Shepherd, J.W
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Our Heritage of Unity and Fellowship
OUR HERITAGE OF UNITY AND FELLOWSHIP Writings of Leroy Garrett and W. Carl Ketcherside Edited and Published by Cecil Hook Order From: Cecil Hook (Mira Prince) 905 Forest Canyon Cove Round Rock TX 78664 (512) 716-3066 Table of Contents DEDICATION ................................................................................................................................i Introduction ....................................................................................................................................1 1. It Began In Scotland.................................................................................................................8 2. Thomas Campbell Writes His Declaration of Independence ................................................13 3. The Spirit of the “Declaration and Address” ........................................................................17 4. Principles of the Document ....................................................................................................23 5. Historic Notes on Our First Church .......................................................................................27 6. “Let Christian Unity be Our Polar Star” ................................................................................29 7. The Noblest Act in Barton Stone’s Life.................................................................................34 8. Learning from a Backwoods Preacher ...................................................................................40 9. Christians in Babylon.............................................................................................................43 -
John W. Welch, “'All Their Creeds Were an Abomination':A Brief Look at Creeds As Part of the Apostasy,”
John W. Welch, “‘All Their Creeds Were an Abomination’:A Brief Look at Creeds as Part of the Apostasy,” in Prelude to the Restoration: From Apostasy to the Restored Church (Provo, UT and Salt Lake City: Religious Studies Center, Brigham Young University and Deseret Book, 2004), 228–249. “All Their Creeds Were an Abomination”: A Brief Look at Creeds as Part of the Apostasy John W. Welch John W. Welch is a professor of law at Brigham Young University and editor-in-chief of BYU Studies. On October 15, 1843, the Prophet Joseph Smith commented, “I cannot believe in any of the creeds of the different denominations, because they all have some things in them I cannot subscribe to, though all of them have some truth. I want to come up into the presence of God, and learn all things: but the creeds set up stakes, and say, ‘Hitherto [1] shalt thou come, and no further’; which I cannot subscribe to.” While Latter-day Saints gladly and gratefully recognize that all religious creeds contain some truth, the problem is that those formulations of doctrine also contain errors or impose limits that are “incompatible with the gospel’s inclusive commitment to truth and continual [2] revelation.” Such mixing of truth and error is reminiscent of the parable of the wheat and the tares, the Lord’s most [3] salient teaching on the nature of the Apostasy (Matthew 13:24–30, 37–43; JST Matthew 13; D&C 86:1–11). Thus, the creeds themselves, as vessels of mixed qualities, become metaphors or manifestations of the Apostasy itself. -
Lesson 65 Young Disciples Curriculum Online
Lesson 65 Young Disciples Curriculum Online Purpose - To learn about how The Disciples of Christ started - To learn about the Campbells - To learn about “Raccoon” Smith and Walter Scott - To learn about Barton Stone Materials - Handouts - Bibles Background Information Starting today we will learn the history of the Christian Church, Disciples of Christ and how it all began. Our church really had two beginnings. One led by Thomas and Alexander Campbell and the other by Barton Stone. We will study each and then find out how they merged and fit it all together. THE CAMPBELLS Thomas Campbell was a Presbyterian minister and schoolteacher in Ireland. The Presbyterian Church was kind of divided into five groups. Thomas Campbell was part of the Evangelical, New Light, Anti-Burgher, Secedar Presbyterians. (How would you like to tell that to people every time they asked you what church you go to.) That group was liberal and evangelical in comparison to the others that were very rigid in what they believed. In 1807 Thomas Campbell immigrated to American to establish a home so that his family could join him later. He brought with him his authority to be a minister in the Presbyterian Church, his Bible, and possibly a few books and personal belongings. For two years he was a circuit minister. This meant that he traveled around on horseback and gave communion to the people who lived in rural Pennsylvania. According to the rules of his church in Ireland he was only allowed to give the Lord’s Supper to those who were a part of the New Light, Anti-Burgher, Secedar Presbyterian church. -
Unity and Brush Run: the Declaration and Address
