24
April 1973 A.D. The “Split
Ps” or Split-Presbyterians, OPC & RPCES
April 24: A Proposed
Plan That Failed
24 April, 2014
What Might Have Happened?
Francis Schaeffer is reported to have been the one who
coined the phrase “split P’s,” in reference to the many divisions among
Presbyterians. But for all the talk of division among Presbyterians, the latter
half of the twentieth century was actually quite full of mergers and attempted
mergers. One of these attempted mergers formally began in 1972, first with
committee planning, and then with talks in 1973 between the Presbytery of the
Midwest of the Orthodox Presbyterian Church and the Midwestern Presbytery of
the Reformed Presbyterian Church, Evangelical Synod, as they sat down to
discuss the proposed union at a meeting in St. Louis on April 24, 1973. Then in June
of that same year, the matter came under initial consideration at the national
level for each of the two denominations.
Both the OPC and RPCES assemblies approved sending the
Plan down to their Presbyteries for further discussion and voting. With
characteristic dry humor, Dr. Clair Davis, then a member of the OPC, quipped,
“We almost know more about you RP’s than we do about ourselves. We have looked
you over in more detail than we ever viewed ourselves with.” One major
sticking point proved to be RPCES views on millennial issues, particularly as
that had been set down in the RPCES edition of the Westminster Larger
Catechism. In the end, the proposed union failed to secure approval when voted
on in 1975.
The Preamble to the proposed Plan of Union is an
interesting document to review now, nearly forty years later. What might have
happened if that proposed merger had been approved? Would a new, larger
denomination have entertained the idea of yet another merger a decade later
with the PCA? And how do the documents drawn up in preparation for that
proposed union compare with the later arrangements made for the Joining &
Receiving of denominations into the PCA in 1982? The Rev. Donald J. MacNair,
pictured above right, was a key part of both the efforts to merge the OPC and
RPCES in 1975 and later in the efforts to receive the OPC and RPCES into the PCA
in 1982. In the end, the RPCES was received into the PCA, and the OPC continued
on as a separate denomination.
PREAMBLE OF THE PLAN OF UNION (1973)
The Reformed Presbyterian Church, Evangelical Synod and
the Orthodox Presbyterian Church come together committed to the supremacy and
authority of the Scriptures, the inerrant Word of God, and confessing one Lord,
one faith, one baptism. These churches come together as the ________________
[the name of a united church has not been determined] Church in one scriptural
faith and order, in full fellowship in the service of Christ under the divine
authority of the whole of Scripture for all of faith and life. We come to this
union acknowledging both God’s grace and our sins in days past, and trusting in
the renewal of the Holy Spirit for days to come.
In this union we seek first the honor of our Savior’s
name; we wish to be found pleasing in the sight of the Lord who prayed for the
deepest unity of His people. In particular we would praise God for His mighty
grace in bringing us together after a sad experience of division in the history
of our churches. Soon after the Presbyterian Church of America was established
in 1936 to continue a faithful witness to the Christ of the Scriptures, a
grievous division brought reproach upon this testimony. We recognize the
genuine and deep concerns that influenced this division; on the one hand, a
fear that indifference or hostility to characteristic features of the piety and
hope of American Presbyterianism would doom the church to sectarian isolation;
on the other hand, a fear that the reformation of the church would be crippled
by adherence to requirements for life or faith that went beyond the teaching of
Scripture.
We do not claim to have achieved unanimity of opinion on
all the issues that led to that division, but in effecting this union we do
confess that the unity of Christ’s church should not have been broken as it was
in 1937. Both those who left and those who suffered them to leave did so
without pursuing with zeal all the scriptural means for reconciliation. Each
sinned in a measure, and even the least sin against the love of Christ brings
reproach on His name.
In seeking the joy of restored fellowship, we would
confess afresh our need of the heartsearching and healing work of God’s Spirit
to convict us of all sin and lead us into the obedience of Christ. We express,
by this union, our obligation and determination to maintain, by God’s grace,
the unity of the church in the mutual faith, love, and confidence which we
profess.
—–end—–
Words to Live By:
“Behold, how good and how pleasant it is
for brethren to dwell together in unity!
It is like the precious ointment upon the head,
that ran down upon the beard,
even Aaron’s beard:that went down to the skirts of his garments;
As the dew of Hermon, and as the dew that descended upon the mountains of Zion:
for there the Lord commanded the blessing,
even life for evermore.” —(Psalm 133:1-3, KJV)
For Further Study:
To view relevant documents from the Max Belz Manuscript Collection at the PCA
Historical Center, Box 118, folder 80, see the links provided here:
Also, news coverage of the initial
discussions of the Plan of Union in 1973, as carried in the June 4, 1973 issue
of the RPCES magazine, Mandate, volume
107, number 3 (4 June 1973).
No comments:
Post a Comment