Bethel Methodist Church (denomination)

Bethel Methodist Church
Classification Protestant (Methodist)
Orientation Evangelical, Holiness
Polity Congregational
Region Texas
Origin 1989
Separated from Evangelical Methodist Church
Congregations 4

The Bethel Methodist Church is a Wesleyan-Holiness denomination. It consists of four congregations in Texas.

History

The Bethel Methodist Church separated from the Evangelical Methodist Church after a church trial called into question the theological stances of a handful of ministers.

The small denomination's Book of Discipline traces this theological dispute to the mid-1970s when "a widening tolerance of many different beliefs regarding the nature of God, man, angels, sin, salvation, sanctification and heaven" began to emerge.[1]

After Rev. Arthur Slye was elected Mid-States District Superintendent in the 1980s, he "chose to preach some of his deepest-held truths to the District Conference at Irving." This raised many objections, which resulted in a "heresy trial" followed by repeated "attempts to clarify" by Slye and his supporters.[2]

On August 16, 1988, five Evangelical Methodist Church ministers met in Hico, Texas to determine a course of action. Their three churches in Irving, Port Neches, Texas, and Robinson, Texas would pull away from their parent denomination and form an Interchurch Council. Articles of Incorporation for the Bethel Methodist Church were filed with the State of Texas on February 27, 1989. Slye, pastor of the Irving church, was elected the new denomination's first General Superintendent. The first services were held on Easter Sunday, March 24, 1989.

The denomination maintains congregations in Port Neches and Robinson, as well as Colleyville, Texas and New Braunfels, Texas.

Beliefs

Bethel Methodist Church is for the most part Wesleyan-Holiness in doctrine—lamenting a Modernist trend in American Methodism.

Some distinctions include an emphasis on the possibility of "backsliding" as well as man's free will. The Bethel Methodists take these Arminian positions an uncommon step further by teaching God's free will. From its online catechism:[3]

For God to tell a lie would violate His divine attribute of truth. He has the power to lie, but it would be immoral, against His standard of right and wrong. God can lie, but He will not lie. [...] He never has, is not now, nor ever will choose to [sic] go against His divine nature, not because He can’t, but because His divine character will not allow Him to make immoral decisions.

The denomination prefers baptism by sprinkling and pouring, rather than allowing for immersion as did the parent body. It does not practice infant baptism.

Polity

Church government is largely congregational, though bound by a denominational constitution and bylaws.

See also

External links

References

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