Unity and Brush Run: The Declaration and Address By Douglas A. Foster Director, Center for Restoration Studies Professor of Church History Graduate School of Theology Abilene Christian University The church of Christ upon earth is essentially, intentionally, and constitutionally one; consisting of all those in every place that profess their faith in Christ and obedience to him in all things according to the scriptures, and that manifest the same by their tempers and conduct, and of none else as none else can be truly and properly called Christians. hile not at the beginning of Thomas Campbell’s 1809 Declaration and Address of the Christian Association of Washington, these words are at the heart of the Stone- W Campbell Movement’s reason for being. Deeply embedded in the soul of the churches of this global movement is the vision of this founding document, a vision for the visible unity of Christ’s church on earth. Born out of Campbell’s burden to end the fighting and division among professed followers of the Prince of Peace, the Declaration and Address (D&A) is a call and a rationale for Christians to live out the truth that “there is one body.” Thomas Campbell wrote the D&A as an explanation of the nature and purpose of the newly formed Christian Association in late summer 1809. The creation of the Association was in response to his expulsion from the Associate Synod of North America, the Presbyterian denomination he had served since arriving in the United States two years earlier.1 His dismissal was sparked by his violation of the rules of the Associate Synod to exclude from the Lord’s Supper anyone not part of their order. -
From Segregation to Independence: African Americans in Churches of Christ
FROM SEGREGATION TO INDEPENDENCE: AFRICAN AMERICANS IN CHURCHES OF CHRIST By Theodore Wesley Crawford Dissertation Submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School of Vanderbilt University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY in Religion August, 2008 Nashville, Tennessee Approved: Dr. Dennis C. Dickerson Dr. Kathleen Flake Dr. John S. McClure Dr. Lucius Outlaw To my father, who helped make this possible but did not live to see its completion and To my wife, Kim, whose support is responsible for this project ii TABLE OF CONTENTS Page DEDICATION……………………………………………………………………. ii LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS…………………………………………………….. v INTRODUCTION………………………………………………………………… vii Chapter I. UNDERSTANDING CHUCHES OF CHRIST……………..……………. 1 Denominational Organization…………………………………………. 1 Churches of Christ Journals………………………………………….... 7 Churches of Christ Schools………………………………………...….. 21 Churches of Christ Lectureships………………………………………. 34 Conclusion……………………………………………………………... 38 II. SEGREGATION…………………………………………………………... 40 White-Imposed Segregation…………………………...……………… 41 The Life and Ministry of Marshall Keeble…………...……………….. 61 Conclusion…………………………………………………………….. 83 III. INDEPENDENCE………………………………………………………… 84 The Foundation of Independence..……….…………………………… 85 African American Independence……………………………………… 98 White Responses to the Civil Rights Movement……………………… 117 A United Effort: The Race Relations Workshops…………………….. 128 Conclusion…………………………………………………………….. 134 iii IV. THE CLOSING OF NASHVILLE CHRISTIAN INSTITUTE…………… 137 -
Docket of Business for the 2009 Meeting of the General Board of The
2009 DOCKET OF BUSINESS General Board of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) April 17 – 21, 2009 Indianapolis, Indiana Meeting documents, forms, online tutorials and other material can be found at: www.disciples.org/generalboard Login: docboard Password: chalice Order of Worshipful Work (Agenda) ............................................................................................................................ 5 The Mission Imperative of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) ....................................................................... 13 Exhibit A ‐ Committee and Group Membership ......................................................................................................... 14 Exhibit B ‐ Travel Information ..................................................................................................................................... 15 Exhibit C ‐ Travel and Expense Reimbursement Policy .............................................................................................. 16 General Board Member Travel Expense Form ........................................................................................................... 18 Small Group Assignments ........................................................................................................................................... 19 General Ministry Reports 0901 General Assembly of the Christian Church, including the Office of the General Minister and President, Committees, Commissions and Minutes ..................................................................................... -
Documents from Sand Creek
