Reflections After a Funeral

By Mike Willis

Although I have been preaching for eleven years, I have personally conducted only two funerals and participated in about two others. Hence, I have not been around death nearly so much as many my own age. Recently, I witnessed the burial of a close friend of mine, a deacon in one of the churches in Indianapolis. Since this man’s death, I have reflected on death and what the Bible has to say about death on more than one occasion.

The wise man said, “There is a time to give birth, and a time to die” (Eccl. 3:2). Man, at sometime in his life, has got to come to grips with the fact that death is just as much a part of life as is birth. We must come to accept death as a part of life. Again, the wise man wrote, “No man has . . . authority over the day of death” (Eccl. 8:8). Regardless of how many skilled neurologists or heart specialists one may have hired, when the day of death comes, none of them can prevent it. Death is certain for all men; “it is appointed unto man once to die” (Heb. 9:27). Because all of us are going to die, perhaps all of us need to spend a few minutes reflecting about death.You Do Not Know When You Are Going To Die

Whenever a man walks through a graveyard, he notices that death strikes people in all age groups. Graves come in various sizes. I remember one occasion when my cousin gave birth to a baby which died soon thereafter. They came to our house one afternoon with the small casket in the backseat of their car and asked my family to go with them to bury it. We proceeded to dig the grave, lay the casket containing the infant’s body in it, and to cover it with dirt. This small, family funeral should always make men conscious that death is no respecter of persons; it strikes old, middle-aged and young persons alike! Certainly we should be reminded of how temporary our earthly life really is. Peter said, “All flesh is like grass, and all its glory like the flower of grass. The grass withers and the flower falls off . . .” (1:24). We shall not live on this earth forever.

Another thing that we should be reminded of is how unexpectedly death comes. Very seldom do people get a warning that death is going to come. When I was just a kid, a neighbor came knocking on our door at four o’clock one morning to call my mother to the phone. Since we lived in a rural neighborhood and were somewhat poor, we did not have a phone. As a matter of fact only one neighbor in the whole area had a phone. Therefore, everyone gave this neighbor’s phone number to their relatives in order that they could be reached quickly in cases of emergency. That morning, my mother went to the phone to be told that my cousin had just been run over by a train and killed. How quickly death had taken his life!

The unexpected demise of a loved one has caused untold grief to survivors. I have seen a husband bend over and kiss the lifeless corpse of his mate as if to say, “I’m sorry that I did not do this more often while you were living.” At the funeral home one night, I heard the daughter of the man who had died tell what had happened the day before her daddy’s death. The daughter and her family had eaten lunch with her daddy the day before he died. During the afternoon, the two-year old granddaughter’s shoe string broke. Grandpaw looked all over the house and finally found a red shoestring which matched his granddaughter’s dress perfectly. On the way home, the granddaughter told her mother, “Mommy, Papaw sure is a nice man.” She had intended to tell her daddy about this incident the next day. He died before she got around to it.

Since death comes so unexpectedly, we should live each day expressing our love to those whom we love lest they die without us having the opportunity to express our love and they having had the opportunity to know how loved they were. One poet expressed this thought, this way,

“We never know at the dawn of day

Greeting the rising sun,

Whether the reaper shall call away,

Ere the day’s work is done.

“Tomorrow may mean good-by,

We never know when nor why,

God calls us away, when life seems so gay,

Our bodies in dust to lie;

Tomorrow our souls may sigh,

For beauties we’ve let slip by,

O soul then prepare, sweet heaven to share,

Tomorrow may mean good-by.”

There are other thoughts about death which we need to consider, so let us move on; this aspect of death could consume our thoughts for weeks.

People Die Regardless Of . . .

1. How much money they have. As one walks through the old graveyard, he is impressed with the differences in the grave markers. A man will see one marker which obviously costs a lot of money erected beside a simple cross which was the very minimum amount that the family could respectfully spend on their departed loved one. This should remind us that all men die, rich and poor; money cannot keep a man from dying. The psalmist said, “Why should I fear in days of adversity, when the iniquity of my foes surrounds me, even those who trust in their wealth, and boast in the abundance of their riches? No man can by any means redeem his brother, or give to God a ransom for him — for the redemption of his soul is costly, and he should cease trying forever-that he should live on eternally; that he should not see the pit” (Psa. 49:5-9). The riches of no man can prevent him from dying!

