|

A Journey Out of the UPC
By Lawrence "Buddy" Martin
This testimony is not about individual
members of the United Pentecostal Church. I deeply care for my
Pentecostal kinsmen and I believe that most of them also love
Jesus deeply. I simply hope that my testimony will encourage
others to take a closer look at how the United Pentecostal
Church misrepresents the gospel of Jesus Christ.
My mother was born, 1920, into a Oneness
Pentecostal family. When she married at age 15, she left the
world of the Pentecostal. Mom never ceased to have the fear of
the Lord in her life. She was the one who planted in my heart
a love for the Lord. My earliest childhood memory is of my mom
kneeling beside me, as I prayed, "Now, I lay me down to
sleep." I called upon the Lord as a child. It would be years
later before I would meet Him personally.
Although I was not raised in my formative
years in a Pentecostal home, my family roots through both
sides of my grandparents, as well as my wife's roots, go back
to the early Oneness Pentecostal movement before there was a
United Pentecostal Church. The UPC arrived on the scene in
1945. I became a UPC preacher in 1964, at the age of 24.
I was formally introduced to the world of
the Pentecostal in 1949. I was nine years old. For a child who
had never been in a church of any sort, it was almost
overwhelming. People were falling out, and shouting, and
dancing. The preaching and singing was filled with passion. In
my childlike way I dearly fell in love with all that was
happening. It was an amazing world to me. And so
Pentecostalism became my religion of choice.
Let me first skip forward to a crisis
moment that set the stage for my departure out of the UPC. It
was in 1971. I had been preaching about seven years. My wife
Betty and I had pastored a UPC Church and afterwards entered
into the fulltime evangelistic ministry. We then decided to
move to Los Alamos, New Mexico, to establish a UPC home
mission work. It was there that we became acquainted with some
non-Pentecostal believers.
These non-Pentecostals helped us get
settled in our new mission town. Yet they did not actually
attend any of our services. In a short time I took note of how
these non-Pentecostal people truly loved the Lord. It was
obvious that they were living a Spirit-led life. I thought to
myself: How could these people who did not speak in tongues
know Jesus? It was their spiritual composure and their genuine
love for others that left me troubled. Something was wrong. I
wanted to know what it was.
Perhaps I should point out that this is a
real problem area for people of the United Pentecostal faith.
UPC people are so secluded from other Christians that they
know very little about the greater body of Christ. UPC people
are pretty much led to believe that they are the truly saved
ones. Other so-called Christians are unsaved people.
Back to the testimony - The Lord knew I
was being misguided in a system that did not present the
message of salvation properly. He used these non-Pentecostal
people to LOVE me to my knees. It was their peacefulness and
composure of spirit that sent me on a quest of the Scriptures.
Where were we missing it? Soon I realized that the gospel we
UPC ministers preached was not the same gospel the apostles
preached. The doctrine of having to speak in tongues to be
saved was never preached by the early Christians. It is pure
Pentecostalism. It arrived on the scene in the early 1900s.
The Lord began to open my eyes to how we
are truly saved. It is by faith alone. The more I studied the
unhappier I became. I began to feel that my mentors had
deceived me. What was I to do? I couldn't continue the mission
work. Yet I had a call on my life. Of course this was only the
beginning of a new future for my family. God had a plan for
us. It would come together in due time.
Betty and I and our two sons left the
mission work and evangelized for a short time. Our last
revival saw twenty-five people baptized. Often as the altars
filled, I would go to a back room and weep before God. Seekers
were begging God to save them. It wasn't a situation where you
could kneel by a seeker and explain how true salvation works.
The seekers had largely been brought up under the influence of
Pentecostal teachings. In fact in many Pentecostal revivals
you would find the same people back in the altar again, trying
to get saved again.
In God's providential care, the next
three years found us in a local congregation. It was a UPC
church, but the pastor was a gentle and compassionate man. So
August 1971 through August 1974 became our season of healings.
I still preached out from the local church but my major need
was to get my thinking fully in accord with God’s word.
