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September 12, 1996 | |
| BOOK OF DISCIPLINE | ||
1. The basis of all church discipline is the free love of God in Christ
expressed in both mercy and judgment. The purpose of discipline is to bring
about the reconciliation of man to God and man to man and to engage the
people of God in the ministry of reconciliation, and to promote the peace,
purity, and edification of the Church. Christian discipline is discipleship;
it is the response of loving commitment to God in Christ as Lord that learns
from Him as it obediently seeks to carry on His mission in the world. Under
the rule of Christ expressed through the Church, discipline is that submission
that frees the Christian for more effective service. Such service by the
Church in the world demands a disciplined individual and corporate life.
Each Christian is incorporated into the disciplined community and is responsible
under its government for the total ministry of the body as the body is
responsible for each individual and group in the Church. In this mutual
responsibility, all are held accountable for the sake of the task of the
whole body of Christ, remembering that each individual and group is finally
responsible not to a church court, but to God.
2. Discipline is never to be perverted into the impossible and unnecessary
effort to gain the gift of salvation, into a source of pride, or into the
nourishing of the life of the Church as an end in itself. Whereas a certain
structure is essential for the disciplined life, the mission of the Church
is primary, and the rule of discipline is not rigid but open to change
that will better accomplish this mission according to the Scriptures.
3. In this context of discipline, the Church, under the authority of the
Lord, disciplines or guides, instructs, and controls its members and courts
to enable them to serve God more effectively. The exercise of discipline
is made necessary by the need more fully to reconcile Christian individuals
or groups to God and one another, to prevent mercy from becoming a soft
and finally cruel indulgence, and to control those whose words and actions
may seriously hinder the witness of the whole body of Christ. Whereas each
Christian has a responsibility for discipline, corporate discipline exercised
in the name of the Church is to be undertaken only by the church courts
of session, presbytery, and General Synod.
4. The constant responsibility of any church court to a situation calling
for discipline is contrition by the court itself. The court will search
for any ways in which what the court has done or failed to do has contributed
to the problem requiring discipline. True contrition leads to that repentance
which will cause the court to confess its own sin and need for forgiveness
and to be more responsible. The court will submit itself constantly to
the will of the Lord in searching the Scriptures and in prayer.
5. The court is to restrain the words and actions of those under its jurisdiction
according to the particular circumstances. The criterion for corrective
discipline is the teaching of the Scriptures and the standards of the Church.
This is summed up in the good news that in response to God's love, the
Christian loves God and his neighbor as himself and is engaged in the mission
of the Church. Every effort will be made to accomplish any needed restraint
by constructive criticism and verbal persuasion. If these means fail, then
necessary censures will be employed in proportion to the offense and in
consideration of all the circumstances.
6. In all things, the church court shall seek the repentance and restoration
of the individual or group involved consistent with the higher responsibility
of the court to carry on Christ's work in the most effective way.
A. OFFENSES
1. An offense is anything in the principles or practice of a church
member or court which is contrary to the Holy Scriptures, the Constitution
of the Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church, and the Westminster Confession
of Faith and Catechisms.
2. Offenses are either personal or general, private or public but all offenses,
being sins against God, are grounds for discipline. A personal offense
is a violation of the law of God in the way of wrong done to some particular
person or persons, including one's own self . A general offense is a violation
of the law of God not directed against any particular person. Private offenses
are those known only to an individual or, at most, to a few persons. Public
offenses are those which are generally known.
B. CENSURES
(See Chapter VII on the Application of Censures)
1. There are five ascending degrees of church censure: admonition, rebuke,
suspension, deposition, and expulsion. When a lesser censure fails to reclaim
the offender, the court shall consider the infliction of a higher degree
of censure.
(a) Admonition is kindly reproving an offender, warning him of his guilt
and danger, and exhorting him to refrain from such conduct in the future.
(b) Rebuke is a reprimand, a strong, authoritative expression of disapproval
by a church court.