2. How famous they are. There are some new techniques in burying people which remind me of how insignificant we are. By burying several members of a family on top of each other, one graveyard boasts that it can bury 17,000 in just about two city clocks. Yet, try to identify the names of those who are there. When I wander through a graveyard, I see names of persons who have already crossed the river of death; those names mean absolutely nothing to me. My friends, regardless of how famous you might be now, you are going to die and become a nobody.

If you think that this world is going to remember you, you should consider the nature of mankind. Would you be able to tell me who discovered penicillin? I doubt that you can, although your own life has probably been saved by his discovery. Alexander Fleming has died and become a nobody. I doubt that you can remember the first and last names of your own great-grandmother. Think about that for a minute; in just a few years, your own name will be forgotten by your own descendants!

Death and the Christian

Although death is going to strike all men just alike, the Christian will be effected somewhat differently by death than the non-Christian will. When men die, they must answer to God. After death comes the judgment (Heb. 9:27). At death, men are separated into two groups, the righteous and the wicked, on the basis of whether or not they obeyed God while in this body on this earth (2 Cor. 5:10; Lk. 16:19-31). The Christian has hope in his death (Prov. 14:32); he expects to live forever in a place of eternal happiness with God Himself.

To the Christian, death is only a birth-canal to heaven. Paul said that death to him was gain (Phil. 1:23). In death, the Christian lays down his tired, worn-out body with the earnest expectation of clothing himself with an immortal body prepared by God (2 Cor. 5:14). Hence, a Christian’s death is a victory celebration; he has overcome every snare and trap which Satan has used to entrap him. I heard about one funeral in which the congregation sang the “Hallelujah Chorus” at the funeral of one of its faithful ones. Certainly the ones who participated in this had caught a glimpse of the fact that death is the Christian’s victory march; he celebrates his victory over Satan.

The death of a faithful saint is precious to the Lord for this very reason; hence, the Psalmist said, “Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of His godly ones” (116:15). Though God takes no pleasure in the death of the wicked (Ezek. 33:11), God is pleased to see another saint go through this life and die with the hope of eternal happiness.

Conclusion

Sometimes when preachers talk about death, someone says, “Preacher, all this talk about death doesn’t scare me.” You are a nut if it does not scare you! I know of some children who are not afraid of snakes, spiders, cliffs, ledges, etc. They have them behind bars in a mental hospital or else their family has to keep very careful watch over them lest they be found playing with their toys in the middle of an interstate highway; they are retarded in some sense. And, my friend, if death does not scare you, something is wrong with you.

Death is just as certain to face you as the next breath that you breathe is certain to be vital to your well being. The words which someone wrote on his tombstone need to be embedded in your mind; he wrote,

“Dear Friend, remember as you pass by,

As you are now so once was I.

As I am now, so you will be,

Prepare for death and follow me.”

Only a fool makes no preparation for the inevitable. And, yes, death is inevitable for everyone of us. The only solution to the death problem is the life which is offered to us through Jesus Christ our Lord.

Truth Magazine XXI: 19, pp. 291-293
May 12, 1977

That’s A Good Question

By Larry Ray Hafley

QUESTION:

From Nigeria: “What is the real meaning of revellings?”

REPLY:

“Revellings” is one of the works of the flesh that is in contrast to the fruit of the Spirit (Gal. 5:19-23). Those guilty of engaging in revelerous deportment cannot go to heaven. They will go to hell (Gal. 5:21). Therefore, it is imperative that we understand what it means to be involved in “revellings.”

Scholarly Comments On Revellings

1) Barclay says: “Komos (revellings) expresses a lustful excess in physical and sexual pleasure which is offensive to God and to man alike. It may well be that the best translation of it is that the J. W. C. Wand, when he translates it debauchery” (Barclay, Flesh and Spirit, p. 62).

2) Vincent says: “The word originally signifies merely a merry-making; most probably a village festival . . . . In the cities such entertainments grew into carouses, in which the party of revellers paraded the streets with torches, singing, dancing, and all kinds of frolic” (M. R. Vincent, Word Studies in the New Testament, p. 314).

3) A. T. Robertson says: “Revellings (komoi, old word also for drinking parties like those in honor of Bacchus, in N.T. only here and Rom. 13:13; 1 Pet. 4:3)” (A. T. Robertson, Word Pictures in the New Testament, Vol. IV, p. 312).

