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AMERICAN RESTORATIONIST
ROOTS
The Church of Christ
Disciples of Christ began as an organized fellowship in America in the mid-1800s as a branch of the restoration movement. Restorationists
sought to restore the church to New Testament teachings and practices by following
the Bible as its rule and guide, dropping denominational contrivances such as creeds and
non-Biblical rituals. In North Carolina the
preaching of James O'Kelly, Barton Stone, Joseph
Thomas (the White Pilgrim), and Thomas Campbell delivered the message of Discipleship to the
Carolina coast and across to central North Carolina. Churches that came out of their evangelism were the
forerunners of Disciple congregations among African American believers.
THE AIM AND PLEA
In 1809, Thomas Campbell, a
Presbyterian minister, became displeased with the doctrines of both the Presbyterian and Baptist Church and decided that he
would oversee a new congregation at Bush Run, Pennsylvania. He organized this Church of Christ on
one principle, "Where the Scripture speaks, we speak; where the Scripture is silent, we are silent."
From that statement came our Aim and Plea.
Congregation: We, the Disciples of Christ, wishing to
be in complete accord and agreement with the doctrine of Christ, set forth the following
principles, which have been the focus of the Church for more than a century.
Minister: General aim of the Church.
Congregation: Restoration of the New Testament
teachings and practices.
Minister: Plea of the Church.
Congregation: No creed but Christ, no book but the
Bible; no name but the Divine.
Minister: Where the Bible speaks, we speak.
Congregation: Where the Bible is silent, we are
silent.
Minister: In essentials unity.
Congregation: In nonessentials, liberty; in all
things, charity.
The Aim and Plea of the Church of Christ is not a
statement that seeks to define God, Christ, or the Holy Spirit, for the Bible has adequately done this.
It is a statement that clarifies and reminds all Disciples who we are. This petition is scripturally
sound and should be studied and learned by all Disciples.
We, the Disciples of Christ, This statement identifies us by name. "So shall ye be
my Disciples" (John 15:8). Christ calls us His Disciples.
Wishing to be in complete accord This refers to the unity of the Church on the matters
of government as well as faith. The early Church was not divided. It was united in Christ
(Ephesians 4:4-6). Paul, in his letter to the Corinthians, condemned divisions in "the body of
Christ" (1 Corinthians 1:10).
And agreement with the doctrine of Christ, The Church agrees on the principles and precepts that
Christ left for all of His followers (Matthew 28:20, John 7:16).
Set forth the following principles which have been
the focus of the Church for more than a century. We understand that the Church has a history of
followers in between Apostolic times and the present day who lived and died to hold the light of Jesus (2
Thessalonians 2:15).
Restoration of the New Testament teachings and
practices. As the New Testament Church moved through the Middle
Ages, the Renaissance and into modern times, heresies were introduced by evil gain seekers
(1 Corinthians 11:19, 2 Peter 2:1).
The Church is first called to teach (Matthew 28:19)
so that it may give insight to the blind and liberty to the captives (Luke 4:18-21, Mark 16:20).
No creed but Christ;
Creed comes from the Greek root credo (to believe).
We do not accept human-inspired statements of belief regarding Christ. Christ is our only creed
(Matthew 17:5, John 11:27, Acts 16:31).
No book but the Bible; The Bible is the only rule of faith and direction
that God left for the Church to follow (Isaiah 8:16, Matthew 4:4, Hebrews 4:12).
No name but the divine. There is no other name by which one can be saved
other than Jesus. "For whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved" (Romans 10:13).
Jesus Christ is divine, so His name is a divine name. We are to hear Him and His commandments
(Matthew 17:5, Acts 4:12).
Where the Bible speaks, we speak. We are to rely on what the Bible says instead of
relying on what people's opinions are. The Church cannot shun any subject in the scripture because
others may think it is controversial (Proverbs 30:56, Matthew 5:37, 2 Timothy 3:16).
Where the Bible is silent, we are silent. For subjects that are not presented in the
scriptures, we use the scripture as a reference, but our applications never blur the messages of any text
(Deuteronomy 4:2, Revelation 22:8).
