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Rating:  Summary: Finally!!! Review: It's about time someone in the Church of Christ wrote a history without all the propaganda. For years, we've been told this silly story about the "First Century Church" that went underground after Catholicism rose to power but resurfaced in early 19th century America. Now I have a better historical understanding of the CofC ideology. I now know the real reasons why there is a "plan of salvation" and no instrumental music. These reasons are historical and not scriptural. The CofC is so ashistorical that this book has and will continue to upset more people. After leaving the CofC, I had so many feelings of guilt. This book has helped me cope with a lot of issues. It has humanized this institution and not preserved it as part of a newfound deity - God, Son, the Holy Spirit and the Church of Christ.
Rating:  Summary: One of the Best Histories of the Stone-Campbell Movement Review: Reviving the Ancient Faith is by far one of the three best histories of the Stone-Campbell Reformation in print, the others being Leroy Garrett's Stone Campbell Movement, Revised Edition, and Robert Hooper's A Distinct People. Anyone interested in the origins and history of the Church of Christ, and what makes those "peculiar people" so peculiar will find Hughes' book most enlightening. Hughes traces the two main streams of our tradition, exemplified by "founders" Barton Warren Stone and Alexander Campbell and how Stone's apocalyptic, countercultural worldview and Campbell's "progressive primitivism" and focus on restoring the ancient gospel merged in second and third generation leaders like Tolbert Fanning, David Lipscomb and James A. Harding. As one who grew up in the church of Christ, I was intrigued to learn from Hughes in the book, that our tradition had several pre-millennial evangelists (actually a pre-millennial "wing" of our brotherhood), which I had never realized before (most traces of it were "stamped out" by conservatives such as Foy Wallace, Jr., until memory of this branch of our tradition was lost by the mainline churches). Those sections of the book alone make it worth reading. Hughes continues by examining in detail the triumphs and controversies of the twentieth century, through the insitutional wranglings of the fifties and sixties, the Crossroads movement of the seventies and on into modern times. Some readers may be suprised at much of the material presented, as much of it has been consciously or unconsciously "swept under the rug," as it were, by the church as a whole. For this reason, many have inaccurately accused Hughes of "revisionist history." My one problem with the book is the absence of any substantive material on Alexander Campbell's father Thomas, and the latter's pivotal 1809 "Declaration and Address," which greatly influenced the thinking of his son Alexander and, at least in the early years served as the movement's Magna Carta. But all in all, Reviving the Ancient Faith is a great primer on the Churches of Christ and what makes us tick.
Rating:  Summary: Outstanding Overview Review: The author provides a well-balanced, readable and compelling overview of the people and issues that have influenced the modern history of the churches of Christ. The book was fourteen years in the making and is extremely well-researched and well-documented. It includes dozens of historic photographs and drawings of people who figure prominently in the text. The book covers the standard history starting with Alexander Campbell and Barton W. Stone, continuing through the various controversies that divided and subdivided the body in the late 19th century and first half of the 20th century: missionary societies, instrumental music, premillennialism, moderization and institutionalism. It then provides excellent sections on more recent trends and controversies, including racial issues, campus ministries, the indwelling of the Holy Spirit, the Crossroads and Boston movements, the emphasis on grace, the "new hermeneutic" crisis, and the role of women in the church. I would highly recommend this book for every member of the church of Christ and for anyone who wants an excellent overview of the church's modern history.
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