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#1 | |
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Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Greater Ohio
Posts: 13,693
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Like the poster Terry has recommended above, brother Canfield must go back and do a thorough examination of the writings presented by those who left the Recovery in the late 80's, starting with John Ingalls. Nearly everything I have read by Canfield to date indicates that he never did this.
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Ohio's motto is: With God all things are possible!. Keeping all my posts short, quick, living, and to the point! |
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#2 | |
Member
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Renton, Washington
Posts: 3,558
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VISITS FROM TITUS CHU September 29, 30, 1988 "In December 1987, before we went to see Brother Lee on December 12th, Titus Chu was in Anaheim, and we had lunch together. At that time since I respected Titus as a senior co-worker and had considerable fellowship with him in the past, I opened to him in a general way my heavy concern for the work and the churches. He agreed with my realizations and convictions and indicated that he had the same concerns. On Monday, September 26, 1988, Titus came to Anaheim to see Brother Lee and also wanted to see me. I did not get back to Anaheim from a few days rest until Wednesday, September 28th. He came to the Anaheim prayer meeting on Tuesday evening and spoke with Godfred afterwards, complaining about the mailing of the transcripts of the sixteen points to Ohio and seeking information concerning a certain problem of misconduct. On Thursday morning, September 29th, the day after we had our final fellowship with Brother Lee, he came to see me and fellowship for over two hours. He was quite tender and soft and said that he fully understood what I was passing through; he had passed through a similar experience himself. He wanted to assure me that he was standing with me, and he emphasized this point. He was concerned, he said, for the going on of the churches should Brother Lee pass away. He also said that he felt that Brother Lee still had some ministry for the churches, and we must find a way to receive whatever he has. He left, asking if he could return to have further fellowship the following morning. I agreed. The next morning Titus came with a totally different attitude and demeanor. It seemed that he took an adversarial position, and said rather decisively that now we have to cover some practical matters. He was very strong, telling me that I had damaged the Lord’s recovery by the conferences I had, and that I must not speak anything contrary to Brother Lee. He is the one carrying out the work, he said; we are his co-workers with him, and we should submit to him. He warned me that if I continued to speak as I did I would damage myself most of all, and he would have to take some action concerning me among the churches in the Midwest. Moreover, I would lose my field for ministry because the churches would not invite me. I was surprised to hear this, for that was of no concern to me and did not influence me at all. I feel that no faithful servant of the Lord should have such a consideration, but seek to simply and faithfully follow the Lord in all things, come what may. I was not ambitious to be welcomed everywhere, and was prepared to be rejected. Before Titus left he urged me with much feeling to go to Brother Lee, to open myself to him, and to ask how he feels about me. I had no response at all to this, since I already had many sessions with Brother Lee, and I believed I knew what he felt about me. But because he kept repeating it, I said I would consider it. Titus returned to Cleveland and a couple of weeks later called me on the phone. I told him that I felt not to see Brother Lee as he had proposed, and he replied that that was all right and made no further mention of it. I was surprised at this, expecting that he would again urge me to see him. He wanted to assure me once more that he was standing with me – that seemed to be the main point of his call. It was a very brief conversation, lasting not more than two or three minutes. I was surprised when nearly four months later I had received a letter from Titus, co-authored by James Reetzke (an elder in Chicago long known to me), dated February 12, 1989, in which Titus reproved me among other things for not taking his fellowship to see Brother Lee. The letter was full of rebuking and censuring concerning the conduct of the elders in Anaheim and contained this statement: "Is it not a fact that you brothers and the church in Anaheim owe him {Brother Lee} your existence?" I am grateful to Brother Lee for his love and service to the saints (including myself) in past years, and I thank the Lord for what we have received through his ministry, but we surely do not owe our existence to him – that is absurd. The source of whatever we are and have, physically or spiritually, is God and no one else." The part in bold ties into post #25. |
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#3 | |
Member
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Renton, Washington
Posts: 3,558
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WRITINGS ON THE TURMOIL AMONG THE CHURCHES Page 22 "In 1989 a number of senior co-workers who could not go along with the new emphasis on the ministry, and who also felt there were some very serious problems internally at the Living Stream Ministry itself, rose up in an attempt to warn Brother Lee concerning these matters, but he would not accept their admonition. Instead, he and those around him eventually labeled these co-workers as “divisive” and “rebellious,” and then put them out of the fellowship. In the U.S., this turmoil mainly affected the churches in California. Those of us who were outside of that area, and not so directly involved, simply assumed that Brother Lee and those with him must have been right to take such action. Today, however, we may say that while there are different views as to what exactly happened in this turmoil, and whether or not the brothers who were put out conducted themselves in a proper manner, it now seems clear that the case was not nearly so one-sided as we in the churches outside of California had assumed." |
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#4 |
Member
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: DFW area
Posts: 4,384
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I just did a perusal of DC's web site. Lot's of good stuff. And lot's of stuff to try to direct people back to the old LRC ways.
