Abilene Christian University's Agenda to
Denominationalize the Lord's Church
In December, 1999, I realized that the church that I had
been attending was a denomination. Although I thought
I had been attending a congregation of the church of
Christ, I know now that I had instead been attending a
congregation of the Church of Christ – with a capital “C”
in Church. The preachers used denominational language
and never indicated in any way that “our church” (as they
called it) is in any way distinctive. The Great
Commission, we were told, applies only to the
“unchurched.” The “churched” (no matter how or where
they are “churched”) are in no danger. The Lord’s
church, we were told, is just “our movement” – a “movement”
that started in the 1800’s. Like the Baptists and the
Methodists, we are just another man-made organization of
recent origin. I have since left that denomination,
and I am now attending a congregation of the Lord’s church
– a church that is not man-made and that is not of recent
origin.
How did this happen to the Lord’s church? How did
once strong and faithful congregations reach a point where
they are now indistinguishable from denominations?
One could place all of the blame on weak leaders and
apathetic members – and those are certainly big parts of
the problem. But I have to come believe that there is
another perhaps even bigger part of the problem – we have a
Judas among us. In what in hindsight can only be called a
departure from the New Testament pattern for the church,
Abilene Christian University was set up by members of the
church to educate our children based on Christian
principles and produce faithful Gospel preachers.
That man-made creation has now turned on its makers.
Our children are being taught error, and our preachers are
proclaiming error. ACU has an agenda to remake the
church, and it is doing all that it can to carry out that
agenda.
These are strong charges, but I do not make them without
evidence. Indeed, the evidence is overwhelming.
The following sections contain actual quotations by ACU
professors in which they carefully detail their view of the
church and their plans for its future. Remember as
you read these quotations – it is to these men that the
church is entrusting its children. It is from the
classrooms of these men that we are getting our
preachers.
A. Leonard Allen
Leonard Allen is an Associate Professor in the College
of Biblical Studies at ACU. He has authored or
coauthored a number of books on the Restoration. One
of those books is entitled The Cruciform Church: Becoming a
Cross-Shaped People in a Secular World (2nd ed., 1990, ACU
Press). As the following passages from that book
show, Professor Allen believes that the church of Christ is
a denomination and that it is of a very recent
origin.
1. On page ix, Allen writes: “I chose
the word [cruciform] in hope that this image might become
the dominant image by which Churches of Christ speak of
identifying the New Testament church.” Note how he
distinguishes the “Church of Christ” from the church found
in the New Testament.
2. Note the use of the term “movement”
in the following excerpts from page 5: “This attitude
toward the past characterized the early movement. …
Propelled by such an attitude toward the past, restoration
movements like ours easily develop a kind of
historylessness. By this term I refer to the
perception that, while other churches or movements are
snared in the web of profane history, one’s own church or
movement stands above mere human history. One’s own
movement partakes only of the perfections of the first age,
the sacred time of pure beginnings. … This sense of
historylessness works in powerful and subtle ways. In
the process it creates exhilarating (and damaging)
illusions. Among Churches of Christ it often has
meant that we simply discounted eighteen centuries of
Christianity as, at worst, a diseased tumor or, at best, an
instructive failure. And not surprisingly, the same
attitude has led many people among Churches of Christ to
dismiss their own history as itself irrelevant. For
after all, if our origins come entirely from the Bible and
our churches are New Testament churches, then we really
need not bother ourselves with the recent past.”
Since Professor Allen is obsessed with our recent past, it
follows as a logical consequence of his own statement that
he does not believe our origins come entirely from the
Bible or that our churches are New Testament churches.
3. On page 7, he writes: “In the
process we sought not so much to understand earlier
Christian movements in all their complexity. We
sought rather to decry them or on occasion simply to
ridicule them. For they obviously ran in the stream
of profane history, swept along by little more than human
willfulness and ignorance. But our movement was
different. It did not run in any wide and turgid
stream. Rather, it gushed directly out of the spring,
forming only a crystal clear pool around it. … It was an
exciting story, almost the stuff of epics and
legends.” If “our movement” means the New Testament
church, then what are these earlier Christian movements
that he is talking about here?