4) Albert Barnes says: “Revelling; denoting the licentious conduct, the noisy and obstreperous (boisterous, unruly-LRH) mirth, the scenes of disorder and sensuality, which attend luxurious living” (Albert Barnes, Barnes Notes on the New Testament, p. 652).

5) Macknight says: “The word . . . comes from . . . Comas, the god of feasting and revelling . . . he was a god of the obscene . . . and his rites consisted in feasting and drunkenness, and every kind of obscenity. Hence, . . . Comas, denotes revelling, that is, feasting with lascivious songs, accompanied with music. According to Suidas, . . . `The Comas in a drunken dance, which, when the drinking is continued, provokes lasciviousness, and makes the feast a scene of very dishonorable actions’ ” (Macknight on the Epistles, Vol. I, p. 454).

6) Greek authorities say: Revellings are “feasts and drinking-parties that are protracted till late at night and indulge in revelry (carousal-LRH)” (Thayer). “A jovial festivity, with music and dancing; a revel, carousal, merrymaking” (Liddell and Scott).

Modern cocktail parties, “falsely so called” happy hours at bars and taverns, most all rock music concerts held out of doors, some celebrations of victory by sport fans, office Christmas parties, company or employer sponsored beer drinking picnics, “and such like” are all condemned by the term “revellings.” It is not wrong for Christians to rejoice, to celebrate, to be happy, but it is wrong to dance, to drink, to engage in boisterous, unruly acts that are associated with drinking parties, drunkenness, and sexual immorality. Riotous conduct and revellings of all kind must be condemned by faithful Christians in thought, in word, and in deed. “And have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness, but rather reprove them. For it is a shame even to speak of those things which are done of them in secret” (Eph. 5:11, 12). “They which do such things shall not inherit the kingdom of God” (Gal. 5:21).

Truth Magazine XXI: 19, p. 290
May 12, 1977

Observations Taken from a Religious Census

By Bill H. Reeves

The Bureau of the Census, of the U.S. Dept. of Commerce, prepared a two-volume work entitled, “Religious Bodies: 1936,” which contains some of the most valuable material in print on denominationalism. The government had for a good number of decades taken such a census every ten years. I have only the 1936 work, but prize it highly. In my early years I had heard of older preachers refer to the “more than 250 different denominations in the U.S.” and wondered where they got that information, and if really there were that many!

This work states, “The denominations presented in this report number 256, of which 183 are grouped in 24 families and 73 are listed as separate denominations.” The one feature which I find so valuable is that for each separate denomination the account of its history, doctrine and organization, and work, is prepared by one representing that particular denomination, usually a high official in it. It is not a one-author work, or statements of what others think a particular group believes and practices! So, one can quote from this material and be confident that he is correctly representing each denomination.

I want to quote from two entries in this Census, and then make some observations on them. (I can make available a few copies of the entire entries, if any care to have them).

“Churches Of Christ”

The entry under this heading bears this footnote: “This statement, which is substantially the same as that published in Vol. II of the Report on Religious Bodies, 1926, has been revised by Leslie G. Thomas, Churches of Christ, Dickson, Tenn., and approved by him in its present form.”

Brother Thomas, after mentioning the Campbells, Walter Scott, and Barton W. Stone, and their plea in general, comes to the issue of the missionary society. He wrote:

The agitation for the organization of a missionary society began soon after 1840 and continued unfit the American Christian Missionary Society was formed in Cincinnati Ohio, in 1849.

He quoted from Alexander Campbell’s earlier writings to prove that Campbell was “not the real leader behind the effort nor the same man mentally who had previously opposed such inventions of men:”

Their churches were not fractured into missionary societies, Bible societies and educational societies; nor did they dream of organizing such . . . . They knew nothing of the hobbies of modern times. In their church capacity alone they moved …. They viewed the Church of Jesus Christ as the scheme of salvation to ameliorate the world. As members of it they considered themselves bound to do all they could for the glory of God and the good of men. They dared not transfer to a missionary society a cent or a prayer, lest In so doing they should rob the Church of its glory and exalt the inventions of men above the wisdom of God.

Brother Thomas quoted from the article in the constitution of the Missionary Society which referred to selling of membership and directorship for money, which thing gave great offense to many brethren. Then follows a paragraph on instrumental music, and two other matters of controversy.