My conclusion is that to those who are not entirely enveloped in the LRC's garlic, the errors of practice as seen by the BBs' attempts to purify the LRC's theology to take only the old, established words of Lee are quite evident. What is not evident is that this is not the problem. It is the symptom of the root problem. My brother, who works in the defense industry, has mentioned that when something is not working right, their response is to dig until they find the "root problem." In this kind of case, they would not stop with "what are the BBs doing wrong?" They would further ask, "why are they doing it?" And if the answer to that does not appear to be the source of the problem, they would ask further. So if the answer to the second question is "because they believe in a "one trumpet" rule for ministry in the LRC," then the next question might be "how do they determine that there actually is such a rule?" If they say, "because Lee taught that it was so," then there might be two questions to answer; 1) "did Lee really say such a thing?", and 2) (assuming it is determined that he did) "is this teaching actually taught in the Bible in the manner Lee taught it?" And if there is a question about how the BBs have the authority to make such sweeping determinations, like quarantining certain ones, then they might find that there is a thing called "deputy authority." So the inquiry then is "where did this come from?" The answer is Nee and Lee. "Where did they get it?" DC has correctly pointed out that in normal Christian circles the actions of the BBs would be seen as wrong. But it is based on the theology that underpins the very thing that DC is trying to "salvage." Lee taught the things that the BBs are using to make only the LSM the source of LRC writings and teachings. Unless you undermine the very theology upon which that is built, you cannot eliminate the problems. And the problems go all the way back to the very teachings of the "ground of the church." You cannot simply focus on Christ and automatically be "on the proper ground of the church." There are too many requirements. You have to be careful about what you call yourself. You have to be "open" and "one with" all Christians, yet they must come with you for there to be any real fellowship. (I'm just not sure how "oneness" and "one-way" are compatible positions.) You can't think that there is a special group that is a "remnant" and be one with anyone but yourselves. You can't think that the Lord's table has not happened in Rome for 1,500 years and actually be one with any of the Christians there who have been having the Lord's table there for all of that 1,500 years. Blessed are the pure in heart, not the pure in doctrine. And you can't pretend to be some kind of spiritual Mecca if your so-called spirituality is not always coupled with real action in righteousness. There is grace. And there is dispensing (just not exactly how Lee taught it). But if you expect grace and dispensing to do all the work, you will be in a spiritual wasteland. It has always required that you accept the grace, take in the dispensing, and simultaneously step out in faith to obey. That is not the theology of the LRC. As a result, it needs lots of meetings to keep everyone pumped-up so they can pretend that their defeated daily lives are irrelevant and that joyous feeling you get from saying something in a meeting and hearing all those "amens" is their substitute for the peace and satisfaction of obedience to the one you claim to believe in.
