fbpx
Wikipedia

Missionary Church of the Disciples of Jesus Christ

The Missionary Church of the Disciples of Jesus Christ is an evangelical non-profit religious organization based in West Covina, CA. The group consists of 2,000 to 3,000 members throughout North America and Latin America. Members, referred to as missionaries, who come from a variety of different socio-economic backgrounds, dedicate their time to spreading the word of God. Training before becoming missionaries include reading and studying the Bible daily, praying and communal events. Using the Bible as their source of doctrine, adepts carry out various activities such as spiritual counseling, disaster relief teams, seasonal programs that consist in the distribution of food and toys for the community, missionary training programs, and charity works through the collection of donations.

Missionary Church of the Disciples of Jesus Christ
ClassificationEvangelical
TheologyTrinitarianism
GovernanceApostolic Order
StructureHierarchical
DirectorCeasar Rivera Lewis
RegionNorth America and Latin America
HeadquartersCovina, California, U.S.
FounderErnest William Sellers
SeparationsIglesia Evangelica Internacional Soldados de la Cruz de Queso
Members2,000–3,000
Official websitehttps://www.disciplesofjesuschrist.org

The group believes in the tenets of the New Testament and uses the Ten Commandments as their moral and spiritual guide. The missionaries are best known for their distinct uniforms which include white garments decorated with burgundy stripes. They also observe the Sabbath, the biblical Laws of Health, Divine Healing and adhere to the Discipleship as a way of life.

Beliefs and creed Edit

Their creed in a nutshell may be found in the What We Believe[1] section of their website. It is a Christian-Judeo denomination distinguished by the observance of the Sabbath and emphasis in the Second Coming of Christ. Its theology corresponds to the Christian teachings of biblical infallibility and the Trinity. Although similar in beliefs to the Seventh-Day Adventist Church, it differs in the belief of a more rigid system of keeping the Sabbath and the keeping of the Commandment by avoiding images of all sorts in their homes and on themselves.

Baptism Edit

The doctrine embraces Trinitarianism, immortality of the soul, and immersion baptism as the first step towards salvation as cited in Matthew 28:19 on their official website.[2] According to the Bible those ages 12 and up may be baptized.

Keeping the Sabbath Edit

Every Saturday, members gather to commemorate the commandment which declares that the seventh day be kept holy. Any daily activities are paused on this day and instead are replaced with worship from Friday sunset to Saturday sunset.

Practices Edit

Discipleship Edit

Those who wish to become full members of the organization, can become disciples. This position designates members to become learners of the Bible with combined worship.

Evangelism Edit

This organization is also known for their door to door preaching approach. Members can be seen spreading their literature in the form of pamphlets and offering bible studies.

Faith healing Edit

Through a strict prayer routine and a spiritual mindset, those who are granted the discipleship, carry out activities that involve praying for any one who is in need of being healed of a spiritual or physical illness. This activity may be carried out either in public or in private.[citation needed]

Dietary guidelines Edit

Members ascribe to the dietary laws described in Leviticus[citation needed] and requires members to eat accordingly. Eating unclean animals such as pork is forbidden.

History Edit

Background (1922–1929) Edit

Ernest William Sellers (better known as Daddy John) was born on August 30, 1869, in Portage County, Wisconsin. His family were members of the Methodist Church. In 1924, George Smith, a Christian missionary, was said to have revealed the doctrine of Christ to Ernest. In the years 1922 to 1924, Sellers started preaching in Cuba in his own place of business where he sold toys and sorts. Sellers would later turn this same business establishment into a worship center called "Misión Gedeon" (Gideons’s Mission). In 1928, Sellers was greeted at his place of living by two spiritual beings who revealed to him that images of all sorts could not be present in any form. After this meeting, Sellers declared September 30 to be the "Day of the Holocaust" in which all images of all types would be brought by the parishioners to burn at a bonfire in commemoration of the Second Commandment. Sellers started to preach the revealed doctrine, visiting eight countries in the Americas before returning to Cuba in 1930.