(c) Suspension is temporary exclusion from receiving the sacraments or
from a church office or from both. This censure becomes necessary when
more serious offenses have been committed or when, notwithstanding admonition
or rebuke, an offense is persistently repeated.
(d) Deposition is depriving an officer of the Church of his office.
(e) Expulsion is the judicial dismissal of an offender from membership
in the church. This fearful censure is to be passed only for such errors
or violations of the law of God as are grossly inconsistent with the Christian
faith, or for obstinate persistence in grave offenses in the face of milder
censures. Its purpose, like all censures, is to reclaim the member for
Christ's service.
2. The censures of the Church are in no case to be employed for any selfish
or vindictive purpose.
1. Original jurisdiction over church members, including non-communing
members, and over elders and deacons as officers, is vested in the session
of the congregation to which they belong.
2. Original jurisdiction over ministers is vested in the presbytery to
which they belong.
3. In cases where the court having original jurisdiction is unable or unwilling
to exercise jurisdiction, the next higher court may assume original jurisdiction
upon demonstration of sufficient cause having been shown to the higher
court.
4. A higher court has appellate jurisdiction in all cases appealed from
a lower court.
5. Jurisdiction over members and ministers remains in the proper church
court until the person involved comes under the jurisdiction of another
church body.
6. Jurisdiction over members ceases upon their expulsion. Original jurisdiction
by the presbytery over ministers ceases upon their deposition.
1. When a personal offense has been committed, whether the offense is
public or private in nature, the injured party shall use the means prescribed
by our Lord for bringing the offender to a recognition of his wrong and
shall exhaust every effort to effect a reconciliation.
(a) He shall go in the spirit of Christian love and forgiveness and endeavor
to reconcile the trouble between himself and the one who has committed
the offense. (Matthew 18: 15).
(b) If the breach cannot be healed privately, the injured party is to take
with him one or more other members of the Church and repeat the effort
to effect a reconciliation. (Matthew 18:16).
(c) After a reasonable time, if it appears that the efforts to effect a
reconciliation are in vain, the matter may be referred to the church court
which has jurisdiction. (Matthew 18:17).
2. Personal offenses satisfactorily settled between the parties concerned
are not, as a rule, to be inquired into by the church court. Judicial process
by a church court, however, is not to be precluded in such cases where
the personal offense is so generally known or of such a nature as to require
judicial investigation.
3. In all cases of private offense, any one to whom the offense is known
shall endeavor to effect a reconciliation without disturbing the peace
of the Church.
4. An informer who has not taken these previous steps to effect a reconciliation
is himself to be considered worthy of censure.
5. In certain cases, the person to whom the offense is know, before making
any effort to remove it, may desire to obtain the counsel and assistance
of the pastor or some officer in the Church. To seek such counsel and assistance
in order to remove the offense privately is not only not censurable, but
in some cases highly proper.
6. It is the duty of pastors and other session members to endeavor earnestly,
according to the spirit of the Lord's command, to handle all private offenses
that may come to their knowledge and maintain the peace which is often
disturbed by public process.
7. The peace and purity of the Church is best maintained when private offenses
are resolved by the parties immediately involved and kept confidential.
A. PROCEDURE FOR JUDICIAL PROCESS
1. Judicial procedure is the orderly succession of legal proceedings
in accordance with those principles and rules set forth in the Constitution
of the Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church, and specifically in this
Book of Discipline.
2. Offenses which are brought before a church court are those of a public
and general nature or personal and private offenses that cannot be settled
in a private way.
3. Whenever any charge of offense is referred to a church court for decision,
the court shall, before even hearing the charge, determine whether every
reasonable and appropriate effort has been made to settle the matter in
a more private way.
4. Judicial process against an alleged offender shall not be instituted
unless some reliable person or persons make the charge and undertake to
substantiate it, or unless the court finds it necessary for the good of
the persons involved and/or the Church to investigate the alleged offense.