The question as to the use of instrumental music In the services of the church became an issue as early as 1859, when a melodeon was placed in the church at Midway, Ky. Much opposition was aroused, and the claim was made that Instrumental music in the church services “ministered to pride and worldliness, was without the sanction of New Testament precept and example, and was consequently unscriptural and sinful.”

Other matters In regard to which there was controversy were the introduction of the “modern pastor” and the adoption of “unscrlptural means of raising money.”

It is interesting to note that the term “anti” is nothing new. It was part of the controversy of the last century as well, according to Brother Thomas back in 1936. He writes:

It was inevitable that such divergencies of opinion should result in the formation of opposing parties, and these parties were variously called “Conservatives” and “Progressives,” or “Antis” and “Digressives.”

After presenting some very helpful material concerning the Missionary Society issue, which divided the brotherhood in the nineteenth century, Brother Thomas then proceeds to surrender his whole contention before discerning readers, as he lists what he calls the “institutions of the Churches of Christ”! Strange that one institution (the Missionary Society), through which local churches do part of their work (that of evangelism), is all wrong, whereas other institutions, built and maintained by churches of Christ, are alright for doing part of their work! If churches of Christ have educational, benevolent and publishing institutions, then they are as denominational in nature as the other religious movements which have the like, and function through such centralized agencies. Here is what Brother Thomas says about the “work” of churches of Christ:

The opposition to missionary societies on the part of the Churches of Christ does not imply any lack of interest in missionary work, which has been fully developed since the division. They are rapidly establishing new churches in different parts of the United States, and are carrying on missionary work in Japan, China, Korea, Persia, Brazil, Hawaii, Philippine Islands, India, Africa, Mexico, and other parts of the world.

The educational institutions of the Churches of Christ include 7 Bible, or Christian colleges, with 184 teachers, 2,206 students, and property valued at $2,610,974. There are also several academies and professional schools; 7 orphanages, with 833 children, and property valued at $496,001; and 2 homes for the aged (1 takes children, too, and is not included In the orphanages), with 50 inmates and property valued at $500,000. These institutions are located in Tennessee, Texas, Kentucky, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Georgia, and California.

They publish eight monthly, two semimonthly, and three weekly journals devoted exclusively to religious instruction.

We turn now to the second entry which we will notice, this one concerning the Disciples of Christ.“Disciples of Christ”

The footnote under this entry says: “This statement, which is substantially the same as that published in Vol. II of the Report on Religious Bodies, 1926, has been revised by Dr. Stephen J. Corey, president, the United Christian Missionary Society, Disciples of Christ, Indianapolis, Ind., and approved by him in its present form.”

Mr. Corey first gives some brief information on the restoration period, dating from 1800, referring to the Campbells and Barton W. Stone. When Stone, Campbell and their associates effected a partial union in 1832, “the question arose as to the name to be adopted.” He says:

Mr. Stone favored “Christians,” as the name given In the beginning by divine authority. Mr. Campbell and his friends preferred the name “Disciples” as less offensive to good people and quite as scriptural. The result was that no definite action was taken and both names were used, the local organization being known, generally, as a “Christian Church,” or a “Church of Christ,” and, rarely, as a “Church of Disciples,” or a “Disciples’ Church.”

Barton Stone, according to Corey, wanted to use the Scriptural name (Christian, Acts 11:26, a proper name), while Alexander Campbell advocated making a proper name out of a common noun (disciple), in order to not “turn people off,” as it is expressed today. This is familiar reasoning, is it not? Such is the age-old conflict between human wisdom and divine!

I find it interesting to note what Mr. Corey says about public debates of that period:

During the first few years of the movement, Alexander Campbell and other leaders were often.engaged fn more or less heated controversies with representatives of other denominations. Gradually, however, these discussions became less frequent and at the same time more conciliatory in tone.

How true this pattern is followed in all ages! First there is militancy, but as numerical success is realized, the tendency is to slack off, especially on the part of the innovator. During the 50’s and 60’s there were many debates on centralization (“sponsoring church”) and institutionalism (church support of orphanages, colleges, etc.), but now that the liberal brethren have taken the majority with them, they see little or no need for debates. Today debates are virtually unheard of.

