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History in the Remaking

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Title: History in the Remaking


1
History in the Remaking?
  • Why is it important for us to know and to
    remember the past?
  • Various reasons have been given you are familiar
    with some of the famous answers
  • Those who cannot remember the past are condemned
    to repeat it. George Santayana
  • To be ignorant of what happened before you were
    born is to remain a child always.
  • Cicero
  • Knowing the past can change the future.
    Historians

2
History in the Remaking?
  • Sometimes everyday experiences with the young
    shock us into the reality of how important
    knowledge of the past is.
  • Two summers ago, I returned home from a trip to
    Berlin with a fragment of the now vanished Berlin
    Wall as a silly tourist gift for a bright college
    student of my acquaintance. The gift brought a
    question to mind. Howd that wall get there in
    the first place? (D. J. Tice (Editorial writer
    for the St. Paul Pioneer Press), Nations
    Ignorance of History Hurts, Newspaper Column
    12/22/94

3
History in the Remaking?
  • One reason is biblical.
  • Take the place of remembering and its link to
    faith and obedience. You cannot have faith or
    obedience without rememberingand the principal
    example is the Lords Supper.
  • In the OT, its the Passover (and the other
    festivals), the various monuments (piles of
    stones) and more.
  • Deut. 82 And you shall remember the whole way
    that the Lord your God has led you these forty
    years in the wilderness, that he might humble
    you, testing you to know what was in your heart,
    whether you would keep his commandments or not.

4
History in the Remaking?
  • One reason is biblical.
  • It is instructive just to check a big concordance
    for remember in the OT.
  • Do you remember Stephens sermon in Acts 7?
    History.
  • Do you remember Pauls sermon at Antioch of
    Pisidia in Acts 13? History.
  • Can you imagine?? To get the Jews to listen,
    they used history!!

5
History in the Remaking?
  • Furman Kearley and the Dec. 1991 issue of the
    Gospel Advocate, The Restoration Principle
    Getting Back on Course
  • The Restoration Principle as Preached by the
    ProphetsRex A. Turner, Sr.
  • Jesus Use of the Restoration Principle
  • As Illustrated in Early Church History
  • .As Illustrated by the Reformation.

6
Division in the Church
  • History in the Remaking?

7
The 1906 Census
  • What division?
  • The division which took place over time in the
    late 1800s but is conveniently marked by
    historians at 1906.
  • The census bureau gave official recognition to
    the reality of a division between the Christian
    Churches and churches of Christ in its 1906
    religious census, which was published in 1910.

8
The 1906 Census
  • On June 17, 1907, S. N. D. North, the Director of
    the Census, wrote David Lipscomb and asked
    whether there was a religious body called church
    of Christ, not identified with the Disciples of
    Christ, or any other Baptist body.
  • And if there was such a church, North wanted
    information about its organization and
    principles, and how the Census Bureau could
    secure a complete list of churches.
  • Replying to Norths letter, Lipscomb outlined the
    basic principles of the Restoration Movement as
    formulated in Thomas Campbells Declaration and
    Address and charged that those principles had
    been betrayed when the missionary society and the
    instrument had been introduced and that division
    had resulted.

9
David Lipscomb (1831-1917)
10
The 1906 Census
  • Lipscomb explained
  • The polity of the churches being purely
    congregational, the influences work slowly and
    the division comes gradually. The parties are
    distinguished as they call themselves
    conservatives and progressives, as they call
    each other antis and digressives.
  • In many places the differences have not as yet
    resulted in separation. There are some in the
    conservative churches in sympathy with the
    progressives, who worship and work with the
    conservatives because they have no other church
    facilities. The reverse of this is also true.
    Many of the conservatives are trying to
    appropriate the name churches of Christ to
    distinguish themselves from Christian or
    Disciples Churches.

11
The 1906 Census
  • A few months later, North visited the Advocate
    office and arranged for J. W. Shepherd, one of
    Lipscombs co-editors, to compile a list of the
    churches of Christ for the census report.
  • The Shepherd count was inexact, but even so, the
    1906 census revealed two significant facts about
    the division in the Restoration Movement 1)
    The Christian Churches were the larger body
    (982,701 members for Christian Churches, 159,658
    for churches of Christ) and 2) Christian
    Churches had won the North, while churches of
    Christ found their numbers concentrated in the
    South (across the Midwest they outnumbered
    churches of Christ 19 to 1).

