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Alliance World Fellowship

The Alliance World Fellowship is the international governing body of the Christian and Missionary Alliance (The Alliance, also C&MA and CMA). The Alliance is an evangelical Protestant denomination within the Higher Life movement of Christianity, teaching a modified form of Keswickian theology.[3][1][2] The headquarters is in São Paulo, Brazil.

Alliance World Fellowship
ClassificationProtestant
OrientationEvangelical
TheologyKeswickian[1][2]
PolityElements of Congregationalist, Presbyterian and non-sacramental Episcopal polities
PresidentJura Yanagihara
Region88 countries
HeadquartersSão Paulo, Brazil
FounderAlbert Benjamin Simpson[1]
Origin1975
Congregations22,000
Members6,200,000
Seminaries90
Official websiteawf.world

History

 
Building of Zamboanga Alliance Evangelical Church, member of the Christian and Missionary Alliance Churches of the Philippines (Alliance World Fellowship), Zamboanga, Philippines

The Alliance has its origins in two organizations founded by Albert Benjamin Simpson in 1887 in Old Orchard Beach, Maine, in the United States, The Christian Alliance, which concentrated on domestic missions, and The Evangelical Missionary Alliance, which focused on overseas missions.[4] These two organizations merged in 1897 to form the Christian and Missionary Alliance.[5]

The Missionary Training Institute (now Alliance Theological Seminary), founded in 1882 by Simpson in Nyack, near New York, contributed to the development of the union. [6]

A.B. Simpson was influenced by Keswickian cleric W.E. Boardman in his view of sanctification.[7] During the start of the 20th century, Simpson became closely involved with the growing Pentecostal movement. It became common for Pentecostal pastors and missionaries to receive their training at the Missionary Training Institute that Simpson founded. Consequently, Simpson and the Alliance had a great influence on Pentecostalism, in particular the Assemblies of God and the International Church of the Foursquare Gospel. This influence included evangelical emphasis, Alliance doctrine, Simpson's hymns and books, and the use of the term 'Gospel Tabernacle,' which led to many Pentecostal churches being known as 'Full Gospel Tabernacles.'

Eventually, there developed severe division within the Alliance over issues surrounding Pentecostalism (such as speaking in tongues and charismatic worship styles). By 1912, this crisis was a catalyst for the emergence of the Alliance as an organized Christian denomination, shifting more authority to the council and becoming more ecclesiastical. To ensure the survival of the Alliance in the face of division, Simpson put all property in the name of the Alliance. In the event of separation, all property would revert to Alliance.[8]

After Simpson's death in 1919, the C&MA distanced itself from Pentecostalism, rejecting the premise that speaking in tongues is a necessary indicator of being filled with the Holy Spirit, and instead focused on the deeper Christian life.[8] By 1930, most local branches of the Alliance functioned as churches, but still did not view themselves as such.

By 1965, the churches adopted a denominational function and established a formal statement of faith.[9] In 1975, the Alliance World Fellowship (AWF) was officially organized.[10] In 2010, it was present in 50 countries.[11]

Statistics

According to a census of the denomination, in 2022, it had 22,000 churches, 6,200,000 members in 88 countries.[12]

Beliefs

The denomination has an evangelical theology,[13][5][14] and is largely aligned with the Higher Life movement.[2][3][1][15] A.B. Simpson articulated the Alliance's core theology as the Christological "Fourfold Gospel": Jesus Christ as Saviour, Sanctifier, Healer, and Soon Coming King.[16] Sanctification is sometimes described as "the deeper Christian life".[17] This teaching is that of other churches aligned with the Higher Life movement and its Keswick Conventions.[7][2][18] It is perhaps best exemplified by the writings of A. W. Tozer. Simpson, however, departed from traditional Keswickian teaching in his view of progressive sanctification and his rejection of suppressionism.[19][20] The Alliance also emphasizes missionary work, and believes that the fulfillment of the Great Commission is the reason it exists.[21]

Espousing a modified form of Keswickian theology, the Christian and Missionary Alliance, as with Simpson, differs from the Wesleyan-Holiness movement in that the Christian and Missionary Alliance does not see entire sanctification as cleansing one from original sin, whereas adherents of the Wesleyan-Holiness movement affirm this Methodistic teaching of John Wesley.[18][22][1]

