- Restorationism
:"For other usages, see
Restoration (general disambiguation),Apokatastasis (universal restoration),Christian Zionism (restoration of Israel) andRestorationism (middle ages) ""
Restorationism ", sometimes called "Christian primitivism", frequently describes religious movements that believe "pristine", or "original" Christianity is restored in themselves to an important degree. These diverse groups teach that a restoration of Christianity has become necessary because Catholic, Orthodox andProtestant Christians introduced grave defects into Christian faith and practice, or have lost a vital element of genuine Christianity. ("seeGreat Apostasy ").As a descriptive label, "restorationism" often applies particularly to the
Restoration Movement , and numerous other unaffiliated movements that originated in the easternUnited States andCanada and grew rapidly in the early and mid 19th century in the wake of theSecond Great Awakening . "Restoration" is also a label applied by theLatter Day Saint movement , often calledMormonism , referring to a period which began with Joseph Smith and the publication of theBook of Mormon .More recent groups also apply the label "restorationist" to themselves, describing their goal to re-establish Christianity in its original form, such as some anti-denominational "Restorationists" which arose in the 1970s in the United Kingdom ["Evangelicalism in modern Britain: a history from the 1730s to the 1980s", David W. Bebbington, pub 1995, Routledge (UK), ISBN 0415104645, pg 230,231; 245-249] ["Alternative Religions: A Sociological Introduction", Stephen J. Hunt, pub 2003, Ashgate Publishing, Ltd; ISBN 0754634108, pg 82,83 ] and elsewhere. In comparable terms, earlier "primitivist" movements including the
Paulician s, Hussites, Anabaptists, radical Baptists, and theQuaker s have been described as examples of "restorationism".Fact|date=April 2008Background
Leading up to the 19th century, the Calvinist and Wesleyan revival called the
Great Awakening had established the Congregationalist,Presbyterian ,Baptist and newMethodist churches on competitive footing for social influence in the new America. As that "revival of religion" cooled, there was a retreat from the social gains that had been experienced by Evangelical churches. Furthermore, that revival had strengthened opinion in some quarters that Evangelical religions were weakened and divided, and that loyalty to traditional creeds and doctrines constituted an obstacle to salvation and Christian unity.The
Second Great Awakening made its way across the frontier territories, fed by intense longing for a prominent place for God in the life of the new nation, a new liberal attitude toward fresh interpretations of the Bible and a contagious experience of zeal for authentic spirituality. As these revivals spread, they gathered converts to Protestant sects of the time. The revivals eventually moved freely across denominational lines, with practically identical results, and went farther than ever toward breaking down the allegiances which kept adherents to these denominations loyal to their own. Consequently the revivals were accompanied by a growing dissatisfaction with Evangelical churches and especially with the doctrine ofCalvinism , which was nominally accepted in most Evangelical churches at the time.A Protest against Protestantism
Restorationists were not content with mere cooperation between denominations. The leaders of these movements did not believe that God intended to simply fatten the old institutions and perpetuate the old divisions with the revivals. They perceived the new religious awakening as the dawn, or at least the harbinger, of a new age. Restorationists sought to re-establish or renew the whole Christian church on the pattern they held to be set forth in the
New Testament . They had little regard for the creeds developed over time inCatholicism andProtestantism , which they claimed kept Christianity divided. Some even claimed the Bible suffered from ancient corruption, which required correction.The
Protestant Reformation came about through a kind of restorationist impulse to repair the Church and return it to its original biblical structure, belief, and practice. [cite web| url=http://www.wsu.edu/~dee/REFORM/LUTHER.HTM | author=Richard Hooker | title= Martin Luther, The Freedom of a Christian | accessdate=2007-03-08 ] But the Protestant reform movements, including Puritanism, accepted history as having some "jurisdiction" in Christian faith and life, according to historian Richard T. Hughes. [The American Quest for the Primitive Church, ed. Richard T. Hughes, 1995, University of Illinois Press. "Introduction", Hughes, page 5, "Here is the central point: the extent of history's jurisdiction.", ISBN 0252060296] Mark Noll similarly says of the Protestant view that "the Bible may be absolute in its wisdom and authority, but we apprehend its treasures as mediated through history." [,"ibid"; "Primitivism in Fundamentalism and American Biblical Scholarship" by Mark Noll, page 127] The Protestants believed in an historical continuity of the faith, and criticized Roman Catholic traditions in terms of both history and Scripture. Restorationists denied the "jurisdiction" of past historical development, in order to be free to embrace what they understood to be the heavenly pattern originally revealed to Christ's apostles. While Protestants would reject certain church traditions they viewed as not having biblical warrant, such aspurgatory and veneration of thesaints , various Restorationists would reject beliefs and practices considered orthodox and biblical by Protestants, such as the Sunday Sabbath and theTrinity .Restorationist organizations include