5. If there is any doubt in the minds of two or more members of the court
regarding whether the alleged offender is censurable or whether there is
sufficient evidence to substantiate the charge, a committee shall be elected
by the court to ascertain whether all required preliminary steps have been
taken, whether there are probable grounds for an accusation, and whether,
if charges are proved, they will constitute a censurable offense.
(a) In its investigation, the committee (or the court) is to exercise great
caution when charges rest chiefly on the testimony of persons who are or
have been at enmity with the accused, who have the reputation of being
untruthful or quarrelsome, or who have prospect of some temporal advantage
from the charges.
(b) Anyone who brings charges shall be previously warned that if there
is a failure to show reasonable grounds for the charges, the accuser may
himself be censured for slander. The committee (or the court) will drop
any charges based on rumors or other common report unless some particular
offense is specified, is widely believed, and raises a strong possibility
of the guilt of the accused.
(c) If the committee finds that the case does not require judicial process
or that there is insufficient evidence to substantiate the charge, the
committee will recommend that the matter be dropped. If the investigation
indicates that charges should be made, the committee shall prepare the
charges for presentation to the court.l
6. A person who may consider himself injured by a rumor, more or less current,
may request an investigation for his own vindication. If the court grants
the request, it may elect a special committee to make the investigation
and report in writing. A record of the results may conclude the matter.
If the committee finds that charges should be made, it shall prepare the
charges for presentation to the court.
7. Before proceeding with any judicial process, the court, or a committee
appointed by the court, should seek by private conference with the accused
to avoid, if possible, the need for actual judicial process.
8. If the offender confesses, the way is clear for the court either to
restore him or to impose such censure as the welfare of the offender and/or
the Church may require.
9. The original and only parties in a case of process are the accuser and
the accused. The prosecution is always initiated by a court in the name
of the Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church. The prosecutor is always
the representative of the Church, whether he voluntarily brings the charge
and is permitted by the court to prosecute it or whether he is a member
of the court appointed by the court to act as prosecutor. In appellate
courts, the parties are known as appellant and appellee.
10. When the judicial process is initiated, the court shall appoint one
or more of its members (in a case before the session, any communing member
of that congregation may serve) as a prosecuting committee to prepare the
indictment and conduct the case in all its stages in whatever court until
the final decision is reached. Any appellate court before which the case
is pending may appoint one or more of its own members to assist in the
prosecution. No one is to be admitted as prosecutor who is personally biased
or at enmity with the accused, who is not of good reputation, or who may
have some temporal advantage in view.
11. When any church officer has been cited for process, all his official
functions may be suspended at the discretion of the court pending the trial,
but this shall not be construed as a censure.
12. In any trial neither the accused, his counsel, nor the prosecutor shall
perform any function of a voting member of the court.
13. Prosecution for the alleged offense should begin as soon as possible,
but it must begin within one year from the time of the alleged commission
of the offense or from the date it is reported to the court of jurisdiction.
14. The accused person may appear on his own behalf, or if he prefers,
he may be represented by any member or members of the Church subject to
the jurisdiction of the court. Any counsel appearing before the court must
sign a statement that he has not and will not accept any fee or other emolument
beyond necessary expense for any service rendered as counsel for defense
or prosecution.
15. If the accused is absent and not represented by counsel, the court
shall appoint as counsel one or more members of the Church subject to the
jurisdiction of the court.
16. It is incumbent on every member of a court engaged in the trial of
offenders to bear in mind the injunction: "if a man is overtaken in
any trespass, you who are spiritual should restore him in a spirit of gentleness.
Look to yourself, lest you too be tempted" (Galatians 6:l)
17. Every charge must be presented to the court in writing and must state
the alleged offense with the specifications of the facts relied upon to
sustain the charge. Each specification shall declare, as far as possible,
the time, place, and circumstances of the commission of the alleged offense,
and shall be accompanied with the names of the witnesses and the titles
of records and documents to be cited for its support.