Ministries

CAMA Services

Associated with the denomination is CAMA Services. “CAMA” stands for “Compassion and Mercy Associates”. Services include a variety of relief and development efforts providing food, clothing, medical care, and job training to people in crisis situations around the globe in the name of Jesus.[23]

Begun in 1974 by Andy Bishop as an outreach to refugees fleeing the Indochina conflict, CAMA now works in refugee camps in Thailand, and has worked with refugees in Hong Kong, Lebanon, Jordan, and Guinea, and famine victims in Burkina Faso and Mali.[24] CAMA Services worked together with local C&MA churches in 2005 to provide Hurricane Katrina relief in the United States.

Seminaries and colleges

It had 90 theological colleges.[25]

Controversies

In the 1980s alumni of Mamou Alliance Academy in Guinea, West Africa, began to write letters to C&MA headquarters informing leadership of systemic child abuse that occurred at the school. Phone calls and letter writing of this nature to the C&MA continued for ten years.[26]

The alumni reported that the C&MA response was evasive, deceptive, and employed “stonewalling” tactics. Alumni were reportedly told that they should forgive, and that they would "hurt the name of Jesus" by coming forward. One alumnus said that "the only way that we could get the Alliance to do anything was through the media. It was only through shaming them by putting the truth out there". Robert Fetherlin, vice president for International Ministries for the C&MA, said "We heard as far back as the 1980s that there were some questionable events that took place at Mamou. That there may have been mistreatment of children, however, we were slower than we should have been in responding to that."[26]

In 1995, 30 alumni from Mamou approached the C&MA for an investigation and restitution.[27] They reported systemic abuse including psychological abuse, excessive beating, sadistic dental practices performed without novocaine, sexual molestation, and rape.[26] The following year an independent commission of inquiry (ICI) was formed and 80 testimonies were heard. In April 1998 the ICI released a report which found the denomination negligent in monitoring Mamou and in training teachers. The report identified nine offenders, of whom four were retired, three deceased and two no longer with the C&MA.[27]

The US C&MA Board of Directors issued an open letter to the victims of abuse asking for "forgiveness for the pain and trauma that you suffered while under the care of C&MA dorm parents, teachers and missionaries."[28]

Since these abuses occurred, the Alliance changed its policies and practices. Fetherlin said that the Alliance tried "to keep families together as much as possible, as opposed to asking parents to commit to sending their elementary children off to 'missionary kid' boarding schools", and supported homeschooling, which they had previously opposed.

