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Introducing a Bible-based
Community
There must be many people who feel that there is
something outstandingly significant about the person and the
teaching of Jesus Christ. Yet when they survey "Christianity",
both in its history and its modern forms, they find a wide variety
of churches and communities, all with their differing foundations,
teachings and practices. Feeling bewildered by the existence of so
many groups claiming the name "Christian", they may well give up
the quest for "the truth" as hopeless.
This web page is written to draw your attention
to the existence of a community of believers in Christ, calling
themselves "Christadelphians", organized in groups found
throughout the world. Wherever they exist they have a fellowship
founded upon an agreed basis of beliefs. Fundamental to their
faith is the principle that what Christ and his apostles taught in
the first century was truth, and it is still the truth today. The
Holy Scriptures, both Old and New Testaments, are their sole
authority. |
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An Apostolic Fellowship
The community has no paid ministry, no robes or elaborate
ceremonies, nor has it any "head of the church" or legislative
council. Their ecclesias (the New Testament word for 'church')
organize their own affairs, though the pattern is similar
everywhere. Like the "elders" of New Testament times, members are
appointed to manage the affairs of the ecclesia and to preside at
its meetings.
At the meeting for the "breaking of bread" on
"the first day of the week" there are hymns, prayers, readings
from the Scriptures and an exhortation. The bread and the wine
circulate among all the "brothers and sisters" present. Voluntary
collections are taken to meet all the expenses. If some of the
early followers of the apostles in the first century could attend
such meetings, it is believed that they would immediately
recognise what was going on, for it is patterned on New Testament
worship. Like Jesus' early disciples, they also proclaim his
message of life to all willing to hear; they instruct their
children and young people in Sunday Schools and Youth Groups, and
promote the life of faith and prayer, and obedience to Christ's
commands, among their members. |
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The Name "Christadelphians"
In the early days, members found that to preserve their identity
they had to give themselves a name. "Christadelphians" was chosen
because it means "brothers (and of course sisters) in Christ". It
has been used to distinguish the community for more than 120
years.
Since 1864 The Christadelphian Magazine has
appeared monthly, issued from
Birmingham, U.K. It provides informative articles and contains
items of news from the ecclesias worldwide. Pamphlets and books
are also produced for the use of members and their friends. Other
organizations throughout the world promote the preaching of the
Gospel in areas where the ecclesia is small or non-existent, and
there are special committees responsible for preaching the Gospel
in other countries. Still another organization circulates typed
exhortations and Bible studies to those members who live some
distance from an ecclesia.
The care of the infirm and the elderly has been
seen as a pressing need: there are several Homes in various
countries. Voluntary contributions are made to help individual
members in need. |
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A Distinctive Foundation
But why should the Christadelphians deserve any more attention
than other groups of "believers", many claiming to be based on the
Bible?
The brief answer is this: their understanding of
the teachings of the Bible is quite different from that of other
denominations. The difference arose from the conviction of one,
John Thomas, that the teachings he was encountering in
"Christendom" 150 years ago did not truly represent the faith of
Christ and his apostles. Persuaded that the truth must be sought
only in the Bible, he embarked upon a conscientious study of the
Scriptures. He made no claim to any vision or personal revelation.
He eventually came to an understanding of "the gospel of the
Kingdom
of God and the name of Jesus Christ" (Acts 8:12) which was
different in a number of important points from that of the
churches and other religious sects. His labours attracted the
support of others who were convinced of the validity of his
conclusions. This understanding of Bible truths has been
rigorously tested by free enquiry for 150 years. The distinctive
views of the Christadelphians today are the result of this
process. |
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The Whole Bible
What is this message of the Bible, and why is it different from
popular "Christian" ideas?
It arises from the important principle that the
Bible must be understood as a whole. It is easy to uphold certain
teachings by accepting some parts of the Scriptures and neglecting
others. For instance, it is popular today to dismiss much of the
Old Testament. Yet these documents - the Law, the Psalms and the
Prophets - were accepted by Jesus and his apostles as "the word of
the Lord". The Bible is a unity: the revelation of God for mankind
begins in the pages of the Old Testament and is continued and
expanded in the New. The "whole counsel of God" (Acts
20:27) is to be derived from the whole book.
Christadelphians accept that all of the Bible is
the wholly inspired Word of God (2 Timothy
3:16). They therefore read it carefully and regularly. A reading
plan, called the Bible Companion, enables them to read the Old
Testament once in a year, and the New Testament twice.
There is another point of great importance: if
man is truly to understand the Bible, he must be prepared for the
fact that it is absolutely frank about all issues, and primarily
about ourselves. It is the most realistic book in the world,
confronting the stark issues of life without wishful thinking.
Human problems, both of the race and of individuals, are frankly
assessed. The origin of the problems is explained and so is the
solution to them. The Bible is the only source in the world to do
this in harmony with the facts of history and of human life. |
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God, Creator and Father
The Bible portrays God as the Creator of the heavens and the
earth. He is "the King eternal, incorruptible, invisible.....to
whom be honour and power everlasting" (1 Timothy 1:17). Yet by His
Holy Spirit, the expression of His power, He controls the affairs
of the world according to His ultimate purpose with mankind.
