Fall - Dixon Pentecostal Research Center
Transcription
Fall - Dixon Pentecostal Research Center
A PUBLICATION OF THE HAL BERNARD DIXON JR.PENTECOSTAL RESEARCH CENTER ‘ith evuy person, group or orgmization comes a history No one just shows up on the scene widlout a story to tell. People’s historieslxovicle the lbunclation lor their presentancla contexl tbr their fuIxre. The rninistly of Mount Pam Church of God in Atlanta, Georgia, is no clifferenr. Mount Paran’s ministry, ourreach and vision dir1 not begin on Mount Pnran Road. Dating back to 1917, this current glohnl outreach is the result of people who have wanted to experience and express the fullness of God in puriry and power. Such a desire was the very hearlbeat of the Pentecostal m~vcn~c~~~ thar began around the turn ol the twenrieth century. People were searching for a purity of rcligion that was free from creeds and cocks, which they believed brought segregation ancl disunity. They also longed for a clemonscralion of the Holy Spirit’s power as recorded in Acts. .This longing was the catalyst for two of the most significant streams of Penrecosralism: die Azusa Street revival of 1906 which Mount Paran is planted 1~~1 flowcrl into Arlonta. The srconcl stream rushed in with a Church of God cvangdist by the name ul’ M.S. Imms. Lemons, a tcachct born T~nwssec, was the clvcrsccr of Georgia when he began n revival in Atlnnln in July of 19 17. During rhis time hc ldrided Molr., who with Micldlchr~~oks had lxcn conducting Pcntccostal services in the Glenn Street Mission. On August 12, 191.7, the converts ol‘ Lemons tentrevival and the mmlxx or Molt’s iiiissinn came togcthcr to lorm Ihc hst Clmd~ of God in AllNItil, GC!Ol@il. L~lllOllS reporixcl tile cstalhlmcnt ol‘the new cl-m~l~in the Chu r-cl1 zrns of AtlNlta to do so. His god fricncl, T. ,J. Micldlclxx~olis, also rcccivccl the Holy Spirit Ixpism, nncl around I.914 they began holding regulx church scrviccs in :I rcnterl (!I’ God Evllrl‘iyl: WC hkavc;I lurgc church in AtlmUa now, WC united the two missions.. , They have rhcil niectings at the corner d Whilchall ancl Trinity Streets. WC apl~ointctl two clcacons, a clerk and a treasurer, The work was left in the hnnds of rhe blessccl Holy G1.11x1 and l~rorllcr I-loh and Midcllclxd~s, who have lxxx faithlid lnborcrs and have beengreatlyusedd God in giving out His Word, the rcsulr of which is a.goodly number of lively, happy souls.’ Lemons and Holr had brought together the two major streams of Penlecostdism; they symbolized the type of pastor-leader that would serve this Atlanta congregation throughout its history. HISTORY AND HERITAGE 0 Page 2 Marks of Pentecost One of the marks of Pentecostalism has been the miracles, signs and wonders that characterize the movement as Jesus Christ said in Mark 16 17,18. Pentecostals have taken these words as truth and have always believed in the miracle-working power of God. The fulfillment of Joel continues today in the Pentecostal tradition. God5 delivering hand wasevident in the early life of the Mount Paran church. Charles Holt experienced tremendous miracles in the lives of his family. His wife, Dora, was healed of asthma duling one worship service, HoIt’s daughter, Ruth, wrote to the Evangel sharing her testimony of healing; she was twelve years old at the Chnrles Halt in his tailor. shop in Atlanta time. God’s delivering hand was also clisI want to praise God for His wonderful healing power. He has played in the life of MS. Lemons. healed me of double pneumonia. While Lemons was preaching the tent All of us take the Lord for our revival, a woman attended the meethealer. Your little sister in Christ, ings although her husband disapRuth Halt’ proved. She would come home from Grace, another daughter of Charles the meetings and suffer because of his Holt, had a highly publicized healing. ill temper. One night he told her that if At the age of fourteen months she was she ever went back to the revival, he diagnosed with double curvature of would