 
 
    
      
        | 
          The Roots of Shepherdingby D. Vinzant    |  | 
    
    ROOTS OF THE MODERN DISCIPLING MOVEMENT 
    Disciples need to be called Christians   again. It happened first in Antioch (Acts 11:26) and it needs to happen today.   The words "disciple, " "discipling," and "discipleship" have been so abused that   they no longer communicate what they used to. The terms may some day be rescued   and used again in the biblical sense. For now, however, other terms used in the   New Testament for Christian growth will serve much better. 
    Where did the modern authoritarian discipling system come from? Who dreamed   up this pyramid scheme of a young evangelist controlling the lives of converts   so that they grind out huge work quotas and big number baptisms? What are the   roots of this system? 
    This particular form of authoritarianism largely ran its course in other   religious groups and has been abandoned. There is a large body of literature   full of warnings and criticism of this authoritarianism as it has been tried by   others. The fact that it has been tried by others is rather embarrassing to   those who thought that someone in the churches of Christ invented this approach.   The reality, however, is that churches of Christ are among the last ones to be   damaged by the discipling movement. 
    A Search for Roots 
    There are five important roots of the modern discipling movement as it now   appears among churches of Christ. Each of these roots will be considered here.   Statements from many religious leaders explain why they rejected the discipling   approach. 
    The first root of the modern discipling movement may be found in the Roman   Catholic Spiritual Directors of the fifth century and later throughout Roman   Catholic history. 
    The Spiritual Director system operated in monasteries and convents for many   centuries. Those being trained were told to reveal their most secret thoughts to   their Spiritual Director and submit themselves totally to their Spiritual   director's decisions as to what is good and evil. This is essentially what is   now called a "discipling relationship." 
    The idea of confessing sins to a discipler obviously comes from the Catholic   tradition and their doctrine of auricular confession. Because of abuses, the   Roman Catholic Church built in a safeguard in their Spiritual Director   arrangement. They found that personal domination and manipulation can easily run   out of control when one person is both the confessor and the Spiritual Director.   They began to require, therefore, that the confessor and the Spiritual Director   could not be the same person.
    In this regard, the modern discipling movement is about where the Roman   Catholic Church was almost 1,500 years ago. They have not yet learned the danger   of having one person serve both as the confessor and the Spiritual Director for   another person. 
    In the Roman Catholic Church today there is much less emphasis on each person   having a Spiritual Director and more emphasis on each person having spiritual   direction. 
    Based on his work with the Association for Psychological Type, Flavil Yeakley   reports that the Roman Catholic Church was the first religious group to make   widespread use of Jungian typology, the Myers-piggs Type Indicator, and other   approaches to personality differences as a way of counseling individuals about   the spiritual direction their lives should take. They now clearly recognize the   value of diversity and do not try to make members over after the image of the   group norm. (1)
    Pietism/Wesleyanism
    A second root of the discipling movement is to be found in   Pietism/Wesleyanism. Early in the Reformation, such men as Spener, Franke, and   Zinzendorf wanted to peathe new life into ice cold state churches. John Wesley   was impressed by Spener's use of small groups (collegia pietatis) for this   purpose. This influenced him to establish Methodist societies within Anglican   churches. These small groups soon came to see themselves as a church within a   church. They believed that they had achieved a higher level of spirituality than   that experienced by other Christians. Eventually they poke with the Anglican   fellowship and became a separate denomination.
    This is similar to what happened when Crossroads-trained campus ministers   went into churches of Christ throughout the nation and started using the   discipling approach. The "Soul Talk" group became a church within a church. 
    Those involved in using this approach saw themselves as being superior to the   "lukewarm" or "dead" members who were not involved in the discipling ministry.   They thought of themselves as being the "faithful remnant." They sought   perfection through rule-keeping and thus demonstrated pietistic tendencies   toward legalism. 