The Alliance also established a Sensitive Issues Consultative Group made up of professional counselors and caregivers as part of its response to the commission's recommendations. A publication on child safety and protection entitled Safe Place was produced, a child safety and protection policy for its international work introduced, and a revised Uniform Discipline, Restoration and Appeal policy implemented that mandates denomination-wide zero-tolerance when there is a finding of sexual abuse of a child or vulnerable adult. A child protection training program which every overseas Alliance worker is required to attend was set up. Child Protection and Safety policies were published on the Alliance Web site.[29]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Wu, Dongsheng John (1 April 2012). Understanding Watchman Nee: Spirituality, Knowledge, and Formation. Wipf and Stock Publishers. p. 58. ISBN 978-1-63087-573-2. D. D. Bundy notes that A. B. Simpson (1843–1919)—Presbyterian founder of the Christian and Missionary Alliance—who never accepted the Wesleyan doctrine of eradication of sin, accepted the Keswickian understanding of sanctification.
  2. ^ a b c d Kenyon, Howard N. (29 October 2019). Ethics in the Age of the Spirit: Race, Women, War, and the Assemblies of God. Wipf and Stock Publishers. ISBN 978-1-4982-8522-3. Much of the Keswickian influence came through A.B. Simpson's Christian and Missionary Alliance, itself an ecumenical missionary movement
  3. ^ a b Knight III, Henry H. (11 August 2010). From Aldersgate to Azusa Street: Wesleyan, Holiness, and Pentecostal Visions of the New Creation. Wipf and Stock Publishers. p. 365. ISBN 978-1-63087-656-2.
  4. ^ George A. Rawlyk, Aspects of the Canadian Evangelical Experience, MQUP, Canada, 1997, p. 281
  5. ^ a b Randall Herbert Balmer, Encyclopedia of Evangelicalism: Revised and expanded edition, Baylor University Press, USA, 2004, p. 156
  6. ^ George Thomas Kurian, Mark A. Lamport, Encyclopedia of Christian Education, Volume 3, Rowman & Littlefield, USA, 2015, p. 132
  7. ^ a b Burgess, Stanley M.; Maas, Eduard M. van der (3 August 2010). The New International Dictionary of Pentecostal and Charismatic Movements: Revised and Expanded Edition. Zondervan. ISBN 978-0-310-87335-8. A.B. Simpson, founder of the Christian and Missionary Alliance (CMA), influenced by A.J. Gordon and W.E. Boardman, adopted a Keswickian understanding of sanctification.
  8. ^ a b Burgess, Stanley, et al. 1993. Dictionary of Pentecostal and Charismatic Movements. Grand Rapids: Zondervan. p. 166.
  9. ^ Samuel S. Hill, Charles H. Lippy, Charles Reagan Wilson, Encyclopedia of Religion in the South, Mercer University Press, USA, 2005, p. 182
  10. ^ J. Gordon Melton, Martin Baumann, Religions of the World: A Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Beliefs and Practices, ABC-CLIO, USA, 2010, p. 80
  11. ^ J. Gordon Melton, Martin Baumann, Religions of the World: A Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Beliefs and Practices, ABC-CLIO, USA, 2010, p. 605
  12. ^ Alliance World Fellowship, Statistics, awf.world, Brazil, retrieved November 5, 2022
  13. ^ George Thomas Kurian, Mark A. Lamport, Encyclopedia of Christianity in the United States, Volume 5, Rowman & Littlefield, USA, 2016, p. 462
  14. ^ Alliance World Fellowship, Statement of Faith, awf.world, Brazil, retrieved May 9, 2020