18. When an offense, alleged to have been committed at a distance, is not
likely otherwise to become known to the court having jurisdiction, it is
the duty of the court within whose bounds the offense occurred, after satisfying
itself that there is reasonable grounds of accusation, to send notice to
the court having jurisdiction.
19. A charge shall not allege more than one offense. Several charges against
the same person, however, with the specifications under each of them, may
be presented to the court at the same time and may be tried together. A
vote on each charge must be taken separately.
B. TRIAL PROCEDURE
1. Before beginning a trial, the court shall decide whether it shall
try the case or refer the judicial case for hearing and decision to a judicial
commission elected by it.
2. Judgment shall not be rendered in a case by any members of a court or
commission who can benefit personally form the decision, who is closely
related to either party, who had been active for or against either party
in the matter embraced in the charge, who has personal enmity toward either
party, or who has prejudged the case. Any member may be challenged by either
party at and only at the first opportunity when the court meets for trial.
The decision about the challenge shall be made by the remaining members
of the court.
3. When the court begins consideration of an alleged offense, the charge
and specifications shall be read. Except by consent of both parties, the
only other actions to be taken at the first meeting of the court shall
be: (1) To appoint the prosecution committee, (2) to furnish the accused
with a copy of the charge and specifications including the times, places,
and circumstances, if possible, and with the names of all witnesses then
known and titles of records and documents that may be offered in support
of the charge, (3) to cite all parties and their witnesses to appear and
be heard at another meeting for the trial, which, except in an appellate
court, shall not be sooner than two weeks after such citation.
4. The citation must specify the name of the accused, the court before
which he is to appear, the time, and place. It is to be accompanied with
a copy of the charge. The citations shall be issued and signed by the court's
moderator and/or clerk, who shall also furnish citations for such witnesses
as either party shall name. The accused shall not be required to disclose
the names of his witnesses. Citations are issued only to members of this
denomination. Other persons can only be requested to attend. Citations
shall be served personally or by registered mail to the last known place
of residence. Before proceeding to trial, it must be clear that all citations
have been served as indicated. If anyone who is a member of the denomination
fails to obey the citation, he shall be cited a second time. The second
citation shall include notice that if he does not appear and plead and/or
testify at the time appointed, unless providentially hindered (which he
must make known to the court), he shall be considered guilty of disobedience
and contempt and may be censured for that offense. The time allowed for
responding to a second citation shall be set by the court with proper regard
for all the circumstances.
5. When an accused person refuses to appear or plead after a second citation,
the court shall enter the fact on its records, together with the nature
of the offense charged, and the person shall be suspended from the sacraments
and/or any office held in the Church. When the censure of suspension is
imposed upon an accused person for refusing to appear or plead, the court
will ordinarily proceed no further with the trial. It may, however, if
circumstances require it, and if it is sure the citation was received,
proceed to trial on the merits, despite the absence of the accused, and
impose whatever censure it finds warranted. In this event counsel would
be appointed to represent the interest of the accused person during the
trial.
6. At the meeting when the citations are returnable, the accused may request
a change in the time of meeting because of inability to be present or because
of the need for additional time to prepare his defense. The accused or
his counsel shall appear. He may file objections and be heard on the regularity
of the organization, the jurisdiction of the court, the right of any member
to participate in the trial, the sufficiency of the charges and specifications
in form or legal effect, or any other substantial objections affecting
the order or regularity of the proceeding. The court shall consider all
such preliminary objections or charges which do not change their general
nature. If the proceedings are found in order and the charges, if proved,
are censurable, the accused shall be called to plead "guilty"
or "not guilty." If the plea is "guilty," the court
may deal with him according to its discretion. If the plea is "not
guilty," or if the accused declines to answer, a plea of "not
guilty" shall be entered on the record, and the trial shall proceed.