    Such a spirit leads to divisiveness. It produces end-runs around good elders.   It tempts toward elitism and a kind of self-importance. Study Pietism and you   will find an important source of much that characterizes the discipling   movement.(2) 
    Watchman Nee
    A third root of the authoritarian approach to discipling can be found in the   writings and influence of Watchman Nee. He is the favorite theologian of many   modern charismatics. Nee is a somewhat heroic figure because he suffered a long   imprisonment by the Chinese Communists. In his early career, he went through a   pief association with the Plymouth pethren and came under the influence of   Pietism. In later years, he advocated very forcefully a strong role for those   with "delegated authority." As Russell T. Hitt reported,
    Watchman Nee, a prolific writer and leader of the indigenous Chinese church   movement known as the Little Flock, makes a strong plea for the need for   Christians to obey delegated authority in the church. "The church is a place not   only for fellowship of pothers and sisters," says Nee, "but also for the   manifestation of authority. " (3)
    Nee's writings on spiritual authority and on the normal church life reflect   the kind of Asian authoritarianism that prevailed before World War II. According   to Bob Buess, Nee required blanket obedience regardless of morals or   righteousness, simply for the sake of obedience . (4) 
    Nee taught that each person must have a "covering" in the Lord. He used that   term for a person who has delegated authority, who must be obeyed   unconditionally, and who must be imitated. He also taught that Christians must   confess their sins to the person who is their "covering." 
    Jerram Barrs explained that the doctrine of "covering" means that ideas,   decisions, and lifestyle must be covered by someone higher in the chain of   command; thus the "covering" gives instructions on many secular matters and not   just on matters of faith.(5) This, of course, is what the discipling churches   such as the Boston Church of Christ call a "discipler." 
    Nee had another doctrine that has been picked up by the Boston Church of   Christ. He taught that there should be only one congregation in each city. Juan   Carlos Ortiz [who wrote the seminal book "Disciple"] later advocated the same   thing. 
    When Nee's "Little Flock" moved into a city, they proclaimed themselves as   the only church (and the only local congregation) approved by God in that city.   Study the writings of Watchman Nee and you will find that the discipling   movement did not begin with the Boston Church of Christ or the Crossroads Church   of Christ. It did not begin with Kip McKean or Chuck Lucas. It did not begin in   churches of Christ at all. 
    Parachurch Organizations 
    A fourth root of the discipling movement is found in certain parachurch   organizations. The term "parachurch" is applied to evangelical organizations   with no church affiliation or sponsorship. Two parachurch organizations helped   shape the discipling movement.
    In 1934, Dawson Trotman founded a parachurch organization known as the   "Navigators." Trotman, a strong leader and a true evangelistic entrepreneur, is   remembered as having a somewhat authoritarian and dogmatic style. He ran a tight   ship and was often confrontational and apupt with those who worked under him. He   would assign workers to any geographic location as it occurred to him. He often   had Navigator "houses" where a number of Navigators would share living   quarters--with no hint, however, of any moral improprieties. 
    The kind of one-on-one follow-up after conversion that Trotman taught was   very similar to the discipling approach practiced by the Boston Church of Christ   and other discipling churches. (6) 
    Since Trotman's death, his successor, Lorne Sanny, has adopted a modified   leadership style. A journal published by the Navigators recently warned against   the abuse of discipling relationships. The article warned about authoritarian   intervention into the private life of the one being discipled. The article   suggested that such a practice can foster over-dependency in the recipient and   furnish unhealthy ego-gratification for the discipler. (7) 
    Another parachurch organization that influenced the discipling movement is a   group known as "Campus Crusade." Bill and Vonette pight are its leaders. They   are as cheerful and sunny as their last name suggests. Bill has been in campus   work for almost four decades. Campus Crusade has led the way among evangelical   fundamentalists in several areas. 
    Historian Richard Quebedeaux observed that pight is an authoritarian leader   with a chain of command placing himself clearly at the top as leader of Campus   Crusade. Further, he says, there is a lack of any effective self-criticism   within the organization. 
    Concerning pight, Quebedaux adds,". . . it has been very difficult for him to   divorce himself from the pietistic tendencies toward legalism and   super-spirituality, despite his words to the contrary. " (8) It should be noted   that this criticism comes in a work about pight and Campus Crusade that is   highly favorable. Similar criticisms have been made concerning the leaders of   the discipling movement among churches of Christ. 
    THE CHARISMATIC MOVEMENT
    The last root of the discipling movement as it has appeared among churches of   Christ is seen in the charismatic movement. This movement developed outside   traditional denominational structures. Similar doctrines had been taught earlier   in Pentecostal denominations such as the Assemblies of God, the Church of God,   and the Pentecostal Holiness Church. 
    In the late 1950s, however, a Neo-Pentecostal charismatic movement began.   There was no structure to this growing movement. To this loose and amorphous   group came five men offering leadership with a capital "L." They were known as   the Shepherds of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, or the "Fort lauderdale Five" . 
    These five leaders were Don Basham, Ern Baxter, Bob Mumford, Derek Prince,   and Charles Simpson. These men formed the "Holy Spirit Teaching Mission," later   renamed "Christian Growth Ministries." They began producing tapes, books, and a   monthly magazine called New Wine.
