Resources for the Three Streams
Christian Churches & Churches of Christ
The Christian Churches/Churches of Christ are autonomous churches that have fellowship with one another as a part of a "brotherhood." They have no denominational status, no hierarchy, no headquarters and no official voice. We are the segment of the Restoration movement which James DeForest Murch in Christians Only describes as holding the "Centrist" position.Christian Standard
Christian Standard is a monthly publication for leaders in Christian churches and churches of Christ--ministers, staff members, elders, deacons, committee chairpersons, teachers. Give a copy to everyone at your church who has joined hands with you in ministry!church-of-christ.org
Churches of Christ internet ministriesDisciples.org
The official website of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)disciplesworld.org
DisciplesWorld is a journal of news, opinion, and mission for the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ). DisciplesWorld Inc. is a recognized organization of the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), and reports to the denomination's General Assembly. But the magazine maintains organizational and editorial freedom in a journalistic tradition that has shaped Disciples' theology, character, and identity from the church's very beginnings.worldconvention.org
Every four years a World Convention is held in a different part of the world. The next will be July-August, 2008 in Nashville, Tennessee, USA. Conventions bring together people from the 'Christian' family of Churches (Christian - Churches of Christ - Disciples) from around the world.
The Stone-Campbell movement
Center for Restoration Studies
The Center for Restoration Studies is a repository of books, archival materials (cabinets and boxes of file folders, papers, audio/video cassettes etc.) and artifacts connected with the Stone-Campbell Restoration movement.Hymnals of the Stone-Campbell movement: The Enos E. Dowling Hymnal Collection
A New History of the Stone-Campbell movement
The editors of the popular Encyclopedia of the Stone-Campbell movement have put together a team for an exciting project: writing a new narrative history of the Stone-Campbell movement. This new history will recognize the beginnings of the movement in North America and consider its growth across the globe. It will include the traditional voices of the movement and the voices of those whose stories have been neglected in previous histories. And it will be a common story for all expressions of the movement.Pioneer History
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History of Churches of Christ & Christian Churches in the Pacific Northwest until about 1910.Restoration movement
This website feature historical texts, pictures, resources for historical research and links to other relevant pages dealing with the Restoration movement. (Maintained by Dr. Hans Rollmann, Memorial University of Newfoundland.)Restoration movement in Canada
Maintained by Dr. Hans Rollmann, Memorial University of Newfoundland.
General Interest
American Academy of Religion
The American Academy of Religion's mission is to promote reflection upon and understanding of religious traditions, issues, questions, and values through excellence in scholarship and teaching in the field of religion.American Historical Association
The American Historical Association (AHA) is a nonprofit membership organization founded in 1884 for the promotion of historical studies, the collection and preservation of historical documents and artifacts, and the dissemination of historical research. As the largest historical society in the United States, the AHA provides leadership and advocacy for the profession, fights to ensure academic freedom, monitors professional standards, spearheads essential research in the field, and provides resources and services to help its members succeed.American Society of Church History
The American Society of Church History studies the history of Christianity and its relationship to surrounding cultures in all periods, locations and contexts. Through publications conferences, awards, research support, and other means, the Society encourages the study of the Christian church and faith, its figures and movements, in institutional and non-institutional settings.