kill her and the minister. the spine. Holt prayed daily for Grace The woman stayed away one to be healed. One clay 1-101~ placed his evening, but returned the following daughter on his knee and passed his night. Her husband recruited two of his hand over her spine. The McChm! li-iends, and when the service was over, Newqqer Syndicate reported the story: they followecl Lemons with the intent It was like passing the hand over of carrying out the murderous threat, a row of marbles. He saysthat he Lemons was staying in a tailor shop prayed the prayer of his faith and at the time, most likely the shop of begged that God woulcl give him Charles Holt. He did not see the three a sign. Suddenly he felt a vibramen following him with railroad ties in tion in his fingers, which comtheir hands, but it did not matter; they municated itself like electricity to did not attack him. Lemons went into his entire body, and he felt the the shop, said his evening prayers and crooked part of his baby’s spine went to bed. He never knew anything give way under his touch. Laughwas afoot. ing and clying at the same time The next night when Lemons gave he called his wife in joyful the altar call, someone began screamtones! “Dora, our baby is going to ing outside the tent. Le’mons looked up get well!” From that day on her and saw the woman’s husband running improvement was rapid. People into the tent where he fell at the altar, came from far and near to see the gave his life to the Lord and was slain in the Spirit. result of this wonderful healing.” Once the service ended, Lemons and Holt began talking to the man. He told them about his plan to kill Lemons and his inability to cany it out. Accorcling to Judy Cripps, granddaughter of Lemons, the man explained this way: As I and my two friends were coming after you, there were two men in very bright shining clothes walking on either side of you. As we started toward you, they looked at us and we fell down. So we came here tonight to wait again for you, but then I heard you preach ancl I knew I had to give my life to the Lord.” Neither sickness nor persecution was going to stop Gocl or His people. There was work to be clone; God was confirming His kingdom purpose for this small band of believers. Another confirming sign of God’s presence has been the revelation of His divine will through the gifts of the Spirit. The following message was given during the Mount Paran years, when in 1972, the pastor, Dr. Paul L. Walker, was invited to visit servicemen’s centers and bases in Vietnam. On Sunday morning prior to his departure, the elclers were called forward to anoint him and send him off with prayer, A message in tongues came forth to the church, and the associate pastor, Dr. M.G. McLuhan, gave the interpretation from which the following is excerpted: Behold.. .saith the Spirit. Lift up thine eyes and look unto the harvest field. For behold I extend thy outreach around the world.. . to those who have never heard, and I send my messenger as your -See MOUNT PARAN, puge 5 ....Q.............. ........I..............,...,................................. Mark L. WaZheu,M.A., is the senior Pustor of Mount Paran North Church 01God in Marietta, Georgia, HISTORY AND HERITAGE * Pqge 3 he strength or the Church of Gocl lies unmisLal~nl~ly in the millistry meeting the Church of God was prcscnwl; scven~y-live unikcl with them, my wife aii~l I among he n~udxc In December of the same year I rcccivccl Llic Iq~tism with the I-101.~Ghost. I at once lost all interest in my l~usincss. My wife 1x1~1 attcnclccl a meeting at Alion, Tcnn., with Brothct Lemons alltl 0LhelS in Chillj$, anti Lhr lrccivucl her call Lo go in the work. I also reccivecl the call after rccciving the Holy Glivst. We sold all our possessions and were liccnscd to preach. ’ ol 11x local cllLudl from which lcuclcrs have come 1.0 expand the ministry ancl growth of the movemenl. One such couple was SJ. and Annie Heath, charter members of rhe Mount Paran Church of Gocl..’ Natives of Georgia, Snmucl Jnckson Heath (1.867-I.931.) and Annie Julia Baldwin (18751933) first met in 1894. The two were married the following year and lxgan their lift together as devout Methodists. Shortly nkr the turn CA-the cent.uly, Jack was l~omotcd to a prominent position in the telegraph business l3Lil WJS lilrcetl to end his service clue lo ill health. They then moved to Atlanta where Jack found work as a contractor, ancl there the Heaths built a home with moclern conveniences. They felt as il‘ they hacl “rcachccl the height of [their/ aspirations. I’.’ Then in I.917 the Mcnths experienced a raclicnl change in their spiritual life, gave up all their malerial possessions in obcclicnce to the Holy Spirit’s call, ant1 clevorecl their livos to the ministry, as Reverend Heath relaks in his autobiography: In 19 17 a Holiness lent was placed at the rear of our home in Atlanta ancl services concluctecl by MS. Lemons, a Church of Gocl ~x~~c~~L we ~tt~~d~~l the first service, ancl for five weeks we sdclam missecl a sewice. July 26~11, during this meeting, my wife received the baptism with the Holy Ghost. At the close of this Bishop S.J. I-Ica~h rcccivccl his I‘irst crcclentials in the Church 01’Goal as an evangelist on January 1‘I , ‘I9 1H, rind Mrs. &mic Heath receivccl ministerial license on Scptcml~cr 1.8, 19 19. This 17usl,ancl-nncl-wife team hcgan llicil first cvnngelistic trip on July I, 1.91.8, and ccmluctcrl services in Soud~ Georgin. Tlirc~uj$i their clrorLs lbc Church of Gocl was cstalnlisliecl in Offerman, Georgia, following a clifficull stmg&--their workers clescnccl them, shots were lid into Lhc meeting place, and their lives wcrc threatened at gunpoint. Yet bccausc ol their smcll‘aslness, a strong church was organizecl in Offerman that later served as a camp meeting site for the Church ,of Gocl in South Georgia.,’ One of those canvertccl to Pentecostalism during this time was Earl I? Paulk, Sr., who later became assistant general overseer of the Church of God. Brother Heath was known as a man of deep thought: and as an effective conimunica~or ol’ end-rime lxol~l~q Gcncrd Overseer S.W Lalimer noted that Brother I-lcath was a “polished Christian gentleman” and “one of the read men in 11x COW& . .well versa1 in Scripture [who] always stoocl bcsl l’or the doctrine of the Church of God ~~ucoml~risi~i~l~“~l Brother Heath’s intcgrily earnccl him respect in the rlciiomination ancl enabled him lo serve the Church d God in various gcncral chu~h positions while still serving as evangelisl, ancl l~~s1or,~ When Brorhcr Heath was appointccl OVE~SCCI’ of Mississippi in 1929, hc movccl to the village of ML~~~~INOW~I. Morgantown had been the birthplace of the Church nTGod in South Mississippi in 19l.5. There hc served as pastor d the two local congregations, Morgantown ancl Mount Sinai. 1-k was malting plans to retire in Morgantown following Lhc 1931 General Assembly when he passed away on Fcbruaty 2, 1.931.,after a brief illness. Reverend E.J. Boehmer cond~~tecl the funeral with burial in the Morgantown Cemetery? IUowing Brother Heath’s tleath, SisterHeath served.as pastor of both Morgantown ancl Mount Sinai cl~~nd~es ,unLil another pastor could be secrureclat the General Asscml$ Thereafter, Sister He& continued Lo resicle in Morgan...,,.,.,,.........,...,,..,..,,,,..,,...,.,..,.. . ...*.,,..1....1,..,1.......... HISTORY AND HERITAGE * Page 4 town while traveling throughout the country as an evangelist and camp meeting speaker. With no children of her own, she was often accompanied by young Mava Morgan, who later became a noted evangelist and pastor hersell as well as the wife of Reverend Joseph L. McCoy” Although Brother and Sister Heath were known for their uncompromising support of the Church of God, they also displayed respect for other Christian groups, which inclucled taking part in the social activities of the cornmunities where they lived and promoting education, especially among youth. This attitude enabled them to establish fellowship with the Reverend R.R. Walker, a Baptist minister and high school principal living in Morgantown. The Heaths invited him to fill the pulpit at the Morgantown church and were instrumental in leading him and his wife, Leedie, into the Church of God, greatly enriching the Church of God as Reverend Walker is believed to have been its first minister with a fouryenr college degree [A.B.] . After uniting with the denomination, R.R. Walker was appointed principal of the high school at Bible Training School.