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Mike I think . . . . I think I am . . . . therefore I am, I think — Edge OR . . . . You may be right, I may be crazy — Joel |
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#5 |
Οὕτως γὰρ ἠγάπησεν ὁ θεὸς τὸν κόσμον For God So Loved The World
Join Date: Apr 2008
Posts: 3,826
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Received from the Author:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Hello - I've posted a new version of Writings on the Turmoil Among the Churches to the website: *****http://www.standforthetestimony.org/book-writings/***** As shown on page 4, this is version 1.1, and was uploaded last Tuesday. (The only changes in content are in the the Foreward and in Appendix B; in addition, there are some editing changes in the Introduction.) If you have the previous version please replace it with this one. In Christ, David Canfield __________________________________________________ _______________________ www.TheChristianFaith.org
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αὐτῷ ἡ δόξα καὶ τὸ κράτος εἰς τοὺς αἰῶνας τῶν αἰώνων ἀμήν - 1 Peter 5:11 |
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#6 | |
Member
Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Greater Ohio
Posts: 13,693
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"... it now seems clear that the case was not nearly so one-sided as we in the churches outside of California had assumed." Did I really read this? Was it really the churches outside of CA that assumed all was well in "Disneyland?" These kind of claims just make me sick. This is just the evil workers in the Recovery blaming the churches for doing what they did themselves. Did not all the GLA churches trust Titus Chu and James Reetzke Sr. to adequately investigate the events in Anaheim before these two signed that letter of condemnation to John Ingalls? Don't tell me that Titus Chu and James Reetzke Sr. were "coerced" into signing that letter of condemnation just like they were "forced" to sign the "letter of allegiance" to WL back in Feb 1986. Did not the two of them just trade their righteousness for hypocrisy, and integrity for man-pleasing? Wouldn't be the last time Reetzke did this either, since the Blendeds demanded the same hypocrisy of him before they could quarantine Titus Chu. On a leadership level (not referring to the saints here), the history of the Recovery since WN was incarcerated in the late 40's, is just an endless series of political back-stabbings for self gains. That what happens when another man, any man, is promoted above The Man Christ Jesus. Allegiance to man, whether it be oneness with the Minister of the Age or oneness with the Holy See, always results in corruption. Eventually that corruption pollutes, not just the leadership, but the whole lump. It is this corruption which brothers like John Ingalls cried out against.
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Ohio's motto is: With God all things are possible!. Keeping all my posts short, quick, living, and to the point! |
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#7 | |
Member
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Renton, Washington
Posts: 3,558
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This word that David Canfield said: "it now seems clear that the case was not nearly so one-sided as we in the churches outside of California had assumed." I think with the Great Lakes Area, Titus' word would be good enough. In the Northwest Joel Kennon's word, Roth Williamson's word and Sherman Robertson's word was good enough. Good enough for the saints. If the brothers said this senior co-workers were rebellious and ambitious, then it must be true. Unless you were one who heard about John Ingall's book and took the time to read it with an open heart. If one who isn't satisfied with the brother's word and need to find out for their conscience sake from John Ingalls or from John So what their discernment is, then you will be poisoned. At least that's what the teaching from LSM is. As I understand David's word is the churches bearly everywhere outside of Orange County California took the word coming out of Witness Lee and LSM at face value. Even if it did not correspond with your experience of the quarantined brothers, it must be true. As the great lake localities pass through their own turbulence, for some it afforded opportunities to find out what really happened to these former leading ones in 1990? Could their experience be also ours? I think what David isn't saying so plainly is Living Stream did such an excellent job misleading the churches, even he believed to be true for a time. |
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#8 | |
Member
Join Date: May 2012
Posts: 360
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I'm sure the Politburo gave Chicago a similar choice. Enjoy the influence, infrastructure, funding, etc of being under the LSM umbrella or side with Titus Chu - losing status and having to deal with his rude behavior. Third options are not part of the LC system. |
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#9 |
Member
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Renton, Washington
Posts: 3,558
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#10 |
Member
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Renton, Washington
Posts: 3,558
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"In a number of ways, the turmoil of 1977, which of course took place while Brother Lee was still with us, and that of 2006, were quite similar. In particular, during both turmoils the brothers involved stressed the need for a kind of international coordination among the churches. As Brother Lee makes very clear in his comments below, this kind of “oneness” (the quotation marks are Brother Lee’s) was, in 1977, fully against the truth. We may add, so it was in 2006 when it was promoted by the Blended Brothers, years after our brother had gone to be with the Lord.
Among us these past few years there have been indications that we too do not see the significance of Christ’s headship. An effort was made to organize all the churches in the recovery under an international coordination. It may seem wonderful to have such “oneness,” but actually this was a subtlety to gain control of all the churches, thus taking the headship away from Christ and putting it in the hands of the ‘coordinator,’ who in essence would be a pope. Such a hierarchical setup robs the saints of their personal contact with God." http://www.standforthetestimony.org/...ess/#more-1146 |
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