4. On pages 11-12 we read: “As we have
seen, a critical attitude toward the past means that we
take Christian traditions other than our own with great
seriousness. … When we view tradition A (our own)
alongside traditions B, C, and D, we will begin to see
dimensions of tradition A that we probably never saw
before. … The effect of such engagement might best be
described as a theological loss of innocence. … For if we
naively assume that we are fresh and pure, that we stand
above worldly compromise and spiritual failure, that we
espouse only the Truth and nothing but the Truth, then we
lose the capacity for self-criticism, for repentance, and
thus for spiritual growth.” One wonders how the first
century church was able to experience spiritual growth
since they also naively assumed they were fresh and pure
and that they espoused the Truth and nothing but the
Truth.
5. One page 19: “First, there is
the simple and observable fact that, throughout Churches of
Christ, many people are questioning and sometimes rejecting
the traditional doctrinal system that for several
generations gave Churches of Christ their distinctive
identity. Acts and the Epistles as architectural
‘blueprint,’ as a rigid ‘pattern,’ as a collection of case
law – these images and the interpretive method they support
are steadily declining.”
6. On page 23, Allen describes
Alexander Campbell as a “pioneer of our heritage.”
That places a rather late date on the origin of our
heritage. I suppose he would consider it naive to
trace our heritage back to the first day of Pentecost
following the Lord’s resurrection.
7. On pages 71-72, Allen similarly
dates “our movement”: “Our traditional ‘scientific’
way of reading Scripture, as we have seen, tended to level
Scripture into a body of doctrinal facts. These
facts, when inductively assembled into their proper order,
all carried about the same weight. As a result,
distinctions between majors and minors, between the main
plot and various subplots, were lost. [Major doctrines and
minor doctrines – now where have we heard that?] …
Throughout the history of our movement, as a result, we
have struggled endlessly with the problem of what is
essential and what is not essential. This struggle
began with Campbell himself.” Thus, our heritage and
our movement began in the 1800’s. If that is true,
then I suggest the Baptists have been right all along – we
really are just Campbellites.
8. On page 72, we read more about the
distinction between major doctrines and minor
doctrines: “The problem of essentials has plagued
Churches of Christ ever since, leading frequently to rancor
and fragmentation. Behind this problem lies the
Baconian inductive method where one pulls down the
concordance, gathers the biblical ‘facts,’ then constructs
a doctrinal platform with each plank of virtually equal
weight. With this way of reading the Bible, we have
simply not been able to follow the biblical plot and thus
to let what is theologically central in Scripture function
centrally for us.”
9. On page 125, Allen dates the origin
of this denomination he has been referring to as the Church
of Christ: “For well over 150 years Churches of Christ have
been calling for restoration of New Testament
Christianity. It has been a powerful ideal. It
has shaped our identity as a movement.” The Lord’s
church (the church of Christ) was established in the first
century, and that is the church (and the only church) of
which I am a member. According to Allen, however, I
am not a member of that church or just of that
church. Instead, I am a member of some human
organization (“our movement”) that calls itself a church
and that began about 150 years ago. On page 174,
Allen further distinguishes the “church of Jesus Christ”
from the “Church of Christ.”
In 1991, Allen coauthored a book entitled The Worldy
Church: A Call for Biblical Renewal (2nd ed., 1991, ACU
Press). His coauthors were Richard Hughes (formerly
with ACU, now a professor at Pepperdine) and Michael Weed
(professor of Christian ethics at the Institute for
Christian Studies in Austin, Texas). The following
excerpts are from The Worldly Church:
1. Page 32: “By sectarian, we
mean the belief that the church has been fully restored by
our forebearers, that the American Churches of Christ are
fully identical to the primitive churches in every
significant respect, and that there is now nothing left to
do but defend the gains of the past. Surely this
spirit has characterized many in our movement. The
naivete of this position makes its proponents especially
susceptible to secularization. The sectarian mind,
after all, is unaware of the enormous extent to which
culture moulds lives, shapes faith, and even helps
determine the concerns of the church in every age.”
2. Page 33: “[The sectarian
Christian] assumes that the church in which he lives has
been fully restored, when in fact it may reflect his own
cultural interests to a far greater extent than he is
aware. The American church historian, Henry Bowden,
recently pointed to this very tendency in many restoration
movements. … Bowden’s judgment clearly applies to
restorationists who claim they have completed their course
and finished their search. For the search is never
fully done. Paul, himself, was quick to admit that he
had not arrived. ‘I press on,’ he wrote, ‘toward the
goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ
Jesus’ (Phil. 3:12-14). Restoration must be conceived as
ongoing process, not as final achievement.” Pop Quiz:
What was Paul really talking about in that passage?
Have the authors lifted that quote out of context as a
“proof text” to support their own “doctrinal plank”? That
is, have they done exactly what they accuse us of
doing?