12
J. W. Shepherd
13
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14
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15
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16
Why the Division?
  • First, it should be noted that the break did not
    come about in a few months or even a few years.
  • 1906 was much more a formal and symbolic date for
    the division than a literal date.
  • One could argue that the division had been in
    process for nearly 60 years.
  • Why the division?
  • There were several symptoms but one basic root
    cause.
  • First the symptoms.

17
Why the Division?
  • Missionary Societies. Not very long after the
    union of the Stone and Campbell movements early
    in 1831 Alexander Campbell decided that if the
    movement was to have significant effect on the
    new nation it must be organized. In a lengthy
    series of articles in the Millennial Harbinger in
    the 1830s and again in the 1840s Campbell
    strongly urged the brotherhood to form a general
    organization among the churches. The result was
    that the American Christian Bible Society was
    formed in 1845 and the American Christian
    Missionary Society was formed in 1849.

18
Why the Division?
  • The society never had the support of the entire
    brotherhood. Jacob Creath, Jr. was an early
    critic. In the 1820s when Campbell was
    publishing the Christian Baptist he had denounced
    missionary societies. He said the churches of
    the NT age were not fractured into missionary
    societies, for they knew nothing of the hobbies
    of modern times. They dared not transfer to a
    missionary society, or Bible society, or
    education society, a cent or a prayer, lest in so
    doing they should rob the church of its glory and
    exalt the inventions of men above the wisdom of
    God. In their church capacity alone they moved.

19
Jacob Creath, Jr.
20
Why the Division?
  • Creath reminded Campbell of these earlier views,
    If you were right in the Christian Baptist, you
    are wrong now. If you are right now, you were
    wrong then. Churches and groups of churches
    adopted resolutions opposing the missionary
    society. The best known example of this is that
    from the church in Connelsville, PA, which said
    that the church was not a missionary society,
    but emphatically and pre-eminently the missionary
    societythe only one authorized by Jesus Christ.

21
Why the Division?
  • Perhaps the most important opponent of the
    missionary society in the pre-Civil War years was
    Tolbert Fanning, probably the most influential
    preacher in the South during the 1850s and 1860s.
    When the society was formed Fanning was elected
    a vice president though he was not present. He
    supported the society through the early 1850s but
    came to question the NT authority for it. He
    founded the Gospel Advocate in 1855 with the
    chief purpose being to examine the subjects of
    church organization and Christian cooperation.
    The content of his early articles in the Advocate
    was strikingly similar to that of Campbell in the
    early Christian Baptist.

22
Tolbert Fanning (1810-1874)
23
Why the Division?
  • Fanning wrote, The Church of God is the only
    divinely authorized Missionary, bible, Sunday
    School and Temperance Society the only
    institution in which the Heavenly Father will be
    honored . . . and through no other agency can man
    glorify his Maker.
  • Fanning addressed the missionary society
    convention in 1859 and took advantage of the
    occasion to explain that many Southern Christians
    could not conscientiously support the society.
    Further, he explained how three Tennessee
    congregations were cooperating as churches,
    without the aid of a Missionary Society to
    support J. J. Trott in mission work among the
    Cherokee Indians.

24
Why the Division?
  • Fanning went on to say, But I am happy to say,
    that from what I have heard on this floor, we are
    one people. With us all there is one faith, one
    God, one body and one spirit. Differences on a
    significant issue had not yet produced division.

25
Why the Division?
  • Instrumental Music. Instrumental music was not
    used, or its use even discussed, in the early
    days of the Restoration Movement. The first
    discussion came in 1851 when a reader asked the
    editor of the Ecclesiastical Reformer if its use
    would not add solemnity to worship. The editor,
    J. B. Henshall, spoke against it, but carried
    some articles by others favoring its use. Seeing
    those articles, John Rogers wrote Campbell asking
    his opinion. Campbell replied that if churches
    had no real devotion or spirituality in them,
    instrumental music might be an essential
    prerequisite to devotion. But he added, To all
    spiritually-minded Christians, such aids would be
    as a cow bell in a concert. After that the
    question was not discussed for ten years.