Breakup of a movement: Documents from Sand Creek By A. K. Guthrie CONTENTS INTRODUCTION A GRAND OCCASION Daniel Sommer's Preliminary Report of the Meeting AN ADDRESS (Daniel Sommer) Sommer's Introduction to the Declaration ADDRESS AND DECLARATION (Version I) Version published in Sommer's Octographic Review ADDRESS AND DECLARATION (Version II) Version published a week later in Christian Leader (this one mentions Instrumental Music) SAND CREEK CHRONICLES Reaction by the Christian Standard SAND CREEK ADDRESS AND DECLARATION Reaction by David Lipscomb in Gospel Advocate THE SAND CREEK CHURCH CASE Decision of the Shelby County, IL Circuit Court from Gospel Advocate THE SAND CREEK CHURCH CASE Decision of the Illinois Supreme Court from Gospel Advocate A HISTORY OF THE SAND CREEK CHURCH Looking back, seventy years later from The Truth INTRODUCTION HOW THIS CAME ABOUT I am a life-long part of the (non-instrumental) Church of Christ and an amateur historian of the Stone-Campbell (or "Restoration") Movement . I'm increasingly amazed that our movement, begun to "unify the Christians in the sects," could divide into many factions, and do it in fewer than two hundred years. Many authors contribute to my continuing education. Cecil Hook's "Our Heritage of Unity and Fellowship" (available from him at 10905 S.W. Mira Court, Tigard, OR 97223) is especially valuable. It reproduces essays by W. Carl Ketcherside (from Mission Messenger) and Leroy Garrett (from Restoration Review). Chapter 13, The Sand Creek Address (from Mission Messenger , February, 1962) caught my eye. I believe the Sand Creek Address and Declaration is a key to understanding the mind sets which erupted into the 1880-1910 "Great" Division. -
Discipliana Vol-13-Nos-1-7-April-1953-December-1953
Disciples of Christ Historical Society Digital Commons @ Disciples History Discipliana - Archival Issues 1953 Discipliana Vol-13-Nos-1-7-April-1953-December-1953 Claude E. Spencer Disciples of Christ Historical Society, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.discipleshistory.org/discipliana Part of the Christian Denominations and Sects Commons, History of Religion Commons, Religious Thought, Theology and Philosophy of Religion Commons, and the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Spencer, Claude E., "Discipliana Vol-13-Nos-1-7-April-1953-December-1953" (1953). Discipliana - Archival Issues. 11. https://digitalcommons.discipleshistory.org/discipliana/11 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by Digital Commons @ Disciples History. It has been accepted for inclusion in Discipliana - Archival Issues by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons @ Disciples History. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Published quarterly by the Disciples of Christ Historical Society, Nashville, Tennessee VOL. 13 APRIL, 1953 NO. STATE CONVENTIONS ENDORSE DCHS Society Maintains Exhibits -------------FAMILY FOUNDATION at Spring Meetings TAKES Resolutions endorsing the program of the CONTRIBUTING MEMBERSHIP Disciples of Christ Histori~al ~ociety a~ter The Disciples of Christ Historical Society one year of full-time operation 10 NashvIlle reports the receipts of a ~500 contribu~ing have been adopted by nine (9~ state co~v~n- membership from the Irw1O-Sweeney-Ml11er tions of Disciples of Chnst (Chnstran Foundation of Columbus, Indiana. The Churches). The J:.esolutions called attention Foundation represents the interests of Mr. to the work of the Society in collecting and and Mrs. Irwin Miller, Mrs. -
Download Complete Issue
THE JOURNAL of the UNITED REFORMED CHURCH HISTORY SOCIETY incorporating the Congregational Historical Society, founded in 1899, and the Presbyterian Historical Society of England, founded in 1913 EDITORS: Dr. CLYDE BINFIELD, M.A. and the Revd. Dr. S.H. MAYOR Volume 3,No.6 May 1985 CONTENTS Robert Buick Knox, an Appreciation by Stephen Mayor .................... 191 The Essex Classes (1648) by Geoffrey F. Nuttall .................. 194 'Catch a Scotchman becoming an Englishman!' Nationalism, theology and ecumenism in the Presbyterian Church in England 1845-1876 by David Cornick . 202 The Irish Background to Thomas Campbell's Declaration and Address by David M. Thompson ................. 215 High Church Presbyterianism in Scotland and England by Douglas M. Murray . 225 In Search of Mrs. A.: A Transpennine Quest by Qyde Bin field . 234 'One Eucharistic Fellowship' by Martin Cressey . 251 A bibliography of the writings of Robert Buick Knox .................. 261 Notes on contributors .................................... 264 ROBERT BUICK KNOX One's mind goes back to a party of visitors to Westminster College listening to a lecture by the Professor of Church History on the Presbyterian worthies displayed around the walls of the dining hall. Often the account seemed to end with the lapidary phrase: 'A very remarkable man'. Sometimes it was not apparent in what the remarkableness consisted. There were those whose life's work was enshrined in published works, but others whose magic was now traceable only through the tributes paid by their contemporaries. Many will bid farewell to Buick Knox on his retirement with the con viction that they are seeing the departure of a very remarkable man. -