  15. ^ III, Henry H. Knight (1 February 2014). Anticipating Heaven Below: Optimism of Grace from Wesley to the Pentecostals. Wipf and Stock Publishers. pp. 91–92. ISBN 978-1-63087-125-3. It is the other christological strand, that of the indwelling Christ, that is the heart of the distinctive sanctification theology of A. B. Simpson. A Presbyterian who ultimately founded the Christian and Missionary Alliance, Simpson operates within a Keswick framework while also drawing upon Wesleyan ideals. Like Wesley, Simpson described sin as in the motive or intent of the heart most especially lack of love for God and neighbour. While he agrees with Keswick that we can't ever be freed from this sinful nature in this life, he insisted, as Van De Walle puts it, "the power of the resurrected Christ would more than enable the believer to consider the sin nature a vanquished foe and to behave as though it were.
  16. ^ "Fourfold Gospel". Christian and Missionary Alliance. Retrieved 2013-03-29.
  17. ^ Pardington, George P. The Crisis of the Deeper Life. New York: The Christian Alliance Publishing Company, 1925. Accessed May 31, 2011.
  18. ^ a b Murphy, Karen (23 May 2018). Pentecostals and Roman Catholics on Becoming a Christian: Spirit-Baptism, Faith, Conversion, Experience, and Discipleship in Ecumenical Perspective. Brill Academic Publishers. p. 131. ISBN 978-90-04-36786-9. ... the Christian and Missionary Alliance (CMA) ... accepted the Keswickian teaching over the Wesleyan-Holiness belief.
  19. ^ Bernie A. Van De Walle, The Heart of the Gospel: A. B. Simpson, the Fourfold Gospel, and Late Nineteenth-Century Evangelical Theology, Wipf and Stock Publishers, USA, 2009, p. 93; "Despite similarities, Simpson's sanctification doctrine included its own distinctives, not duplicating either Keswick or Holiness soteriology", p. 94 ; "Richard Gilbertson, like McGraw, distinguishes between Simpson's view of sanctification and those of Keswick and Wesleyanism: There have been frequent attempts to categorize Simpson and the C&MA. Often the assertion is made that Simpson held to a Keswick-type view of sanctification. More precisely, Simpson should be seen as having been influenced by Boardman's Higher Christian Life, a book which also impacted the Keswick movement. Other than an 1885 invitation to speak at one of their conferences, Simpson had little formal contact with the British Keswick movement."
  20. ^ Gordon T. Smith, Conversion and Sanctification in the Christian & Missionary Alliance, awf.world, Brazil, 1992 : "He differed in some notable ways from the teachings of his contemporaries: he rejected the perfectionism of the Wesleyan-methodists; he did not accept the suppressionism of the Keswick movement." And "In these respects, the C&MA is distinct from the Keswick movement. The Alliance heritage is more life and work affirming. Our actions in the world do make a difference and are meaningful."
  21. ^ "The Great Commission". Christian and Missionary Alliance. Retrieved 2013-03-29.
  22. ^ "The Radical Holiness Movement and The Christian and Missionary Alliance: Twins, perhaps, but not Identical". Bernie A. Van De Walle. Retrieved 30 September 2020.
  23. ^ Michael G. Yount, A. B. Simpson: His Message and Impact on the Third Great Awakening, Wipf and Stock Publishers, USA, 2016, p. 188
  24. ^ "Our Work". Our Work. Compassion and Mercy Associates. 2014-05-17. Retrieved 12 February 2018.
  25. ^ Alliance World Fellowship, Statistics, awf.world, Brazil, retrieved November 5, 2022
  26. ^ a b c All God's Children – Documentary - 2008
  27. ^ a b "A Badly Broken Boarding School". Christianity Today. Retrieved October 30, 2012.
  28. ^ Board of Directors of the U.S. C&MA. "alife". Alliance Life. Retrieved 2013-03-29.
  29. ^ "Child Safety & Abuse Reporting". Cmalliance.org. Retrieved 22 November 2022.

