“I know when this program was first
announced a few years ago, I had a great deal of misgivings about it —
just the very idea of it. I could envision a great concentration of
power at the hands of a single eldership . . . It’s very easy for one
congregation to go astray and when such power is concentrated in one it
would have influence to a great many others . . .”
The Herald of Truth (H.O.T.) has divided the
brotherhood twice. The first time was over the sponsoring church concept
of the organizational structure of the church. Most major apostasies
have come through a corruption of the organization of the church
(Catholic Church, Missionary Society, Sponsoring Church). The second
time, it divided promoters of the program who endorsed the sponsoring
church concept. Soft preaching on the program and doctrinal error in the
Highland church was the reason the second time, as well as politics in
the power structure at the top (firing of E.R. Harper, etc.). The
sponsoring church bit the hand of those who were feeding it. Some of its
most avid promoters reaped the whirlwind, especially those who defended
it in debate (E.R. Harper, Guy Woods, G.K. Wallace, Alan Highers).
In recent months, Garland Elkins wrote a
series of 22 articles titled “One Grape At A Time” in the Yokefellow (a
publication of the Memphis School Of Preaching. Knight Arnold Road
congregation is the sponsoring church) in which he rehashed a meeting
con- ducted on September 10, 1973 at the Getwell Church Of Christ in
Memphis. The meeting was to discuss the Herald of Truth and lasted
between 10-13 hours. Elkins was chairman of the meeting and preacher at
Getwell.
Approximately 200 elders and preachers from
all over the country came to discuss this “brotherhood” project.
The
Pyramid Structure
Denominational projects that originate in
the minds of men, such as corruptions in organizational structure,
usually have one thing in common. They become so big and powerful that
nobody can stop them. The pyramid structure places power at the top over
which the rank and file have no control, except to disassociate
themselves. In the ’70s when the hierarchy of the Presbyterian Church
decided to contribute $10,000 to the Angela Davis (a communist) Defense
Fund, many at the bottom of the pyramid opposed it but were powerless to
stop it. Other church hierarchies have made decisions on such things as
ordaining homosexual preachers and members expressed disapproval but
were powerless to stop it. Those who supported the televangelists had
similar problems because of the pyramid structure. The same thing
happened regarding the H.O.T. and the hierarchy involved in the
“sponsoring church.” Those who opposed it at the Memphis Meeting were
unable to stop it. It is still going on 25 years later.
Many conservative brethren had argued that
the H.O.T. was more than a program of a local church. That it had its
own offices, mail permit, workshops, representatives, etc. This was
ridiculed by the liberal brethren who promoted it. Some finally (perhaps
unwittingly) admitted it. Consider this admission from the editor of
Contending For The Faith (July 1973). “Do you recall just a few years
ago, when some of us used to ponder whatever would happen to the
churches of Christ if the forces of error should ever get control of the
HERALD OF TRUTH?” (Why the capital letters for H.O.T. but not for
churches of Christ? Why worry about this any more than one would worry
about forces of error gaining control in any one of thousands of local
churches?, db). I can just hear the anti-cooperationists rising up as
one man to chide ‘I told you so;’ however, brethren, it no longer is
‘unthinkable’ . . . as from March 26, 1973 with the firing of E.R.
Harper, NOT by the Highland elders but by the HERALD OF TRUTH RADIO AND
TELEVISION COMMITTEE, . . .” (Ira Rice).
Rice’s admission showed what we had been
saying for so long, that while the H.O.T. had ties to Highland it was a
separate organization. Yes, as history will show and as Rice admit- ted,
we told you so but you wouldn’t listen. Ironically, after noting several
signs all was not well at Highland, Rice says, “You just can’t warn SOME
folks because they refuse to be warned!” Say what? In the Memphis
Meeting he also asked, “I want to know who is paid top salary at the
Herald of Truth? Who gets the most money? . . . We’d like to know the
top five men, the top five salaries” (Sec. I, 33). That answer was never
given but it shows Rice regarded the H.O.T. as an entity in itself.
Consider this statement from Thomas B.
Warren, “I know when this program was first announced a few years ago, I
had a great deal of misgivings about it — just the very idea of it. I
could envision a great concentration of power at the hands of a single
eldership . . . It’s very easy for one congregation to go astray and
when such power is concentrated in one it would have influence to a
great many others . . .” (Sec. I, 40). Also, this statement from Alan
Highers, “In every liberal takeover in denominationalism the means has
been through gaining control of the influential institutions, . . .
