Peace v. First Christian Church of McGregor

48 S.W. 534, 20 Tex. Civ. App. 85, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 374
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 21, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 48 S.W. 534 (Peace v. First Christian Church of McGregor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peace v. First Christian Church of McGregor, 48 S.W. 534, 20 Tex. Civ. App. 85, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 374 (Tex. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

KEY, Associate Justice.

Appellee brought suit and obtained a judgment for the property involved in this litigation. The defendants have appealed. The district judge filed the following findings of fact and conclusions of law:

“Findings of- .Fact. — First. I find that there has existed for many years in Texas and in other States of this country, a body of religious people calling themselves Disciples of Christ, or Christians, and known in the aggregate as the Christian Church, and existing in independent local churches, and having no ecclesiastical tribunal superior to the local church; said local churches being congregational in form of government.

“Second.- These churches have no formulated creed or articles of faith, but claim to be guided in their faith and practice by the Bible, and it is and has always been a fundamental principle with them, that nothing more or less than faith in Jesus Christ as the Son of God and the Savior of Men, and obedience to his commands, is to be required to constitute persons .Christians, and to entitle them to membership and good standing in said Christian churches.

“Third. They hold to immersion exclusively, as Christian baptism, and they teach that baptism, when preceded by faith in Christ, repentance from sin and a public confession of such faith, is for the remission of sins, but they have never required uniformity in opinion as to this purpose or design of baptism, and it has been their custom and usage from the beginning, and held by them to be in accord with their fundamental principles above stated, to regard and treat as Christians, persons from other Christian denominations, who have been immersed, upon profession of their faith in Christ, and to receive such persons into membership and full fellowship in their churches, whether or not they believe that baptism is for the remission of sins.

“Fourth. It is also a part of their fundamental principles that missionary societies, conventions, and similar voluntary organizations for Christian work, as well as the use of instrumental music in connection with their worship in the churches, are regarded as expedients, concerning which no rule, pro or con, can be made, but regarding which each local church or congregation, and each individual, is allowed liberty in opinion and practice, and they have generally, since the beginning of the denomination; had their general societies and conventions for missionary work, and each of-such voluntar)'" organizations being allowed and having free access to" and use of their respective church houses or places of worship in which to hold their meetings and transact their business.

“Fifth. In 1883, some twenty or more persons, residing in or near the town of McGregor, in McLennan County, Texas, adhering to the fundamental principles, customs, and usages of said church, as recited in the *87 foregoing paragraphs, organized a local congregation in McGregor, denominated ‘The Christian Church of McGregor/ as one of the local churches of that body, adopting and accepting its principles, customs, and usages, as aforesaid, and on November 2é, 1883, said congregation purchased from the Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway Company the lots in controversy in this suit, paying therefor the sum of $50, raised for that purpose by contributions from the persons composing the said congregation, and in the spring of 1884 erected on said lots the present house of worship, with funds contributed for that purpose by the members of that congregation and their friends. Said lots were purchased and the house erected thereon as a place of worship for said Christian Church of McGregor, and said lots were conveyed by said railway company to W. L. Harrison, A. G. Ament, and J. P. Diifey, original members of said church, as trustees of said Christian Church of McGregor, and the legal title thereto was held by them in trust for the said Christian Church of McGregor, as their place of worship.

“At the time said lots were acquired and said house was erected thereon, and for a number of years thereafter, the Christian Church of McGregor was composed of persons accepting and adhering to the fundamental principles, usages, and customs of the Disciples of Christ or the Christian Church at large, as above set forth.

“Sixth. Within the past ten or twelve years the Christian Church or Disciples of Christ in Texas, have become divided into two factions; those adhering to the principles, usages, and customs above set forth are now designated as the Progressive Faction, and the other as the Firm Foundation Faction. These have become distinct and opposing factions, and church organizations, the difference being, mainly, that the Firm Foundation Faction hold that none have been scripturally baptized, or are Christians, who did not, at the time of receiving baptism, understand and believe that they were being baptized for the purpose of securing a remission of their sins. ‘For the remission of sins/ as contradistinguished from ‘because of the remission of sins/ as held by some other Christian denominations, and they refuse to receive such persons in their churches without rebaptism, and insist upon excluding such persons from the Christian Church; and the Progressive Faction hold that all persons, who have been baptized upon a profession of faith in Christ, are Christians and are entitled to membership in their churches, regardless of their views, as to whether or not baptism is for the remission of sins> and without rebaptism, and they oppose the exclusion of any from the churches, because of their views of the purpose or design of baptism. The Firm Foundation Faction oppose and do not allow the use of musical instruments in connection with their worship in the churches controlled by them, and oppose the formation of missionary societies, conventions, and like organizations for Christian work, holding that such practices are sinful and in violation of the faith of the church, and forbid the use of their church houses and property by such organizations for meeting purposes; while the Progressive Faction holds that the use of musical in *88 strmnents in the churches and the formation of such societies and conventions are mere matters of expediency, concerning which individuals may exercise their preferences without affecting their standing in the church, and the Progressive Faction generally use musical instruments in their churches, in connection with their worship, and organize Missionary, Christian Endeavor, and Ladies’ Aid Societies in their local churches, and participate in the general conventions and general missionary societies of the Christian Church at large.

“Seventh.

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Bluebook (online)
48 S.W. 534, 20 Tex. Civ. App. 85, 1898 Tex. App. LEXIS 374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peace-v-first-christian-church-of-mcgregor-texapp-1898.