External links

  • Official website of the Alliance World Fellowship
  • Official website of the Christian and Missionary Alliance in the United States
  • Official website of the Christian and Missionary Alliance in New Zealand
  • Official website of the Christian and Missionary Alliance in Canada
  • Official website of the Asia-Pacific Region of the Christian and Missionary Alliance
  • Official website of the Christian and Missionary Alliance in Australia
  • Official website of the Christian and Missionary Alliance in Hong Kong
  • Alliance Life: Official Magazine of the Christian and Missionary Alliance
  • Christian and Missionary Alliance at Curlie
  • Christian and Missionary Alliance: Association of Religion Data Archives

alliance, world, fellowship, redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, international, governing, body, christian, missionary, alliance, alliance, also, alliance, evangelical, protestant, denomination, within, higher, life, movement, christianity, teaching,. C amp MA redirects here For other uses see CMA disambiguation The Alliance World Fellowship is the international governing body of the Christian and Missionary Alliance The Alliance also C amp MA and CMA The Alliance is an evangelical Protestant denomination within the Higher Life movement of Christianity teaching a modified form of Keswickian theology 3 1 2 The headquarters is in Sao Paulo Brazil Alliance World FellowshipClassificationProtestantOrientationEvangelicalTheologyKeswickian 1 2 PolityElements of Congregationalist Presbyterian and non sacramental Episcopal politiesPresidentJura YanagiharaRegion88 countriesHeadquartersSao Paulo BrazilFounderAlbert Benjamin Simpson 1 Origin1975Congregations22 000Members6 200 000Seminaries90Official websiteawf wbr world Contents 1 History 2 Statistics 3 Beliefs 4 Ministries 4 1 CAMA Services 5 Seminaries and colleges 6 Controversies 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksHistory Edit Building of Zamboanga Alliance Evangelical Church member of the Christian and Missionary Alliance Churches of the Philippines Alliance World Fellowship Zamboanga Philippines The Alliance has its origins in two organizations founded by Albert Benjamin Simpson in 1887 in Old Orchard Beach Maine in the United States The Christian Alliance which concentrated on domestic missions and The Evangelical Missionary Alliance which focused on overseas missions 4 These two organizations merged in 1897 to form the Christian and Missionary Alliance 5 The Missionary Training Institute now Alliance Theological Seminary founded in 1882 by Simpson in Nyack near New York contributed to the development of the union 6 A B Simpson was influenced by Keswickian cleric W E Boardman in his view of sanctification 7 During the start of the 20th century Simpson became closely involved with the growing Pentecostal movement It became common for Pentecostal pastors and missionaries to receive their training at the Missionary Training Institute that Simpson founded Consequently Simpson and the Alliance had a great influence on Pentecostalism in particular the Assemblies of God and the International Church of the Foursquare Gospel This influence included evangelical emphasis Alliance doctrine Simpson s hymns and books and the use of the term Gospel Tabernacle which led to many Pentecostal churches being known as Full Gospel Tabernacles Eventually there developed severe division within the Alliance over issues surrounding Pentecostalism such as speaking in tongues and charismatic worship styles By 1912 this crisis was a catalyst for the emergence of the Alliance as an organized Christian denomination shifting more authority to the council and becoming more ecclesiastical To ensure the survival of the Alliance in the face of division Simpson put all property in the name of the Alliance In the event of separation all property would revert to Alliance 8 After Simpson s death in 1919 the C amp MA distanced itself from Pentecostalism rejecting the premise that speaking in tongues is a necessary indicator of being filled with the Holy Spirit and instead focused on the deeper Christian life 8 By 1930 most local branches of the Alliance functioned as churches but still did not view themselves as such By 1965 the churches adopted a denominational function and established a formal statement of faith 9 In 1975 the Alliance World Fellowship AWF was officially organized 10 In 2010 it was present in 50 countries 11 Statistics EditAccording to a census of the denomination in 2022 it had 22 000 churches 6 200 000 members in 88 countries 12 Beliefs EditThe denomination has an evangelical theology 13 5 14 and is largely aligned with the Higher Life movement 2 3 1 15 A B Simpson articulated the Alliance s core theology as the Christological Fourfold Gospel Jesus Christ as Saviour Sanctifier Healer and Soon Coming King 16 Sanctification is sometimes described as the deeper Christian life 17 This teaching is that of other churches aligned with the Higher Life movement and its Keswick Conventions 7 2 18 It is perhaps best exemplified by the writings of A W Tozer Simpson however departed from traditional Keswickian teaching in his view of progressive sanctification and his rejection of suppressionism 19 20 The Alliance also emphasizes missionary work and believes that the fulfillment of the Great Commission is the reason it exists 21 Espousing a modified form of Keswickian theology