    A 1975 article in Christianity Today discussed problems that followed in the   wake of the new charismatic shepherding movement.
    A dispute is taking place over issues of authority and discipleship. Powerful   figures in the movement have built up a chain of command linking many local   groups around the country to themselves. . . . Discipleship involves submission   to the shepherd as he points the way-and points out flaws in behavior. . . .   Some travel to Ft. Lauderdale to receive training directly from Mumford and his   colleagues. . . . Those being discipled must consult with their shepherd about   many personal decisions. In some cases, shepherds forbid marriages, reject   school and vocational plans, demand confession of secret sins. . .   .(9)
    
    The five Shepherds of Fort Lauderdale taught and practiced a style of   leadership that they called "shepherding. " They used this term to describe   attempts to control the private lives of their members. 
    In 1972, shortly after they added the authoritarian tone to their teaching,   Juan Carlos Ortiz came from Argentina to Fort Lauderdale. His presentations in   Fort Lauderdale had wide reception--including some from the churches of Christ.   Ortiz taught the same thing as Watchman Nee about one congregation to a city. He   also taught authoritarianism to the point that he said disciples should be told   which individuals they should take home with them for meals. (10)
    Russell Hitt's article on the top religious news events of 1975 went beyond   the discussion of Watchman Nee that was mentioned earlier. That article also   discussed problems with the shepherding movement.
    The charismatic movement's oneness in the Spirit has been badly strained by a   disagreement on the nature and methods of discipleship training between Bob   Mumford of Christian Growth Ministries, Fort Lauderdale, Florida, and a variety   of charismatic VIPs....Mumford is charged with constructing an overly rigid,   denomination-like hierarchy of "shepherds" whose spiritual authority over their   charges is called a threat to . . . the interdenominational character of the   charismatic movement itself. Mumford denies wanting to form a new denomination,   but his opponents so far haven't had ears to hear. (11)
    Bob Buess attributes many of these problems in the shepherding movement to   the influence of Juan Carlos Ortiz. In his book Discipleship Pro and Con, he   wrote,
    Juan Carlos Ortiz came from Argentina to America and is now traveling in   various parts of the world spreading his version of discipleship. . . . The   shepherd is treated like an earthly father would be treated. . . . In   neo-discipleship groups there is absolute submission to the shepherd. Everyone   is submitted in a regimented (army type) authoritarian chain of command. Someone   is between you and God at all times. (12)
    In an earlier work, Buess had warned, "Some pastors and elders set themselves   up as little 'Hitlers' over the flock. . . . Some even go so far as to demand   submission to themselves rather than to the Lord. . . . You cannot make a   decision for yourself." (13)
    Pat Robertson wrote an Open Letter to Bob Mumford on June 27, 1975, in which   he complained about abuses associated with the discipleship-shepherd-submission   teaching. 
    He mentioned indivIduals who submit to shepherds instead of becoming   responsible church members. He mentioned those who have little to say about   Jesus but much about their relationship and submission to their shepherd. He   told of a secretary at the Christian poadcasting Network who had been turned   into an emotional cripple by this movement. He said that she scarcely could type   a letter without a long distance call to her shepherd. 
    Robertson went on to tell about wealthy Christians being forced by their   shepherds to reveal confidential details of their financial and family life. He   told of one individual who was warned that he would miss out on the Kingdom of   God and be ruined spiritually, physically, and financially if he did not submit   to the shepherd's authority. 
    Finally, Robertson quoted a key figure in the shepherding movement who said   that if God spoke to him and he knew that it was God speaking, but his shepherd   told him to do the opposite, he would obey his shepherd. (14) 
    The Shepherds of Fort Lauderdale met in Oklahoma City in March of 1976 and   issued the following "Statement of Concern and Regret."
