Church of God (Restoration)

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The Church of God (Restoration) is a plain dress Christian denomination founded in the 1980s by American evangelist Daniel (Danny) Wilburn Layne. [1] [2] Members of this group believe that they are ordained by both prophecy and divine command to restore the church of God as it was in the Book of Acts, and believes that it alone is the only true church. [3] Many of the church's teachings originated from the Church of God (Anderson) movement thirty years earlier.

Contents

History

Danny Layne was raised in the Church of God (Anderson) in Ontario, California, where his father was a minister. He claimed that he lived a life of drug addiction (heroin), drug dealing, crime and sin on the streets of San Francisco for several years. Layne began preaching in the Church of God (Guthrie, OK) after his conversion in May 1980.

After Layne's death in 2011, the church's chief Apostle is D. Ray Tinsman of Greenville, Ohio, along with 11 other minister are also called Apostles, including Henry Hildebrandt.

Church government

The group is officially presbyterian-hierarchical in ecclesiastical polity, with the General Ministerial Body having the greatest authority in doctrine and practice, especially those recognized as apostles. However, many ex-members claim that it was actually episcopalian, with Daniel Layne acting as de facto archbishop until his death in 2011. Daniel Layne was officially held to be an Apostle in the Church of God (Restoration). [4]

While there is no official church headquarters, individual congregations are expected to be more than a loose association, and submit to the decisions of the General Ministerial Body. There is no formal membership, however, those who attend regularly are expected to strictly adhere to the standards and theology taught by leaders in the movement.

The General Ministerial Body consists of male and female ministers, who call themselves "The Seventh Trumpet Angel Ministry". Ministers must be saved and sanctified, not divorced and remarried, and agree with the Church's theology and practice. They must also feel personally called of God and have the approval of the General Ministerial Body.

Beliefs and doctrines

The group considers itself to be "anti-denominational", with roots in the holiness movement and Church of God (Anderson) of which Daniel Sidney Warner was one of the leading ministers in the late 19th century. Warner had been associated with the Churches of God General Conference, and was greatly influenced by the "anti-denominational" teaching of that denomination.

This group also claims to closely follow all the teachings of the Bible, and practices excommunication to some former members it considers to be errant from its very strict and real interpretation of the Bible and actively work against the group. They believe and teach that they are the one and only true church and that anyone outside of their group who is saved will eventually join them. [5]

The doctrines of the Church of God (Restoration) seem to be similar to the original doctrines of the Church of God (Anderson), although the "Anderson" churches are now indistinguishable from most other evangelical churches in the USA.

The following is a list of some of the emphasized doctrines and practices:[ citation needed ]

The church has been accused of implicitly teaching several other controversial doctrines. Though the church officially denies these claims, former members have maintained that these views are promoted by members of the church. The most popular accusations include: praying to apostles or in their names, belief in Ray Tinsman as the messiah, and belief in reincarnation.[ citation needed ] Former members have also published threats against church leaders including violence and death threats.[ citation needed ]

Eschatology

The official eschatology of the sect is a form of church historicism. This church [4] teaches that the sounding of the 7th Trumpet referenced in the Book of Revelation began around the same year in 1980 when Daniel Layne was saved, alleging that there was a general discontent among many of its current adherents that were in various Churches of God at that time. A variation of this "7th Seal message" had been taught in other Churches of God for approximately 50 years prior to this point. [8]

Daniel Sidney Warner and the earlier ministers of the Church of God (Anderson) taught that the restoration of the church was prophesied by the Old Testament prophets, in the New Testament, and in the Book of Revelation. They taught that the time period from 270 to 1530 was the "Papal age" and 1530 to 1880 was the "Protestant age", with 1880 being the year the church of God was restored with the full message of salvation, sanctification, and unity of God's people. Warner describes how he came up with these dates in Birth of a Reformation. [9] From a number of scriptures in Daniel and Revelation, he took "time, times, and half a time", "42 months" or "1260 days" (Dan 7:25; 12:7, Rev 11:3; 12:6; 12:14; 13:5;) to mean 1260 years of the "Papal age", holding that in symbolic language one day is one year. The 1260 years of the "Papal age" is added to the time that the church lost its unity and purity, which gives the end of the "Papal age" as 1530 AD. Then using the symbol from Revelation of "three days and a half" (Rev 11:11), with each day equaling a century, they held that the duration of the Protestant age was 350 years, which brings them to 1880. This date was the beginning of the full restoration of the church of God and called the "Evening Light age".