Christian Conventions , Churches of Christ,Disciples of Christ ,Independent Christian Churches/Churches of Christ ,Jehovah's Witnesses , theLatter Day Saint movement , Seventh-day Adventists,Church of God (Anderson) and others. These groups teach widely divergent theologies, but they all arose from the belief that the true pattern of the Christian religion died out through apostasy many years before and was finally restored by their churches. Some believe that they alone fully embody this restoration exclusively; others understand themselves as conforming to a rediscovered pattern of original Christianity that is now found in many churches, including their own. This is the official stance of theChristian Church (Disciples of Christ) , for example. Some restorationist denominations state that the historical institutions of Protestant, Catholic and Orthodox churches are not actually Christian. In some cases these groups believe that the Great Apostasy's departure from essential Christianity was so total and disastrous as to render futile any plan to remodel Christianity on existing foundations, necessitating a restoration so radical that the only feature familiar to traditional Christians is the name of Jesus the Christ.Restoration Movement
Of these movements, the most optimistic about the then-present state of
Christianity was the Stone-Campbell Restoration Movement. Others sometimes refer to the followers of this movement asCampbellite s; but the movement itself never adopted the term, which it considers disparaging. These churches strongly preferred to avoid applying to themselves any of the labels of convenience which divide Christians from one another, calling themselves instead by generic New Testament names, such as theDisciples of Christ , or theChurch of Christ . They brought together many from Baptist, Congregationalist, Presbyterian, and Methodist churches, and other Christians across a spectrum of Evangelical and alsoUnitarian Christianity , at first with astounding success. But as the movement progressed it developed non-negotiable distinctives of its own, sometimes referred to disapprovingly as unwritten creeds, and fractured into three major groups—each of which has become a recognizable group (the term "denomination" still being unacceptable to many of them): theChurches of Christ (or "church of Christ"), the Independent Christian Churches and Churches of Christ and theDisciples of Christ .Christadelphians
Dr. John Thomas (April 12, 1805 - March 5, 1871), was a devout convert to the
Restoration movement after a shipwreck at sea on his emigration to America brought to focus his inadequate understanding of theBible , and what would happen to him should he die. This awareness caused him to devote his life to the study of the Bible, which in turn brought him into contact with the teachings of Alexander Campbell. However, Dr. Thomas could not reconcile his views on baptism and resurrection with Campbell's. Once the split with Campbell was inevitable, Dr. Thomas appealed to the Churches of Christ both in America and inEngland and a growing movement emerged. A distinctive body of believers developed whose doctrine incorporatedAdventism , anti-trinitarianism, the belief that God is a "substantial and corporeal" being, objection tomilitary service, a lay-membership with full participation by all members and other doctrines consistent with the spirit of the Restorationist movement.cite web | title =Our History | publisher =Williamsburg Christadelphians | url = http://www.widomaker.com/~cpatax/xadelfia/who01.htm | accessdate =2008-04-03 ]One consequence of objection to military service was the adoption of the name
Christadelphians to distinguish this small community of believers and to be granted exemption from military service in theAmerican Civil War .Latter Day Saint restorationism
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints or "Mormons " believe thatJoseph Smith, Jr. was chosen to restore the original organization founded by Jesus "in its fullness", rather than to reform the church. This belief is no longer shared by the second largest branch of theLatter Day Saint Movement , theCommunity of Christ (formerly The Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints).According to Smith, God the Father and Jesus appeared to him and instructed him that the creeds of the churches of the day "were an abomination in
his sight" and that through him, God would restore (or re-establish) the true church. [(SeePearl of Great Price :Joseph Smith - History : Chapter 1:19)] Smith taught that theGreat Apostasy was complete and required a full restoration of the original church. This included theAaronic priesthood andMelchizedek priesthood and the full church structure consisting of prophets, apostles, evangelists and teachers. Joseph Smith founded the Church of Christ in 1830, serving as the first prophet believed to be appointed by Jesus in the "latter days".Smith published the
Book of Mormon , which LDS believe was translated fromGolden Plates as directed by anangel Moroni . Members of the Latter Day Saint movement (Mormonism ) believe that the Book of Mormon contains a record of the original church of Jesus in the Americas between about 600 BC and 421 AD. In addition, Smith claimed that he received the true authority or Priesthood directly from those who held it anciently, namelyJohn the Baptist , who returned as an angel and gave him andOliver Cowdery the authority to baptize.Saint Peter ,Saint James and Saint John, theApostles , returned as angels and gave Smith and Cowdery the authority to lead the church just as they had done anciently.The church was organized on
April 6 1830 inNew York state. Originally the church was unofficially called the "Church of Christ". Four years later, in April 1834 it was also referred to as the "Church of Latter Day Saints" to differentiate the church of this era from that of theNew Testament . Then, in April 1838, the full name was stated as the "Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints". [See The Doctrine and Covenants, sourcetext|source=The Doctrine and Covenants|book=Section 115|verse=4]Adventism