26
Why the Division?
  • As far as is known, the first congregation to
    introduce instrumental music (a small melodeon)
    into the worship was the Midway, KY church around
    1860. Dr. L. L. Pinkerton, the preacher, writing
    in 1860 claimed to be the only preacher in KY to
    advocate it and Midway the only congregation to
    introduce it. The reason was poor singing which
    was so bad it would scare even the rats from
    worship.

27
Dr. L. L. (Lewis Lettig) Pinkerton (1812-1875)
28
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29
Why the Division?
  • The first extended discussion of the music
    question came in 1864-65. W. K. Pendleton,
    editor of the Millennial Harbinger after Campbell
    and also Campbells son-in-law, conceded that
    instrumental music was not used in the early
    centuries of Christian history, but nevertheless
    said it was a matter of mere expediency.
  • Isaac Errett, editor of the Christian Standard,
    in 1870 counseled the churches against
    introducing the instrument on the basis of the
    law of lovethat its use would disrupt the unity
    of the church. He said, We have no
    conscientious scruples against the use of
    instruments.

30
W. K. Pendleton
31
Isaac Errett (1820-1888)
32
Why the Division?
  • (One cant help but note that already in our own
    city brothers have indicated that they would not
    introduce instruments though they did not believe
    the use of them to be wrong.)
  • Benjamin Franklin realized that when brotherhood
    attitudes changed, Erretts advice would also
    change.

33
Benjamin Franklin (1812-1878)
34
Why the Division?
  • Central Christian Church. In Feb. 1872 the
    Central Christian Church in Cincinnati, OH
    dedicated a new building. (The Central church
    building had been the meeting place of the
    missionary society.) It was the largest church
    building in Cincinnati (seating over 2000), had
    the largest stained glass window in the country,
    cost of 140,000 and had an 8,000 organ.
    Benjamin Franklin called it a temple of folly
    and pride and said he would blush to speak of
    the ancient order or the gospel restored in
    such a place. In a week of preaching that opened
    the building, Baptist, Methodist and
    Congregationalist preachers had been used. (I
    cant help but note that similar things again
    have been done in our own city, to so say nothing
    of joint worship services with various
    denominations in other cities.)

35
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36
Central Christian Church Cincinnati, Ohio
37
Why the Division?
  • Liberalism in the Christian Church. While it was
    still in the process of dividing from the
    churches of Christ, the Christian Church began to
    feel the strain of serious internal tensions.
    The root of the problem was theological
    liberalism. The new liberal theology and higher
    Biblical criticism, which had arisen in Germany
    and moved to England and then the U.S., was
    widely accepted by American Protestants in the
    1880s and 1890s and the Christian Churches did
    not escape its influence.
  • While not the first to accept conclusions of
    Biblical criticism, Dr. R. C. Cave shocked the
    brotherhood in 1889 with a sermon which openly
    denied the biblical story of creation, the
    account of the flood and such fundamental
    doctrines as the virgin birth and bodily
    resurrection.

38
R. C. Cave
39
Why the Division?
  • Cave said, He who brings himself, according to
    his measure of knowledge and ability, into
    obedience to the will of Christ and into oneness
    of life and character, with Christ, is a
    Christian.
  • David Lipscomb responded to such events as this
    and it is interesting to note in this period that
    he wrote many articles in the Advocate on the
    role of women.
  • Ahead of his time, Cave soon left the church, but
    after the Disciples Divinity House was
    established at the U. of Chicago in 1894, many
    young men from the Christian Churches began doing
    graduate work in religion at Chicago and Yale.

40
Why the Division?
  • As a result, theological liberalism was soon
    widespread among the Disciples. The liberals had
    a strong editorial champion after 1908 when
    Charles Clayton Morrison became editor of the
    Christian Century. Later this publication
    severed its ties with the Disciples and became
    the voice of liberal Protestantism in America and
    it still is today97 years and counting.