A Review of a Life of Alexander Campbell by Douglas A. Foster
Journal of Discipliana Volume 74 Issue 1 Journal of Discipliana Volume 74 Article 4 2021 A Review of A Life of Alexander Campbell by Douglas A. Foster Thomas H. Olbricht [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.discipleshistory.org/journalofdiscipliana Part of the Christian Denominations and Sects Commons, History of Christianity Commons, and the Religious Thought, Theology and Philosophy of Religion Commons Recommended Citation Olbricht, Thomas H. (2021) "A Review of A Life of Alexander Campbell by Douglas A. Foster," Journal of Discipliana: Vol. 74 : Iss. 1 , Article 4. Available at: https://digitalcommons.discipleshistory.org/journalofdiscipliana/vol74/iss1/4 This Book Review is brought to you for free and open access by Digital Commons @ Disciples History. It has been accepted for inclusion in Journal of Discipliana by an authorized editor of Digital Commons @ Disciples History. For more information, please contact [email protected]. A Review of A Life of Alexander Campbell by Douglas A. Foster Cover Page Footnote Olbricht passed away in August 2020. This review is one of his last writing efforts. For James Thompson’s tribute that focuses on Olbricht’s academic career, see Restoration Quarterly 62.4 (Fourth Quarter, 2020) 193, 194. This book review is available in Journal of Discipliana: https://digitalcommons.discipleshistory.org/ journalofdiscipliana/vol74/iss1/4 Olbricht: A Review of A Life of Alexander Campbell by Douglas A. Foster Douglas A. Foster, A Life of Alexander Campbell (Grand Rapids: William B. Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2020), xviii + 350 pp., $29.99. Paperback. Reviewed by Thomas H. Olbricht. Douglas Foster by training and experience is eminently qualified to write this extraordinary biography on the historically prominent Alexander Campbell (1788- 1866). -
The Word and Work
"Holding fast the Faithful Word..." The Word and Work "Holding forth the Word of Life." APRIL, 1993 HE RULES LIFE’S WINDS AND WAVES Be still, my soul: thy God doth undertake T o guide the future as He has the past, Thy hope, thy confidence let nothing shake A ll now mysterious shall be bright at last Be still, my soul: the waves and winds still know His voice who ruled them while He dwelt below --Katharine von Schlegel; translated by Jane Borthwick; may be sung to "Finlandia." The Church Must Overcome Future Hurdles Howard W . Norton The challenges faced by the church in this decade are as stagger ing as those being faced by society at large. Here are some o f the prin cipal challenges the church faces in the 1990s. [We include only 3 o f his 10 points --AVW ] The church must deal with the growing influence o f the baby boom er generation (people bom between 1946 and 1964). It appears to this observer that many o f the problems now existing in Churches o f Christ center in a power struggle between the older generation and this younger group. Unless we open a meaningful dialogue between the older and younger generations, we can anticipate several decades o f turmoil in the church. Then, besides a generation gap, the church faces a cultural gap. W hile many o f the older members come from rural and conserv ative backgrounds, younger people in the church often have little contact with rural America and are instead urban and open to change. -
Notes on Thomas Campbell's Declaration and Address Jay Smith
Restoration Quarterly Volume 5 | Number 3 Article 1 7-1-1961 Notes on Thomas Campbell's Declaration and Address Jay Smith Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.acu.edu/restorationquarterly Part of the Biblical Studies Commons, Christian Denominations and Sects Commons, Christianity Commons, Comparative Methodologies and Theories Commons, History of Christianity Commons, Liturgy and Worship Commons, Missions and World Christianity Commons, Practical Theology Commons, and the Religious Thought, Theology and Philosophy of Religion Commons Recommended Citation Smith, Jay (1961) "Notes on Thomas Campbell's Declaration and Address," Restoration Quarterly: Vol. 5 : No. 3 , Article 1. Available at: https://digitalcommons.acu.edu/restorationquarterly/vol5/iss3/1 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by Digital Commons @ ACU. It has been accepted for inclusion in Restoration Quarterly by an authorized editor of Digital Commons @ ACU. RESTORATION QUARTERLY CONTENTS Not es on Thomas Campb ell's Declaration and Adress-Jay Smith ................................................................ 113 Through the Eye of the Needle: Simplicity or Singleness?-Ab r aham J. Malherbe ............................................ 119 Ordination in the Ancient Church (IV) -Everett Ferguson ......................................................................... 130 Eschatolo gy in Luke-Act s- Roy Bowen Wa r d ................................ 147 Ex egetical Notes-Th e Preposition Eis After the Verbs Pisteuo and Bapt izo-J.