An interesting thing happened. The church
we now attended had recently went through a split. The pastor
asked me to help him rebuild. When I told him of my beliefs,
what he shared surprised me. He said that when the UPC was
first formed, one of the forming groups believed the way that
I believe, that is, that a person did not have to speak in
tongues to be saved. Over time this belief disappeared under
the stricter, 'you-must-speak-in-tongues-to-be-saved',
teaching of the other forming group. This bit of history is
unknown to most UPC members. Anyway, we agreed to disagree. I
worked with this godly man for three years.
[Note: I encourage any UPC person to
secure the book, ‘Christianity
Without the Cross: A History of Salvation in Oneness
Pentecostalism, by Thomas A. Fudge. It is an eye
opener for those who do not understand the real history of the
UPC.]
Back to the testimony - During this time
the Lord gave me a work-over of life. God's love began to
replace any anger I had towards my mentors. When it came time
for my departure, I could do so with no anger left. I only
felt great sorrow for my Pentecostal kinsmen, and perhaps a
deeper love for them than I had ever felt. I formally left the
UPC in 1974. It was simple enough; just a matter of letting my
ministerial credentials drop.
I should point out that anyone coming out
of the base teachings of the United Pentecostal Church will
have need of spiritual repair. Oneness Pentecostalism has a
deep effect on the psychological and spiritual make-up of its
members. The repair work takes place as the believer comes to
grips with the true gospel of Jesus Christ. The believer just
needs to keep in mind that time is always on the side of
truth.
This is also where truth needs to be
understood. Truth is not a church, an organization, a
movement, a revelation, a group, a denomination, or even a
doctrine. Truth in its spiritual essence is a Person. His name
is Jesus Christ. Until we come to grips with this reality we
will always drift about looking for truth in some religious
setting. Certainly I am not discounting the flocking of God's
people. I am speaking to what Biblical Christianity is really
about. Jesus said, "I am the way, and the truth, and the life.
No one comes to the Father but through Me." (John 14:6)
Over the years I have been able to help a
great many UPC people get their hearts and minds together.
Once a UPC person's eyes are opened to the truth of our
completed salvation in Christ, the misapplied gospel of the
UPC no longer has a hold on them. The Biblical doctrine of our
completion in Christ Jesus is a major bondage breaker for any
person who has been under a works-righteousness system of
religion.
Before I share more about the world of
Oneness Pentecostalism, let me share how I came to know Jesus
Christ personally. It was 1963. I had just gotten out of the
Navy. A Pentecostal cousin kept insisting that I go to church
with her. So I did. It was in church that I first saw my wife
to be. In short order I fell in love with this beautiful
Pentecostal girl. We married that same year. (That was nigh 43
years ago.)
It wasn't too many months afterwards that
I entered the world of the Pentecostal altar. Night after
night, and revival after revival saw me in the altar. The
longer this went on the more discouraged I became. One Sunday
afternoon I am sitting in our living room with my Bible in my
hands, reading from the book of John. When I came to John 14.
I saw that the questions being asked of Jesus were my very own
questions. It seemed I was being pulled into the setting. My
deepest struggle was over who Jesus really was.
Philip asked the Lord to show them the
Father. It was at that very moment that Jesus spoke to my
heart. He said, "Have I been so long with you Buddy, and you
don't know me? He who has seen Me has seen the Father." Tears
flowed down my cheeks. I could not speak. I was so aware of
the divine presence. That was when the peace of Jesus entered
my heart. It has been that peace of heart that has sustained
me these many years. Years later I would come to understand
that that moment was the moment of my birth into God's
kingdom.
But there was a problem. I was still in
the world of the Pentecostal. And so, I kept attending the
altar. Some months later I actually spoke in tongues. But I
also remember thinking to myself, "Is this all? I've had this
all along." Of course I did not share these thoughts with
anyone else. I was too happy that the battle was over. I could
now be accepted as being saved. What a relief!
Sometimes it takes years for a person who
has been under the influence of Oneness Pentecostalism to sort
out truth in his life. It can be difficult to discern what may
have been a psychological experience from that which was truly
of the Lord. It is likely that much speaking in tongues today
is learned behavior. It has been through all this that the
Lord has educated me to the pitfalls that are found in the
world of Pentecostalism.