‘” Sister Annie Heath, who pioneered the first statewide youth ministry in Mississippi for the Young People’s Endeavor, was also an anointed pianist. She was often called upon ta play for camp meetings, conventions and the General Assemblies. Sister Heath co-wrote at least three songs with Reverend MS. Lemons that were published in Church of God songbooks. Their most noted song, “Heaven’s Bells Are Ringing,” was written shortly after the organization of the Church of God in Atlanta and published in the first Church of God songhook, TeEanWitlzJoyy.ll Sister Heath also spoke frequently at the General Assembly where she exhorted the delegates to support Christian training and the orphanage.12 Annie Heath was scheduled to teach piano at Bible Training School beginning in October 1933.” However, just before leaving Morgantown to accept her position in Cleveland, Tennessee, Sister Heath traveled to Montgomery, Alabama, to conduct a camp meeting. During this meeting she passed away on September 15, 1933, and thus, was never able to invest her musical rninistly in the lives of the young men and women at B.T.S.“’ The story of Jack and Annie Heath reveals the importance of local church ministry. From the thriving Mount Paran Church of God in Atlanta to the 150~member congregation in rural Morgantown, Mississippi, the Pentecostal message has been promoted through the invaluable minisny of people such as the Heaths. Today there is a continuing need for members of the local congregation to arise as witnesses in building the kingdom of God and the Church of God. Undoubtedly, the prayer of many believers would agree with that of Reverend EE Fritz when HISTORY AND HERITAGE* Pczge5 Almzo Gann replaced ‘HoIt as the pastor in 1.920. A year later the church l~urchasecl properly on Sixth Street, and built a while frame building that included two S~mclay s&w1 rooms. The church moved in 1921. and becmc the Sixth Street Church of God. Pastor Gann conducted a revival in June of 1925 in which over one hundrecl were saved and filled with the Holy Spirit. Six pasl3rs served the congregation during its nineteen years at Sixth Street (1921-1940). Then in 1940 under the direction of Pastor I-I.L. Whittington, the churcll built a new building on Hcnzl~hill Avenue and became the I-lcmphill Awnuc Church of God. The I-Icml~l~ill Awiue ministry spanned tweii tyseven years, which incluclcd four cliffcrcnt pastors. Dr. Paul I-. V/dicer lxcamc I-Icmpliilk paskv in lc)60. Wilh the move to Mounr Paran Road in 1.907, the II~C WAS officially ~11mg~~l t0 he penned of the Heaths, “May the good Lord give us many more like mldiers of the cr~ss.“‘~ NOTES 7 Brother Heath servccl on the Council ol Seventy(1921.-27), as SuprcmcJusticc on the Court 01Judges (1927-28), on the Council ol’ Twclvc, Exccutivc Comn~ii.tcc and ExecutiveCouncil (I927-Zc)), mtl as overseer ol’Alal-~ama(I 927-28) and Nississippi (1.929-1931.). I1 E.J. Bochmcr, ‘Another Mighty Soldier 01 God Has Passed On to Nis Great Reward,” Chllrrh of GodEvun,q!l,Pcbrllary 14, 1931, 1. q Mary GenevaMolgnn, interview by author, March 25, I997, Morgantown, Mississippi, Louis F. Morgm Collection. I” R.R Walker, Mv ?.~slil,lol?v’(Clc\rclancl, Tcnn.: Church or God PublishQ House, lc)42), 5, I.1-14; Durm M. Palmcrtrcc, “Forn1er GCllmll Secrc~~ly-?