This, then, is what the Herald of Truth controversy really means” (Sec.
III, 2). Warren recognized that the Highland elders constituted a
concentration of power that was out of the ordinary. Why the alarm?
Wasn’t this Highland’s work as E.R. Harper told us in the Harper-Tant
Debate? Weren’t they just another local autonomous congregation? Where
did brethren get the right to concentrate such power in one local
eldership? Not from the Bible. Unwittingly, Warren was admitting they
had become more than local elders. While Highers probably did not intend
to refer to the H.O.T. as an institution, this is what he said, and he
recognized it as an “influential institution,” some- thing
extraordinary. Highland became a “super” church as they assumed (not
assigned) oversight of a national program, a “brotherhood” project.
Where did those who gave Highland such power get that right? Who had the
right to make plans for the “brotherhood”? The only way elders can be
over a “brotherhood” project is if they are “brotherhood” elders,
something the Lord did not ordain (1 Pet. 5:2). Such authority is
usurped. All who consented are partakers of their sin. There is no
reason why problems in one local congregation should have caused such
widespread discussion, division, and a gathering of preachers and elders
from “the four corners of the earth,” except that the church had more
power and influence given to them through an unscriptural combine known
as “the sponsoring church.”
An
Unscriptural Plea
In the Memphis Meeting, a High- land elder
said: “We plead with you to allow us to continue to pray and work with
this problem” (Art Haddox, Sec. I, 2). Can you imagine the elders in the
local congregation where you worship traveling a thousand miles to plead
with preachers and elders who have assembled from congregations all over
the nation to let them continue a work overseen by your local
independent, self-governing congregation and its elders? If so, you have
too big an imagination. But it can be imagined if you are engaged in
something unscriptural. Imagine them pleading with brethren a thousand
miles away to let them continue their Bible class program!
Moving
The H.O.T. To Another Eldership
Consider these statements: “It may be that
before this work is able to continue . . . that it may have to be under
the leadership and sponsorship of some other congregation. That may be
the solution” (Alan Highers, Sec. II, 28). “I’m not trying to kill the
Herald of Truth, but it ought to be moved from Highland to a good sound
elder- ship . . .” “The present eldership must go or the program is dead
. . . I want to see it under a strong eldership if we have to move it to
Memphis or Nashville, Tennessee (AMEN, from audience, db)” (Frank Cawyer,
former Highland elder, Sec. I, 14, Sec. II, 64). “I want the program
saved if it means moving the oversight to a strong, knowledgeable,
efficient eldership . . .” (James D. Willeford, one of the founders of
the H.O.T., Sec. II, 52). “Maybe this ministry should be transferred to
an eldership that is more capable of coping with the unusual pressures
that come . . . You see, if there is no Highland church, there isn’t any
Herald of Truth unless its first transferred” (Lynn Anderson, a Highland
preacher, Sec. II, 74,75). “But if not, that the program can be . . .
given to some other congregations” (Garland Elkins, Sec. II, 72).
Can a group of elders and preachers from all
over the country meet a thousand miles away from your local congregation
to discuss moving part of your congregation’s work? If they can, the
congregation must be involved in something unscriptural because New
Testament congregations were ruled by the elders “among you” (1 Pet.
5:2; Acts 20:28). What group of men has the right to come together
to discuss moving part of another congregation’s work? Who gave them
that right? Not the Lord.
The only way elders can be over a
“brotherhood” project is if they are “brotherhood” elders, something the
Lord did not ordain (1 Pet. 5:2). Such authority is usurped. They
assumed it. These brethren would have loved to have moved the H.O.T.
since they considered it part of their work, but they had surrendered
the oversight of that part of their work! This shows Highland had
exclusive control. It was the work of many churches controlled by one.
It was unscriptural centralized agency, as Roy Cogdill proved in the
Cogdill-Woods Debate.