3. On page 34 we discover that
the Enlightenment was the “seedbed of our movement” and
that “our movement was born of the same intellectual
currents that launched the process of secularization in the
eighteenth century.”
In 1988, Allen coauthored a book with Hughes entitled
Discovering Our Roots: The Ancestry of the Churches of
Christ (1988, ACU Press). Needless to say, the ancestry
they traced did not involve the book of Acts. The
following excerpts are from Discovering Our Roots:
1. On pages 6-7, the authors
outline what they see as the “profane roots” of the
“Churches of Christ.” These profane roots include “a
scholarly movement called Christian Humanism,” the “Puritan
movement,” the “Baptist movement” (which “helped provide
the seedbed of our own movement”), the Enlightenment, and
the restoration movement. Thus, “our movement” is
merely the product of many other recent
movements.
2. Chapter Nine (beginning on
page 101) is entitled “The Birth of Our Movement.”
Not ones to keep their readers in suspense, the authors
make it clear from the very first sentence in that chapter
that the “birth” of “our movement” occurred in the “early
nineteenth century.”
3. Page 155: “What are some of
our traditions? An important one, clearly, is the way we
conceive the task of restoration itself. As we have
seen, Churches of Christ stand in a stream of thought – a
tradition – focusing on the restoration of churchly forms
and structures. To put it more strongly, we have
often proceeded on the assumption that if one did not focus
attention on biblical form and structure then one was
actually neither a restorationist nor biblical at all, and
perhaps not even Christian.”
B. Carroll D. Osburn
According to the back cover of his book, Carroll D.
Osburn is “an internationally respected New Testament
textual scholar” who is the Carmichael Distinguished
Professor of New Testament at ACU. In 1993, he
published a book entitled The Peaceable Kingdom: Essays
Favoring Non-Sectarian Christianity (1993, Restoration
Perspectives). Professor Osburn is very open in that
book about ACU’s agenda for changing the church.
1. On pages 14-15 we read: “With
so many questions flying around and so much uncertainty
being expressed in various quarters, what an opportunity
for the various faculties of our Christian colleges and
universities to help shape the future! These are the best
of times to be involved in Christian education! If we are
to have a truly significant impact upon the national and
international scene, faculties of religion must play
leading prophetic roles in channeling and facilitating
whatever changes loom ahead. An outdated curriculum
from a sectarian past that placed emphasis upon
transmitting doctrinaire positions will not suffice if we
would engage convincingly the larger arenas of current
religious thought. … Our graduate programs must train
students how to think, to investigate the biblical text
afresh, to feel the pulse of the world around them, to
sense where things ought to go, and provide the kind of
experiences that will enable servants to go out into
churches and communities and provide direction.” As
we know, ACU has not been very successful in teaching their
graduates “how to think” – but they have been quite
successful in sending those graduates forth to “provide
direction” for the church.
2. In the previous excerpt, Osburn
mentioned our “sectarian past.” On page 5, he tells
us what he means by that term: “Sermons on the
‘identifying marks of the church’ were given in terms of
selected issues. Books were written on ‘What is the
Church of Christ?’ with chapters concentrating on those
issues. Although the issues differed from place to place,
enough consensus existed to provide thrust for a movement
along those lines in the thinking of many during our recent
past. Sectarian disdain for unity dominated.”
Thus, we are being “sectarian” when we attempt to
distinguish the Lord’s church from the denominational
morass that surrounds it. This attempt to distinguish
the true church is what the ACU graduates are being sent
out to change – and unfortunately they have been quite
successful.
3. Has the New Testament church been
restored or are we still trying to restore it? If the
New Testament church has not been restored, then we are not
members of the New Testament church. If we are
members of the church that Jesus promised to build and if
our congregation operates according to the pattern that
Christ left for his church to follow, then the New
Testament church has been restored. Instead, if the
church has not been restored, then it follows that we must
be members of a denominational movement, which is of
recent, human origin. Osburn says the following on
page 14 with regard to this issue: “There is no point in
time at which one can say that the church was restored and
that now all we have to do is preach it.” On page
137, he discusses the need to develop a “fresh definition
of church.” What’s wrong with the Bible’s
definition? If the New Testament church has not been
restored, then what is the church of Christ? If we
are not the church that we read about in the New Testament,
then how is “our movement” different from any other church
on the block? Perhaps this explains why our focus
across the brotherhood is rapidly shifting from “saving the
lost” to “reaching the unchurched.”