    We realize that controversies and problems have arisen among Christians in   various areas as a result of our teaching in relation to subjects such as   submission, authority, discipling, and shepherding. We deeply regret these   problems and, insofar as they are due to fault on our part, we ask forgiveness   from our fellow believers whom we have offended. We realize that our teachings,   though we believe them to be essentially sound, have in various places been   misapplied or handled in an immature way; and that this has caused problems for   our pothers in the ministry. We deeply regret this and ask for forgiveness.   Insofar as it lies in our power, we will do our best to correct these situations   and to restore any poken relationships. (The statement is signed by Don Basham,   Em Baxter, Bob Mumford, John Poole, Derek Prince, and Charles Simpson.)   (15)
    
    Over the years since this statement, the men who were the Fort Lauderdale   Shepherds have attempted to distance themselves from the negative image the   shepherding movement acquired. Charles Simpson might be the one who is still   most involved with covenanted leadership relationships. Even Simpson, however,   has made strong efforts to clarify his former situation as a leader and advocate   of shepherding. In a recent book he said,
    When the biblical qualifications for making disciples are ignored, bad things   can happen. The Jim Joneses of history, the introverted cultic groups, the   groups that produce serious perversions of the faith are not the results of true   spiritual authority but of perverted authority. The qualifications for making   disciples and the proper kind of accountability in the ongoing leadership of   God's people are necessary to healthy discipleship. In 1985, I published a   public apology through New Wine magazine because I felt that my teachings had   been misused on some occasions. I felt I had not sufficiently guarded the truths   of authority and that abuses had occurred. Disciple-making without   accountability and a corporate mentality should be considered intolerable in the   church for biblical and historical reasons. (16)
    Then Simpson added this important warning,
    The discipling relationship is not static. Hopefully, both the leader and the   disciple are growing and maturing. Any possessiveness by the leader stifles this   process. As I have said, it is easy for the leader to become possessive of a   disciple. He may even use the phrase, "My disciple." The terminology may have a   biblical basis, but it is loaded with poor connotations. A disciple belongs to   the Lord. A leader only serves as a steward to help a disciple grow and mature   in the Lord. (17)
    
    The discipleship/shepherding movement has surfaced in other forms, as well.   In a Christianity Today article, Edward E. Plowman said,
    One of the most colorful and effective Jesus-movement groups was the   Christian World Liberation Front (CWLF). It was founded by Jack Sparks and a   handful of fellow Campus Crusade for Christ staffers as a Crusade front in   Berkeley in 1969. . . . Two months ago CWLF suffered a serious rupture. . . .   Sparks was also allied with other former Campus Crusade staffers who head   shepherd-disciple type ministries with a heavy emphasis on authority. A clash   occurred among Sparks' house group in August on questions of authority.... The   former Crusade staffers with whom Sparks is now "mutually committed" in an   "apostolic band" . . . see themselves as apostles or missionaries called to set   up and oversee small church groups patterned after biblical discipleship. ... A   chain of command already exists between the groups and the apostle-missionaries.   This has already led to the same kind of criticism as that leveled against Bob   Mumford, Derek Prince, and others in the charismatic-oriented Christian Growth   Ministries of Fort Lauderdale, Florida. (18)
    
    Strangely, the heirs of the parachurch organization known as "Campus Crusade"   and the charismatic shepherding movement out of Fort Lauderdale, Florida, are   thus seen to be using the same system of authoritarianism and, consequently,   receiving the same kind of criticisms. The CWLF has since gone through other   name changes and has finally affiliated with the Syrian Orthodox Church. 
    Links with Rome
    The charismatic shepherding movement moved into Roman Catholic circles just   about the time of Vatican II, when Pope John XXIII was attempting to ping Roman   Catholicism more into line with modern times. 
    One of the first places where this happened was at Duquesne University in   January of 1967. Some of the Catholic charismatics from Duquesne met Don Basham   and Derek Prince during the peak of the shepherding enthusiasm. Roman Catholics   soon began applying shepherding principles at some "intentional communities,"   "Christian covenant communities"--a kind of Christian commune. 
    Those involved in this Roman Catholic application of shepherding principles   published a magazine called New Covenant. This magazine contained articles from   the Fort Lauderdale Shepherds' magazine, New Wine. 
    By 1978, five ecumenical communities had entered into covenant relationship   with each other as an outgrowth of this Roman Catholic-charismatic-shepherding   movement. 
    These five communities were "Work of Christ" in East Lansing, Michigan; "Word   of God" in Ann Arbor, Michigan; "People of Praise," in South Bend, Indiana;   "Servants of the Light" in Minneapolis, Minnesota; and "Lamb of God" in   Timonium, Maryland. 
    [Note from Editor: The founder and former head of   Promise Keepers, Bill McCartney, came out of the Ann Arbor group.]