Adventism is a Christian eschatological belief which looks for the imminentSecond Coming of Jesus to inaugurate theKingdom of God . This view involves the belief that Jesus will return to receive those who have died in Christ and those who are awaiting His return and in anticipation of it have made themselves ready.Millerites and Sabbatarianism
The
Millerites are the most well-known family of the Adventist movements. They emphasized apocalyptic teachings anticipating the end of the world, and did not look for the unity of Christendom but busied themselves in preparation for Christ's return. Millerites sought to restore a prophetic immediacy and uncompromising biblicism that they believed had once existed but had long been rejected by mainstream Protestant and Catholic churches. From the Millerites descended the Seventh-day Adventists. TheWorldwide Church of God movement belongs to this category because it sprang from theSeventh Day churches. The personal ministry ofHerbert W. Armstrong became theRadio Church of God , which became the Worldwide Church of God. It later splintered into many other churches and groups when the Worldwide Church of God disassociated itself with the Restoration movements and made major attempts to join theProtestant branch of Christianity.eventh-day Adventists
The
Seventh-day Adventist Church grew out of the Adventist movement, in particular the Millerites. They are widely considered to be a restorationist church, [cite web|url=http://www.religioustolerance.org/chrrest.htm|title=The Restorationist denominations in Christianity ] [cite web|url=http://www.allexperts.com/el/2318-9/Seventh-Day-Adventists/|title=Seventh-Day Adventists - Christianity - Restorationism - Religion/Spirituality ] [cite web|url=http://religion.moonlightchest.com/restorationism.asp|title=Restorationism - World Religions ] [cite web|url=http://www.glosk.com/BR/Igreja_Nova/-910908/pages/List_of_Christian_denominations/14089_en.htm|title=Igreja Nova, Estado de Alagoas, Brazil - Pages: List of Christian denominations - glosk ] [cite web|url=http://www.spiritus-temporis.com/restorationism/restorationists.html|title=Restorationism - Restorationists ] [cite web|url=http://www.christianpost.com/article/20070904/29180_Mainstream_Protestants,_Adventists_Make_Efforts_to_Remove_'Stereotypes'.htm|title=Mainstream Protestants, Adventists Make Efforts to Remove 'Stereotypes' | Christianpost.com ] Important to the Seventh-day Adventist movement is a belief in progressive revelation, [cite web|url=http://www.andrews.edu/~damsteeg/Prog%20rev.html|title=Seventh-day Adventist Doctrines and Progressive Revelation] teaching that the Christian life and testimony is intended to be typified by "the Spirit of Prophecy", as is exemplified in the writings ofEllen G. White .Jehovah's Witnesses
In the early-mid 1870s a Bible study group led by
Charles Taze Russell eventually formed into what was called theBible Student Movement . Following a widespread schism within the group during the 1920s, and after the death of Russell, theJehovah's Witnesses emerged as separate religious organization while maintaining control of the legal organs of the Bible Society Russell had incorporated. They believe that Russell was not the founder of a new religion, [Jehovah's Witnesses – Proclaimers of God's Kingdom. chap. 31 p. 707 "A biography of Russell, published shortly after his death, explained: “He was not the founder of a new religion, and never made such claim. He revived the great truths taught by Jesus and the Apostles,"] but that he helped in restoring true Christianity from the apostasy that Jesus and theApostle Paul foretold. They believe that they are the true Christians and all other Churches departed in aGreat Apostasy from the original faith on major points. Like theMillerites , the Witnesses believe that the original faith could be restored through a generally literal interpretation of the Bible and a sincere commitment to follow its teachings. They focused on the restoration of a number of key doctrinal points derived from their interpretation of the Bible, including the use of the common English transliteration of theTetragrammaton "Jehovah " as God's personal name; a rejection oftrinitarianism (they believe that the Father and Son are two separate entities, and the Holy Spirit is an influence from God, without its own personality); the rejection of the definition ofhell as a place of eternal torment; [ The Hebrew she’ohl´ and its Greek equivalent hai´des, which refer, not to an individual burial place, but to the common grave of dead mankind; cite book|title=Reasoning From The Scriptures|publisher=Watchtower|year=1988|pages=169] active proselytization; strict neutrality in political affairs; total abstinence from military service; and a belief in the imminent manifestation of the Kingdom of God on Earth. The name "Jehovah's Witnesses" was adopted in 1931, under second presidentJudge Rutherford . The other branch of the Bible Student Movement, known as Bible Students, although sharing some of the same doctrinal views of Jehovah's Witnesses, have no connections with them in fellowship or Bible study, and differ significantly on many other doctrinal points.Fact|date=September 2008Charismatic Restorationism
British New Church Movement
During the
