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What is the International
Church of Christ?
The International Church of Christ (ICC) is a break-off
of the Church of Christ denomination. The ICC is Christian in its basic theology but has
some aberrant practices.
The ICC was influenced by the
discipling movement on the 1950's. Its roots can be traced back to 1967 to the
Crossroads Church of Christ, in Gainesville Florida. The crossroads Church
had a program on discipling which became known as the Crossroads Movement. It is
out of this Crossroads connection that the present leader of the ICC, Kip McKeen,
received his start. He and Roger Lamb were fired from the Houston, Texas, Church
of Christ. Kip McKeen then found a Church in Boston MA, was asked to come on
board and began what has come to be known as the Boston movement. The Boston Church grew by leaps and
bounds due to its heavy discipling program. Soon other churches were being planted in the United States and then in
England.
The ICC did not become known as the "International Church of
Christ" until 1993 and its headquarters became Los Angeles, California.
The ICC considers Christian denominations to be
sinful. They will cite biblical passages that speak of the apostles
establishing one Church per city, and claim that there should only be one Church
in each city. Of course, the one Church should be an ICC
Church. As of the year 2001, the ICC claims to have over 400
churches with a membership of 130,000 worldwide in over 150 countries.
The international Church of Christ considers itself to
be "a family of Christian churches whose members are committed to living
their lives in accordance with the teachings of Jesus Christ as found in the
Bible." This commitment to biblical living includes a very strong
emphasis on discipling. In fact, it is this overly strong emphasis on
discipling that has drawn much criticism from outside the church as inside from
those who were once were members.
The ICC is Orthodox affirms the Trinity, salvation by grace, Jesus'
virgin birth and physical
resurrection, His deity, the personhood of the Holy Spirit, heaven and hell, and much more.
But, it deviates from orthodoxy in both its
requirement of baptism as a necessary element for salvation and its heavy
requirement of discipleship.
According to the ICC, baptism must be done in their
church with the person being baptized having an understand that baptism saves. Combined with this, the
ICC method of discipleship includes strong accountability to other members of the
church as a necessary element to be considered a Christian. According to the ICC, one
cannot be a Christian if he is not a true disciple, and being a disciple must
precede baptism. Therefore, the International Church of Christ tends to be
very legalistic and controlling. Many of its former members attest to
requirements that they confess their sins to their disciple leaders, that they
submit to the decisions of their disciple "leaders" regarding dating,
frequency of sexual relations for married couples, jobs to take, places to move,
and so on.
This discipling operation with in the ICC has drawn
much criticism for its intrusive practices and has been labeled as a form of the brainwashing and psychological and emotional
manipulation. There are numerous web sites on the Internet devoted to
ex-members of the International Church of Christ who warn people not to be
involved with the movement. There are also support groups
to help those who have left to find healing and, hopefully, true Grace in Christ
instead of legalism and bondage.
Return to International
Church of Christ
CHRISTIAN APOLOGETICS
AND RESEARCH MINISTRY
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Matthew J. Slick, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003
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