Background Information
Their history:
In the early 1970s Kip McKean, founder of
this movement, met Chuck Lucas, a campus minister at the
University of Florida. Lucas was from Crossroads Church
of Christ in Gainesville, Florida. McKean was trained by
Lucas in what was then and is now a radical version of
discipleship.
McKean moved to the Boston suburb of
Lexington, MA, in 1979 and became involved in the
Lexington Church of Christ. His discipleship program
brought great growth to this church, and in 1981 this
church launched an aggressive missions program. This was
the beginning of "the Boston Movement." The Boston
Movement disassociated itself from the Churches of
Christ in 1988, taking the name the International
Churches of Christ (hereafter ICC).
Their deviations:
Salvation depends on faith plus the
completion of works, the presumptuousness of the leaders
judging another’s heart, and water baptism. This
teaching is based on a misinterpretation of Mt 28:18-20,
which ICC believes establishes the order of steps
necessary for salvation: one must become a disciple;
only baptized disciples are saved.
Each person is discipled within a
hierarchy of disciples. Under God, Kip McKean is the
director; under him are elders (e.g. Al Baird and Bob
Gempel), then evangelists (e.g. Gordon Ferguson), then
pastors, and then lay people who are disciplers. Final
authority in all matters is vested in the leadership.
There is only one true church in any
city, the __________ Church of Christ (which is one of
the ICC). This teaching is based on erroneously
universalizing Rev. 2-3.
Biblical Teaching Regarding Salvation -
Faith is both necessary and sufficient.
What does the Bible say is necessary
for salvation? (i.e., "without _______ a person cannot
be saved.") According to John 3:18; 8:24; Hebrews 4:2;
and 11:6, for example, the answer is faith, believing,
trusting in Jesus Christ
What does the Bible say is sufficient
for salvation? (i.e., "If a person has __________ he/she
will have eternal life.") The answer is faith,
believing, trusting in Jesus Christ (see for example,
John 3:16-18; 5:24; 6:40, 47; 20:30-31; Acts 10:43;
16:31; Romans 1:16-17; 1 John 5:1, 13).
ICC’s Teaching Regarding Salvation
The International Churches of Christ
teach that faith is necessary but not
sufficient. Becoming a disciple and baptism are also
necessary. Only baptized disciples are saved.
According to Matthew 28:18-20, they teach
that: Faith + repentance + becoming a disciple + baptism
= salvation.
Their view is that the first step is to
become a disciple [i.e. change one’s lifestyle to
conform to ICC standards]; the second is to be baptized.
To become a disciple one must complete
some or all of a series of studies with a discipler,
commit to attend all the services, promise to read the
Bible daily, begin recruiting others, agree to obey
church leaders, and give tithes weekly. One must also
list all the sins he or she has committed and confess
these to one or more members.
One’s eligibility for salvation depends
then on the leadership’s determination as to whether or
not that person is ready for baptism.
Our response is
to ask: Is Jesus really commanding that only baptized
disciples are truly saved?
First of all, to "make disciples" is a
verb; "baptizing" and "teaching" are participles which
describe how a disciple is made (i.e. by being baptized
and taught).
Second, "them" [the ones to be baptized
and taught] is a pronoun which can only refer to the
noun "nations," and not to the verb "make disciples."
Thus, this passage does not teach the baptism of
disciples, as the ICC claims, but nations. The disciples
were to begin preaching to all people, not only Jewish
people, and those people who believed were to be
baptized and taught.
The ICC states
that Mark 16:16; John 3:5; Acts 2:38; 22:16; 1 Peter
3:21; among others, teach that baptism is necessary for
salvation.
Our response:
1. Mark 16:16
Church of Christ teaching:
Believing + baptism = Salvation.
Biblical response:
(1) A textual problem exists—Verses 9-20 are not
contained in the earliest manuscripts of the New
Testament. (2) Granting that this passage is a
legitimate text, the key relationship to understand is
between believing and being baptized. Logically, there
are four possibilities regarding salvation:
a. Believing and baptized, which is
affirmed in Verse 16a
b. Believing and not baptized.
c. Not believing but baptized, which is
rejected in Verse 16b.
d. Not believing and not baptized, which
is also rejected in Verse 16b.