charismatic movement of the 1960s and 1970s, which focused on the transformation of the individual, some leaders formed what has become known as the Charismatic Restorationist Movement. These leaders, of whom Arthur Wallis, David Lillie and Cecil Cousen were at the forefront, focused on the nature of the church and shared a distinctive view that authentic church order was being restored to the whole church. This authentic church order centred on what is referred to as the "fivefold ministries", as listed in Ephesians 4:11: Apostles, Prophets, Evangelists, Teachers and Pastors. Although the Charismatic Movement brought the Pentecostal gifts to the denominational churches, these restorationists considered denominationalism unbiblical, and shared a conviction that God would cause the church to be directly organised and empowered by the holy spirit.The movement has grown to number thousands of adherents worldwide, and notable church networks include
Newfrontiers led byTerry Virgo ,Salt and Light Ministries International led byBarney Coombs and (arguably)Ichthus Christian Fellowship led by Roger and Faith Forster.Shepherding Movement
The British leaders of charismatic restorationism mutually recognised a parallel movement in the USA centered on the Fort Lauderdale Five;
Derek Prince ,Don Basham , Bob Mumford, Charles Simpson and Ern Baxter. This movement became known as theShepherding Movement and was the subject of significant controversy in the mid-1970s. The movement left a significant legacy through its influence on contemporary ministriesInternational Churches of Christ ,Maranatha Campus Ministries andGreat Commission International .Apostolic-Prophetic Movement
More recently another form of charismatic restorationism with a similar recognition of the
apostolic office has emerged in the form of theApostolic-Prophetic Movement , centered on theKansas City Prophets . Leading proponents of the movement includeC. Peter Wagner ,Rick Joyner ,Mike Bickle andLou Engle .Iglesia ni Cristo
"Iglesia ni Cristo" began in the
Philippines and was incorporated byFelix Y. Manalo onJuly 27 1914 .Sanders, Albert J., "An Appraisal of the Iglesia ni Cristo," in Studies in "Philippine Church History", ed. Anderson, Gerald H. (Cornell University Press, 1969)] Tipon, Emmanuel (Jul 28, 2004). [http://www.philippinenews.com/news/view_article.html?article_id=586e5943f3ab9a2049e883c382ca1842 "Iglesia Ni Cristo celebrates 90th anniversary"] . PhilippineNews.com. Retrieved August 19, 2005] The church professes to be the reestablishment of the original church founded by Jesus and teaches that the original church was apostatized. It does not teach the doctrine of theTrinity or the divinity of Jesus.cite news| last = Shepherd| first = Harvey|title = Millions mark Church of Christ's 80th anniversary; Founded in the Philippines by Brother Manalo| pages =H.7| publisher =The Gazette (Montreal) | date =July 30 1994 | url = http://proquest.umi.com/pqdweb?did=167582091&sid=1&Fmt=3&clientId=53018&RQT=309&VName=PQD|qccessdate = 2006-09-03 (as cited byProQuest )] [http://student631.tripod.com/biblestudentspage/id29.html Aromin, Rubin D. "God's Own Special People", "God's Message" (Manila: Iglesia ni Kristo, July 2001) cited by Student621. "Bible Students Page at tripod.com"] . RetrievedJuly 6 2005 .] "Iglesia ni Cristo" does not subscribe to the term "Restoration" nor claim to be a part of the "Restoration Movement".Local Churches
The
local churches are a Christian movement influenced by the teachings ofWatchman Nee andWitness Lee and associated with theLiving Stream Ministry publishing house. Its members see themselves as separate from other Christian groups, denominations, and movements, part of what they sometimes call "the Lord's recovery". One of the defining features of the local churches is their adherence to the principle that all Christians in a city or locality are automatically members of the one church in that locality. Another defining feature is the lack of an official organization or official name for the movement. The local churches believe that to take a name would be disrespectful and insulting to the name of Jesus. To distinguish themselves each local church refers to itself only as "the church in -insert-locality-". [cite web|url=http://www.localchurches.com/beliefs/faq.html|title=Local Churches Beliefs]Restorationist dates for the Great Apostasy
Restorationism is often criticized for rejecting the traditions followed by the early church, but different restoration groups have treated tradition differently. While some view all the
Church Fathers as unreliable witnesses to the original Apostolic Church, others find in the earliest Church Fathers proof that the early church believed and practiced as some restorationists do, and the late Church Fathers differences as evidences of a gradual or sudden falling away. Common to all restorationism is the belief that the Church Fathers or post-apostolic church leadership had no authorization to change the church's beliefs and practices, but did so nevertheless.The Jehovah's Witnesses believe that the apostasy started after the death of the last apostle, John. They believe that the Holy Spirit held the apostasy back in full force but after John died the spirit let the apostasy grow. They believe that it came in full after the
First Council of Nicaea . Still, they believe that throughout all that time there were true Christians alive until the beginning of the restoration.The Latter-day Saints also assign a very early date for the apostasy, beginning shortly after the deaths of the original Twelve Apostles at approximately 100 AD, and certainly being in a full state of apostasy by the 4th century. With this early date, they claim the least need to reconcile known writings and practices of the early church and
Church Fathers . Although their writings are sometimes cited to show reminiscences of earlier true practices, they are also used to demonstrate that doctrine and understanding had been already altered.The Sabbatarians have generally agreed on the approximate date of 135 AD as the start of the apostasy.