Christ and His apostles engaged in public debates almost constantly (e.g., Matt. 21:23-24:1, two and a half chapters of debating; Acts 17:17-34; 19:8-10; Jude 3). Truth has always prevailed in controversy; not so with error. As an old Texas friend of mine used to say, “Some brethren don’t believe in debating for the same reason that a muley cow doesn’t believe in hooking!” (A “p.s.” for city folk: muley cows have no horns!).

Mr. Corey then speaks of the rapid growth of this movement in its early years, and makes a very honest admission concerning opposition within the brotherhood:

The growth of the new organization was very rapid, especially in the Middle West. Throughout Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Tennessee, and Missouri It gathered numerous congregations, though there was evident a strong objection to any such association, even for fellowship, as would appear to involve ecclesiastical organization. This manifested Itself fn various ways, especially in opposition to the use of societies for carrying on missionary work. The use of instrumental music in the churches also occasioned dissatisfaction.

Liberal churches of Christ of our day have revived the old principal of centralization, which underlay the missionary society concept, and no doubt instrumental music in worship will not be long in following. A growing number of preachers are playing down objection to its use. History has a way of repeating itself.

Innovations, being of necessity without Scriptural authority, are always the “wedges” that “split the log.” As in the last century, so in this! Mr. Corey speaks of the division of the last century, and beginning of this one:

During the Civil War the movement suffered from the general disorganization of the sections In which it had gained its strength, and the death of Alexander Campbell in 1866 was no doubt a severe blow. From the effect of these discouragements, however, it soon,recovered, and the period since that war has been one of rapid expansion. With this expansion there developed, out of the objections referred to above, and especially to any semblance of ecclesiastical organization and to the use of Instrumental music In the churches, two parties, generally termed “Progressives” and “Conservatives.” The former were anxious to include all under one general head as was done in the census report for 1890, leaving each church free to conduct its affairs In its own way, but the Conservatives objected, and Insisted on separate classification. Accordingly, in the’ report for 1906 and in subsequent reports the “Conservative” churches have been listed as Churches of Christ. The line of demarcation between the two bodies, however, is by no means clear.

Where would the liberal brethren of today have stood in the controversy of yesteryear? Would they have been the “Conservatives,” as referred to by Mr. Corey? They are not the conservatives of today!

Under the heading of “doctrine,” Mr. Corey gives the “doctrinal position of the Disciples.” It is a good statement of some Bible truths. He then proceeds to say: “In addition to these beliefs, in which they are in general accord with other Protestant churches, the Disciples hold certain positions which they regard as distinctive.” He mentions ten of these, nine of which I find well expressed, as far as their being expressions of Bible truths. But, the fifth one reads: “While claiming for themselves the New Testament names of `Christians,’ or `Disciples,’ `they do not deny that others are Christians or that other churches are Churches of Christ'” This is a little hard to harmonize with a later statement of Mr. Corey’s: “sects are unscriptural and unapostolic,” unless he means that “other churches” are not “sects”!

Within the last few years we have begun to hear language similar to Mr. Corey’s, respecting “other churches,” coming from our liberal brethren! I am amazed as I read this 1936 material, regarding events and attitudes and vocabulary of the last century, and then contemplate the same regarding the last twenty-five years within the brotherhood.

Under the head of “Organization,” Mr. Corey insists that “in polity the Disciples churches are congregational. Each local church elects its own officers, calls its own ministers, and conducts its own affairs with no supervision by any outside ecclesiastical authority.” Furthermore, he says:

There is no national ecclesiastical organization of the churches. There is an International Convention of Disciples of Christ, which is composed of Individual members of the churches. These may or may not be selected by the churches, but their standing In the convention is personal rather than representative, and the convention as such has no authority over the action of the churches, which are at liberty to accept or reject its recommendations.

For mutual conference in regard to their general affairs, the churches unite in district and State conventions. These conventions, however, have no ecclesiastical authority, the ultimate responsibility In every case resting in the local church.

This is interesting to note, in the light of the charges of our liberal brethren respecting the Missionary Society of the Christian Church. Inasmuch as there is a “deadly parallel” between the Missionary Society of the Christian Church (or, Disciples of Christ), and the “Sponsoring Church” of our brethren, the advocates of the “Sponsoring Church” disclaim this parallel by telling us that the Missionary Society controls the local Christian Churches, while the Sponsoring Church does not control local churches of Christ. According to Mr. Corey, our liberal brethren misrepresent the facts! He insists that the local church is not controlled by any “outside ecclesiastical authority”! But, the indirect control which the Missionary Society does effect over local congregations is the same kind of control which the Sponsoring Church effects over local churches of Christ. Both parties deny any direct control. Both must admit that the indirect control is there, to a degree.

