Tuesday, October 1, 2019
The Churches Of Christ: A Comparative Essay :: essays research papers
 The Churches of Christ: A Comparative Essay      Over the past ten years there has been much controversy in the Christian and  secular media about the International Churches of Christ (ICC), and the United  (or mainline) Church of Christ (CoC). This controversy has stemmed from the  ICC's misuse of funds, doctrinal problems, member abuse, and mind-control. The  differences between the CoC and the ICC are important for Christians know and  understand.    The CoC began in 1957 when these four groups merged The Congregational Churches,  The Christian Church, The Evangelical Synod of North America, and The Reformed  Church in the United States. These churches had firm Protestant roots in  England, Germany, Sweden, and the United States, totaling over 49 years in their  own traditions and fellowship. On June 25, of 1957, the four churches held a  synod meeting in Cleveland, Ohio, to commit more fully to unity, liberty,  freedom in Christ, and the evangelism of the world. These groups, under the  head of the Uniting General Synod, became the United Churches of Christ. Today  the CoC has over two thousand registered churches in the world.    By 1979, the roots of the CoC were firmly in place. It was then that Chuck  Lucas, a pastor at the Gainesville Church of Christ (mainline), met a young  college student, Kip McKean, and began discipling him. Kip was a bright student  and showed great potential for leadership in the church. However, something in  the discipling process went wrong. Kip was expelled from the Gainesville church  later that year for reasons dealing with departure from the CoC doctrine,  manipulative attitude, unclear motivation, and controlling of other's lives.  Kip and his wife Elena moved to Boston and started a small church that grew  rapidly from thirty to over three hundred disciples in two months. Kip (who, by  this time, proclaimed himself as "God's man for God's mission") then declared in  his Evangelism Proclamation speech in 1981 that disciples of his Boston church  would be sent out to start sister churches in London, Chicago, New York, Toronto,  Providence, Johannesburg, Paris, Stockholm, Mexico City, Hong Kong, Bombay,  Cairo, and throughout the United States by the year of 1985. His success with  this goal led him to present another Evangelism Proclamation in 1990 that said  that every city in the world with a population of over 75,000 will have a sister  church by the year 2000. Today the ICC is in over seventy two countries, with a  recorded attendance (as of January 1997) of 920,000 people. It is important to  note that the ICC's current "fall-away (members who leave the church) rate" is    					    
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