4. On page 11 we read: “We must sort
out very carefully what is biblical and what is cultural
about our religion, and not bind the latter. Divorce
and remarriage and women in the church remain unresolved,
but such must remain mere issues and not be allowed to
shape our emerging identity. Instrumental music will
remain an issue, but it certainly is not deserving of
center stage, and never was. There is something grossly
distorted about a religion which depends for its
cohesiveness upon paltry issues that kill the
spirit.”
5. On pages 90-91 we are treated to
his views on Christian fellowship: “There should be
room in the Christian fellowship for those who differ on
whether more than one cup in communion is acceptable,
whether the communion bread is to be pinched or snapped,
whether one can eat in the church building, whether funds
can be used from the church treasury to support orphan
homes, whether the Lord’s Supper must be taken every
Sunday, or whether instrumental music is used in
worship. There should be room in the Christian
fellowship for those who believe that Christ is the son of
God, but who differ on eschatological theories such as
premillennialism, ecclesiological matters such as
congregational organization, or soteriological matters such
as whether baptism is ‘for’ or ‘because of’ the remission
of sins.” Thus, Osborn lumps the necessity of baptism
and the “one cup” issue together in that category of “minor
doctrines” that should not interfere with our quest for
unity. How can we call someone a “brother” or
“sister” in Christ when that person has not become our
brother or sister through a new birth? If baptism
occurs after remission of sins, then why does anyone need
to be baptized at all? Why does a person who is
spiritually alive need to be buried with Christ in
baptism? According to Osborn, there is “room in the
Christian fellowship” for those who differ on this
issue.
C. Royce Money
Dr. Royce Money is the President of ACU. In
connection with the 75th Annual ACU Lectureship in 1993,
Dr. Money delivered an address entitled “On this Rock I
will Build My Church.” A transcript of the address
was widely published by ACU, and was even included as a
paid advertising insert in the May, 1993, edition of the
Christian Chronicle. The following excerpts are from ACU’s
published transcript of Money’s address:
1. “Often I have read this passage
[Matthew 16:13-18], and every time I find myself wondering
what Jesus had in mind when he said ‘church.’ When
Jesus promised to build his church on the confession of his
Lordship, I wonder what he envisioned for his people, when
he referred to ‘my church.’”
2. “We must decide what is the driving
force behind the restoration of New Testament
Christianity. Is the process of restoring New
Testament Christianity a relentless and continual search
for God’s truth? A process? Or is it accomplished
fact? Have we restored everything in the New
Testament church, or do we need to continue to search God’s
Word for a better glimpse of the truth?” Of course,
one possibility he omits is that we have restored the New
Testament church and that we (like the first century
Christians) must nevertheless continue to search God’s
word. That is, just because we continue to search
God’s word does not mean that the church hasn’t been
restored. Again, if the church has not been restored
– that is, if restoration of the church is not an
accomplished fact – then we are members of a
denomination. How can the church of Christ be the New
Testament church if restoration is not an accomplished
fact?
3. Money continues: “If you believe
that the restoration of New Testament Christianity is an
accomplished fact – that we have the truth, the whole truth
and nothing but the truth, the last thing you want is
people going around trying to think and examine and search
and question.” Thus, according to the president of
ACU, not only has the restoration of New Testament
Christianity not occurred, but those of us who think it has
occurred are doing our best to stifle all of the great
minds at ACU who are trying to lead us out of the darkness
by thinking, examining, searching, and questioning.
Of course, in reality, it is we who constantly tell people
to study their Bibles and test what they hear. The
ACU position is that people are incapable of understanding
the Bible without expert help. These ACU professors
have all the answers about the church, and they (as Money’s
condescending statement shows) are here to remedy our
ignorance. If these ACU church historians are really
so interested in studying and examining the Bible, then why
do their writings about the church spend so much time
quoting Restoration leaders and so little time quoting the
Scriptures?
D. Douglas A. Foster
Douglas A. Foster is an Assistant Professor of church
history and an Assistant Director of the Center for
Restoration Studies at ACU. In 1994, he published a
book entitled Will the Cycle be Unbroken: Churches of
Christ Face the 21st Century (1994, ACU Press). The
premise of his book is that there are cycles through which
“all religious movements tend to move” [page v] and the
“Churches of Christ” are moving through these same
cycles.