Justin Martyr in about 160 AD had specifically defended the first day assembly, and so is considered an apostate to Sabbatarians. Nevertheless, the early church history recorded the continued keeping of the Saturday Sabbath for creation and Sunday Sabbath for the Resurrection in Hippolytus's time. They view the apostasy as not complete until the church stopped keeping the Sabbath sometime after Constantine.The Stone-Campbell Restoration Movement views the Great Apostasy as a gradual process.
Ignatius promoted obedience to the bishop in about 100 AD, [Eph 6:1, Mag 2:1,6:1,7:1,13:2, Tr 3:1, Smy 8:1,9:1] which is viewed by some as signaling the introduction of the idea of a professional clergy, who began to elevate themselves over the people, leading by a gradual process of corruption to the prophesied "man of lawlessness".Infant baptism , which restorationists condemned as coercive church membership, is similarly viewed. They believe that only adult baptism was practiced at least to the time ofTertullian , but that infant baptism was introduced locally around the time of Irenaeus. They often reject notions oforiginal sin which entail a corruption of human nature, and admit only a defilement of mankind's habitual environment, traditions or culture. As do other Restorationists, they saw the church-state alliance under Constantine (see alsoConstantine I and Christianity andChristendom ) as a kind of captivity of the church through the centralized power of the bishops. Finally, the development of the idea of the supremacy and universal authority of theBishop of Rome is considered the completion of the Great Apostasy from which the Protestant Reformation only partially recovered, but most nearly did so among the Anabaptists and the Baptists.ee also
Restoration Movement
*
Charismatic Restorationism
*Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)
*Churches of Christ
*Independent Christian Churches/Churches of Christ
*International Churches of Christ
*List of famous people with Restoration Movement ties Mormonism
*
Mormonism
*Mormonism and Christianity
*Community of Christ Millerites
*
Anglo-Israelism
*Bible Student Movement
*Jehovah's Witnesses
*Millerites
*Primitive Apostolic Christianity (Sabbatarian)
*Seventh-day Adventist Church
*Sabbatarianism Other
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Arianism
*Black Death (and its effect upon "lore tradition")
*Christadelphians
*Ebionites
*Fundamentalist Christianity
*Great Apostasy
*Herbert W. Armstrong
*Judaizers
*Messianic Judaism
*Church of Christ with the Elijah Message
*Tahrif (and the Muslim concept of "restoration")"17th century Christian denominations in Britain with some similar views:"
*Quakers
*Fifth Monarchists
*Ranters
*Muggletonians
*Seekers External links
* [http://www.mun.ca/rels/hrollmann/restmov/ Restoration Movement] - Christian Churches + Churches of Christ + Disciples of Christ
* [http://www.fairlds.org/pubs/conf/1999BarK.html Restoration Movements] - "A Tale of Two Restorations," A comparison of the LDS restoration movement and the Alexander Campbell restoration movement.
* [http://www.fairlds.org/apol/ai018.html Mormon Restorationism] - Topical GuideReferences
Further reading
* Birdsall Richard D. "The Second Great Awakening and the New England Social Order." "Church History" 39 (1970): 345-64.
* Cross, Whitney, R. "The Burned-Over District: The Social and Intellectual History of Enthusiastic Religion in Western New York, 1800–1850".
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