"JOSHUA CARMAN has already been mentioned in this book several times, first in
the chapter relating to "the Carman Family," again in connection with
Caleb Carman, the husband of Mary LaRue Carman (V.), and last in this chapter as
one of the first pastors of Severns Valley Baptist Church. Of him it may well be
said, that his "was the voice of one crying in the wilderness." He was
strangely out of harmony with the times and with the people among whom he lived
in Kentucky...
Joshua Carman is mentioned by Col. R. T. Durrett in the sketch of
"Ancient Louisville," which was first published in the Louisville
Courier-Journal on the opening of the Southern Exposition, in 1883, as one of
the early preachers at the Falls of the Ohio. In the year 1787, Mr. Carman
became pastor of the Severns Valley (Elizabethtown) Baptist Church, to which he
preached for only a short time. Concerning his work after that pastorate, the
following is quoted from Spencer's "History of Kentucky
Baptists"--"Rolling Fork Church was located in the southern part of
Nelson County. It was constituted in 1788, and united with the Salem Association
the same year. * * * It was probably gathered by Joshua Carman, an enthusiastic
Emancipationist. This church sent with its letter to the Association (in
October, 1789), the year after it obtained admission into that body, the
following query: 'Is it lawful in the sight of God for a member of Christ's
Church to keep his fellow-creatures in perpetual slavery?' (Answer) 'The
Association judge it improper to enter into so important and critical a matter
at present.' This answer was unsatisfactory. The church continued to agitate the
subject of slavery, till, in 1796, it withdrew from the Association."...
Again, Mr. Spencer says of Joshua Carman: "He was among the early
settlers of Nelson County, Kentucky. For a number of years he was an active
minister in the bounds of Salem Association and was several times appointed to
preach the introductory sermon before that body. He was regarded as a man of
good ability, and was much beloved by the brethren. But, becoming fanatical on
the subject of slavery, he induced Rolling Fork Church to withdraw from the
Association, in 1796, and declare non-fellowship with all slave-holders."
In connection with Josiah Dodge he organized an Emancipation Church, about six
miles northwest of Bardstown, supposed to have been the first organization of
this kind in Kentucky. "Mr. Carman, finding himself unable to bring any
considerable number of Baptists to his views, moved to Eastern Ohio, where, it
is said, he raised up a respectable church and preached to it till the Lord took
him away."--(Spencer)."