1. The source he used for this idea is
a book by Richard Niebuhr entitled The Social Sources of
Denominationalism. On page v, he describes this cycle
as follows: “A period of initial fervor and exclusivity is
followed by a stable consolidating phase. Finally,
the body settles into a respectable position in the larger
religious world, but without its early vibrancy and
success. The final stage involves decline that could
ultimately lead to the body’s death. Are Churches of Christ
locked into this seemingly inescapable pattern?”
2. On page vii in footnote 1, he
writes: “I know that some are uncomfortable with terms like
‘our heritage,’ ‘Restoration Movement churches,’ or even
‘Churches of Christ.’ That fear is legitimate – we
cannot equate our immediate heritage or anyone else’s with
the universal church of God in all times and places.”
3. On page xi we read: “Nostalgia has
definitely set in among some of us. Many long for
something that used to be, for better days, now seen as
slipping away, when ‘we stood for something.’ What is that
‘something’? Is it the proud confidence that we were
‘right’ and the ‘only ones going to heaven?’ Is it
our reputation for knowing the Scriptures better than any
other religious group? Is it the certainty that
‘denominationalism’ was wrong and that we were not a
denomination? Is it the conviction that we had
restored the church of the New Testament?”
4. As for “our movement” and its
origin, on pages 8-9 he discusses the “vibrant new
movement” that was begun by Barton W. Stone and Thomas and
Alexander Campbell. “With their own leaders and
slogans and a new zeal for standing for what they saw as
the true basis of the original [Stone/Campbell] movement,
the Churches of Christ took shape in the late 1800’s and
early 1900’s.”
God's Plan of Salvation
You must hear the gospel and then understand and recognize that you are lost without Jesus Christ no matter who you are and no matter what your background is. The Bible tells us that “all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God.” (Romans 3:23) Before you can be saved, you must understand that you are lost and that the only way to be saved is by obedience to the gospel of Jesus Christ. (2 Thessalonians 1:8) Jesus said, “I am the way, the truth, and the life: no man cometh unto the Father, but by me.” (John 14:6) “Neither is there salvation in any other: for there is none other name under heaven given among men, whereby we must be saved.” (Acts 4:12)
You must believe and have faith in God because “without faith it is impossible to please him: for he that cometh to God must believe that he is, and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him.” (Hebrews 11:6) But neither belief alone nor faith alone is sufficient to save. (James 2:19; James 2:24; Matthew 7:21)
You must repent of your sins. (Acts 3:19) But repentance alone is not enough. The so-called “Sinner’s Prayer” that you hear so much about today from denominational preachers does not appear anywhere in the Bible. Indeed, nowhere in the Bible was anyone ever told to pray the “Sinner’s Prayer” to be saved. By contrast, there are numerous examples showing that prayer alone does not save. Saul, for example, prayed following his meeting with Jesus on the road to Damascus (Acts 9:11), but Saul was still in his sins when Ananias met him three days later (Acts 22:16). Cornelius prayed to God always, and yet there was something else he needed to do to be saved (Acts 10:2, 6, 33, 48). If prayer alone did not save Saul or Cornelius, prayer alone will not save you. You must obey the gospel.
(2 Thess. 1:8)
You must confess that Jesus Christ is the Son of God. (Romans 10:9-10) Note that you do NOT need to make Jesus “Lord of your life.” Why? Because Jesus is already Lord of your life whether or not you have obeyed his gospel. Indeed, we obey him, not to make him Lord, but because he already is Lord. (Acts 2:36) Also, no one in the Bible was ever told to just “accept Jesus as your personal savior.” We must confess that Jesus is the Son of God, but, as with faith and repentance, confession alone does not save. (Matthew 7:21)
Having believed, repented, and confessed that Jesus is the Son of God, you must be baptized for the remission of your sins. (Acts 2:38) It is at this point (and not before) that your sins are forgiven. (Acts 22:16) It is impossible to proclaim the gospel of Jesus Christ without teaching the absolute necessity of baptism for salvation. (Acts 8:35-36; Romans 6:3-4; 1 Peter 3:21) Anyone who responds to the question in Acts 2:37 with an answer that contradicts Acts 2:38 is NOT proclaiming the gospel of Jesus Christ!
Once you are saved, God adds you to his church and writes your name in the Book of Life. (Acts 2:47; Philippians 4:3) To continue in God’s grace, you must continue to serve God faithfully until death. Unless they remain faithful, those who are in God’s grace will fall from grace, and those whose names are in the Book of Life will have their names blotted out of that book. (Revelation 2:10; Revelation 3:5; Galatians 5:4)