41
Why the Division?
  • But the above items are symptoms, not the root
    cause.
  • The root cause, to which Lipscomb had alluded in
    his letter to S. N. D. North, was that the basic
    NT principles of unity through restoration had
    been abandoned. The long controversy had
    focused on the missionary society and
    instrumental music, but the basic problem
    underlying these two issues was the rise of two
    antagonistic interpretations of the restoration
    principle.

42
Why the Division?
  • Alexander Campbell had formulated the strict view
    in the Christian Baptist when he insisted that
    the NT was a blueprint for the church and that
    any practice not specified in this pattern was
    forbidden.
  • Later, as the movement grew and the first traces
    of a denominational mentality began to appear,
    many interpreted the restoration principle less
    rigidly by allowing many practices as
    expedients.

43
Why the Division?
  • The basic issue was the same whether the practice
    in question was the society or the organ.
  • They were defended as expedients, and opposed
    by others as unauthorized by the NT pattern.
  • Moses Lard proved to be correct when he warned in
    1869 that expediency might be the rock on which
    the Restoration Movement went to pieces.

44
Moses Lard (1818-1880)
45
Why the Division?
  • Open Membership.
  • When division was recognized in the 1906 census,
    it was a division with the churches of Christ on
    one side and Christian Churches/Disciples of
    Christ on the other.
  • But there was already turmoil on the
    Christian/Disciple side.
  • In just two decades, with the increasingly
    liberal direction taken by the Disciples (and
    specifically the practice of open membership
    (accepting the unimmersed to church membership)
    by liberal missionaries on the foreign mission
    fields, Christian Churches/Disciples of Christ
    divided.

46
Why the Division?
  • The Conservative or Independent Christian
    churches broke away in 1927 and formed the North
    American Christian Convention.
  • By 1955 the North American Convention had its own
    yearbook of loyal ministers, churches and
    agencies.
  • With the culmination of the Disciples
    restructure in 1968 and the formation of a
    full-fledged denomination (Christian
    Church/Disciples of Christ) the separation was
    complete and official.

47
Disciples of Christ
  • Osborn one of editors of 3-vol. restudy of the
    Disciples (1963).
  • Many of the papers constituting this volume and
    the two succeeding volumes in this series
    explicitly repudiate restorationism, as do
    numerous other studies recently written by
    Disciple scholars. as an interpretation of
    apostolicity, restoration is no longer feasible.
    The Reformation of Tradition, p. 318.

48
Disciples of Christ
  • Ralph Wilburn, Dean of Lexington Theological
    Seminary, wrote in the same volume, The
    restoration idea is basically a false concept. .
    . . It would seem wise to abandon the use of the
    term altogether.

49
Why the Division?
  • No Place for Compromise
  • There is also a lesson to be learned about the
    ultimate futility of trying to work with both
    extremes.
  • J. W. McGarvey, one of the great Biblical
    scholars of the 19th c., head of the College of
    the Bible and preacher for the Broadway
    congregation in Lexington, KY, left the Broadway
    congregation in 1902 when it brought in the
    organ.
  • At about the same time he shared his
    disillusionment with Jesse P. Sewell.

50
J. W. McGarvey (1829-1911)
51
Jesse P. Sewell
52
Why the Division?
  • McGarvey told Sewell, You are on the right road,
    and whatever you do, dont let anybody persuade
    you that you can successfully combat error by
    fellowshipping it and going along with it. I
    have tried. I believed at the start that was the
    only way to do it. Ive never held membership in
    a congregation that uses instrumental music. I
    have, however, accepted invitations to preach
    without distinctions between churches that used
    it and churches that didnt. Ive gone along
    with their papers and magazines and things of
    that sort. During all these years I have

53
Why the Division?
  • taught the truth as the New Testament teaches to
    every young preacher who has passed through the
    College of the Bible. Yet, I do not know of more
    than six of those men who are preaching the truth
    today. It wont work.
  • (J. P. Sewell, Biographical Sketches of
    Restoration Preachers, Harding College
    Lectures, 1950, p. 75).

54
Why Bother With History?
  • Why look at these lessons?
  • Because todays church culture is shockingly
    similar to that of the last part of the 19th
    century.
  • As they did, we face churches that practice open
    membership, fellowship with error and employ
    worship styles that are producing dissension and
    divisions.
  • Once more biblical authority is minimized or
    disregarded.