7. The following trial order shall be observed: (1) The moderator or commission
chairman shall charge the court to recollect and regard their high responsibility
as judges of a court of Jesus Christ. (2) The indictment shall be read
and the answer of the accused heard. (3) The witnesses for the prosecutor
and then those for the accused shall be examined, with either party being
entitled to call rebuttal witnesses. (4) The parties shall be heard - first
the prosecutor and then the accused - and the prosecutor shall close. (5)
The prosecutor and the accused, their counsel and all non-members of the
court shall withdraw, the roll shall be called, and then members may express
their opinion in the case. (6) A ballot vote shall be taken on each charge
separately, with a majority necessary to convict. (7) Keeping in mind that
the purpose is to correct and restore and not to punish as an end in itself,
the court shall determine what censure, if any, shall be inflicted. (8)
The parties shall be recalled, the verdicts announced, and judgments entered
on the records. It is then in order at once, in any court except the highest,
to give notice of appeal. Such notice must be filed with the moderator
or clerk of the court within two weeks after adjournment of the court.
8. Before or during the trial of a case prior to completion of receiving
all evidence, any member of the court who expresses his opinion on its
merits to either party or to any member of the court, or to any person
not a member of the court, or who absents himself from any session without
the permission of the court for reasons satisfactory to the entire court,
shall be thereby disqualified from taking part in subsequent sessions.
9. If there are questions as to order or evidence arising in the course
of the trial, the questioning parties shall have an opportunity to be heard.
The question shall be decided by the moderator, or chairman, subject to
an appeal to the court to be determined without debate.
10. At any stage of the trial the court may decide by a vote of two-thirds
of the members present to sit in private session with all non-voting members
excluded.
11. The charge and specifications, the plea, all the testimony, and the
judgment shall be entered on the minutes of the court. The minutes shall
also include all the acts and orders of the court relating to the case,
with the grounds therefore together with any notice of appeal, with the
grounds therefore. All of this, together with the evidence in the case
duly filed and authenticated by the clerk, shall constitute the record.
The parties shall be allowed copies of the whole record at their own expense,
if they request them. In case of appeal, the lower court shall transmit
the record, or a certified copy, to the higher court. Nothing not contained
in the record shall be taken into consideration by the higher court without
consent of the parties in the case. After the final decision in a higher
court, its judgment shall be sent down to the court in which the case originated.
C. GENERAL PROCEDURE
1. If the convicted party refuses to submit to the censure, the court
may impose a higher censure for disobedience.
2. The court shall use its own judgment as to when it is necessary to pronounce
sentence in public. When the ends of public edification can be as well
served, private censure is to be preferred.
3. A church officer under process shall retain the right to deliberate
and vote in other matters unless suspended by the court until completion
of investigation and/or trial.
4. Church courts are to be careful not to involve in the shame and severity
of a judicial process errors and irregularities which do not strike at
the vitals of doctrinal and practical godliness and/or which may be removed
by private admonition and reproof.
5. Whenever a church officer willfully and habitually fails to be engaged
in the regular discharge of his official functions, it shall be the duty
of the court having jurisdiction, at a stated meeting, to inquire into
the cause of such dereliction, and, if necessary, to institute judicial
proceedings against him for breach of his covenant engagement. In such
a case, the clerk shall, under the order of the court, forthwith deliver
to the individual concerned a written notice that, at the next stated meeting,
the question of his being so dealt with is to be considered. This notice
shall distinctly state the grounds for this proceeding. The party thus
notified shall be heard in his own defense. If the court decides that his
neglect proceeds from his want of acceptance to the Church, or from his
lack of interest in the work of his office, it may divest him of his office
without censure, even against his will, a majority of two-thirds being
necessary for this purpose. The Church officer may appeal from this decision
as if he had been tried after the usual forms.