The church under Sellers (1930–1953) Edit

On March 25, 1930, Sellers officially established the church in Cuba as Iglesia Bando Evangélico Gedeón or Gideon Evangelical Band Church. His first church activities included a large scale preaching campaign and divine healing which yielded successful results. From June 13, 1928, up until his death in 1953, together with his wife Muriel C. Sellers oversaw the work in Cuba from his central headquarters in Playa Baracoa. In 1939, Sellers created a monthly newspaper called, El Mensajero de Los Postreros Días (The Last Days Messenger). In it, Sellers wrote world news and religious exhortations and literature. The Messenger was distributed free as a result of donations that were collected from people, which it would then go into the production of the newspaper. The donations would also go to the construction of new churches and to support other church activities.

As head of the church, throughout the years, Sellers reorganized and changed the internal disciplines of the church. Sellers created a strict hierarchy within the church. Sellers appointed Mayordomos de Provincia (Provincial Church Administrator) and Mayordomos de Distritos (District Church Administrator) to head the regional sections of the church. They in turn had to report to the Mayordomo General (General Church Administrator), Sellers, and their monthly activities; some of these were published in The Messenger. Sellers took on the title of Bishop around 1939. All members of the church had to report their whereabouts and activities in writing to the church administrator who in turn would deliver them to the main headquarters. Other ranks included: Member, Good Samaritan, Watchtower, Member of the Light Brigade, Disciple, Lieutenant, Captain, Teacher, Preacher, and Evangelist.

While Sellers built churches, he also preached and baptized people. Records indicate that in the late 1940s the church had well over a total of 20,000 members. The largest baptismal record made was seventy-one people in one day. Sellers, now with the title of Apostle, which was given in 1946, died on February 25, 1953, in Playa Baracoa at the age of 83.

Succession of Apostles (1953–1987) Edit

Sellers declared that the Bishop of Great Echelon, Ángel María Hernández, would succeed him in the office of Apostle. As an Apostle, Hernández oversaw the expansion of the church into international lands such as Jamaica, Guatemala, Costa Rica, Nicaragua, El Salvador, Honduras, Chile and Haiti. He died on December 27, 1961, at the age of 61.

A year before his death Hernández announced that the new successor would be Arturo Rangel Sosa. Having been recalled from Panama by the presiding bishops, he replaced Angel María as Apostle in 1962. Rangel added Internacional (International) to the church’s name in 1964. In 1966, Rangel disappeared while on his way to Matanzas along with his brother José Rangel Sosa and an Evangelist named Heliodoro Castillo. That same year, two bishops of the church took command and established a Junta de Obispos (Board of Bishops).

Due to the escalating tensions between the Castro regime and the churches, these bishops left the country on February 27, 1968. They set up the church in Tampa, Florida but then changed the headquarters to Miami, Florida. Both bishops were assigned the ranks of Archbishop in 1971. In 1974, the church’s name was changed once again. In 1986, both Archbishops were ordained as the new Apostles. On October 14, 1987, Samuel Mendiondo, one of the two archbishops, died.

Reorganization (1990–1993) Edit

A Bishop by the name of Rolando Gonzalez Washington, head of the church in California and the western part of the United States, disagreed with what he saw as transgressions within the church. He believed that certain changes and other things that were not permitted under the Sellers administration were now beginning to make an entrance into the church and were not part of the original doctrine proclaimed by Sellers. In early 1990, Rolando Gonzalez openly split the western section of the church from the eastern section of the church. He placed his headquarters in Bell Gardens, California and renamed the organization Church of the Soldiers of the Cross of Christ of the State of California.[3]

Legitimacy (1990–1993) Edit

During these years, there were a series of legal battles. In these years both factions, the California and the Florida main headquarters, found themselves embroiled in federal courts over matters of legitimacy and sovereignty. As a result, the California church had to change the appearance of its uniforms, insignias, and logos. The church renamed itself one last time, changing its name to Missionary Church of the Disciples of Jesus Christ. Reasons given for the separation were that the Miami church had deviated from the original doctrine preached by Daddy John (Ernest William Sellers) and therefore was no longer guided by the same Holy Spirit.

