Title: LESSONS FROM RESTORATION HISTORY
1LESSONS FROM RESTORATION HISTORY
- UNITY AND DIVISION AMONG AMERICAN PRIMITIVIST
CHRISTIANS
2The American Restoration Movement, 1800-2000
- 1 Peter 411 If any man speak, let him speak as
the oracles of God if any man minister, let him
do it as of the ability which God giveth that
God in all things may be glorified through Jesus
Christ, to whom be praise and dominion for ever
and ever. Amen.
3Restoration Principle Antecedents
- 1. The Idea of Restoration
- Often expressed in Christian history
- Simple Principle
- 2. Other Restoration and Primitivist Movements
- Early church
- Reformation
- Puritanism
- English Separatism
- Scottish Separatism
4A New Testament Church
- 1. An organizationPhil. 11 Acts 1423 I Tim.
3 1ff Titus 15ff.
- 2. An AssemblyHeb. 1025 I Cor. 1118
- 3. TaughtActs 207 I Cor. 1415
- 4. PrayedActs 125 I Cor. 1419
- 6. Lords Supper on 1st DayActs 207 I Cor.
1120
- 7. Gave on 1st DayI Cor. 161,2 Acts 244-45
- 9. Relieved Needy SaintsActs 434-35
1129-30 I Cor. 161
- 10. Supported PreachingII Cor. 118 Phil.
415-16
- 11. Discipline Unruly MembersI Cor. 51-5
5- Restoration History Background
- The Churches of Christ in the Twentieth Century
Homer Haileys Personal Journey of Faith (2000) - Quest for a Christian America (1966)
- The Social Sources of Division in the Disciples
of Christ (1973) - The Sectional Origins of the Churches of
Christ, Journal of Southern History, August,
1964, pp. 261-277. - The Proliferation in Restoration Historiography
- West, The Search for the Ancient Order
(1949-1987) - Hooper, A Distinct People (1993)
- Foster, Will the Cycle Be Unbroken? (1994)
- Casey, Saddlebags, City Streets, and Cyberspace
(1995) - Garrett, The Stone-Campbell Movement (1997)
- Hughes, Reviving the Ancient Faith (1996)
-
-
-
6Disciples of Christ Churches of Christ
Phase 1-1800-1865
Phase 2-1865-1950
Churches of Christ
Disciples Of Christ
Independent Christian Church
Churches of Christ
Phase 3-1900-1960
Phase 4-1960-2007
Progressive Churches of Christ
Noninstitutional Churches of Christ
Institutional (Traditional) Churches of Christ
Phase 5-1960-2007
7Five Phases of American Restoration History
1800-2000
- 1. Growth and Unity, 1800-1865
- 2. 3-Way Division, 1865-1900/1950
- 3. Growth and Unity, (Churches of Christ)
1900-1950 - 4. 3-Way Division, 1950-2000
- 5. Distinctive Histories and Growth Patterns of
Noninstitutional, Conservative, and Progressive
Churches of Christ
8Disciples of Christ Churches of Christ
Phase 1-1800-1865
Phase 2-1865-1950
Churches of Christ
Disciples Of Christ
Independent Christian Church
PERIODS OF UNIFORMITY OF MIND AND HERMENEUTICAL
AGREEMENT
Churches of Christ
Phase 3-1900-1960
Phase 4-1960-2007
Progressive Churches of Christ
Noninstitutional Churches of Christ
Institutional (Traditional) Churches of Christ
Phase 5-1960-2007
9Disciples of Christ Churches of Christ
Phase 1-1800-1865
Phase 2-1865-1950
Churches of Christ
Disciples Of Christ
Independent Christian Church
Phase 3-1900-1960
Phase 4-1960-2007
Progressive Churches of Christ
Noninstitutional Churches of Christ
Institutional (Traditional) Churches of Christ
Phase 5-1960-2007
10PHASE 1 GROWTH, UNITY AND TENSIONS
- 1. GROWTH WITHOUT ORGANIZATION
2. ABSENCE OF SOPHISTICATED MEMBERS
3. LACK OF WEALTH
4. CONVICTION AND COMMITMENT
11PHASE 1 DIVISIONS AND TENSIONS
- DIVISIONS
- PREMILLENIALISM (CHRISTADELPHIANS)
- MORMONISM
- CULTURAL TENSIONS
- SLAVERY AND CIVIL WAR
- DOCTORAL TENSIONS
- MISSIONARY SOCIETIES AND INSTRUMENTAL MUSIC
12Types of Divisions in the Restoration
MovementPhases 1, 3, 5
- Debate and Splintering Among Like-minded People
- 1. Personality Divisions
- 2. Doctrinal Disagreements
- 3. Social and Cultural Tensions
PERIODS OF CONGREGATIONAL AUTONOMY DIVISIONS ARE
CONGREGATIONAL
13Disciples of Christ Churches of Christ
Phase 1-1800-1865
Phase 2-1865-1950
Churches of Christ
Disciples Of Christ
Independent Christian Church
Churches of Christ
Phase 3-1900-1960
Phase 4-1960-2007
Progressive Churches of Christ
Noninstitutional Churches of Christ
Institutional (Traditional) Churches of Christ
Phase 5-1960-2007
14Phase 3 The Churches of Christ--1900-1950
- 1. Rapid Growth (from 125,000 to 1,500,000)
- 2. Reasons for Growth
- Congregational Autonomy versus Denominational
Organization - Sense of World Separation
- Migration from Christian Churches
- Debating and Converting
- Conviction versus Denominational Loyalty