55
Why Bother With History?
  • Accepting the Unimmersed (Open Membership).
  • Today some in churches of Christ advocate that
    pious, unimmersed people are saved, brothers in
    Christ, and fully members of the church.
  • Rubel Shelly and John York in The Jesus Proposal
    argue that churches of Christ ought to give up
    rigid judgmentalism and embrace a generous spirit
    toward those in various denominations (pp.
    171-179).
  • John Mark Hicks in his book, Down in the River to
    Pray, holds that salvation is a process rather
    than an event and the transformed unimmersed
    ought to be included in the grace of God (pp.
    179-199).

56
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57
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58
Why Bother With History?
  • All these authors admit that baptism is
    immersion.
  • They claim that they teach immersion for the
    remission of sins, but in practice they
    fellowship the sprinkled and those who believe
    they are saved before immersion.
  • We wonder by what principle of interpretation one
    can substitute a human practice for a biblical
    one.
  • What commandment of God may any person ignore,
    dismiss or disobey and still remain pleasing to
    God?
  • By what authority can we dismiss immersion for
    general obedience?
  • If a person believes and is baptized, can we
    propose an alternative to repentance?

59
Why Bother With History?
  • Instruments of Music in Worship.
  • Just as the Disciples a century ago believed they
    could embrace instruments of music in worship, so
    some today are embracing them.
  • Weary arguments on psallo and psalmos have spread
    widely, as if they had never been answered.
  • Christian concerts with instrumentation appear on
    our college campuses and at large youth rallies.
  • The desire for instruments arose in the 1800s
    when proponents introduced them to our Sunday
    schools so that our youth could learn to sing
    better in time they reasoned that if they could
    do it in class, they could also do it in the
    worship assembly.

60
Why Bother With History?
  • Today our youth are desensitized by contemporary
    Christian music.
  • The distinctions between entertainment and
    worship have become so blurred that many of the
    naïve hardly know the difference.
  • Teachers and youth leaders quietly tell their
    students that Jesus did not die over instrumental
    music, so whether we use it or not is not a
    salvation issue.

61
Why Bother With History?
  • Other Practices.
  • In the last year, the number of congregations
    overtly preaching and practicing unbiblical
    doctrines has increased dramatically.
  • An increasing number of churches, both large and
    small, urban and rural, are practicing doctrines
    such as

62
Why Bother With History?
  • Worshipping with instruments
  • Encouraging women to lead publicly in worship and
    teaching
  • Substituting Saturday worship as an acceptable
    replacement for worship on the
    Lords
    Day
  • Observing the Lords Supper at any time the time
    seems right
  • Aligning themselves with denominational
    congregations in work and worship with the
    implication being that their differences in
    doctrine are inconsequential preferences
  • Changing the name of their congregation because
    of the baggage associated with the name church
    of Christ

63
Why Bother With History?
  • Just as the symptom doctrines and practices in
    the late 1800s were signs of a fundamental
    causethe differing views regarding the authority
    of Scripture--so, contemporary differences in
    doctrine and practice grow out of conflicting
    understandings of the authority of Scripture.

64
Why Bother With History?
  • It is now 2005, but the same issues confront us
    that confronted our brethren a century earlier.
  • How will we respond?
  • Will we claim we want unity, but sacrifice our
    brethren to follow after our personal preferences
    and desires?
  • Will we seek unity with other groups by
    compromising our beliefs or convincing ourselves
    that they arent salvation issues?
  • Will we cave in to the culture of the day and
    change the teaching of Scripture so that we can
    be more effective in reaching the unchurched?

65
Why Bother With History?
  • What Are We To Do?
  • The story of the differing and antagonistic
    interpretations of the restoration principle is
    clear and the story of the resulting consequences
    in the three bodies that share a common history
    in the American Restoration Movement are just as
    clear.
  • While the circumstances in which we seek to
    shepherd may be complex, challenging and
    downright dangerous, the question, I think, is
    simple.
  • Do we want to see history repeat itself in the
    congregations we lead?
  • I hope you will give it serious consideration.
  • My answer is absolutely not!!
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