The New Church (1990–present) Edit

Now officially a separate legal entity from the Miami church, the California-based Missionary Church proceeded to build more churches and missions through the work of its missionaries. Its missionaries were taught the Bible through the Estudios Biblicos program. They also went out in front of stores and supermarkets to ask for voluntary donations with plastic bags, which then evolved into the recognizable white cans that they carry today. New churches were established in different parts of the world, most notably in the Americas.

During the late 1980s and 1990s, the Missionary Church had its own radio space called Con La Biblia En La Mano (With The Bible In Hand), which transmitted every Sunday on Radio KALY. On August 26, 1993, Rolando Gonzalez was ordained as Apostle-Director. In May of that same year, he relocated the main headquarters from Bell Gardens, California to Covina, California. Gonzalez died on December 10, 2004, and was succeeded by the Bishops Caesar Rivera Lewis,Joel Gonzalez and David Higuera Rolón, marking the beginning of the Board of Bishops which ended in 2007, when Caesar Rivera was proclaimed the new Apostle-Director.

Organization and structure Edit

Ranks Edit

The Missionary Church divides its members into ranks which carry unique responsibilities.[citation needed]

  1. Apostle-Director
  2. Bishop
  3. Major Superintendent
  4. Superintendent
  5. Major Supervisor
  6. Supervisor
  7. Super Deaconess
  8. Deaconess
  9. Deacon
  10. Super Evangelist
  11. Evangelist
  12. Pastor Evangelist
  13. Preacher
  14. Anointed
  15. Disciple
  16. Member

Apostolic Succession Edit

According to the Missionary Church, the Apostles are direct successors and continuation of the original ministry headed by the Apostle Peter. The Directorate recognizes Ernest William Sellers, Ángel María Hernández, Arturo Rangel, Samuel Mendiondo, and Rolando G. Washington as successors to the twelve apostles, hence creating the apostolic line of succession, which they call the Apostolic Family. Its duties include overseeing the entire welfare of the church and head what they refer to as The Apostolic Board of Council Officers.

Apostolic Board of Council Officers Edit

The Apostolic Board of Council Officers is composed of the Bishops, Major Superintendents, Superintendents, Major Supervisors, and Supervisors. The officers are also in charge of safe-guarding the doctrine in their respective churches.

Charity through donations Edit

The Missionary Church of the Disciples of Jesus Christ is best known for their white uniforms and the white donation bins. They can be seen outside stores and streetlights asking for donations that are used for charity through missionary training programs, My Father’s House (which are properties used to offer free housing, meals and clothing to people seeking spiritual guidance and as such have undergone physical or emotional hardship), Disaster Relief programs, church missions and seasonal programs for the community to receive free toys and meals.[4]

Culture Edit

Annual conferences Edit

Each year, the Missionary Church organizes what they call the International Annual Conferences. These conferences usually take place in the United States around March . This event sets the tone for the year and includes prayers, biblical reenacting, and the proclamation and welcoming of new members. More than 1,000 people attend this event.

Special programs Edit

The church offers prison visitations, hospital visitations, as well as a Food and Disaster Relief program. They also offer a Youth and Preparatory School program which aims at spreading its beliefs and a Family Orientation program which aims to help families in need of moral guidance. Furthermore, The House of my Father program is a rehabilitation program which aims at providing help (free housing, food and clothing) to those in need of rehabilitation (drug, alcohol and spiritual). It has been reported that people ranging from single mothers to entire families have been a part of this program.

Evangelical campaigns Edit

Evangelical Campaigns consist of different sections of the country which are then subdivided into their respective cities (for example, the Campaign of Southern California consists of the Campaign of Covina, etc.). This also includes other countries as well. Their main objectives are to evangelize and to work in collecting donations outside stores and streetlights for the use of Disaster Relief programs, The House of my Father program and church missions.

