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Apologetic discussions Apologetic Discussions Regarding the Teachings of Watchman Nee and Witness Lee |
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Join Date: Jul 2008
Location: Greater Ohio
Posts: 13,693
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The tragic story of old beloved Dr. Cronin opened my eyes concerning this teaching. Cronin was one of the original Brethren back in the days of Lady Powerscourt and the prophetic gatherings she held, which were the origins of the Brethren in Dublin. It was ANGroves, George Muller's father in law, who originally linked the English and Irish Brethren. Cronin then accompanied Groves on missionary journeys to Iraq and SW Asia. As the story goes, late in life, while Darby was on his deathbed, the old Doctor Cronin broke bread with some seeking Christians in a small town. Cronin dared not introduce them to an established Brethren assembly in town, since they were consumed with legalistic infighting. But true to form, the Brethren practice was to totally disregard the "condition" of recognized assemblies in fabor of their proper "standing." Sounds a lot like WL, eh? Movement headquarters at the Park Street assembly in London -- the forerunner to today's LC version of a "non-controlling" center of operation in Anaheim -- discovered the dastardly violation of Brethren "principles." They promptly excommunicated the old loving doctor. His crime was violation of the OCOC dogma. Since Darby was in his final days, headquarters exerted its power and quickly moved to make an example of Cronin. The faithful doctor, a lifelong Brethren from their inception ~1827 to 1881 -- more than five decades -- was summarily thrown under the bus. He was heart broken. He was guilty of following the Spirit to care for new believers, breaking bread with them. Such was the sentence for those who chose love over law, liberty over legality. The famous Brethren teacher WmKelly -- perhaps Darby's most accomplished student -- who had compiled all of Darby's writings, rejected the harsh sentence on Cronin. Others followed. Darby, on his death bed, could have stopped the expulsion, but that would signal the absurdity of the established OCOC dogma. It had become the rock on which they were built. This flawed dogma had been cast in stone for 34 years since the Muller excommunication, which split the movement into Exclusives and Open Brethren. To the rank and file, OCOC was their very ecclesiastical identity, perhaps exceeding even the Lord's work on the cross. There was no turning back now. Resigned, Darby said, "if it is the Lord's will." The Kelly-Lowe split took the entire European continent with them. This tragic story would be repeated again. And again. It was a purity test for the movement. And there were many others to come.
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