Just ask members of churches of Christ, “What is wrong with the Missionary Society?” and you will get one of three answers, in essence: (1) Churches of Christ just do not have a Missionary Society! (Which equals saying, I do not know why, except that we just do not have one!); (2) It is a human organization, controlling the local church and destroying its autonomy (This is the typical answer of those advocating the Sponsoring Church concept); (3) It is a human organization through which churches do work of evangelism, and is therefore without Scriptural authority, being an expression of denominational centralization. (This is the answer that represents the facts. Too few are heard to give it!).

The first answer is pitiable; it shows that brethren are uninformed, and most likely do not intend to inform themselves. The second answer misrepresents the Missionary Society advocates, as the quotes from Mr. Corey amply show. But, there is some truth in that second answer: the Missionary Society is a human organization; it does exercise control, but it is indirect in nature; autonomy is sacrificed, to the degree that the local church turns over its money and work to a human organization. But, all this can be truthfully said about the Sponsoring Church arrangement. The elders of that Sponsoring Church are a human organization, because they have the oversight of work of a brotherhood proportion, or scope. The Sponsoring Church effects an indirect control over local churches through pressure tactics (including unsavory epithets for those not “cooperating,” quarantines, etc.). The third answer is the truth of the matter and condemns both the Missionary Society and the Sponsoring Church, and for the same reasons!

Under the heading of “Work,” Mr. Corey says that the “general activities of Disciples of Christ are carried on through several societies or boards, which, in their organization, are independent of any ecclesiastical control . . . .” He mentions The International Convention of Disciples of Christ, but insists that “its powers are advisory.” This is institutionalism; that is, local churches doing work through boards set up to manage the institutions actually doing the work. There is not one ounce of difference, in principal, between what the Disciples of Christ Churches are doing, and what our liberal brethren are doing.

Mr. Corey admits that “the earlier sentiment was somewhat adverse to the organization of societies,” but affirms that Campbell’s association at Washington, Pa., and the organization with which Stone was associated, were forerunners of the Missionary Society of 1849. The development of various boards and societies is set forth in the following, somewhat lengthy, quotation:

It was with Mr. Campbell’s fun approval that in 1849 the American Christian Missionary Society was formed at Cincinnati,, its object being, as stated in Its. constitution, to promote the preaching of the Gospel in this and other lands.” He was the first president and held the office 18 years, until his death In 1866. In 1874 the Christian Woman’s Board of Missions was organized. Prior to this time a large number of State, district, and city societies had been formed. The next year the Foreign Christian Missionary Society came into being, followed in 1887 by the National Benevolent Association of the Christian Church, in 1888 by the Board of Church Extension, in 1895 by the Board of Ministerial Relief, in 1910 by the Association for the Promotion of Christian Unity, in 1914 by the Board’ of Education, and later by the Board of Temperance and Social Welfare.

These boards continued to function separately until, at the International Convention in Kansas City in 1917, the three missionary societies appointed a committee on unification, instructing the committee to seek to bring about the complete unification of societies so that they should function as one organization, having one headquarters and one management. It was proposed that whatever organization should ultimately be brought about, it should have on Its board and Its executive committee equal representation of men and women.

The committee on cooperation and unification held a preliminary meeting In Indianapolis, December 11, 1917. The original proposal was to unite the Foreign Christian Missionary Society, the Christian Woman’s Board of Missions, and the American Christian Missionary Society, the latter involving the Board of Church Extension, which was a board of the American Society. Later the Board of Ministerial Relief and the National Benevolent Association sought representation on the committee and voted to join the above-mentioned boards in forming. the United Christian Missionary Society.

When the committee on cooperation and unification came squarely up to the legal problems involved in a merger of the several societies, it found that technically such a merger, involving as it would the Immediate surrender and dissolution of the old boards, could not be accomplished, or at least, not for a period of years. It seemed, however, that the objects sought in the unification could be accomplished by creating a new society, duly incorporated, to which the operating functions of the old boards should be committed. The old societies, however, were to continue their legal existence to the States where they originated, for the purpose of holding the trusts committed to them and of discharging the responsibilities required by law.