the Christian and Missionary Alliance as with Simpson differs from the Wesleyan Holiness movement in that the Christian and Missionary Alliance does not see entire sanctification as cleansing one from original sin whereas adherents of the Wesleyan Holiness movement affirm this Methodistic teaching of John Wesley 18 22 1 Ministries EditCAMA Services Edit Associated with the denomination is CAMA Services CAMA stands for Compassion and Mercy Associates Services include a variety of relief and development efforts providing food clothing medical care and job training to people in crisis situations around the globe in the name of Jesus 23 Begun in 1974 by Andy Bishop as an outreach to refugees fleeing the Indochina conflict CAMA now works in refugee camps in Thailand and has worked with refugees in Hong Kong Lebanon Jordan and Guinea and famine victims in Burkina Faso and Mali 24 CAMA Services worked together with local C amp MA churches in 2005 to provide Hurricane Katrina relief in the United States Seminaries and colleges EditIt had 90 theological colleges 25 Controversies EditIn the 1980s alumni of Mamou Alliance Academy in Guinea West Africa began to write letters to C amp MA headquarters informing leadership of systemic child abuse that occurred at the school Phone calls and letter writing of this nature to the C amp MA continued for ten years 26 The alumni reported that the C amp MA response was evasive deceptive and employed stonewalling tactics Alumni were reportedly told that they should forgive and that they would hurt the name of Jesus by coming forward One alumnus said that the only way that we could get the Alliance to do anything was through the media It was only through shaming them by putting the truth out there Robert Fetherlin vice president for International Ministries for the C amp MA said We heard as far back as the 1980s that there were some questionable events that took place at Mamou That there may have been mistreatment of children however we were slower than we should have been in responding to that 26 In 1995 30 alumni from Mamou approached the C amp MA for an investigation and restitution 27 They reported systemic abuse including psychological abuse excessive beating sadistic dental practices performed without novocaine sexual molestation and rape 26 The following year an independent commission of inquiry ICI was formed and 80 testimonies were heard In April 1998 the ICI released a report which found the denomination negligent in monitoring Mamou and in training teachers The report identified nine offenders of whom four were retired three deceased and two no longer with the C amp MA 27 The US C amp MA Board of Directors issued an open letter to the victims of abuse asking for forgiveness for the pain and trauma that you suffered while under the care of C amp MA dorm parents teachers and missionaries 28 Since these abuses occurred the Alliance changed its policies and practices Fetherlin said that the Alliance tried to keep families together as much as possible as opposed to asking parents to commit to sending their elementary children off to missionary kid boarding schools and supported homeschooling which they had previously opposed The Alliance also established a Sensitive Issues Consultative Group made up of professional counselors and caregivers as part of its response to the commission s recommendations A publication on child safety and protection entitled Safe Place was produced a child safety and protection policy for its international work introduced and a revised Uniform Discipline Restoration and Appeal policy implemented that mandates denomination wide zero tolerance when there is a finding of sexual abuse of a child or vulnerable adult A child protection training program which every overseas Alliance worker is required to attend was set up Child Protection and Safety policies were published on the Alliance Web site 29 See also EditBible Born again Worship service evangelicalism Jesus Christ Believers ChurchReferences Edit a b c d e Wu Dongsheng John 1 April 2012 Understanding Watchman Nee Spirituality Knowledge and Formation Wipf and Stock Publishers p 58 ISBN 978 1 63087 573 2 D D Bundy notes that A B Simpson 1843 1919 Presbyterian founder of the Christian and Missionary Alliance who never accepted the Wesleyan doctrine of eradication of sin accepted the Keswickian understanding of sanctification a b c d Kenyon Howard N 29 October 2019 Ethics in the Age of the Spirit Race Women War and the Assemblies of God Wipf and Stock Publishers ISBN 978 1 4982 8522 3 Much of the Keswickian influence came through A B Simpson s Christian and Missionary Alliance itself an ecumenical missionary movement a b Knight III Henry H 11 August 2010 From Aldersgate to Azusa Street Wesleyan Holiness and Pentecostal Visions of the New Creation Wipf and Stock Publishers p 365 ISBN 978 1 63087 656 2 George A Rawlyk Aspects of the Canadian Evangelical Experience MQUP Canada 1997 p 281 a b Randall Herbert Balmer Encyclopedia of Evangelicalism Revised and expanded edition Baylor University Press USA 2004 p 156 George Thomas Kurian Mark A Lamport Encyclopedia of Christian Education Volume 3 Rowman amp Littlefield USA 2015 p 132 a b Burgess Stanley M Maas Eduard M van der 3 August 2010 The New International Dictionary of Pentecostal and Charismatic Movements Revised and Expanded Edition Zondervan ISBN 978 0 310 87335 8 A B Simpson founder of the