And here is where I must speak to the
world of the Pentecostal altar. The UPC has such a strong
stress on the necessity of speaking in tongues for salvation
that an altar service can appear to be a total frenzy. It is
common to hear seekers crying and begging God to save them.
You can also hear people shouting, "Just say, 'Jesus, Jesus,
Jesus,' over and over, real fast." Or, "Say 'hallelujah,
hallelujah, hallelujah' over and over real fast." Some are
saying, "Turn loose!" Still others are saying, "Hang on!" The
person in the altar is being drawn into an emotionally charged
atmosphere.
It doesn't end there. Sometimes a circle
will form around the seeker. He finds himself being moved
around. His eyes are often tightly closed. The very moment the
seeker makes any sound that seems not to be English, some of
the people start shouting and jumping about, "He's got it!
He's got it! He's got the Holy Ghost!" In turn he gives in to
all his emotions. He is relieved! The battle is over. Is it
really?
Where is the problem? The problem is
summed up in what happens at the end of the altar service. The
seeker is often told something like this; "Tomorrow morning
when you wake up, the devil is going to tell you that you did
not get anything. You just tell him that he is a liar." While
this sounds like a good thing to tell a person, it is really
another part of the Pentecostal pattern.
Why do they need tell the seeker this?
The reason is because the next morning the emotions will have
subsided and the questions begin. Where is the excitement?
Where is the joy? Why am I having such doubts? It was so real
last night. Why is it not real now? Was I really saved? This
isn’t something the devil is telling him. These doubts are
coming from within him. And believe it or not, this new
Pentecostal has entered into a religious world where doubt and
fear are going to be pretty much the norm.
The point is that there is no need to
tell a person who has truly received Jesus Christ as their
Lord and Savior, that the next morning they'll wake up feeling
like nothing has happened. True salvation is not a worked up
thing of the emotions. While it certainly affects our
emotions, salvation is an issue of a heart-exchange. When the
Holy Spirit enters the heart of a believing one, which can
even happen in a quiet moment of faith, the Spirit will be
there tomorrow, and the next tomorrow, and the next tomorrow.
This is called the testimony of the Spirit. The apostle calls
this the seal of the Spirit.
Yet I am not saying that the Lord is
unable to save us because of bad doctrine. I was saved in
spite of Pentecostal teaching. What I am saying is that this
is one reason you find so many UPC people still struggling
over their salvation. It all comes back to how the UPC
preaches that a person must speak in tongues to be saved. And
the 'keep yourself saved' will continue to play itself out
with battles of the mind.
The real issue is that no person can be
born again until they have been presented with the message of
the cross, and have taken to themselves Jesus Christ as their
Lord and Savior. The apostle said, “As many as received Him,
to them He gave the right to be children of God, even to those
who believe in His name.” Pentecostal people are never taught
that salvation wraps itself around the confession of Jesus
Christ. Paul said our walk of salvation is built around a
simple devotion to Jesus.
Back to the altar. Some may say, "All
that doesn't take place at our UPC church!" My answer is that
your church is rare indeed. I have yet to see a UPC church
where these kinds of altar experiences do not happen. From all
the personal correspondences that I receive, it appears that
the Oneness world has made little to no change.
What I have been describing is very real
and very common. I've been there. I've done everything that
any passionate Oneness Pentecostal would do. How could I know
any difference? The preaching and teaching that I had been
exposed to, was geared to produce this atmosphere.
I have often thought of why the Lord
allowed me to undergo my experience in the UPC. Was there a
plus side to this? Yes, I think so. I came to realize that
only a Pentecostal can know the heart need of another
Pentecostal. I speak the language. I know the thinking. I know
the arguments. I've been able to help a number of Pentecostals
with the help that I received from the Lord. Many Pentecostals
have contacted me with regard to their struggles. Sometimes
they are so afraid of being found out that they ask that their
conversations with me be kept secret. Eventually they take
courage and find themselves making their own departure out of
Pentecostalism.
In all this it is important not to 'bash'
Pentecostal people. When you are trapped in a religious system
such as the UPC, you don't know anything else. Everything a
Oneness Pentecostal person is taught revolves around a single
Scripture, where Peter said, "Repent, and be baptized every
one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of
sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost." (Acts
2:38 KJV.) This Scripture is always distorted beyond its
setting. It should go without saying that no apostle ever
preached that a person had to speak in tongues to be saved.
