A Perspective on the
Restoration Movement
The church of God is complex. These days we use the term
“It’s complicated!”. Throughout church history the church has gone through many
cycles. One such cycle was the Restoration Movement. According to James North
(2) “The church has constantly gone through cycles of revival in order to cast
off some of the accretions that have built up around the structure of the
church”. Throughout the process, we find people leading the charge with a
variety of opinions, many rallying the cause under a variety of titles such as
Liberals, Conservatives, Fundamentalist, Disciples of Christ and even,
“Christians”.
“Probably the most significant of the reviving and cleansing
movements was the Protestant Reformation” (North, 2). The Movement took place
in the Americas around the year 1800 and its goal “was to restore the church to
the ideals of the New Testament” (ibid, 6). These ideals were built upon the
twin pillars of (1) The Unity of all Believers, and (2) The use of the Bible as
the only authority for the Faith and Practice of Christians. This platform was
very attractive, considering the state of the church at the onset of the
movement. There were sectarian divisions, splits over doctrine, objections to
the use of musical instruments, creeds and church polity. One thing was sure,
the Reformation Movement was very appealing in that it was a breath of fresh
air for the church in general and the community of unbelievers who had to
endure constant scandals, fights and splits over these issues. “The existence
and competition of rival denominations was a stumbling block to the smooth
progress of the Gospel. Therefore, removing the stumbling block was to be the
goal of the Movement” (ibid, 7).
The strategy was brilliant.
In comes the Restoration Movement – set to restore the
original standard, which is the New Testament church. For one thing, the
fathers of the movement believed that it was God’s will that “They may all be
one” (John 17:21). To achieve this, there had to be a rallying cry, and that
cry was the twin pillars of unity and biblical orthodoxy mentioned earlier. The
Movement “put much emphasis on the restoration of the Apostolic Church and the
idealization of early Christianity” (ibid, 9). Hence the adoption of strategies
geared to achieve these goals.
The Stone Movement set as its goal, actions to achieve
“Christian union upon the basis of Scriptures” (ibid, 33). Stone was adamant
that the way to go was not creeds as a test of fellowship, but rather with three basic
ideas (1) Christian unity, (2) Exclusive Biblical Authority, (3) Local
congregational Autonomy (Ibid, 55).
Scriptures. He thought creeds conflicted with the Bible. As he grew in his
faith, Stone became “committed to the Bible alone as his authority, and his
sourcebook for faith and doctrine” (ibid, 45). This became a standard for the
movement he led. As time went by, articles were developed that made their
philosophies clear
It was decided that if the churches were to be true to the
original mandate of the New Testament church, then “they must abandon human
inventions, and use the Bible alone as their guide” (ibid, 56).
This leads me to the Campbell movement. The strategy was
similar. Both Thomas and Alexander Campbell shared similar convictions – The
opinions of creeds and confessions were not taught in the Bible (unauthorized
by Scripture), and therefore “injurious to the interests of religion” (ibid,
107). This set the stage for a strategy similar to Stone’s, separating from
denominations. They declared “No teaching or practice could be made essential
unless it was expressly revealed” (ibid, 108). A little later, the Campbells
would adhere to the slogan ““Where the Scripture speaks, we speak. Where the
Scripture is silent, we are silent” (Stone, 46). This would mean operating only
on a “Thus saith the Lord” strategy.
The strategy was successful, as union of the church at large
was achieved. With the assistance of men like Walter Scott, the church realized
significant growth. On this platform, the Stone’s realized union through
revivals across the country, and the merger of many churches. The Campbells
realized the goal of unity and maturity by taking advantage of the power of
print media and debates, with Alexander Campbell in particular becoming the
voice of the Restoration Movement. There was also a clear understanding of the
principles of the Movement through the writing of documents such as The Sermon
on the Law, The Declaration and Address, The Last Will and Testament and The
Springfield Apology. With the church becoming more organized and an increased
emphasis on doctrinal purity, the focus shifted to strategies to accomplish the
Great Commission mandate to reach the world. We see the founding of Christians
schools, and more Christian Newspapers/Magazines. A unified church was on the
move, using the power of the pen to “expose, correct and set in order” (ibid,
132).