Joint
Elders’ Meetings
In discussing a campaign in the
Hurst-Bedford (Texas) area in which Lynn Anderson was to speak, Ed
Sanders of Harding College said, “I have been asked by the elders of the
four congregations that were involved in this campaign to act as
director of the campaign . . . And we asked Lynn to come . . . and the
elders of the four congregations that were interested in the campaign
met in the conference room of the Pipe Line Road church in Hurst with
Lynn, . . . It was the consensus of those elders that here was a man who
was safe to use for this particular job” (Sec. II, 68, 69). As most
Christians will remember from the Jule Miller filmstrips, the formation
of the Roman Catholic Church began by an elder from each congregation
meeting together as a unit from which decisions were made. This was the
seed, a corruption in the organization of the church. In principle it
would make no difference whether one or all the elders from several
congregations met, the seed for the beginning of an unscriptural
organization is there. Given time, as in the case of the Catholic Church
and the Disciples of Christ (Christian Church), and one will have no
trouble seeing where the apostasy began.
Great
Swelling Words For A Human Institution
One of the men at the Memphis Meeting said
it “. . . was one of the most important gatherings of brethren which has
been conducted in this generation” (i, Introduction). He went on to say
“brother Baxter (Batsell Barrett Baxter, db) said earlier that today
might determine whether or not the Herald Of Truth program would live or
die. But you know brethren, really the survival of the church is
involved in this too” (AMEN. That’s right . . . from audience) (Sec. I,
32). If no one learned the truth that the “sponsoring church” is an
unscriptural institution, then the meeting was not that important
regardless of how much self-importance its participants may have
claimed. But, imagine it! The survival of the church depends upon a
project that originated in the minds of men and had its beginning on
February 3, 1952! That is grandstanding at its worst. How about if the
church where I labor has a meeting of influential preachers and elders
from all over the nation to determine whether part of the work of your
home congregation lives or dies? The only way such meetings could take
place or that we could begin to think the survival of the church depends
on the outcome of such meetings is if the churches are involved in some
unscriptural organization. These statements demonstrate how the
“sponsoring church” destroys the autonomy of both the contributing
churches and the “sponsoring church” as well — a denominational concept.
It is what happens in an unscriptural pyramid. Who would make such a
wild statement that the survival of the church was dependent on a
meeting that originated in the minds of men to discuss a project that
originated in the minds of men? Garland Elkins, chairman of the meeting,
present co-editor of Yokefellow and dean of public relations at Memphis
School of Preaching.
What The
Scriptures Teach
The scriptures teach that elders are to
“tend the flock of God which is among you” (1 Pet.5:2). They are
to “take heed . . . to all the flock, in which the Holy Spirit hath made
you overseers . . . I know that after my departing grievous wolves shall
enter in among you . . .” (Acts 20:28, 29). Which flock was that?
It was the local flock at Ephesus. Those elders were over the
evangelism, edification, discipline, resources, etc., of the flock
“among you.” What part of any of that can they delegate to another
eldership? None, and remain self-governing and independent. The
congregations represented by men in the Memphis Meeting could not
control what was being done with their money. They had surrendered their
oversight, much to their surprise. They could not move the Herald of
Truth to another eldership nor could they stop it. But consider this
statement: “. . .If I believe any part of the Bible, I believe the part
. . . that teaches a congregation is autonomous” (Ed Sanders, Sec. II,
72). These brethren honor autonomy with their lips but their practice is
far from it.
Was
Jerusalem a “Sponsoring Church?”
We have been told that what Highland and
other “sponsoring churches” are doing is no different than when brethren
sent to Jerusalem when they were in want (1 Cor.16:1, 2; 2 Cor. 8, 9).
First, Jerusalem was a destitute church. They became that way through no
fault of their own. (Did Highland become destitute through no fault of
their own? No, they were one of the largest and wealthiest congregations
in America.) The only situation in the Bible in which one church donated
funds to another was when it became destitute through circumstances
beyond its control. This does not describe Highland, Sycamore in
Cookeville, Knight Arnold Road in Memphis, nor any other “sponsoring
church” today. Second, Jerusalem was the target of the need (it was for
needy saints in that congregation) and not a funnel which filtered funds
back to various parts of the country. Third, Jerusalem did not launch a
massive campaign to solicit funds from churches at large as does
Highland, Sycamore, or Knight Arnold Road. Fourth, Jerusalem’s want was
in benevolence. Highland’s, Sycamore’s and Knight Arnold’s want is not.