    James Hitchcock studied the Roman Catholic charismatic movement and found the   same kind of authoritarian abuses discussed earlier in the shepherding   movement--abuses very similar to those now found in the Boston Church of Christ.   (19) Bruce Barron also studied the excesses of these covenant communities. What   he described sounds similar to the excesses reported by those who have escaped   from the Boston network of churches.(20) 
    Margaret Paloma wrote about the situation among Roman Catholic charismatics   in her book ,The Charismatic Movement. She explained,
    Discipleship refers to the practice of making oneself personally responsible   and accountable to another believer for all "life decisions." Such decisions may   range from figuring a daily time schedule or financial budget to appropriate use   of possessions. . . . The practice of discipleship has been advanced by a number   of charismatic leaders (including Mumford 1973; Ortiz 1975). It is practiced in   varying degrees in some churches as well as in many intentional communities. . .   . Supporters and critics of the practice can be found among Protestant as well   as Catholic charismatics.(21)
    
    Every characteristic of discipling churches that sets them apart from other   churches of Christ can be traced, directly or indirectly, to one or more of   these influences discussed above. 
    Others who have tried this approach, however, have rejected it. In a recent   conversation with a leader of Maranatha Ministries, I was told, "What you are   experiencing in the Church of Christ is what the charismatic movement vomited   up." 
    Maranatha Ministries is a campus movement built along the lines of the   shepherding movement. They are militant in evangelism, charismatic, and   authoritarian in the personal lives of their members. Their growth may exceed   that of any similar movement--even that of the Crossroads/Boston churches. It   may be more than an interesting coincidence that the headquarters of Maranatha   Ministries is in Gainesville, Florida, not far from the Crossroads Church of   Christ where the discipling movement was first introduced to churches of Christ. 
    Influence on "Churches of Christ" 
    It would go beyond the purpose of this article and the information of this   writer to trace out the full history of how the various elements of the   discipling approach came into the Crossroads/Boston movement. That history can   best be recorded when someone from the inner circle of founders wants to tell   the story.
    The general outline of this story, however, is already obvious. It started   with a desire to see the gospel make a greater impact on the university campus.   In the late 196Os, a campus ministry organization among churches of Christ--a   group known as "Campus Evangelism"--tried to learn and adapt some of the   techniques Bill pight developed in Campus Crusade. 
    Jim Bevis, one of the Campus Evangelism leaders, went to California to train   with Campus Crusade. Chuck Lucas was actively involved in the activities of   Campus Evangelism at that time. It appears that some of the techniques he later   introduced at Crossroads came directly from Campus Crusade. The chain,   therefore, went from Campus Crusade to Campus Evangelism to Crossroads to   Boston. 
    In the late 196Os and early 197Os, it seemed that what was working in campus   ministry was an authoritarian approach. The scene on secular university campuses   was one of anarchy, rebellion, lawlessness, and rejection of all authority. What   seemed to be the answer was to face the times with frontal attacks using   crusades, blitzes, and militancy. 
    This kind of environment led Campus Evangelism and its successor, Campus   Advance, to adopt an aggressive "total commitment" stance. Some who were quite   close to the Gainesville work could find no real fault with the approach Chuck   Lucas used until well into the 1970s. 
    At that time, the Crossroads congregation was making many converts on the   University of Florida campus and looking for better ways to keep these new   converts faithful. It was at that very time that the Fort Lauderdale Shepherds,   Juan Carlos Ortiz, and Watchman Nee seem to have influenced the Crossroads   work.
    It was at that same time that some connected earlier with Campus Crusade   (Jack Sparks, Peter Gillquist, Jon paun, etc.) were peaking away into their own   pand of authoritarian shepherding. Some or all of these influences were probably   having an impact on the Gainesville work. As time passes, however, someone   formerly within this movement may tell all of this story with far more detail   than can now be provided by an outside observer. 
    CONCLUSION
    What about discipleship? If that term is used to mean being a disciple of the   Lord Jesus Christ and recognizing that He has all authority, then the term is   proper as one of many terms that describe the Christian life. If that term is   used to mean the kind of authoritarian discipleship/shepherding movement that   ran its course in various denominations in the 196Os and 197Os, then Carl   Wilson's advice is appropriate. 
    In 1976, this Pentecostal author warned that certain leaders claim authority   that puts them between Christ and the people. He said that these leaders take   control of the personal lives of their members by giving all sorts of orders   with no biblical support at all. He concluded, "If the people of the churches   concede to the clergy the right to make decisions of life and doctrine apart   from the clear teaching of scripture, it will inflict the deathblow to disciple   building in the churches, even as it did in the early church." (22) 
    Churches of Christ need to learn from what other religious groups have   already experienced. They tried the discipling approach and rejected it.   Churches of Christ should also reject this approach. It's time we called   disciples Christians again. 