‘l‘casulcr Ml~Llllt klKUI cbLUd1 01 &Cl. oVU th? ycurs elcvcn lx~sL”rshave served the local church--lium the first rented lkilitics to Mount Paran and its claugh tcr cl~~ml~, Mount Parnn North. ;111d Spouse Cclcbrate Golden Anniversary,” Church (!fGod Evcq$, August 8, 1%6, 4; and Chlllrh $G~K~Bilk TnlinillgSrhoc~l, 1933-34CutLLlq~, 8. Pastoral Tapestry During the first three years of its existence, under rhe pastoral lendcrship of Charles I-Iolt, the Church of God congregation inovecl to three dirI3 Church 0fGod BibleT’rztininSS&KI~, 193% ferenl rental faciliries to l~ai~lle the 1933 Cutal”g, 4, 6,14. growth. Pasror Molt cliccl in 1.920 of a I” S.W. Latimer, “Death Notices,” Church of ruptured. appendix, but not before God Eva,@, December 16, 1933, 13. ” P..F Fritz 1“Introduction,” in Heath, Lije c~tzd starting a fkcl to build the first chul-cl1 Writings, 4. building. HISTORY AND HERITAGE 0 Page 6 Looking back over the history of the church, Martha I-Iolt Godwin, daughter of Charles Iloll, described the different pastors and their ministries as a tapestry. She reflected that they all made a contribution to the successof the ministry “YOLI can see the hand of Gocl at work in all of them.‘lh Ruth Blackwell, longtime member of Mount Paran, echoed the same sentiments. She stated that some pastors excelled in teaching the Bible, others in running church programs, others in promoting music, and still others in appealing to young people. The bottom line to her, however, was that “God’s hand was in all of it.“7 That is the key: God’s hand in all of it. NOTES ’ “Faith Heals Twisted Back of Little Girl,” McClure Nebvspq7erSyndicute,July 10, 1919, Bl. * Judy Cripps, interview with Mark Walker, November l&1997; transcript, archives files, Mount Paran Church of God. ’ Dr. Paul L. Walker, “Where Is the World and Who Arc the Missionaries!” Sunclay I morning sermon, Mo~mt Paran Church of God, November 1.2, 1972, Mount Paran Tape Library, Atlanta, Gn. ” Martha Holt Godwin, interview with Sue Duvall, March 8, 1984; cassette, Ruth Holt Collections, Ruth Holt Library, Mount Paran Church of God. ’ Godwin interview. CHURCH OF GOD : i i I ......d...,........... *................+. Name i Address 1 City I State Zip ’ M.S. Lemons, “Reports,”Church alCud Evnngel, September 1, 1917,4. * Ruth Holt, “At.lanta, Ga.,” Evangel, March 20, 1920,2. ; 1 MAIL TO: Hal Bernard Dixon Jr. Pentecostal Research Center, FA98 260 1 lth Street, NE, Cleveland, Tennessee, 37311. 1-1-1111-11-11111-1--------- ; ! A he expansion of Christianity, as it is recounted in the New Tcstament and church history, wns achieved by whnl has been cdlcrl lhc: mother-church or seed-churd~ pr0Ceclure, a principle from LllC ll3tLlK Of all growth. It is a law of nalulc that cnch generation dispenses sccclsby which its own life is assured. The early Church of God followccl that principle instinctively-and still follows it today Ckut of one church other churches were born, until there was a ramily of congregations, each strong and productive in reaching lhe world with the message of Christ. The purpose was not to b~~ilcl a great organization, but to reach others with the good news of Christ and the Holy Spirit. The motivation was as pure as the cause was holy. The principle required a great degree Or sclllessness ancl sharing, qualities hat direct,ccl everything the church did. It meant giving up members 0rits own rddin order to give lice to others. In the 1930s I was witness to, and part of, that principle in. action. In fkt it was my introduction to the Church of God-and the Pcntecosral mcssagc itself. It began in the early 19OOs, before I was born, when early ministers of the Ch~irch orGod in Tennessee established a congregation in Atlanta, Georgia. That congregation proved to be a model of the biblical principle of growth. First, it had to attain its own maturity, with sufficient strength to reproduce itself. From its base 011 Sixth Street in the northwestern section of Atlanta, it began to conduct worship services in other parts of the city. Just as the first tree sprouts begin from the seeds that drop near its base and then spread outward into a copse, or