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Volume 4 - Issue 3 (May/Jun 2000)
The Vision
Myth Became Fact
Family Circle
"And You Were There"
Ekklesia
Not in Kansas Anymore
Rightly Dividing
If I Only Had A...
The School House
Shelter From the Storm
Culture Matters
Poppies
Practicum
Follow the Yellow Brick Road
Open Letter
My Pretty
Leviathan
The Man Behind the Curtain
Apologia
Disassociating
Hit and Run
Re:Views
Unless otherwise noted, all content is Copyright © 2008 Highlands Study Center
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Disassociating
by R.C. Sproul Jr.
Dorothy was a young girl. She could not be trusted on her own. For this
reason, at some point before the story starts, she has come to live with, and
under the protection of Auntie Em. When the winds began to howl, you'll
remember, the brave woman cried out to her niece to come quickly, to get in the
cellar where it was safe from the cyclone. But Dorothy didn't make it, perhaps
because she had been dilly-dallying with the carnival man.
God knows that we are frail, and fragile. And so He has established authority
structures into our lives, giving parents to children, husbands to wives,
sessions to husbands, and presbyteries to sessions. But even this system of
back-ups doesn't always work. Children disobey and parents abdicate. Fathers
disappear, and sessions roll over. Sessions squabble, and presbyteries kick them
out of the house.
Such has happened in the Tennessee/Alabama presbytery of the Associate
Reformed Presbyterian Church. We have written before about the sad goings on at
York Presbyterian Church, and at our presbytery. The short story goes like this.
My friend Martin Murphy, who had been the pastor at the church for over five
years, was approached by a few elders and deacons, and asked to leave the
church. A congregational meeting was held, in which two thirds of the members
expressed the wish that the pastor stay. No charges were made against Pastor
Murphy. There was assorted wrangling over who had authority over the church, the
trustees, or the session. (Trustees are a legal thing. This whole case is a
textbook argument against the evils of incorporated churches.) Eventually the
presbytery sent a delegation to investigate matters. They instructed the feuding
parties to make amends. On the floor of presbytery one of the offending elders
clearly affirmed his refusal to be reconciled to the pastor. Charges were
brought against him. A failure to read the charge, a technicality in the arcania
of church discipline necessitated another called meeting of the presbytery.
Between these two meetings the elder asked a judge to grant a restraining order
against the session of the church forbidding them to exercise discipline against
him, and asking the judge to order the presbytery to fire the pastor. When we
gathered to read the charges against the elder, all charges were dropped.
Months later, after continual efforts to gain sufficient votes to oust Pastor
Murphy, a vote was taken to, at the same time, dismiss the church into
independency, and to remove Pastor Murphy from the pulpit. That measure passed.
Still no charges, no trial, no nothing. The church, and the pastor, even the
offending elder, were sent out into the storm to fend for themselves.
In March, at the request of Saint Peter Presbyterian Church, ARP, Saint Peter
was also dismissed into independency by a unanimous vote of the presbytery. And
so we are, for now, Saint Peter Temporarily Oxymoronic Independent Presbyterian
Church. I met with the minister and his work committee to talk about the
decision of our congregation. One presbyter offered that he would be praying for
our church because it seemed to him that we had the attitude of "Things didn't
go our way, and so we're going to take our marbles and go home."
Such is by no means the case. When we first came here to plant Saint Peter
Church, and to start the study center, we understood the importance of
accountability. I know me well enough to know that I could fall off some
theological deep end, and maybe take some poor souls with me. And so I sought
out a denomination with some history behind it, with a confession I believed in,
and placed myself, and later the church, under the authority of the
Tennessee/Alabama presbytery of the ARP. In so doing I expressed my trust in the
elders of that presbytery that they would be as a father to me, and to our young
congregation. We have left not because our Brother Martin was treated badly, but
because he was not treated at all. We left because when the call came, when the
cyclone kicked up, the presbytery ran into the cellar, and locked the door
behind them. We left them, in short, because they left us. (By the way, even
that would not have been enough, if we had had legal standing to appeal this
decision to the General Synod. But because we have no standing, we cannot
appeal.)
In the meantime the session of the church is wrestling over who will be our
Auntie Em, who will take us in and offer us the protection we so badly need. We
are trying to determine what denomination/presbytery we should join with. As we
are searching we have asked a number of godly pastors in the area to serve as a
sort of ad hoc presbytery for us, to make sure that I am not leading the flock
astray. They have been kind enough to help us in this way.
The session of the church, indeed the congregation, would be very grateful
for your prayers. This is not a happy time for us, nor was it an easy decision.
And the decision still before us is a very important one. Please pray that we
would make a wise decision, that we would find a safe and appropriate home.
I told the men on the committee that I did not believe that the men who had
made these decisions did so out of raw malevolence. I told them I did not think
these men held secret meetings and made oaths to Satan. I told them their
failure was not that they were wicked, but that they lacked the will to do the
right thing, that they were cowards. If only the great and terrible true Wizard
would grant these cubs what they so desperately need, that they might sit
rightly on the throne on which Christ has placed them, and use the keys He has
given them.
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