– Chapter 1 –
A Brief History of Christian Disciples Church’s Position on Trinitarianism
Christian Disciples Church (CDC) is a fellowship of churches united by belief, history, and leadership. Most of our churches are located in Asia, along with a small presence in western countries such as Canada, Australia, and the United Kingdom.
Our website at www.christiandc.org lists some 25 or 30 churches, but we have a similar number of other groups not listed.
Our story begins circa 1976 when Eric H.H. Chang (1934-2013) was invited to pastor a young church in Montreal, Canada. Initially there was no church called Christian Disciples Church, but over the years, CDC emerged from its early roots and took on a more international presence, notably in Asia. Chang served as CDC’s main pastor (along with many other pastors) for over thirty years until his retirement from leadership several years ago.
Prior to Montreal, Eric Chang had lived all his years in China and the United Kingdom, and for a time in Switzerland. He was born in Shanghai. As a young adult he had come to know God in post-liberation China through a series of miracles, as recounted in his book How I Have Come to Know the Living God (see the bibliography at the end of this book).
In the 1950s, Chang left China for the United Kingdom where he would end up staying two decades. He studied at the Bible Training Institute (Glasgow) and London Bible College (now London School of Theology) before reading Arts and Divinity at the University of London (King’s College and SOAS). During his time in London, he served in a local church. After completing his studies, he served in a church in Liverpool where he was ordained by the Reverend Andrew McBeath.
Why are we called Christian Disciples Church?
Christian Disciples Church teaches that every Christian is a disciple of Jesus Christ. The predominant New Testament term for a follower of Jesus is “disciple” (Greek mathētēs) which occurs 261 times in the NT, whereas “Christian” (christianos) occurs only three times (Acts 11:26; 26:28; 1Peter 4:16).
Discipleship involves right doctrine and right life. Right doctrine means accepting the truth of what Jesus taught about God and himself even if it runs counter to church tradition. Right life means applying Jesus’ teachings to our daily lives.
Two books by Chang (see the bibliography) — one on total commitment to God, the other on the new life in Christ — are representative of our emphasis on the spiritual life. This is seen, for example, in our stand against the materialism that is so prevalent in Christendom today.
Eric Chang breaks with tradition
We move forward to 2005 or 2006 by which year Eric Chang had been an ardent trinitarian for half a century, having done much to promote trinitarianism in his preaching, in his defense of Christ’s deity, and in his leading many to the divine Christ of trinitarianism. But in his rereading of the Bible he had come to see that his trinitarian view of things such as the deity of Christ is not supported by the biblical data.
He then wrote a book, The Only True God: A Study of Biblical Monotheism (see the bibliography) in which he rejects his former trinitarian belief. In the introduction to the book, he reflects on his trinitarian past:
“I am writing as one who had been a trinitarian from the time I became a Christian at the age of 19 — a time which spans over fifty years. During the nearly four decades of serving as pastor, church leader, and teacher of many who have entered the full-time ministry, I taught trinitarian doctrine with great zeal, as those who know me can testify. Trinitarianism was what I drank in with my spiritual milk when I was a spiritual infant. Later, in my Biblical and theological studies, my interest focused on Christology which I pursued with considerable intensity. My life centered on Jesus Christ. I studied and sought to practice his teaching with utmost devotion.
“I was in a practical sense a monotheist, devoted to a monotheism in which Jesus was my Lord and my God. Intense devotion to the Lord Jesus inevitably left little room for either the Father or the Holy Spirit. So, while in theory I believed in there being three persons, in practice there was actually only one person who really mattered: Jesus. I did indeed worship one God, but that one God was Jesus.”
Why did our church reject trinitarianism en masse?
CDC could well be the only multi-congregation church in the past 20 years to abandon trinitarianism as a whole church. This scenario is not to be confused with the case of a few individuals who, after having seen the errors of trinitarianism, choose to leave their trinitarian church to join a monotheistic one.
How did a church of almost 30 congregations rooted in trinitarianism come to reject trinitarianism and the deity of Christ en masse? The answers to this question may be instructive for other churches grappling with similar issues. Here are my observations:
The final and ultimate reason for our departure from trinitarianism is that it has weak biblical support. In my trinitarian days, I was already aware of the weaknesses of trinitarianism. So when the day came for CDC to abandon trinitarianism in the light of Scripture, we were doing it with an awareness of the strong biblical basis of our new position.
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