They may “want,” but they are not “in want.” Fifth, Jerusalem’s need was
peculiarly theirs. Sponsoring churches’ wants of today are no more
theirs exclusively than any other congregation’s. God has not assigned
national or world obligations to one congregation alone. All
congregations have equal duty to evangelize according to their ability,
but no congregation has the right to assume and oversee the evangelistic
work of several churches. Sixth, Jerusalem’s case is in the Bible. These
others are not.
A church is in “want” when it lacks the
means of self-maintenance, not when it assumes national or world
obligations beyond its ability. When a church, through no fault of its
own, became dependent, other churches acted independently in their
effort to restore that church to an independent status, that there might
be equality (not equal in funds and members but equal in freedom from
want). This is the only condition under which one church received funds
from another. Can you imagine preachers and elders from Judea, Samaria,
and the uttermost parts of the earth calling a meeting to discuss moving
part of Jerusalem’s work to another eldership? Can you imagine them
saying that such a meeting might determine the survival of the church?
If congregations were truly independent, even if one entire eldership
becomes corrupt it need not affect any other congregation in the world.
“Non-cooperation Brethren”
Elkins says, “The non-cooperation brethren
cannot rightfully rejoice that we are now having to oppose liberalism
within the ranks of the Lord’s people . . .” Then referring to a
discussion of Ketchersidism which took place in Truth Magazine and The
Gospel Guardian, he said, “Obviously, cooperation did not produce
liberalism or compromise among them for neither group advocates
cooperation” (iv, Introduction). Rice said, “I can just hear the
anti-cooperationists rising up as one man to say ‘I told you so.’”
Because we believe in only one kind of cooperation (direct and
independent, Phil. 4:15-18), Elkins calls us “non-cooperation brethren”
and says we do not “advocate cooperation.” Both Elkins and Rice are old
enough to know they are willfully misrepresenting us. Since both believe
in only one kind of music (vocal) should they be called “non-music
brethren” or “anti-music brethren”? Since they believe in only one
baptism, should they be called “non- baptism brethren” or “anti-baptismists”?
Should we accuse them of not “advocating baptism”? Since they believe in
only one God, should they be called “non-God brethren” or “anti-Godists”
or of not “advocating God”? To refer to us as “non-cooperation” brethren
is a misrepresentation. It is unfair and prejudicial. We do believe in
cooperation and couldn’t have said it better than W.E. Brightwell, David
Lipscomb, J.C. McQuiddy, F.B. Syrgley, and others.
W.E. Brightwell:
I submit this proposition. Any individual
Christian, or group of individuals, smaller than a local congregation,
or any group of individuals or churches larger than a local church, or
any individual church itself that begins thinking in terms of what the
whole brotherhood should do, and goes or sends somebody to the churches
to see that they do it, and acts as an agent or agency through which the
brotherhood does it, thereby constitutes itself full-grown,
blow-in-the-bottle, fourteen-karat missionary society of the deepest
dye! There is no way on earth to whitewash it. There is no city of
refuge where he may hide from God’s displeasure. To call it something
else, or to leave it because it is similar to a missionary society, but
because it violates the same fundamental principle the society violates
— namely, the initiative and autonomy of the local congregation (Gospel
Advocate, Dec. 20, 1934).
David Lipscomb (objecting to an attempt to
establish a sponsoring church at Henderson, TN in 1910):
Now what was that but the organization of a
society in the elders of this church? The church elders at Henderson
constitute a board to collect and pay out the money and control the
evangelist for the brethren of West Tennessee . . . All meetings of
churches or officers of churches to combine more power than a single
church possesses are wrong . . . But for one or more to direct what and
how all the churches shall work, or to take charge of their men and
money and use it, is to assume the authority God has given to each
church. . .
J.C. McQuiddy:
. . . there is no scriptural authority for
one church controlling and directing the funds of other churches. . .
F.B. Srygley:
The agency system of collecting funds from
many churches, even if it is done under some eldership, is without
authority, . . . The greatest objection to the whole scheme is that it
is not in the New Testament” (Gospel Advocate, November 1, 1934).
Similar quotes from men who preached in the 1930s (before the H.O.T. was
invented) could be produced from such men as E.R. Harper, Foy Wallace,
Jr., F.B. Shepherd, H. Leo Boles, etc.