Demographics Edit

North America Edit

There are several missions across the U.S. including establishments in California, Florida, Georgia, Illinois,[5] New Jersey, Texas,[6] Florida, Colorado, Georgia, Arizona, Nevada, and Washington.

Latin America Edit

With several missions across Latin America, the Missionary Church has established missions in Mexico in Baja California, Chihuahua, Jalisco, Puebla, Chiapas, Campeche, and Quintana Roo.

In Central America,[7] they have missions in Guatemala, Honduras and Costa Rica. In South America, missions have been established in Colombia and Brazil. Lastly, the Caribbean Islands currently features a mission in the Dominic Republic and Puerto Rico.

Europe Edit

During the years 1993 to 2013, the presence of two pastors were leading a mission in Barcelona, Spain. It is reported that there were members from Russia, Czech Republic, Armenia, Brazil and Mexico at the Barcelona mission.

External criticism Edit

External critics have questioned certain practices of this organization, including the governance system and disciplines on issues such as clothing, personal adornment, banning the use of vehicles on Saturdays, and banning television. For example, an external group called the “Center for Religious Research” has classified such practices in the Missionary Church as “legalists”, arguing that such disciplines are too rigid and too unsubstantiated by the Bible.[8]

References Edit

  1. ^ "Official Website". Missionary Church of the Disciples of Jesus Christ.
  2. ^ "Baptism". Missionary Church of the Disciples of Jesus Christ.
  3. ^ "INTERNATIONAL EVANGELICAL CHURCH OF SOLDIERS OF THE CROSS OF CHRIST v. Rolando Gonzalez, Defendant". FindLaw.
  4. ^ Bedford, Ed. "Hot Dogs and Holiness". San Diego Reader.
  5. ^ "Illinois Mission". Youtube.[dead link]
  6. ^ "Dallas, Texas Mission". Youtube.[dead link]
  7. ^ "Central America Mission". Youtube.
  8. ^ "Apologia Cristiana" (PDF). Centro de Investigaciones Religiosas. 2 (1): 8. January–March 1998.

External links Edit

  • Official Website
  • Central America Website
  • Youtube
  • Facebook
  • Blogs