15Disciples of Christ Churches of Christ
Phase 1-1800-1865
Phase 2-1865-1950
Churches of Christ
Disciples Of Christ
Independent Christian Church
Churches of Christ
Phase 3-1900-1960
Phase 4-1960-2007
Progressive Churches of Christ
Noninstitutional Churches of Christ
Institutional (Traditional) Churches of Christ
Phase 5-1960-2007
16Phase 5 Conservative Churches of Christ,
1962-2007
- 1. Heirs of the historic restoration tradition
- 2. Common Sense and Sojourner Mindsets
- 3. Like-Minded Tensions
- 4. Debate in a Wild Democracy
- 5. Growth and Vitality
- 6. Generational changes
17Phase 5Churches of Christ, 1960-
- 1. Period of consolidation and rebuilding in
1960s and 1970s - 2. Rapid Growth in 1980s and 1990s
- 3. Expanded mission activity
- 4. First generation elderships
- 5. Working in a Wild Democracy
18Disciples of Christ Churches of Christ
Phase 1-1800-1865
Phase 2-1865-1950
Churches of Christ
Disciples Of Christ
Independent Christian Church
SEPARATING OF DIVIDED MINDS AND HERMENEUTICAL
DISSONANCE
Churches of Christ
Phase 3-1900-1960
Phase 4-1960-2007
Progressive Churches of Christ
Noninstitutional Churches of Christ
Institutional (Traditional) Churches of Christ
Phase 5-1960-2007
19Types of Divisions in the Restoration
MovementPhases 2 and 4
- Separations of Divided Minds
- 1. Seemingly deterministic divisions
- 2. Broad sociological and intellectual
foundations - 3. Not caused by men or issues
- 4. Generational in nature
20Disciples of Christ Churches of Christ 1860
250,000 1906 1,300,000
Phase 1-1800-1865
Phase 2-1865-1930
Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) 1965
2.000,000 2003 770,000
Independent Christian Churches 1950
500,000 2000 1,500,000 North American Convention
Churches of Christ 1906250,000 2000 2,200,000
21Churches of Christ/Disciples of Christ
Division--1906
- Doctrinal Issues
- 1. Instrumental Music
- 2. Missionary Society
- 3. Pastor System
-
- Dividing Minds (Apostolic Authority and
Hermeneutics) - 1. Biblical literalism versus liberalism
- 2. World Separatism versus denominationalism
22Churches of Christ Division--1906
- Doctrinal Issues
- 1. Instrumental Music
- 2. Missionary Society
-
ECCENTRIC ISSUES???
ISSUES INVENTED BY THE AMERICAN RESTORATION
MOVEMENT???
23Instrumental Music
- THE VOICE OF VARIOUS RELIGIOUS SOURCES...
- 1. CATHOLIC - "... the first Christians were of
too spiritual a fibre to substitute lifeless
instruments for or to use them to accompany the
human voice." -- CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA - 2. GREEK ORTHODOX - "The execution of Byzantine
church music by instruments, or even the
accompaniment of sacred chanting by instruments
was ruled out by the Eastern Fathers as being
incompatible with the pure, solemn, spiritual
character of the religion of Christ." --
Constantine Cavarnos, BYSANTINE SACRED MUSIC - 3. PRESBYTERIAN - "Musical instruments in
celebrating the praises of God would be no more
suitable than the burning of incense, the
lighting up of lamps, the restoration of the
other shadows of the law. The Papists, therefore,
have foolishly borrowed this, as well as many
other things, from the Jews. Men who are fond of
outward pomp may delight in that noise but the
simplicity which God recommends to us by the
apostle is far more pleasing to Him." - JOHN
CALVIN, Commentary on the Book of Psalms, Vol. I,
p. 539 - 4. METHODIST - "I have no objection to
instruments of music, in our chapels, provided
they are neither heard nor seen." - JOHN WESLEY
(founder) - 5. METHODIST - "Music as a science, I esteem and
admire but instruments of music in the house of
God I abominate and abhor. This is the abuse of
music and here I register my protest against all
such corruptions in the worship of the Author of
Christianity." - ADAM CLARKE (commentator) - 6. LUTHERAN - "Martin Luther called the organ an
'ensign of Baal'." - MCCLINTOCK STRONG'S
ENCYCLOPEDIA - 7. BAPTIST - "I would as soon attempt to pray to
God with machinery as to sing to Him with
machinery." - CHARLES H. SPURGEON
24THE SEVERING OF DIVIDED MINDS
- Doctrinal Issues
- 1. Instrumental Music
- 2. Missionary Society
-
- Dividing Minds (Hermeneutics, Mindsets, and
Sociological Change) - 1. Biblical literalism versus liberalism
- 2. Separatism versus denominationalism
25Conservative
- The only way to sustain Christianity and have
union, is for all of us to say and believe that
all Gods statements are facts and truths. . . .