A variety of factors may be involved that
lead to liberalism. However, there is a connection between the “no
pattern” theory that many promoters of institutionalism were preaching
in 1950s and 1960s and present attempts to restructure the church. The
Getwell church (where brother Elkins used to preach) helped circulate
the tract by A.C. Pullias titled “Where There Is No Pattern.” Saying,
“there is no pattern” in the work of the church is a step away from
saying there is no pattern in the worship of the church. This was the
path followed by the Christian Church and is also the path being
followed by many institutional brethren.
Preaching
Funerals
In a recent article, Alan Highers tried to
preach the funeral of churches who oppose the liberalism of “sponsoring
churches” and church supported benevolent institutions and other forms
of liberalism practiced by brother Highers and his associates. After
discussing the prejudicial proposition A.C. Grider debated in the 1960s
he said, “The influence of the movement failed. It has never been able
to exert a significant presence since that time, and most members of the
church today are not even aware that such a movement exists.” This was
reminiscent of a similar attempt to preach our funeral by Thomas Warren
in 1971. It is wishful thinking rather than fact. While no one is doing
all that should be done to spread the gospel, conservative churches
exist in all 50 states and in at least 40 foreign countries. In most
areas where debates have been conducted conservative churches are
stronger. When brethren are allowed to hear both sides of an issue and
truth is given an equal opportunity with error, truth shines brightest.
This may then be reason some church members are not aware that there are
brethren standing for the truth against institutionalism. They are kept
in the dark and not allowed to be exposed to the truth. This seems to be
the reason institutional brethren have never been willing to defend
their practices in Memphis.
Highers also preaches the funeral of those
who have moved farther to the left than he is. “Image Magazine is no
more . . . It is interesting to note that most of the left-wing papers .
. . in the brotherhood have fallen by the wayside. Wineskins stands
practically alone . . . There are just not enough ‘hard-core’ liberals
in the church to support two magazines . . .” (Spiritual Sword, Oct.
1997, 47).
Brother Highers must enjoy preaching
funerals for he comes close to preaching the funeral of the middle-of-
the-road movement that he is part of. “Brethren we are in the fight of
our lives for the truth of the gospel, yet many well-meaning and
well-intentioned brethren are asleep at the battle-stations” (Sec. III,
1). Speaking of the Nashville Jubilee he says, “Why do substantial
publications such as the Gospel Advocate (the “Old Reliable,” db) and
Christian Chronic1e never utter a word of criticism regarding this
program . . . Where is the watchman now upon the wall of Zion . . . My
deepest concern is not that these false teachings are being promulgated
. . . but rather it is in the fact that there is scarcely a word of
opposition being heard (emphasis mine, db) throughout our great
brotherhood from those in positions of power, influence, and
responsibility!
. . . There ought to be a groundswell of
horrified opposition sounding forth from pulpits, church bulletins,
brotherhood journals, and even by Bible professors on every college
campus. Where is the outrage? Where are the voices crying in the
wilderness? ‘Is it nothing to you, all ye that pass by?’ (Lam. 1:12)”
(SS, Oct. 1997). That doesn’t sound too good for brethren who favor
institutionalism. They have lost most of their colleges, journals, and
big sponsoring churches to liberalism. One of their number, a recent
speaker at an appreciation dinner at the Memphis School of Preaching,
said, “Well, here it goes again! I can remember about 35 or 40 years
ago, when almost every week we heard of a new congregation being
established. What a turnaround! Now, almost every week I hear of another
congregation going out of business” (Guss Eoff, Magnolia Messenger,
Jan/Feb. 1998).
The sad truth is there are people all over
the world who have never heard of either of our “movements” (as brother
Highers calls them). The Tennessee Orphan Home (1909) and the Herald of
Truth (1952) both had their beginning in this century — over 1900 years
away from the New Testament. If these brethren would give up their
innovations, we could be united again and we could preach the gospel to
a lost world in a way that it hasn’t been preached in a long time.
Other Articles
Never Give Up
Judging and Casting Stones
Make His Paths Straight
Can God Have Our Attention?
Answering Criticism
Before We Criticize
- Caffin,
B.C. (1950), II Peter – Pulpit Commentary, H.D.M. Spence
and Joseph Exell, eds. (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans).
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