Appropriate articles of agreement were drawn up and adopted by each of the boards and societies prior to their coming together In the International Convention at Cincinnati, in 1919. At this convention, the constitution and bylaws of the new United Christian Missionary Society were presented and adopted, and the organization was effected. The executive committee chose St. Louis, Mo., as the operative headquarters for the United Christian Missionary Society, and it began its functions there October 1920. In 1928 the Society moved its headquarters to Indianapolis, Ind., where it Is located in Its own commodious quarters, called The Missions Building.

Look what came out of some innocent (?) little city, district and state societies! Organization after organization was formed, until the many were unified into one, the United Christian Missionary Society. It took seventy years (1849-1919). Then the great united society itself began to expand, taking on other endeavors. Modernism showed its inroads by addition in 1935 of departments of social action and of higher education.

The Christian Church has come a long way in its apostasy. This article deals with quotes from 1936. That was 40 years ago! It all started with an abandonment of the all-sufficiency of the local church, God’s only organization on this earth, and the advocacy of centralization and institutionalism. Today, the Christian Church is just another human denomination. The “anti’s” of the last century fought those innovations, and there are churches of Christ today because of their battles. The “anti’s” of today have fought the same battle, the same issues (in principle), and the very young, who are coming to manhood, and so were no part of the battle of two or three decades ago, would do well to give a little heed to history and a little more appreciation for some aging warriors (some have passed on) to whom all of us are debtors. There are faithful churches of Christ around the land today because they fought that fight!

When will man learn that the solution to problems in the church is not the substitution of man-made arrangements for divine ones, but the correction of affairs within divine arrangements? Yes, the judge Samuel, had some bad sons, who as judges were turning aside after lucre, taking bribes and perverting justice. This was bad! What was the solution? Punish the judges and remove them, if they did not repent, and appoint others, as God would direct? Ignore God’s arrangement of government by judges, while He reigned over them as King, and substitute another type of government, a human monarchy? They could do one of the two; they chose to substitute!

It was no different in the last century. What to do since the churches were not getting the gospel spread as fast as some thought they should do? Again, there was the same choice: respect God’s arrangements in the local church and exhort those local churches to do more in evangelism, each one according to its opportunity and ability, or, ignore God’s arrangement and substitute human organizations through which the local churches could do work of evangelism, centralizing the power of the many in the hands of the few, thus activating the entire brotherhood. The “antis” took the first course mentioned; the “progressives” the second. A new denomination was born.

That 1936 Religious Census is very revealing!

Truth Magazine XXI: 18, pp. 282-286
May 5, 1977

Baptism is One in Design (II)

By Roy E. Cogdill

We have pointed out in previous articles that Bible baptism has one element, one authority, and one action. We want to notice further that the one baptism of the New Testament is one in design. While that design can be expressed in several different ways in Bible language-it is in essence one and the same in purpose and principle-that is, the salvation of the soul of men.

We want to be distinctly understood about a matter concerning which we have been so often misrepresented. We do not believe baptism in and of itself saves anyone. God does the saving. Jesus Christ made it possible for man to be saved by the sacrifice of Himself for our sins. The Holy Spirit has revealed that salvation thus provided and its terms in the pages of New Testament teaching include baptism. Faith upon the part of man must motivate his compliance with the stipulated conditions upon which heaven requires and God has named in His word and upon which God has offered salvation. Otherwise it would have no significance at all. Baptism must be an act of faith and preceded by repentance. Water could not wash sins away or remove its guilt in any sense. Surely no one thinks or believes that water has the power to cleanse our hearts from sin. Water is only the element God has chosen in which men are baptized as an act of obedience to His will. It takes the blood of Christ to save and one cannot be saved without contact with it through obedience to the truth (1 Peter 1:18-22).