And that all his commandments are to be obeyed
literally. - James L. Thornberry, The American Congress of
Churches, Gospel Advocate, May 5, 1885, p. 49.
26Moderate and Traditional
- The Bible contains but few specific details, but
it does contain every principle of action the
human family will ever need. . . . It assumes the
common sense of the race. . . . In regard to the
methods employed for preaching the gospel to the
world, and all benevolent ministrations of the
church, . . . Christians have no positive
specifications and they must be governed by
general laws and principles applied according to
their best judgement. - M. M Goode, Missouri Christian Lectures (Kansas
City, 1886), pp. 101-102.
27Liberal
- A principle may set aside an apostolic precept.
It may brush aside an apostolic decree. We do
that constantly. We follow the apostolic example
whenever we like it when we do not, we depart
from it. - George T. Smith, No Man Wishes Women to Keep
Silence in the Churches, Christian Standard,
October 7, 1893, p. 798.
28Churches of Christ Division--1906
- Sociological Issues (Sect to Denomination
Process) - 1. Economic Differences
- 2. North and South
- 3. Educational Differences
- 4. Urban versus Rural
29Value of Church Buildings 1936
Churches of Christ Disciples of Christ
Tenn 3,000 14,000
Georgia 4,500 12,000
Texas 3,500 20,000
Indiana 2,300 13,000
30Poor and Alienated
- As time advanced such of those churches as
assembled in large towns and cities gradually
became proud, or, at least, sufficiently
worldly-minded to desire popularity, and in order
to attain that unscriptural end they adopted
certain popular arrangements such as the hired
pastor, the church choir, instrumental music,
man-made societies to advance the gospel. . . .
In so doing they divided the brotherhood of
disciples. - Daniel Sommer, The Signs of the Times,
Octographic Times, October 5, 1897, p. 1.
31Middle-Class Respectability
- We have enough cheap churches. . . . We may
be a great church. We may never be, however,
with dwarfed preachers and insignificant
preachers. - H. C. Alleman, Better Church Buildings, BIC,
January-March, 1897, p. 14.
32The Educated Elite
- There is a call today for more educated men in
the pew, more thoroughly trained preachers, more
profound thinkers, more cultured liberal editors,
and more scholarly professors. - A. M. Hall, Educational Board, Christian
Oracle, July 4, 1895, p. 420.
33The Sociology of Religion
- 1. Sociological religious categories
- Cult, Sect, Denomination, Church
- 2. Economic parameters of religious groups
- Economic, educational and social
- 3. The nature of change in religious bodies
- The sect to denomination process
34Sect-to Denomination ProcessThe Emergence of
the Church of Christ Denomination, pp. 13-15
- From propertyless to property-owning membership.
From economic poverty to economic wealth, that
is, value of church property, ministers salary.
From cultural periphery toward the cultural
center of the community.
From a community excluding unworthy members to
an institution embracing all who are socially
compatible.
From an unspecialized, unprofessional ministry
to a professional ministry.
From emphasis on evangelism to emphasis on
religious education.
From stress on future in the next world to
primary interest in this world.
35Sect-to-Denomination Process
- From non-cooperation with other churches to
cooperation.
From fervor in worship to restraint.
From a high degree of congregational
participation to delegation of responsibility to
a few.
From persecution to success and dominance
psychology.
36TWO LAWS OF RELIGIOUS HISTORY
- 1. Every generation makes its own choices based
on its own experiences
37Dividing MindsJudges 2
- Judges 26And when Joshua had let the people go,
the children of Israel went every man unto his
inheritance to possess the land. 7And the people
served the LORD all the days of Joshua, and all
the days of the elders that outlived Joshua, who
had seen all the great works of the LORD, that he
did for Israel. 8And Joshua the son of Nun, the
servant of the LORD, died, being an hundred and
ten years old. 9And they buried him in the border
of his inheritance in Timnathheres, in the mount
of Ephraim, on the north side of the hill Gaash.