Holiness and truth are His attributes; there can be no deceit or
falsehood with Him, nor can He regard with indifference persistent
human rebellion. Yet He describes Himself as a God "full of
compassion and gracious, slow to anger and plenteous in
mercy....forgiving iniquity, transgression and sin, and that will
by no means clear the guilty" (Exodus 34:6,7, R.V.). This is the
portrait of an Eternal Creator, a supremely moral Being, who is
also the Father of those who seek Him according to His Word. And
it is only in this Word - in the Bible - that man can learn of
Him. |
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The Vital Earth
There is a common impression that the Bible is not really
interested in the earth and what happens there. Its major concern
is said to be "heaven", the abode of the righteous. This is a
great mistake. The revelation of God's purpose shows Him to be
positively concerned with the earth and the human race upon it. As
He said himself: "Thus saith the Lord that created the
heavens....that formed the earth and made it....he created it not
in vain: he formed it to be inhabited" (Isaiah 45:18).
God is concerned with the earth as a whole, and
the nations inhabiting it. The careers of great empires are under
God's control and their fate is predicted. The severe troubles of
the modern world are all foreseen, and so is their solution: the
establishment by God of a new order in the earth as the only means
by which the waywardness of mankind can be controlled.
The Bible, far from being "other-worldly", is realistic and
practical in its concern for the fate of the whole human race. Its
vision of the future is worldwide in its scope, for "the earth
shall be filled with the knowledge of the glory of the Lord, as
the waters cover the sea" (Habakkuk
2:14).
Though this prophecy was uttered 6000 years
before Christ, it represents the world-view of the whole Bible. It
is entirely relevant to our modern troubled condition and is
unique in the history of our planet. |
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Israel in God's Purpose
The careful reader of the Bible will be in no doubt that the
nation of Israel has occupied a special place in the purpose of
God. But many people today find this difficult to reconcile with
the nature of the modern State of Israel. How did the "special
relationship" arise?
The Bible account shows us that the human race,
in the early centuries of its existence, massively abandoned the
true worship of God, so that "the earth was corrupt....and filled
with violence" (Genesis
6:11), thus bringing the divine judgment of
the Flood. It was not long, however, before mankind began to show
again the same tendencies to evil. God therefore determined to
build up a special community, by whom His Word would be preserved.
So he chose Abraham, a man of faith, and made outstanding promises
to him and his descendants, involving the future possession of the
land of Canaan (later Palestine or Israel) and blessings for all
the nations (Genesis 12:1-3; 13:14,15).
Abraham's descendants were brought out of Egypt by God's power and
were eventually settled in 12 tribes in the Promised Land, Israel.
There they lived under the Law, a system of regulations given them
by God through Moses, with the intention of training them to be a
people devoted to His service. In the following centuries the Jews
repeatedly neglected the worship of God and turned to worship the
idols of their pagan neighbours, and as a result were driven out
of their land by the invasion of foreign powers. They lived for
centuries scattered and persecuted, as God has warned them would
happen (read Deuteronomy 28). Nevertheless, despite their
waywardness, the Jews preserved the Word of God both in the land
of Israel and during their exile in other countries. |
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Promises to the Patriarchs
But the promises God made to Abraham did not only concern the
nation of Israel. He was to be "a father of many nations" (Genesis
17:5), though significantly it would be one special Jewish
descendant who was to ensure the fulfilment of the promise of
blessing for all peoples. This descendant, spoken about so long
before, was the Lord Jesus Christ. Later promises made to David,
one of Israel's kings, filled out further details of what Jesus
would accomplish, and of how "God shall give unto him the throne
of his father David: and he shall reign over the house of Jacob
for ever" (Luke 1:32,33).
God's purpose with
Israel, then, was to make them a training centre for the faithful
in the pagan centuries before Christ. Of them Jesus was born, to
proclaim the good news that his faithful servants become children
of Abraham by faith and so inherit the promises. So the Apostle
Paul wrote to the Galatians: "If ye be Christ's, then are ye
Abraham's seed, and heirs according to the promise" (Galatians
3:27-29). |
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The Truth about Mankind
From the dawn of history men have sought consolation in pleasing
views about themselves and their ultimate fate, because in this
way their natural desires have been satisfied. The Bible, however,
encourages no wishful thinking about human nature. It is utterly
realistic about ourselves, our powers and our weaknesses. We were
created, so it tells us, "in the image of God"; that is, we have
been given wonderful powers of mind. We can reason; we have a
power of conscience, warning us when wrong is being done; and we
have a power of will, enabling us to make decisions affecting our
conduct and so our lives.
Yet we have strong natural desires which demand satisfaction: the
pressure to indulge ourselves in many ways, to acquire material
possessions, and to defend our pride. Human history is a record of
the way in which men and women have allowed their desires to
dominate them. Strife and suffering have been the inevitable
result. |
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