When Walter Scott arrived on the scene, his background in
education (I’ll say a spiritual gift to teach), took organizing evangelism to
yet another level. Scott became a contributor to a set of writings called
“Divinely Authorized Plan of Preaching The Christian Religion” (Lecture,
Koffarnus). Walter Scott, made things a bit more simple by coining the approach
“The Plan of Salvation”, using the “Five Finger Exercise”. He “discovered the
simple truth of the scriptures that was void of the “mystical experience” (Koffarnus,
Lecture). Through this approach, modeled
by countless others, the church experienced explosive growth. Before long, both
the Stone movement and the Campbell movement united across the country,
beginning with a series of Unity Meetings in 1831. Hence the formations of the
Disciples of Christ Churches and the Christian Churches. By the 1820’s “the
Stone Movement continued to expand, coming in contact with the Smith-Jones of the east” (growing to about
15,000 members), while the Campbell Movement increased by the thousands (but
not before taking more Baptists with them) (North, 155).
They united on the principles of the two pillars – unity and
biblical orthodoxy. Yet, it was not long before the union became challenged. It
seems that when we achieve peace we need something else to fight about. The
good news is that even though the movement shared their differences, the
passion for unity was enough to overcome their differences. Though, like a
snake in the grass, these differences lurked for the opportune time for
exposure.
By the 1830’s the Movement continued to see significant
growth. It was becoming a standard among the churches which united to seek to
be “governed by the word of God rather than the traditional articles of Faith”
(North, 189). A little later in the decade, we would see signs of a breaking
apart – Mormonism took its toll; so too the doctrine of reimmersion. Dr. John
Thomas played a key role here (1835). Another thorn in the Movement’s side was
the rise of “Opinionism”. Campbell had to use his
platform to encourage that
“opinions remain in the realm of speculation”, declaring “It is not the right
of any one citizen of Christ’s kingdom to propagate any opinion whatever,
either in the public assembly or in private” (ibid, 195). Campbell stressed
that “Teaching that went beyond the foundation of Biblical revelation was a
threat to the Christian Community” (ibid, 195). What we see happening later is
“the inclusiveness of unity and the exclusiveness of biblical authority
creating tensions within the Movement” (ibid, 198).
As the church continued to grow, the need for organization
saw a move towards avenues of outreach
which included “organizations developing beyond the level of the local
congregations” (ibid, 202). This problem conflicted with the early goal of
congregational autonomy. “The early church had a consistent and pervasive fear
of ecclesiastical structure”, but now the unified church saw the “endorsing of
new agencies as a crisis of conscience” (ibid, 205). People were becoming
concerned that leaders like Campbell were betraying the early principles.
Campbell had “evolved”, believing “we are to use any means to reform the world”
(ibid, 202). This hardline on adhering only to the “Thus saith” (where the
Bible speaks) by traditionalists was becoming an issue. The great struggle was dealing
with the silent portions of the Bible. Campbell “insisted that co-operation
among Christian churches in all affairs of the common salvation, is itself the
essence of the Christian institution” (ibid, 204). The return of “extra –
congregational organizations” (North, 204) was increasing becoming an issue.
Other factors to cause disunion:
ü
Attitudes toward the American Civil War
ü
Evangelical Alliances
ü
Missionary Societies
ü
Associations and Conventions
ü
Fulltime Salaried Ministers
ü
Innovations ( anything new became suspicious)
ü
Use of Instruments in church
ü
The Liberal Takeover
As the Movement developed, I believe that unity was sought
at the expense of biblical authority. The incursion of the liberals did not
help. In fact, the liberal divide may have been the nail in the coffin. “A
major milestone in the break up of the union was the events of 1889 called the
Sand Creek Address” (ibid, 250). It stated, “Nothing should be taught, received
or practiced, religiously, for which we could not produce a “Thus saith the
Lord” (ibid, 250). By 1895, there were countless disputes, legal battles over
church property, factions and divisions. In effect, the Movement broke down.
In summary, the goal of the Movement was to unite brethren
through the restoration of the Bible alone as the standard guide for faith and
practice, based on the twin pillars. However, over time “the rigid application
of biblical authority insisted by the faithful” (ibid, 252) did not resonate
with this new generation. “Both sides agreed on biblical authority; however,
they disagreed on application on areas of biblical silence which is the impact
of strict versus loose constructionism” (ibid, 252). I will agree with North,
that “our attitudes towards the authority of the Scriptures” influence the way
we live with each other (ibid, 252). The very pillars that united them at the
beginning, served as roadblocks that led to the breaking up of the Restoration
Movement.
References:
North, J. Union In Truth. United States of America: The
Standard Publishing Company (1994)
Koffarnus, R. Central Christian College of The Bible. Unit 4
Lectures. Retrieved from: https://cccb.instructure.com/courses/375/modules/items/26514
GoogleImages.
Written by Pastor Kevin A. Hall (03.04.18)
No comments:
Post a Comment