    FOOTNOTES      
    1. Charles Hugo Doyle, Guidance in Spiritual Direction (Westminster, Mary.   land: The Newman Press, 1959). 
      2. Dale W. pown, Understanding Pietism (Grand   Rapids, Michigan: Eerdmans Publishing Company, 1978). See also: F. Ernest   Stoeffler, "Pietism," in The Encyclopedia of Religion Volume II (New York:   MacMillian, 1987), pp. 32326. 
      3. Russell T. Hitt, "Top Religious Stories   Mark '75 as Pivotal Year," Eternity, January, 1976, p. 9. 
      4. Bob Buess, The   Pendulum Swings (Van, Texas; Sweeter Than Honey, 1974) pp. 11-13. 
      5. Jerrarm   Barrs, Shepherds and Sheep: A Biblical View of Leading and Following (Downers   Grove, Illinois: InterVarsity Press, 1983), pp. 39 - 57. 
      6. Betty Lee   Skinner, Daws (Colorado Springs, Colorado: Navpress, 1986). See also: Robert D.   Foster, The Navigator (Colorado Springs, Colorado: Navpress, 1983). 
      7.   Gordon MacDonald, "Disciple Abuse," Discipleship Journal, November 1, 1985, pp.   24-28. 
      8. Richard Quebedeaux, I Found It (New York: Harper & Row, 1977),   p. 176 ff.
      9. Edward E. Plowman, "The Deepening Rift in the Charismatic   Movement," Christianity Today, October 10, 1975, pp. 65-66. 
      10. Juan Carlos   Ortiz with Jamie Buckingman, Call to Discipleship (Plainfield, New Jersey: Logos   International, 1975). 
      11. Hitt, pp. 8-9. 
      12. Bob Buess, Discipleship Pro   and Con (Van, Texas: Sweeter Than Honey, 1974), pp. 18, 48, 143. 
      13. Buess,   1974, pp. 11-13. 
      14. Killian McDowell, editor, Presence, Power, and Praise:   Documents on the Charismatic Renewal, Volume 2 (Collegeville, Minnesota: The   Liturgical Press, 1980), pp. 123-126. 
      15. ibid. For personal reasons, John   Poole removed himself from the Ft. Lauderdale Shepherds, leaving their number at   five. Poole generally is not even cited with the others. 
      16. Charles   Simpson, The Challenge to Care (Ann Arbor, Michigan: Servant Publications, me   Books, 1986), p. 101. 
      17. Simpson, p. 115. 
      18. Edward E. Plowman,   "whatever Happened to the Jesus Movement?' Christianity Today, October 24, 1975,   pp. 46-48. 
      19. James Hitchcock, The New Enthusiasts and What They Are Doing   to the Catholic Church (Chicago, lllinois: Thomas Moore Press, 1982), p. 127. 
      20. puce Barron, If You Really Want to Follow Jesus (Kentmore, New York:   Partners Press, 1981). 
      21. Margaret Paloma, The Charismatic Movement   (Boston: Twanyne Publishers, 1982), pp. 235-236. 
      22. Carl Wilson, With   Christ in the School of Disciple Building (Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan,   1976), pp. 23-24. 
    ABOUT THE AUTHOR
    Don E. Vinzant has served as the pulpit minister of the Grandbury Church of   Christ in Grandbury, Texas, since 1982. Before that, he preached for the   Northside Church of Christ in Austin, Texas, 1976-1982, and for the Village (now   Quail Springs) Church of Christ in Oklahoma City, 1973-1976. He was on the   original Sao Paulo Mission Team, 1961-1973. He served as the dean of the Sao   Paulo Institute of Biblical Studies, 1970-1973.
    He contributed chapters to Steps to the Mission Field, a mission textbook. He   translated works of Rubem Alves, pazil's leading Protestant   theologian/philosopher. In addition, he has published numerous articles in   various religious journals.
    Don received his B.A. degree from Abilene Christian University in 1958, his   M.A. degree from Abilene Christian University in 1962, and his D. Min. degree   from Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary in 1984
    © 2003 Tricia Tillin of Banner Ministries. All rights   reserved. Cross+Word Website: http://www.banner.org.uk/  This document is the property of its author and is not to be   displayed on other websites, redistributed, sold, reprinted, or reproduced in   printed or in any other format without permission. Websites may link to this   article, if they provide proper title and author information.   One copy may be   downloaded, stored and/or printed for personal research. All spelling and   phraseology is UK English.
    Contact me about this article
    Blog Me - Feel passionate about this subject? Join my blog and lets talk about it. You'll have to register but it's quick and easy.