10And also all that generation were gathered unto
their fathers and there arose another generation
after them, which knew not the LORD, nor yet the
works which he had done for Israel. 11And the
children of Israel did evil in the sight of the
LORD, and served Baalim 12And they forsook the
LORD God of their fathers, which brought them out
of the land of Egypt, and followed other gods, of
the gods of the people that were round about
them, and bowed themselves unto them, and
provoked the LORD to anger.
38TWO LAWS OF RELIGIOUS HISTORY
- 1. Every generation makes its own choices based
on its own experiences - 2. The church of the New Testament was made up
mostly of the meek and lowly
39Looking at Our Calling
- 1 Cor. 126For ye see your calling, brethren,
how that not many wise men after the flesh, not
many mighty, not many noble, are called 27But
God hath chosen the foolish things of the world
to confound the wise and God hath chosen the
weak things of the world to confound the things
which are mighty
40Disciples of Christ Churches of Christ
Phase 1-1800-1865
Phase 2-1865-1900
Churches of Christ
Disciples Of Christ
Independent Christian Church
Churches of Christ
Phase 3-1900-1960
Phase 4-1960-2000
Progressive Churches of Christ
Conservative Churches of Christ
Institutional (Traditional) Churches of Christ
Phase 5-1960-2000
41Phases 3 (1900-1950) and 4 (1950-2000)
The Dilemma of Names
Churches of Christ
Phase 3 1900-1950
Churches of Christ
Phase 4 1950-2000
Progressive Churches of Christ 1990
Noninstitutional Churches of Christ 1960
Mainstream Churches of Christ 1990
Progressive Churches of Christ 1980s
Noninstitutional Churches of Christ 1960s
Institutional Churches of Christ 1980s
42Institutional Division1945-65
- Church Support of Institutions (colleges, orphan
homes, hospitals)
- Sponsoring Church (Herald of Truth, Missions)
Social Gospel (Fellowship) Issues (Kitchens and
Fellowship Halls)
- Course of Controversy
- Quarantine the antis (1954)
- Debates and magazines
43Institutional Division, 1962Sociological
Dimensions
- The Post-World War II Scenario
- Changes in size, wealth, and self-image
- One of the ten top non-Catholic bodies in
America Meade, - Handbook of Denominations
- Sources of Division
- Legalistic, Creedal Debates
- Denominational Pride (On the March booster
mentality) - Are We a Denomination? The Emergence of the
Church of Christ Denomination (1962) - Are We a Denomination? Voices of Concern (1966)
- The Search for Consistency
44Institutional Division
- Sociological Characteristics
- Economic and Educational Parameters of Divisions
- Alienated in Noninstitutional Churches
(ApocalypticSojourners) - Traditional and Denominational Mindset of
Conservatives (Established Sect) - The Cultural Church (Progressive Critique)
- The Emergence of the Church of Christ
Denomination
45Denominational Pride
- That the church is passing through a transition
in becoming adjusted to the complex, highly
organized social age, is recognized by a number
of educators. . . . Big things are proposed and
performed, denominational plans and successes
are cited to inspire liberality. The simplicity
of the church of the Lord is not a suitable
instrument for entering upon a centralized
undertaking of such magnitude. Great centralized
associations are unknown to the ancient order of
things. W. W. Otey (1948)
46Denominational Pride
- When brethren air their difficulties before the
world they are obscuring the greatness of the
church because of their littleness. . . . We may
not ever make such an impression on others as we
would like, but the one thing within the reach of
all is bigness. Cleon Lyles (1953)
47Denominational Pride
- For years we watched out religious neighbors
build fine church buildings. We saw them send
their preachers by the score to foreign fields.
We listened to their coast-to-coast broadcasts.
Now we know that they are not the only ones who
can do these things. We can, too. . . . An
inferiority complex is a miserable thing. It
seems that there was a time when the church had
such a complex. But now we see that we have the
ability, the resources, the faith and everything
else necessary to do great things. Joe K. Alley
(1955)
48Types of Divisions in the Restoration Movement
- Separations of Divided Minds
- 1. There must needs be factions among you
- 2. Broad sociological and intellectual
foundations - 3. Not caused by men or issues
DIVISION BASED ON DIFFERENT ASSUMPTIONS ABOUT
AUTHORITY AND HERMENEUTICS
49Characteristics of 20th Century Divisions
- 1. Fluidity of Restoration divisions
- Mixed loyalties
- Irregular pace and regional differences
- 2. Individual and congregational choices are
demanded by history - 3. Choosing where to live (fellowship)
- History is not judgmentit is fact
- Not a conventional denominational separating
- Fellowship is only personal and congregational
50The Restoration Spirit
- 1 Peter 411 If any man speak, let him speak as
the oracles of God if any man minister, let him
do it as of the ability which God giveth that
God in all things may be glorified through Jesus
Christ, to whom be praise and dominion for ever
and ever. Amen.