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Introduction and History of the Fellowship of Fundamental Bible Churches

Monday, August 14, 2006

The Fellowship of Fundamental Bible Churches (FFBC) is a fellowship of Fundamental churches and pastors that seeks to honor Jesus Christ and stand together as a national voice for Fundamentalism. The FFBC is one of the charter members of the American Council of Christian Churches and holds its Annual Conference in August of each year. The FFBC is hosting their 66th Annual Conference the week of August 15-18, 2005 at Tri-State Bible Camp and Conference Center in Montague, New Jersey.

Pastor Frank Sansone (mbfpastor) will be attending this conference and providing reports to SharperIron throughout the week. This first report is designed to provide an introduction to the Fellowship of Fundamental Bible Churches for those who may not be familiar with them and will look at the history, ministries, and mission of the Fellowship of Fundamental Bible Churches. Subsequent posts will focus on the conference itself.

The History of the Fellowship of Fundamental Bible Churches

The Fellowship of Fundamental Bible Churches has a long and unique history that traces its roots to 1830 with the beginning of the New York Conference of the Methodist Protestant Church. This New York Conference merged with the Pennsylvania and New Jersey Conferences in 1911 to form the Eastern Conference of the Methodist Protestant Church, which was the direct forerunner of the FFBC.

The FFBC (still known as the Eastern Conference of the Methodist Protestant Church) faced its crucial challenge of the Fundamentalist/Modernist Controversy in 1939 at the 29th and final session of the E.C.M.P.C. At issue was the proposed merging of the Methodist Protestant Church with the Methodist Episcopal Church and the Methodist Episcopal Church South. This merger would form the basis of what is now called the United Methodist Church and would bring the churches and Pastors of the E.C.M.P.C. into direct fellowship with a church group that was controlled by leaders whose doctrinal beliefs were at variance with the Word of God. Among that leadership and a particular bone of contention at the time was Bishop Francis J. McConnell who had been chosen to make the Episcopal address at the first General Conference and who had written a book entitled The Christlike God which attacked the deity of Jesus Christ and taught that "this tendency to deify Jesus" was "more heathen than Christian." (1)

The Reverend Newton Conant, representing a group opposed to the merger, protested the proposed merger. An early report of the meeting comments, "Reverend Conant pointed out very clearly the reasons why the great number of ministers, delegates, and members were not going into the union upon doctrinal basis. He pointed out the real reason was that the Methodist Episcopal Church had in their official offices and institutions men who denied the fundamental truths of the Bible and doctrines of the constitutions of the Methodist Protestant Church."

When a ruling was made by the president that the meeting was now a meeting of the Methodist Church rather than the Methodist Protestant Church, Rev. Conant stated that he could not continue to sit in a Methodist Conference and invited all who desired to do so to withdraw with him and continue their session at the Scullville Methodist Protestant Church. A group of ordained men, supply ministers and delegates left the meeting, singing "Blessed Assurance," "All Hail the Power of Jesus Name," and "'Tis the Old Time Religion" as they made their way to Scullville.

The next year (1940), the name was changed to the Bible Protestant Church and in 1941 the BPC became one of the charter members of the American Council of Christian Churches. The FFBC still enjoys membership in the ACCC to this date. In 1985 the name was changed again to the Fellowship of Fundamental Bible Churches in order to provide clearer identification.

The Ministries and Mission of the Fellowship of Fundamental Bible Churches

The Fellowship of Fundamental Bible Churches provides for a national voice to represent Biblical Christianity and Fundamentalism to a lost and dying world. The Fellowship currently has churches from California to New York and from Michigan to Virginia, although the highest concentration of those churches is in the New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania region where the FFBC had its beginnings.

The FFBC also maintains a year-round Christian Camp and Conference Center in Montague, New Jersey (Tri-State Bible Camp), a Bible Institute (Fundamental Bible Institute), and a number of publications - The FFBC Link, The FFBC Focus, and the FFBC Spotlight.

In addition to these areas, FFBC pastors meet regionally for regular times of prayer, preaching, and Biblical discussion. Usually a Preacher's Fellowship is held annually where the pastors are challenged by men in the ministry (the most recent ones included Dr. Les Olilla and Dr. David Cummins) and the Fundamental Bible Institute holds a yearly Bible Conference.

Every year in August, the FFBC meets at Tri-State Bible Conference for their Annual Conference and business meeting, with a keynote speaker for the year. This year's Speaker is Dr. Tony Fox of Northland Baptist Bible College. Other speakers in recent years include Pastor Chuck Phelps and Dr. Bob Jones, III.

The Positions of the Fellowship of the Fundamental Bible Churches

The FFBC website (www.ffbc.ws) provides a full doctrinal statement of the FFBC, as well as statements of the FFBC regarding the positions of the FFBC on key issues of the day. The summary of these doctrinal positions are that the FFBC is Biblically Literal, Dispensational, Evangelistic and Baptistic.


Materials for this report and recommended reading regarding the Fellowship of Fundamental Bible Churches include the following:

Conant, Newton, How God Delivered 34 Churches, Bible Protestant Press, Camden, NJ, 1964.

Franklin, Mark, The Mission and Work of the Fellowship of Fundamental Bible Churches, Fellowship of Fundamental Bible Churches, Penns Grove, NJ, 1999.

Fellowship of Fundamental Bible Churches Development Data, Volume 3 (1939-2002)

Assorted minutes and papers from the Fellowship of Fundamental Bible Churches archives located at Tri-State Bible Camp and Conference Center in Montague, New Jersey.

Introducing ... The Bible Protestant Church, Bible Protestant Press, 1975

(1) This quote is taken from a report in the FFBC archives and lists this as being found on page 15 of the book. I could not locate an actual copy of the book. A online search of this book shows a number of websites which speak about this book and take this quote, but attribute the book to being published in the 1940s. The fact that this book, including this quote, was part of the controversary that effected the "walk-out" in 1939 and an examination of the U.S. Catalog of Copyright Entries for 1927 shows that this book was copyrighted in 1927, not in the 1940s.

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