But how do we reach the saving power of Christ’s blood? Our eyes have never beheld the blood of Christ except by faith. Our finger tips have never been actually bathed in it. We can reach the saving power of the sacrifice of the Son of God only through the obedience of faith. In Hebrews 9:13-14, Paul tells us, “For if the blood of bulls and goats, and the ashes of an heifer sprinkling the unclean, sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh: How much more shall the blood of Christ, who through the eternal Spirit offered himself without spot to God, purge your conscience from dead works to serve the living God?” Then in Hebrews 10:19-22, the same writer tells us, “Having therefore, brethren, boldness to enter into the holiest by the blood of Jesus, by a new and living way, which he hath consecrated for us, through the veil, that is to say, his flesh; and having an high priest over the house of God; let us draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith, having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience, and our bodies washed with pure water.” We reach the sprinkling of the blood upon our hearts by washing our bodies with pure water. This pure-unmixed water-is contrasted with the “water of cleansing” in the Old Testament law (Numbers 19). Instead of this pure water being sprinkled, the blood of Christ is sprinkled. The “washing of the body in pure water” can only refer to the act of baptism. There is nothing else in the scheme of human redemption that can be so described. When our bodies are washed with pure water in the act of baptism, God sprinkles the blood of Christ upon our hearts to cleanse them from an evil conscience.

This is further amplified in 1 Peter 3:18-21. “For Christ also hath once suffered for sins, the just for the unjust, that he might bring us to God, being put to death in the flesh, but quickened by the Spirit: by which also he went and preached unto the spirits , in prison; which sometime were disobedient, when once the longsuffering of God waited in the days of Noah, while the ark was a preparing, wherein few, that is, eight souls were saved by water. The like figure whereunto even baptism doth also now save us (not the putting away of the filth of the flesh, but the answer of a good conscience toward God), by the resurrection of Jesus Christ.” From this we learn that the purpose of washing the body in the water of baptism is not to get the body clean but rather in order to obtain a good conscience before God. Only the blood of Christ can give us a purged conscience; so it should be obvious that the purpose of baptism is to bring us to the blood of Christ.

Another passage makes this so plain that it cannot be misunderstood but only needs believing, Romans 6:3-4: “Know ye not, that so many of us as were baptized into Jesus Christ were baptized into his death? Therefore we are buried with him by baptism into death: that like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father, even so we also should walk in newness of life. This passage tells us that by baptism we reach the death of Christ. This is where His blood was shed which is able to save us from our sins. Baptism in its action is a burial and a resurrection. But in its design it is to reach the death of Christ that we might die to sin. We are buried into this death to sin by baptism, and “death to sin” in this passage means “justification from sin” (Rom. 6:7). When a man is baptized into Christ, therefore, he is baptized into His death, and when he reaches the death of Christ (blood), he dies unto the guilt of sin; and is therefore justified from sin. How simple this is to the unprejudiced heart!

Jesus said, “Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature. He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be damned” (Mark 16:15-16). This passage does not say as men teach. “He that believeth and is baptized is saved.” There is a vast deal of difference in “is saved” and “shall be saved.” There is also a lot of difference between “is baptized” and “shall be baptized.”

Peter, on the day of Pentecost, commanded men and women who asked “What shall we do?” “Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost” (Acts 2:36-38). This is also easily understood unless someone helps us to misunderstand it by telling us that it does not mean what it says. What does “for the remission of sins” mean? All the scholars tell us that eis (for) denotes transition-movement toward-and not “because of.” Hence, the American Standard version translates it “unto the remission of sins.” But we can settle the matter for ourselves in a very simple manner. Just drop baptism out of the sentence and read it: “Repent every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins.” What does “Repent for remission of sins” mean? Would anyone be foolish enough to say that it means “Repent because of the remission of sins?” Surely not! But if “Repent for the remission of sins” means “Repent unto the remission of sins,” then “be baptized for the remission of sins” would also mean “be baptized unto the remission of sins.” These two verbs-repent and be baptized-form a compound predicate joined together by the copulative “and.” They must move in the same direction. One cannot point backward and the other forward when they are both modified by the same prepositional phrase-“for the remission of sins.” Whatever repentance is for, therefore, baptism must be for in this sentence. Remission of sins in this passage means the same thing that “be saved” means in Mark 16:15-16. Remission is the payment of the debt of sin by the blood of Christ.

Then the New Testament emphasizes that baptism is one act of transition from one state to another state. We are baptized into Christ (Gal. 3:26-27). We are baptized into His death (Rom. 6:3). We are baptized into death to sin (Rom. 6:4). We are baptized into the body of Christ, which is the church of Christ (1 Cor. 12:13). This baptism puts us all into the one body of Christ (Eph. 4:4). This one baptism establishes therefore, but one relationship. It will not put one man into one body (church) and another man into another body (church), but it puts us all into the same body (church) for there is but one baptism and there is but one body.

Truth Magazine XXI: 18, pp. 281-282
May 5, 1977