missionary, church, disciples, jesus, christ, evangelical, profit, religious, organization, based, west, covina, group, consists, members, throughout, north, america, latin, america, members, referred, missionaries, come, from, variety, different, socio, econo. The Missionary Church of the Disciples of Jesus Christ is an evangelical non profit religious organization based in West Covina CA The group consists of 2 000 to 3 000 members throughout North America and Latin America Members referred to as missionaries who come from a variety of different socio economic backgrounds dedicate their time to spreading the word of God Training before becoming missionaries include reading and studying the Bible daily praying and communal events Using the Bible as their source of doctrine adepts carry out various activities such as spiritual counseling disaster relief teams seasonal programs that consist in the distribution of food and toys for the community missionary training programs and charity works through the collection of donations Missionary Church of the Disciples of Jesus ChristClassificationEvangelicalTheologyTrinitarianismGovernanceApostolic OrderStructureHierarchicalDirectorCeasar Rivera LewisRegionNorth America and Latin AmericaHeadquartersCovina California U S FounderErnest William SellersSeparationsIglesia Evangelica Internacional Soldados de la Cruz de QuesoMembers2 000 3 000Official websitehttps www disciplesofjesuschrist orgThe group believes in the tenets of the New Testament and uses the Ten Commandments as their moral and spiritual guide The missionaries are best known for their distinct uniforms which include white garments decorated with burgundy stripes They also observe the Sabbath the biblical Laws of Health Divine Healing and adhere to the Discipleship as a way of life Contents 1 Beliefs and creed 1 1 Baptism 1 2 Keeping the Sabbath 2 Practices 2 1 Discipleship 2 2 Evangelism 2 3 Faith healing 2 4 Dietary guidelines 3 History 3 1 Background 1922 1929 3 2 The church under Sellers 1930 1953 3 3 Succession of Apostles 1953 1987 3 4 Reorganization 1990 1993 3 5 Legitimacy 1990 1993 3 6 The New Church 1990 present 4 Organization and structure 4 1 Ranks 4 2 Apostolic Succession 4 3 Apostolic Board of Council Officers 4 4 Charity through donations 5 Culture 5 1 Annual conferences 5 2 Special programs 5 3 Evangelical campaigns 6 Demographics 6 1 North America 6 2 Latin America 6 3 Europe 7 External criticism 8 References 9 External linksBeliefs and creed EditTheir creed in a nutshell may be found in the What We Believe 1 section of their website It is a Christian Judeo denomination distinguished by the observance of the Sabbath and emphasis in the Second Coming of Christ Its theology corresponds to the Christian teachings of biblical infallibility and the Trinity Although similar in beliefs to the Seventh Day Adventist Church it differs in the belief of a more rigid system of keeping the Sabbath and the keeping of the Commandment by avoiding images of all sorts in their homes and on themselves Baptism Edit The doctrine embraces Trinitarianism immortality of the soul and immersion baptism as the first step towards salvation as cited in Matthew 28 19 on their official website 2 According to the Bible those ages 12 and up may be baptized Keeping the Sabbath Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Every Saturday members gather to commemorate the commandment which declares that the seventh day be kept holy Any daily activities are paused on this day and instead are replaced with worship from Friday sunset to Saturday sunset Practices EditDiscipleship Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Those who wish to become full members of the organization can become disciples This position designates members to become learners of the Bible with combined worship Evangelism Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Main article Evangelism This organization is also known for their door to door preaching approach Members can be seen spreading their literature in the form of pamphlets and offering bible studies Faith healing Edit Main article Faith healing Through a strict prayer routine and a spiritual mindset those who are granted the discipleship carry out activities that involve praying for any one who is in need of being healed of a spiritual or physical illness This activity may be carried out either in public or in private citation needed Dietary guidelines Edit Members ascribe to the dietary laws described in Leviticus citation needed and requires members to eat accordingly Eating unclean animals such as pork is forbidden History EditBackground 1922 1929 Edit Ernest William Sellers better known as Daddy John was born on August 30 1869 in Portage County Wisconsin His family were members of the Methodist Church In 1924 George Smith a Christian missionary was said to have revealed the doctrine of Christ to Ernest In the years 1922 to 1924 Sellers started preaching in Cuba in his own place of business where he sold toys and sorts Sellers would later turn this same business establishment into a worship center called Mision Gedeon Gideons s Mission In 1928 Sellers was greeted at his place of living by two spiritual beings who revealed to him that images of all sorts could not be present in any form After this meeting Sellers declared September 30 to be the Day of the Holocaust in which all images of all types would be brought by the parishioners to burn at a bonfire in commemoration of the Second Commandment Sellers started to preach the revealed doctrine visiting eight countries in the Americas before returning to Cuba in 1930 The church under Sellers 1930 1953 Edit On March 25 1930 Sellers officially established the church in Cuba as Iglesia Bando Evangelico Gedeon or Gideon Evangelical Band