The fruits of Bunyan... Arminius... Wesley... The Methodist Episcopol Church, South, in which we have gems such as George Clark Rankin and Robert Sheffey. The great American Methodist Circuit Riders!
 
	
	
	
		
		
		
			
		
		
	
	
 
 
 Camp Meeting in Virginia around the old, Methodist Episcopal Church South mourners bench! 
 
         I passed my examinations and that year I was sent to the   Wytheville Station and Circuit. That was adjoining my former charge. We   reached the old parsonage on the pike just out of Wytheville as Rev. B.   W. S. Bishop moved out. Charley Bishop was then a little tow-headed  boy.  He is now the learned Regent of Southwestern University. The  parsonage  was an old two-and-a-half-story structure with nine rooms and  it looked a  little like Hawthorne's house with the seven gables. It  was the  lonesomest-looking old house I ever saw. There was no one there  to meet  us, for we had not notified anybody of the time we would  arrive.
 
         Think of taking a young bride to that sort of a mansion! But   she was brave and showed no sign of disappointment. That first night we   felt like two whortleberries in a Virginia tobacco wagonbed. We had  room  and to spare, but it was scantily furnished with specimens as  antique  as those in Noah's ark. But in a week or so we were invited out  to spend  the day with a good family, and when we went back we found  the doors  fastened just as we had left them, but when we entered a  bedroom was  elegantly furnished with everything modern and the parlor  was in fine  shape. The ladies had been there and done the work. How  much does the  preacher owe to the good women of the Church! 
 
The circuit was a large one, comprising seventeen appointments. They   were practically scattered all over the county. I preached every other   day, and never less than twice and generally three times on Sunday.
 
         I had associated with me that year a young collegemate, Rev. W.   B. Stradley. He was a bright, popular fellow, and we managed to give   Wytheville regular Sunday preaching. Stradley became a great preacher   and died a few years ago while pastor of Trinity Church, Atlanta,   Georgia. We were true yokefellows and did a great work on that charge,   held fine revivals and had large ingatherings.
 
         The famous Cripple Creek Campground was on that work. They have   kept up campmeetings there for more than a hundred years. It is still   the great rallying point for the Methodists of all that section. I have   never heard such singing and preaching and shouting anywhere else in  my  life. I met the Rev. John Boring there and heard him preach. He was a   well-known preacher in the conference; original, peculiar, strikingly   odd, but a great revival preacher.
 
         One morning in the beginning of the service he was to preach   and he called the people to prayer. He prayed loud and long and told the   Lord just what sort of a meeting we were expecting and really exhorted   the people as to their conduct on the grounds. Among other things, he   said we wanted no horse- trading and then related that just before   kneeling he had seen a man just outside the encampment looking into the   mouth of a horse and he made such a peculiar sound as he described the   incident that I lifted up my head to look at him, and he was holding  his  mouth open with his hands just as the man had done in looking into  the  horse's mouth! But he was a man of power and wrought well for the  Church  and for humanity. 
 
The rarest character I ever met in my life I met at that campmeeting in   the person of Rev. Robert Sheffy, known as "Bob" Sheffy. He was   recognized all over Southwest Virginia as the most eccentric preacher of   that country. He was a local preacher; crude, illiterate, queer and  the  oddest specimen known among preachers. But he was saintly in his  life,  devout in his experience and a man of unbounded faith. He  wandered  hither and thither over that section attending meetings,  holding  revivals and living among the people. He was great in prayer,  and  Cripple Creek campground was not complete without "Bob" Sheffy.  They  wanted him there to pray and work in the altar.
 
         He was wonderful with penitents. And he was great in following   up the sermon with his exhortations and appeals. He would sometimes   spend nearly the whole night in the straw with mourners; and now and   then if the meeting lagged he would go out on the mountain and spend the   entire night in prayer, and the next morning he would come rushing  into  the service with his face all aglow shouting at the top of his  voice.  And then the meeting always broke loose with a floodtide.
 
         He could say the oddest things, hold the most unique interviews   with God, break forth in the most unexpected spasms of praise, use the   homeliest illustrations, do the funniest things and go through with  the  most grotesque performances of any man born of woman.
 
         It was just "Bob" Sheffy, and nobody thought anything of what   he did and said, except to let him have his own way and do exactly as he   pleased. In anybody else it would not have been tolerated for a  moment.  In fact, he acted more like a crazy man than otherwise, but he  was  wonderful in a meeting. He would stir the people, crowd the  mourner's  bench with crying penitents and have genuine conversions by  the score. I  doubt if any man in all that conference has as many souls  to his credit  in the Lamb's Book of Life as old "Bob" Sheffy.
 
         At the close of that year in casting up my accounts I found   that I had received three hundred and ninety dollars for my year's work,   and the most of this had been contributed in everything except money.   It required about the amount of cash contributed to pay my associate  and  the Presiding Elder. I got the chickens, the eggs, the butter, the  ribs  and backbones, the corn, the meat, and the Presiding Elder and  Brother  Stradley had helped us to eat our part of the quarterage. Well,  we kept  open house and had a royal time, even if we did not get much  ready cash.  We lived and had money enough to get a good suit of clothes  and to pay  our way to conference. What more does a young Methodist  preacher need or  want? We were satisfied and happy, and these  experiences are not to be  counted as unimportant assets in the life and  work of a Methodist  circuit rider.
 
(As told by George Clark Rankin)