Was I innocent in the fact that I could
study the Scriptures for myself and find the truth? I could
not claim innocence in that regard. No Pentecostal preacher
should ever think that he is not accountable for what he
preaches and how he ministers to others. James said that the
teachers will receive a stricter judgment. Yes, I was
responsible for studying the Scriptures for myself. Yet until
a Pentecostal is willing to question the teachings of the UPC,
they will remain locked into a system that is spiritually
unhealthy. After all, Jesus said that the 'Truth' would make
us free.
I need to point out that those who leave
the UPC often enter a time of culture shock. The world they
find themselves in is unlike anything they are use to. Oneness
Pentecostalism is a sub-culture with its own peculiar
distinctive control factors, where fear itself is the primary
control factor. Fear of leaving is deeply ingrained in them.
Yet for many there is a constant ache in their heart. As a
young preacher, I use to say to my wife, "Honey, I feel like
I'm caught in a net and I don't know what it is." At the time
I was unable to recognize that the net was the untrue
doctrines of the UPC.
Those who may be seeking to leave the UPC
need to understand that the UPC is just another religious
system. It is no more than that. It is a system designed by
men, and controlled by men. Jesus Christ did not come to give
us a system of religion. He came to give us a relationship
with Him. The ancient writer said that the fear of man is a
snare. The apostle said that perfect love casts out all fear.
Here is some statistical information with
regard to Pentecostalism. According to statistics the
Pentecostals have the highest rate of divorce, and the highest
rate of emotional disturbances of any Protestant group. A few
years back I did research on issues of mental health to better
educate myself for the purpose of pastoral ministry. During my
research I came across an article on mental patients in
California. It stated that the largest religious groups of
patients in mental institutions in California were from a
Pentecostal background.
In picking up my research again [recent]
I came across a major study by K. G. Meador and others. It was
reported in 'Hospital and Community Psychiatry,' a monthly
journal of the American Psychiatric Association. Having
researched several thousand cases, Meador concluded that there
was a greater rate of major depression in Pentecostals than in
any other religious affiliation. (5.4 vs 1.7%) Here is the
quote: "[The] rate of major depression in Pentecostals was
three times greater than for any other affiliations."
[Note: The term Pentecostal is a broad
term and takes in far more than the United Pentecostal Church.
The statistics above are not simply reflective on United
Pentecostals.]
Let me mention one other item that is
important to understand. The ones who generally suffer the
most under the UPC yoke are the women. This is always the case
with repressive religions. The rules largely apply to them.
Without naming all that is required of the women, let me
simply say that much of what the UPC calls 'standards' have
little and often no real Bible base. Paul speaks of these
rules as having only the appearance of worship. He says they
are really self-made religion.
To a UPC person who is struggling over
any of what I have shared, I can simply tell you that the Lord
knows exactly where you are. He knows what you need to hear.
He knows what your next step needs to be. God has a plan for
your life. Don't be afraid to trust Him with all the details.
He will show you what to do at the proper time.
If any of this fits your world and you
need someone to talk to, feel free to contact me by email at
Bro.Buddy@ChristianChallenge.org.
Your communication will be held in confidence. Our web site is
http://www.christianchallenge.org/.
Christian Challenge has a support group
for people with a United Pentecostal background who are
seeking counsel about leaving the organization, or who may be
questioning certain UPC doctrines. Go to:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/DepartingUPC/
I also extend an invitation to any of our
UPC friends to subscribe to an educational and open dialogue
email study group that Christian Challenge sponsors. It is for
Christians of all persuasions. This is not a debate forum. Go
to:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Hebraic-Foundations/.
Finally, I strongly encourage any UPC
person to check out another web site by a former UPC minister,
Lois Gibson. This site has a wealth of information concerning
spiritual abuse that can be found in Bible based churches. Go
to:
http://www.spiritualabuse.org/.
The Lord bless you,
Buddy
Lawrence "Buddy" Martin
email: Bro.Buddy_at_ChristianChallenge.org
Web: http://ChristianChallenge.Org/
|