Church His first church activities included a large scale preaching campaign and divine healing which yielded successful results From June 13 1928 up until his death in 1953 together with his wife Muriel C Sellers oversaw the work in Cuba from his central headquarters in Playa Baracoa In 1939 Sellers created a monthly newspaper called El Mensajero de Los Postreros Dias The Last Days Messenger In it Sellers wrote world news and religious exhortations and literature The Messenger was distributed free as a result of donations that were collected from people which it would then go into the production of the newspaper The donations would also go to the construction of new churches and to support other church activities As head of the church throughout the years Sellers reorganized and changed the internal disciplines of the church Sellers created a strict hierarchy within the church Sellers appointed Mayordomos de Provincia Provincial Church Administrator and Mayordomos de Distritos District Church Administrator to head the regional sections of the church They in turn had to report to the Mayordomo General General Church Administrator Sellers and their monthly activities some of these were published in The Messenger Sellers took on the title of Bishop around 1939 All members of the church had to report their whereabouts and activities in writing to the church administrator who in turn would deliver them to the main headquarters Other ranks included Member Good Samaritan Watchtower Member of the Light Brigade Disciple Lieutenant Captain Teacher Preacher and Evangelist While Sellers built churches he also preached and baptized people Records indicate that in the late 1940s the church had well over a total of 20 000 members The largest baptismal record made was seventy one people in one day Sellers now with the title of Apostle which was given in 1946 died on February 25 1953 in Playa Baracoa at the age of 83 Succession of Apostles 1953 1987 Edit Sellers declared that the Bishop of Great Echelon Angel Maria Hernandez would succeed him in the office of Apostle As an Apostle Hernandez oversaw the expansion of the church into international lands such as Jamaica Guatemala Costa Rica Nicaragua El Salvador Honduras Chile and Haiti He died on December 27 1961 at the age of 61 A year before his death Hernandez announced that the new successor would be Arturo Rangel Sosa Having been recalled from Panama by the presiding bishops he replaced Angel Maria as Apostle in 1962 Rangel added Internacional International to the church s name in 1964 In 1966 Rangel disappeared while on his way to Matanzas along with his brother Jose Rangel Sosa and an Evangelist named Heliodoro Castillo That same year two bishops of the church took command and established a Junta de Obispos Board of Bishops Due to the escalating tensions between the Castro regime and the churches these bishops left the country on February 27 1968 They set up the church in Tampa Florida but then changed the headquarters to Miami Florida Both bishops were assigned the ranks of Archbishop in 1971 In 1974 the church s name was changed once again In 1986 both Archbishops were ordained as the new Apostles On October 14 1987 Samuel Mendiondo one of the two archbishops died Reorganization 1990 1993 Edit A Bishop by the name of Rolando Gonzalez Washington head of the church in California and the western part of the United States disagreed with what he saw as transgressions within the church He believed that certain changes and other things that were not permitted under the Sellers administration were now beginning to make an entrance into the church and were not part of the original doctrine proclaimed by Sellers In early 1990 Rolando Gonzalez openly split the western section of the church from the eastern section of the church He placed his headquarters in Bell Gardens California and renamed the organization Church of the Soldiers of the Cross of Christ of the State of California 3 Legitimacy 1990 1993 Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message During these years there were a series of legal battles In these years both factions the California and the Florida main headquarters found themselves embroiled in federal courts over matters of legitimacy and sovereignty As a result the California church had to change the appearance of its uniforms insignias and logos The church renamed itself one last time changing its name to Missionary Church of the Disciples of Jesus Christ Reasons given for the separation were that the Miami church had deviated from the original doctrine preached by Daddy John Ernest William Sellers and therefore was no longer guided by the same Holy Spirit The New Church 1990 present Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Now officially a separate legal entity from the Miami church the California based Missionary Church proceeded to build more churches and missions through the work of its missionaries Its missionaries were taught the Bible through the Estudios Biblicos program They also went out in front of stores and supermarkets to ask for voluntary donations with plastic bags which then evolved into the recognizable white cans that they carry today New churches were established in different parts of the world most notably in the Americas During the late 1980s and 1990s the Missionary Church had its own radio space called Con La Biblia En La Mano With The Bible In Hand which transmitted every Sunday on Radio KALY On August 26 1993 Rolando Gonzalez was ordained as Apostle Director In May of that same year he relocated the main headquarters from Bell Gardens California to Covina California Gonzalez died on December 10 2004 and was succeeded by the Bishops Caesar Rivera Lewis Joel Gonzalez and David Higuera Rolon marking the beginning of the