Christian and Missionary Alliance CMA influenced by A J Gordon and W E Boardman adopted a Keswickian understanding of sanctification a b Burgess Stanley et al 1993 Dictionary of Pentecostal and Charismatic Movements Grand Rapids Zondervan p 166 Samuel S Hill Charles H Lippy Charles Reagan Wilson Encyclopedia of Religion in the South Mercer University Press USA 2005 p 182 J Gordon Melton Martin Baumann Religions of the World A Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Beliefs and Practices ABC CLIO USA 2010 p 80 J Gordon Melton Martin Baumann Religions of the World A Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Beliefs and Practices ABC CLIO USA 2010 p 605 Alliance World Fellowship Statistics awf world Brazil retrieved November 5 2022 George Thomas Kurian Mark A Lamport Encyclopedia of Christianity in the United States Volume 5 Rowman amp Littlefield USA 2016 p 462 Alliance World Fellowship Statement of Faith awf world Brazil retrieved May 9 2020 III Henry H Knight 1 February 2014 Anticipating Heaven Below Optimism of Grace from Wesley to the Pentecostals Wipf and Stock Publishers pp 91 92 ISBN 978 1 63087 125 3 It is the other christological strand that of the indwelling Christ that is the heart of the distinctive sanctification theology of A B Simpson A Presbyterian who ultimately founded the Christian and Missionary Alliance Simpson operates within a Keswick framework while also drawing upon Wesleyan ideals Like Wesley Simpson described sin as in the motive or intent of the heart most especially lack of love for God and neighbour While he agrees with Keswick that we can t ever be freed from this sinful nature in this life he insisted as Van De Walle puts it the power of the resurrected Christ would more than enable the believer to consider the sin nature a vanquished foe and to behave as though it were Fourfold Gospel Christian and Missionary Alliance Retrieved 2013 03 29 Pardington George P The Crisis of the Deeper Life New York The Christian Alliance Publishing Company 1925 Accessed May 31 2011 a b Murphy Karen 23 May 2018 Pentecostals and Roman Catholics on Becoming a Christian Spirit Baptism Faith Conversion Experience and Discipleship in Ecumenical Perspective Brill Academic Publishers p 131 ISBN 978 90 04 36786 9 the Christian and Missionary Alliance CMA accepted the Keswickian teaching over the Wesleyan Holiness belief Bernie A Van De Walle The Heart of the Gospel A B Simpson the Fourfold Gospel and Late Nineteenth Century Evangelical Theology Wipf and Stock Publishers USA 2009 p 93 Despite similarities Simpson s sanctification doctrine included its own distinctives not duplicating either Keswick or Holiness soteriology p 94 Richard Gilbertson like McGraw distinguishes between Simpson s view of sanctification and those of Keswick and Wesleyanism There have been frequent attempts to categorize Simpson and the C amp MA Often the assertion is made that Simpson held to a Keswick type view of sanctification More precisely Simpson should be seen as having been influenced by Boardman s Higher Christian Life a book which also impacted the Keswick movement Other than an 1885 invitation to speak at one of their conferences Simpson had little formal contact with the British Keswick movement Gordon T Smith Conversion and Sanctification in the Christian amp Missionary Alliance awf world Brazil 1992 He differed in some notable ways from the teachings of his contemporaries he rejected the perfectionism of the Wesleyan methodists he did not accept the suppressionism of the Keswick movement And In these respects the C amp MA is distinct from the Keswick movement The Alliance heritage is more life and work affirming Our actions in the world do make a difference and are meaningful The Great Commission Christian and Missionary Alliance Retrieved 2013 03 29 The Radical Holiness Movement and The Christian and Missionary Alliance Twins perhaps but not Identical Bernie A Van De Walle Retrieved 30 September 2020 Michael G Yount A B Simpson His Message and Impact on the Third Great Awakening Wipf and Stock Publishers USA 2016 p 188 Our Work Our Work Compassion and Mercy Associates 2014 05 17 Retrieved 12 February 2018 Alliance World Fellowship Statistics awf world Brazil retrieved November 5 2022 a b c All God s Children Documentary 2008 a b A Badly Broken Boarding School Christianity Today Retrieved October 30 2012 Board of Directors of the U S C amp MA alife Alliance Life Retrieved 2013 03 29 Child Safety amp Abuse Reporting Cmalliance org Retrieved 22 November 2022 External links EditOfficial website of the Alliance World Fellowship Official website of the Christian and Missionary Alliance in the United States Official website of the Christian and Missionary Alliance in New Zealand Official website of the Christian and Missionary Alliance in Canada Official website of the Asia Pacific Region of the Christian and Missionary Alliance Official website of the Christian and Missionary Alliance in Australia Official website of the Christian and Missionary Alliance in Hong Kong Alliance Life Official Magazine of the Christian and Missionary Alliance Christian and Missionary Alliance at Curlie Christian and Missionary Alliance Association of Religion Data Archives Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alliance World Fellowship amp oldid 1137311720, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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