In essentials, unity;
In spiritual matters spoken of in the scriptures, the
Church strives to be on one accord without wavering. With one voice we speak the gospel and the
doctrine of Christ (Psalm 133:1-3, John 17:11, Acts 2:42-47, Ephesians 4:4-6, 1 Peter 3:8).
In nonessentials, liberty;For those things that are not Biblical priorities, we
exercise wisdom or our own judgment, with diligent care and concern to work out our own
salvation (Galatians 5:1-13; 1 Peter 2:16).
In all things, charity.All works must be done in love (John 3:16, 1
Corinthians 13, 1 John 4:8).
AFRICAN AMERICAN EVANGELISM
IN NORTH CAROLINA AND BEYOND
Before Emancipation, a
number of free African American Disciples convened to form churches. Uniontown Church of Christ, Disciples of Christ is
the oldest documented church organized and run by African Americans. After the Civil War, three
modes of evangelism worked to bring together the Church of Christ, Disciples of Christ:
(1) Free African Americans east of the Tar River
sought out free and freed Africans to begin churches;
(2) Freed slaves worked with Christian Church
Disciples west of the Tar River to start congregations;
(3) African Americans on both sides of the Tar River
evangelized the unchurched and African Americans from denominational churches to become
members of the Church of Christ, Disciples of Christ. The following table outlines key events in
the 19th- and 20th-century chronicles of the
Church.
RESTORATION COMES TO
NORTH CAROLINA
1790 James O' Kelly of the
newly formed Republican Methodists goes to N.C. to preach Discipleship.
1801 Cane Ridge revival begins Barton Stone's
ministry for Christian union. Part of America's Second
Great Awakening.
1813 Joseph Thomas begins his evangelistic ministry
as the White Pilgrim, visiting central N.C.
1833 Thomas Campbell visits Edenton, Pantego, and
Greenville, NC, for five months.
INDEPENDENT AFRICAN AMERICANS AND CHURCH
RE-IDENTIFICATION
1849-1850 Eastern North
Carolina
Reports of free African Americans in Uniontown (Free
Union); slaves registered as Disciples. In
Pantego Church of Christ and Pungo Chapel.
1854 Uniontown Church of Christ Disciples organized.
1870 African American Congregationalists, O'Kellyites,
and members of the Christian Connection
rename their four-year old communion the North
Carolina Colored Christian Conference.
1873 Disciple elders from the Martin County
Convention, including Elders Robert Esom Green, Alfred
Pettiford, and Joseph Whitley, are listed in the
Christian Annual report on the North Carolina
Colored Christian Conference.
1874 African American Disciple elders leave the North
Carolina Colored Christian Conference due to
differences in doctrine and church order.
1868 West of the Tar River
Annual Conference of Disciples of Christ in N.C.
votes to separate from black Disciples. Benevolent
elders such as Dr. John J. Harper and Pastor, J. R.
Winfield assist the new churches.
1869 African American Disciples submit funds to white
Disciples to have their minutes printed.
1872 Alexander C. Hart and Joseph Henry Foy (white
Disciples) sent by the Hookerton District to
preach to African American Baptists in the west and
to Stony Creek in October.
1872 First recorded meeting of African American
Disciples Assembly minutes west of the Tar River at
Stony Creek, in Lenoir County, organized by Elder
Alfred Lovick, Sr., Elder Demas Hargett, and Elder
Allen Chestnut.
1883 The Church Unites
In Oct., a letter sent by African American Disciples
from the east coast of North Carolina to those in
Bentonville (west of the Tar River) by Elder Robert
Esom Green, urging a merger between the African
American Disciples.
1886 Elder Robert E. Green of eastern N.C. goes west
to attend the Fifteenth Annual Conference of
the Goldsboro-Raleigh Disciples at Vine Swamp Church,
Lenoir County; Green was named Asst.
Moderator over the session.
The 1886 Minutes read: That we shall incorporate
ourselves to be known as the Eastern and Western
North Carolina Disciples of Christ, and that we petition the [state]
General Assembly of North
Carolina to be incorporated as such.