Board of Bishops which ended in 2007 when Caesar Rivera was proclaimed the new Apostle Director Organization and structure EditRanks Edit The Missionary Church divides its members into ranks which carry unique responsibilities citation needed Apostle Director Bishop Major Superintendent Superintendent Major Supervisor Supervisor Super Deaconess Deaconess Deacon Super Evangelist Evangelist Pastor Evangelist Preacher Anointed Disciple MemberApostolic Succession Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message According to the Missionary Church the Apostles are direct successors and continuation of the original ministry headed by the Apostle Peter The Directorate recognizes Ernest William Sellers Angel Maria Hernandez Arturo Rangel Samuel Mendiondo and Rolando G Washington as successors to the twelve apostles hence creating the apostolic line of succession which they call the Apostolic Family Its duties include overseeing the entire welfare of the church and head what they refer to as The Apostolic Board of Council Officers Apostolic Board of Council Officers Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Apostolic Board of Council Officers is composed of the Bishops Major Superintendents Superintendents Major Supervisors and Supervisors The officers are also in charge of safe guarding the doctrine in their respective churches Charity through donations Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Missionary Church of the Disciples of Jesus Christ is best known for their white uniforms and the white donation bins They can be seen outside stores and streetlights asking for donations that are used for charity through missionary training programs My Father s House which are properties used to offer free housing meals and clothing to people seeking spiritual guidance and as such have undergone physical or emotional hardship Disaster Relief programs church missions and seasonal programs for the community to receive free toys and meals 4 Culture EditAnnual conferences Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Each year the Missionary Church organizes what they call the International Annual Conferences These conferences usually take place in the United States around March This event sets the tone for the year and includes prayers biblical reenacting and the proclamation and welcoming of new members More than 1 000 people attend this event Special programs Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message The church offers prison visitations hospital visitations as well as a Food and Disaster Relief program They also offer a Youth and Preparatory School program which aims at spreading its beliefs and a Family Orientation program which aims to help families in need of moral guidance Furthermore The House of my Father program is a rehabilitation program which aims at providing help free housing food and clothing to those in need of rehabilitation drug alcohol and spiritual It has been reported that people ranging from single mothers to entire families have been a part of this program Evangelical campaigns Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Evangelical Campaigns consist of different sections of the country which are then subdivided into their respective cities for example the Campaign of Southern California consists of the Campaign of Covina etc This also includes other countries as well Their main objectives are to evangelize and to work in collecting donations outside stores and streetlights for the use of Disaster Relief programs The House of my Father program and church missions Demographics EditNorth America Edit There are several missions across the U S including establishments in California Florida Georgia Illinois 5 New Jersey Texas 6 Florida Colorado Georgia Arizona Nevada and Washington Latin America Edit With several missions across Latin America the Missionary Church has established missions in Mexico in Baja California Chihuahua Jalisco Puebla Chiapas Campeche and Quintana Roo In Central America 7 they have missions in Guatemala Honduras and Costa Rica In South America missions have been established in Colombia and Brazil Lastly the Caribbean Islands currently features a mission in the Dominic Republic and Puerto Rico Europe Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed April 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message During the years 1993 to 2013 the presence of two pastors were leading a mission in Barcelona Spain It is reported that there were members from Russia Czech Republic Armenia Brazil and Mexico at the Barcelona mission External criticism EditExternal critics have questioned certain practices of this organization including the governance system and disciplines on issues such as clothing personal adornment banning the use of vehicles on Saturdays and banning television For example an external group called the Center for Religious Research has classified such practices in the Missionary Church as legalists arguing that such disciplines are too rigid and too unsubstantiated by the Bible 8 References Edit Official Website Missionary Church of the Disciples of Jesus Christ Baptism Missionary Church of the Disciples of Jesus Christ INTERNATIONAL EVANGELICAL CHURCH OF SOLDIERS OF THE CROSS OF CHRIST v Rolando Gonzalez Defendant FindLaw Bedford Ed Hot Dogs and Holiness San Diego Reader Illinois Mission Youtube dead link Dallas Texas Mission Youtube dead link Central America Mission Youtube Apologia Cristiana PDF Centro de Investigaciones Religiosas 2 1 8 January March 1998 External links EditOfficial Website Central America Website Youtube Facebook Blogs Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Missionary Church of the Disciples of Jesus Christ amp oldid 1177781576, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.