even a forest, the Atlanta church began I.0 replicate its4l in missions and Sunclny schools in lcrtilc sections of tlic city Thure were sufficient worlccrs and lay ministers in the congrejilllion rOr SLICK0utreitd~. In Ic)31, one’ such minister, GorCl011 II. Wdson, lX$iUl il revival mccling in the community of Rivcrsirlc, on the outskirts ofAtlanta. Ik ml his wil’e, Lub Calrlwell Watson, ercctcd a gospel tent on the main strcci ol’ the rural villngc, tight milts hy strccku from At l:uita’s rlowntc1wn. Al, that time the coIllInLmity---linc)wn as a “rough scckn” oTAtlanta, and with no cl~urrl~c~-~;~s ccrtninly in IIUXI d the gcq~cl ol’ Christ. When the Watsniis hcgan their meetings, they WCI’Csubjeclccl to much opposition and ricliculc from citizens and cl~urchcs in ncighboring villnjics. People in ho vicinity wcrc‘ warned by their ]~astors not to go 11car the ICllL. The p”‘“cllill~ was clcnouncctl as heretical, and canards were circulated about tliosc conducting scrviccs. As often 1za171~21is in such cases, that c~pposition scrvctl mainly to publicize the cvnngclistic cnclcavor. I, at age scvcnken, w;is one of those who wciit to the tent meeting out Or curiosity arousccl by the opposition. What 1 discovered was totally clilrivet liomwtlntI was told-~ saw sincerity and compassion in Luiscl fislz persons who really cared lb people. I was impressed by the ministry 0rthe Walsons, the music of their son, Edwin, and his wife, Dorcas I-Ii&s Watson. My conversion to Christ did not occur at the meeting, but the process was begun there, (I was alone on a streetcar on May I., 1939, when I gave my heart to the Lord. Riversicle was my home church, and I would become the first full-time minister to go out from it.) The vigor and fertility of the mother church were rellcctcd in its Riverside cs~u~cacli. I;iky or more ministers cnmc from that congrqation and have been usecl Or God in rr&y parts d the world. Among them wcrc E.l-I. Miles, Doyle King, Keith Ivestcr, Johnny Owens (an cffectivf missions promoter who was responsible for about a bundrcd missions outposts), Jim 0. McClain (executive missions director), I3.J.Moffctt (I-lomc for Children clirectar), Ollic I-Ian% (missionary to I-Ioncluras), Harold and Lucille Turner (missionaries I.0 India), I;rnnl&n Corm (missionary to Jalnaica), and I-Iugo Hammond (U.S. Navy chaplain). Nccdlcss 1.0say that I am happy to be C)llC 01‘ SLlCll a group. This single example illustrates what was practiced throughout the Church of God. Mother congregations had to give ~111 smc 01their inost vnluable illId pdllC~i\~~ coiistitucnls in 0rtlcr LO carry the gospel to other comniunitics, states and countries. Morcovcr, they had to help support their outreaches until they had strength enough to stancl illOTlC-Xld hen drop &xl Or their own. The mother-church principle that wasused to spread the Christian bit11 in the First and Twcnticrh Centuries was in such accord with the lsasic laws 01 reproduction and faith that it will, prcclictably, remain an effective practice in the century and millennium to come. ..........111....111.............................~........~.......*......... Charles M? Corm, Litt.D., is LIE @icid histclriun or tlx Church oJGod und is author q\ Like a Mighty Army: A History of the Church of God, 1.886-1995, &Jirzilivc &ion (CIevcland, Tim.: Puthwuy Press,1996)). HISTORY AND HERITAGE * Page 8 FROM THE DIRECTOR n almost every respect we can be proud of the legacy of our first General Assembly in 1906. The modest endeavors of those twenty-one delegates have expanded into the worldwide outreach of the Church of God today And many concerns expressed during that meeting remain critical to our contemporary ministries. Worship wasvital. That first Assembly encouraged every member to participate in regular worship at the Lords table and dul-ing the washing of the saint’s feet. Obeying the Word ancl preserving the unity of the body of Christ were central reasons for participation in these services. The Assembly