1887 October, first official meeting of east and west
Disciples of Christ (African American) at St.
Mary's Church, Lake Comfort, Hyde County.
1892 Elder Alfred Offie Pettiford, pastor of
Uniontown and Spring Green, dies, March 6.
1892 Western Assembly assembles at Bentonville,
Johnston County, November 17.
1894 Establishment of a Women's Home Mission to build
new churches and ministries.
1895 Elder William A. James writes for the Christian
Disciples newspaper, The Watch-White Tower.
1898 Disciples collect pledges to build an institute
in Pantego.
1902 Disciples purchase a printing press at South
Mills, N.C., and publish a monthly publication
called Signs of the Times, edited by H. F. Woodhouse.
ORGANIZATIONAL AND DOCTRINAL GROWTH AMONG AFRICAN
AMERICAN DISCIPLES OF CHRIST
1904 The Eastern Virginia
Assembly adds approx. 10 churches to the Church of Christ Assembly in
North Carolina, led by Elder J. Tom Pettiford.
1909 Elder Edgar Stonewall Lapidoth Whitfield writes
A Message to the Negro Disciples of Christ of
Eastern North Carolina.
1910 Goldsboro Christian Institute opens Jan. 3, in
Goldsboro, N.C. with 40 pupils. Elder Edgar
Whitfield was the principal.
1910 General Assembly reorganized into two districts;
Quadrennial Assembly instituted; the names
Goldsboro-Raleigh and Washington-Norfolk Assemblies
coined.
1913 Elder William A. James prints a defense of
feet-washing as an ordinance of the church.
1914 First quadrennial General Assembly convened.
Elder William A. James named Chief Elder of
the General Assembly for life.
1922 Elder Charles R. D. Whitfield writes a
combination history and theology, Brief History of the
Negro Disciples of Christ.
1923 Chief Elder William A. James passes.
1926 Teacher J. H. Battle writes a historical and
theological treatise, The Colored Disciples of Eastern
North Carolina.
1931 Elder Clinton Whitfield begins publication of
the Christian Reformer, which becomes in 1932
The Disciples' Herald, with Elder Oscar S. Lucas of
the NEDA as editor.
NORTHERN AND INTERNATIONAL EXPANSION
1925 Elder Charles H.
Cordon and Elder Oscar S. Lucas organize St. Peter's Church of Christ in
Philadelphia.
1929 St. Mary Church of Christ organized in Brooklyn.
1932 Northeastern District Assembly Church of Christ,
Composed of Disciples incorporated.
1940 Title of Chief Elder replaced by Bishop.
1944 Elder Charles R. D. Whitfield passes, July 17.
1948 The Union Assembly established under the
leadership of Bishop W. M Hopson.
1954 Disciples resolve to use Church of Christ,
Disciples of Christ in their official name.
1959 Elder William Joseph Barber completes research
and thesis for The Disciple Assemblies of
Eastern North Carolina, the Church's first critical
history, published in 1966.
1961 First General Assembly held in the North Eastern
District Assembly convened at Shiloh Church
of Christ, Disciples of Christ. Resolutions and
Bylaws Committee submits reconstituted regulations
approved by the church.
1970 First edition of General Manual: The Disciples'
Guide to Christian Living published, dealing
with doctrine, ethics, and polity.
1972 Ministerial ordination for women confirmed as a
General Assembly standard.
1977 Beryl Smith Garrett publishes A Disciple of
Christ Church Manual on history and polity.
1987 From Glory to Glory, a book of systematic
theology by Bishop William C. Gillams, published
posthumously.
1988 All Souls Winning Church of Christ, Disciples of
Christ in Liberia adds Nineteen churches.
Mission in Guyana, South America begins.
1993 United Fellowship Assembly rejoins General
Assembly.
1999 Eleven churches from Ghana join the
Goldsboro-Raleigh District.
2000 Mission in Panama begins.
2005 Two-Thousand Disciples convene for their first
convention in Togo, West Africa.
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