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DISCIPLES HISTORY
The Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)
is a Protestant denomination of nearly 800,000 members in the United States
and Canada. It's one of the largest faith groups founded on American soil.
Some key persons and dates in the church's
development:
Presbyterian
minister Barton W. Stone was born in Port Tobacco, Maryland, December 24,
1772. He died in Hannibal Missouri, November 9, 1844. Stone
was educated as a school teacher and entered the ministry through
the Presbyterian Church. He served a church in Cane Ridge Kentucky, and
after hosting the historic Cane Ridge Revival of 1801, (also see
pages on the Cane
Ridge Meeting House and Shrine) he and several others formed the
Springfield
Presbytery denouncing all human creeds and appealing to the Bible as
the only rule of faith and practice.
They soon dissolved the Springfield Presbytery,
and published the Last
Will and Testament of the Springfield Presbytery, one of the documents
the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) considers key in its development.
They dissolved their denominational ties to enter into unity with "the
body of Christ at large." They called themselves, simply, "Christians."
Thomas
Campbell was born in County Down, Ireland, February 1, 1763. He died in
Bethany, Virginia (now West Virginia), January 4, 1854. He came to America
from Scotland in 1807. He was chastised by Pennsylvania church authorities
for refusing to use Presbyterian creeds as terms of communion. In 1808
he and others founded the Christian Association of Washington, Pennsylvania.
That group adopted the motto, well-known by Disciples, "Where the scriptures
speak, we speak; where the Scriptures are silent, we are silent."
Campbell and others were called "Reformers,"
for their desire to restore the Church's first century roots. This way
of life came to be known as the "Restoration Movement."
Near Washington, Pennsylvania, Campbell
and his son, Alexander, and the Christian Association established the Brush
Run Church, which, in 1815, became part of a nearby Baptist Association.
Reformers and the Baptists differed on
key issues. By 1830, the Reformers cut their last ties with
the Baptist Association and became known as "Disciples."
Thomas Campbell's passion for Christian
unity is summed up in his proclamation that : "The church
of Christ upon earth is essentially, intentionally, and constitutionally
one." This statement is the first and key proposition of Thomas Campbell's
Declaration
and Address, a work called by some the "Magna Charta" of the movement
that preceded the denomination known as the Christian Church (Disciples
of Christ).
Alexander
Campbell was born September 12, 1788 in the County of Antrim, Ireland.
He was raised as a Presbyterian. He attended the University of Glasgow,
Scotland.
In 1809, Alexander arrived in America from
Scotland, and joined his father, Thomas, in western Pennsylvania.
He carefully read and fully endorsed the principles of Thomas' Declaration
and Address. Biographer Nathaniel Haynes says that Thomas and
Alexander Campbell were "one in their aims, spirit and work."
The younger Campbell
was a prolific writer. In 1823, he founded the periodical
The
Christian Baptist. After the Reformers dissolved ties with the
Baptists, Campbell founded a new publication called The Millennial Harbinger.
He was a talented debater, and in 1829 drew attention to the Restoration
Movement in a widely known debate with social reformer Robert Owen. In
1837, he engaged the Roman Catholic John B. Purcell, archbishop of Cincinnati,
in a widely publicized eight day debate on the traditions and beliefs of
the Catholic Church.
His public speaking skills, writing, and
articulation of the place of reason (but not pure rationalism) in Christian
faith propelled him into the leadership of the "Disciples of Christ."
A dedicated scholar and educator, Alexander
Campbell founded Bethany
College, Bethany, Virginia (now West Virginia) in 1840 and served as
the school's first president. His life was chronicled in the award-winning
feature film, "Wrestling
With God".
1832
The "Christians" and the "Disciples of
Christ" agreed on basic beliefs and aims and united with a formal handshake
in Lexington, Kentucky, and created a new Christian movement on the American
frontier.
1832-1968
The "Christians" and the "Disciples of
Christ" functioned and grew as a "movement," often referred to as the "Stone-Campbell
movement." During this period, Disciples often described the relationship
of the Christians and the Disciples of Christ as a "brotherhood." In 1960,
the Commission on Brotherhood Restructure started the task of designing
a new form of organization. Throughout the 20th century, American Asian,
Hispanic and African American Disciples congregations multiplied.
1968
A representative assembly meeting in Kansas
City overwhelmingly approved the Provisional Design for the Christian
Church (Disciples of Christ). Church historian D. Duane Cummins writes:
"Approval of the Provisional Design marked the passage of the Disciples
into denominational maturity. Officially named the Christian Church (Disciples
of Christ), they became a church."
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