also emphasized prayer meetings, family worship and the Sunday school. They encouraged every local church to hold a weekly prayer meeting-preferably under the direction of someone who felt led by the Holy Spirit, but under a selected leader if such feelings were not evident. Prayer was too important to leave to individual feelings. The delegates also urged daily family worship. They viewed such worship as an opportunity to instill in children lessons regarding God and God’s Word. Teaching children to reverence the Word and the house of worship were primary reasons for Sunday school. The Assembly also considered Sunday school essential for a moral community as well as a potential means of church planting. Evangelism was vital to those early delegates. Tears punctuated the reports of their previous evangelistic efforts and their consecration to the ripened fields and open doors of the coming year. The delegates committed to press into every open door with greater zeal and energy than ever before. That first Assembly also recognized the importance of living a holy life. Decades before American culture recognized the perils of tobacco, and in a region where tobacco was an integral part of economic survival, they courageously stood against the use of tobacco. In this farsighted stand, the Assembly cited the offensivenessof tobacco as well as the physical impairmenr it might cause. They related the use of tobacco to drunkenness and labeled it a bad influence upon youth. Further, the Assembly noted that money spent on tobacco could better be used for clothing the poor, spreading the gospel and improving their own homes. Most importantly, the delegates at that first Assembly believed that the use of tobacco was contrary to Scripture, and they co~~lcl not imagine Christ using it under any circumstances. More than anything else they wanted to be like Jesus. In other business, the Assembly recommended the orclerly transfer of members from one local church to another and an annual Assembly for “closer union ancl fellowship orthe churches.” Today we continue to benefit from our biennial General Assemblies. Conversely, we continue to suffer because of their failure to carry out their recommendation that every local church should “make and preserve records of all church proceedings.” nor this recommendation they cited the Acts of the Apostles as biblical etidence of this practice, On this point, the local churches comprising that first Assembly failed, If they did make such records, they failed to preserve them. Because they failed to preserve their recorcls, there is little that we know about those first congregations. For example, we do not know about their membership, their Sunday schools or their succession of PilSlOrS. WC have every reason to bclicve that God wasat work among the congregations at that first Assembly in 1906. We have cvely reasonto believe that ~hcyministered lo and evangelized +cir conimunities. But because they failed to preserve their rccorcls,much d their story is lost. May God help us not to t&l in the sxnc way,so that aslong as the Lord rarries, our children and grandchilclren will know the mighty works of Gocl among us. CHURCH OF GOD i§tory an eritage Volume 2 * Num.ber 2 Fall 1%X3 OJGadHistory arzdI-Icrilcr~e is published in Ihe interest of the Church of God mave~ne~~t. The Ha1 Bernard Dixon Jr. PentecostalResearch Center collectsand preservesChurch al’ God, Pentecostalancl Charismatic clocumenls,recordsand literal.ure. cllu~cll STAFF David G. Roelmck, Editor Ellen R.French,AssociateEditor Wade I-I. Phill.iPs, AssociateEditor l%nces Arringcon.,Consultant Larry R. McQueen, Archivist Janie Hand, ResearchAssistant FrancesMcCall, Indexer Jeremy Yoder, Photo Restoration BobFisher, ‘Designer BOARD ‘OF CONTJXOL Donald M. Walker, Chair Paul Conn Paul L. Walker 260 I.lth Street,NE Cleveland, Tennessee37311 Phow: 423-61.4-8576 FAX: 423-614-8555 dixoll_resea~cll~loeuniversity.edu leeunlversity.edu/W)raly/dixon/clixon.her