The Church of God (Restoration) builds the dating of their movement on the same dates as the Church of God (Anderson) earlier ministers did. They also hold that in about 1930 the Church of God (Anderson) as a whole became apostate and there was silence in the spiritual heavens for "the space of half an hour" (Rev 8:1). This one half-hour is taken to mean 50 years, using one hour in symbolic language as one century. The time of the "silence period" ended in 1980, which was about the time of the beginning of Daniel Layne's ministry.

Some reject the date of 1880 and claim the dates 270 and 1530 hold no historical significance and were only obtained by back-dating from 1880. They also point out that while there is Biblical authority to use the symbol of one day for a year (Num 14:34; Eze 4:6), there is no Biblical authority to use one day as a century or one hour as a century, which the Church of God (Restoration) uses to get the 350 years of the Protestant age and the 50 years of the silent time.

Congregations

The Church of God (Restoration) has about 20 congregations [10] worldwide (with about half in the United States and Canada) as well as mission stations in Haiti, Nepal, India, the Philippines, Kenya and Ireland.

They urge all Christians to unite and bind into one visible body of believers, which they believe should be their own. The group draws most of its members from various Anabaptist and Church of God churches, but includes a diversity of backgrounds, both religious and cultural. One method of outreach has been to have a large group of adherents attend conventions or services of other churches (often churches from which members have been previously gleaned) with the apparent goal of gaining new members. In recent years their outreach efforts have increasingly focused on street meetings and new congregations in large urban centers.

Hanover, Manitoba

The Church of God (Restoration) in the Rural Municipality of Hanover in Manitoba Canada and church pastor Tobias Tissen together received $74,561 of fines for breaching public health regulations during the COVID-19 pandemic. [11]

Bimonthly publication

The Gospel Trumpet [12] [13] is a bi-monthly publication that is published in English, German, and Russian. Some of its clip-art and writings are copied from the original century-old Gospel Trumpet, with which it has no other continuity. The current publishers claim to follow in the steps of the original Gospel Trumpet by publishing strongly against denominationalism and sin. There is also a bi-monthly paper, The Shining Light, intended for children.

Criticism

The Church of God (Restoration) remains the focus of controversy, with many accusations leveled by ex-members across the world. According to former members the church is cult-like and controls dress code, internet access and relationships. Former member Tina Wall said, "I believe Church of God is a cult, you can't think for yourself, nothing. You just follow the leaders." Fear of Hell is used to control members and to make member obey church leaders. [14]

Most of the accusations stem from well-known doctrines of the Church of God (Restoration) such as divine healing, shunning and excommunication. The Church rejects the notion that the husband is the spiritual head of the family. The Church teaches rather that the husband is the head of the home in domestic affairs and bears some responsibility for spiritual matters, but that the pastor has more authority in spiritual matters than the father/husband holds.

For a number of years, they did not believe in accessing any medical help, nor using medicine, but divine healing from God. There have been a number of deaths within the group, of newborns, children, and adults, which normal medical procedures may have prevented. However, due to political and judicial pressure in 2001, a resolution was approved by the General Ministerial Body that now recommends that all underage children be provided with appropriate medical care. Adults are free to choose for themselves. [15] When adults are critically ill they are supposed to choose divine healing rather than medical care. [14]

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References

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  2. "Zion's Voice". churchofgod.net. Archived from the original on July 16, 2010. Retrieved July 17, 2010.
  3. 1 2 "Transcript of Danny Layne message" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on August 14, 2015. Retrieved July 14, 2015.
  4. 1 2 "The Church of God, Official Website of The Church of God". churchofgod.net. Archived from the original on July 23, 2010. Retrieved July 18, 2010.
  5. Archived copy Archived 2015-08-14 at the Wayback Machine
  6. "Musical Instruments in Worship". July 2012. Archived from the original on 2015-07-29. Retrieved 2015-07-30.
  7. "Aylmer Case - TS: When spanking kids crosses the line". Archived from the original on 2011-07-26. Retrieved 2011-02-19.
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  10. "Church of God Congregations". churchofgod.com. Archived from the original on July 21, 2010. Retrieved July 18, 2010.
  11. Kitching, Chris (31 Jan 2023). "Steinbach-area congregation leader asking donors for $75,000 to cover COVID fines". Winnipeg Free Press . Archived from the original on 2023-02-02. Retrieved 2023-03-28.
  12. "The Gospel Trumpet". churchofgod.net. Archived from the original on July 27, 2010. Retrieved July 18, 2010.
  13. "Gospel Trumpet". Archived from the original on 2015-08-15. Retrieved 2015-09-14.
  14. 1 2 "Church fighting pandemic restrictions is cult-like, former worshippers, expert allege". Archived from the original on 2021-06-19. Retrieved 2021-06-19.
  15. "Canadians Flee in Spanking Dispute - The Washington Post". The Washington Post . Archived from the original on 2015-07-25.

Literature