(3) From (b) above, it is clear that Mark
16:16 does not speak to the issue of salvation for
unbaptized believers.
2. John 3:5
Church of Christ teaching:
"Born of water" = Baptism
Biblical response:
(1) Word study approach–- "Born of water" could refer to
John’s baptism (John 1:26); the Holy Spirit (John
7:38-39); the washing of the Word (John 15:3); the
washing of regeneration (Titus 3:5); or perhaps a
meaning found only in this passage, as in: (2)
Structural approach-– "Born of water" (V5) = "born of
flesh" (V6) as "born of . . . the Spirit" (V5) = "born
of the Spirit" (V6). If so, then "born of water" is a
metaphor for physical or natural birth in this passage,
and not a reference to water baptism.
3. Acts 2:38
Church of Christ teaching:
"Be baptized . . . for the remission of your sins."
Baptism is required for the forgiveness of sins.
Biblical response:
(1) Consider the structure of this passage: "You
(plural) repent and be baptized each one of you (third
person singular) in the name of Jesus Christ for [the]
remission [of the] sins of you (plural)." If one
considers the plurals used, remission of sins is the
result of repentance and not baptism. (2) Consider the
preposition "for" ("eis"): Is it causative ("in
order to attain") or resultant ("because of"—as in
Matthew 12:41)? While the Church of Christ accepts the
former as the interpretation, other passages in
Acts support the latter (e.g. Acts 3:19, where the
forgiveness of sins is the result of repentance, and
Acts 10:45-48, where baptism follows salvation and the
forgiveness of sins).
4. Acts 22:16
Church of Christ teaching:
"Be baptized and wash away your sins," i.e. the removal
of sin is the result of being baptized.
Biblical response:
(1) The aorist imperatives are in the middle voice here,
and may best be rendered as "Get yourself baptized, and
get your sins washed away." (2.) The aorist participle
"calling on His name" is either simultaneous with the
aorist imperatives or immediately precedes them, making
it, not baptism, the basis for "sins washed away." (3.)
For substantiation of this conclusion, see Acts 2:21 and
Romans 10:13 as to how one’s sins are washed away.
5. 1 Peter 3:21
Church of Christ teaching:
"Baptism does . . . now save us," or "baptism . . .
save[s] us."
Biblical response:
(1) "Antitupos"— A correspondence
or likeness; (2) Persons in the ark [Flood/water]
corresponds to "Good conscience toward God"
[Baptism/water] (3.) Baptism is used metaphorically to
symbolize a clear conscience before God. It is not the
physical act of baptism, but the good conscience which
baptism signifies that saves.
Whether the Churches of Christ use the
texts above or any other text in the Bible, the fact
will remain that no text or group of texts will
establish their claim that baptism is necessary for
salvation.
Resources
Some resources you might find helpful in
understanding and responding to the teachings of the
International Churches of Christ:
Bauer, Rick. Toxic Faith. 2nd
edition, revised. Bowie, MD: Freedom House Ministries,
1994.
Bjornstad, James. "At What Price
Success?" Christian Research Journal, Winter
1993, 24-28, 30-31.
Giambalvo, Carol and Herbert L.
Rosendale. The Boston Movement. Revised
edition. Bonita Springs, FL: American Family
Foundation, 1997.
Jones, Jerry. What Does The Boston
Movement Teach? 3 Vols. Bridgeton, MO: Mid-America
Bookes and Tapes, 1993. (Note: while these volumes
provide much helpful information on the movement’s
history and theology, they also promote the false
teaching that baptism is necessary for salvation.)
Ruhland, Joanne. "Witnessing to
Disciples of the International Churches of Christ
(a.k.a. the Boston Movement." Christian Research
Journal, Fall 1996, 8.