6. When a presbytery divests a minister of his office without censure,
his church shall be declared vacant; but when he is suspended from office,
it shall be left to the discretion of the presbytery whether the censure
includes the dissolution of the pastoral relation.
1. Every court shall be its own judge as to who shall be admitted as
witnesses in a case. Either party has the right to challenge any witness
that may be called to the stand, giving his reasons for the challenge,
and the court shall decide whether the witness shall be allowed to testify.
2. The accused party may be allowed, but shall not be compelled, to testify
and no inference of guilt may be drawn from his failure to testify, on
the demand of the accused.
3. The credibility of witnesses, or the degree of credit to be given to
their testimony, may be affected by relationship to either of the parties,
by interest in the result, by want of proper age, by weakness of understanding,
by defect in any of the senses, by enmity to the accused, by personal character,
and by various other circumstances to which the court should carefully
attend and for which it should make due allowance in its decision.
4. Private writings and printed publications, the genuineness and authorship
of which are clearly established, shall be received as evidence of the
author's opinion.
5. Husbands and wives, parents and children, shall not be required to testify
against each other.
6. The records of a church court, or any part of them, whether original
or transcribed, attested by the moderator and the clerk, or by either of
them, shall be received as legal evidence in any other court.
7. Where it may not be practicable for witnesses to appear at the trial,
the court may request another court to take their evidence or it may appoint
a commission for this purpose, due notice in either case being given to
the opposite party. Evidence thus taken shall be received as if taken in
the presence of the court.
8. The testimony of a witness in a different case in which the accused
was not a party and had no opportunity to cross-examine shall not be admitted
as evidence of the truth of the matters to which the witness testified.
9. Hearsay evidence is not to be received except when it would be admitted
in courts of law.
10. No private knowledge possessed by members of the court shall be allowed
to influence their decision. A member of the court who is called on to
testify in the case may not vote on any matter in the trial except with
the approval of both parties.
11. Circumstantial evidence may be received either to corroborate positive
testimony or as conclusive when it is of such character as to produce full
conviction on the mind of the court.
12. When a charge depends entirely upon the testimony of witnesses, at
least two credible witnesses shall be necessary to establish the charge.
But the testimony of one witness corroborated by good circumstantial evidence,
may be considered sufficient to establish the charge when there is no conflicting
evidence.
13. In cases of common report, the testimony of several different witnesses
to different acts of the same kind may be considered sufficient to establish
the charge.
14. If after trial before any court new testimony is discovered which the
accused believes important, it is his right to ask a new trial and it is
within the power of the court to grant his request. No person who has been
found innocent, however, shall be re-tried for that same offense.
15. If in the prosecution of an appeal, new testimony is offered, which,
in the judgment of the appellate court, has an important bearing on the
case, it is proper for the court to refer the case to the lower court for
a new trial, or, with the consent of parties, to take testimony and proceed
with the case.
16. Before giving his testimony, every witness is to be solemnly admonished
by the moderator or chairman, that his testimony is given as before the
Lord and that he is to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but
the truth.
17. Witnesses who have not yet been examined shall not be present during
the examination of another witness if either party demands their exclusion.
18. Witnesses are to be examined in the presence of the accused or his
counselor, who are at liberty to cross-examine them. The same privilege
belongs to the prosecutor and to every member of the court. All questions
are to be asked with the permission of the moderator or chairman, and no
frivolous or non-pertinent questions are to be allowed.
19. The testimony of each witness is to be taken down in writing, mechanically
reproduced and read to him for his approval and signature, and then filed
among the permanent records of the court.
20. If the testimony taken during the trial proves an offense properly
denominated by another name than that charged in the accusation, the accused,
while he is to be acquitted of the specific charge of the accusation, may
be found guilty of that which appears in the proof.
1. When a court shall have completed its deliberation concerning an
accused offender and shall have found him guilty, the court, unless it
has received a written notice of appeal within two weeks after the decision
has been rendered, shall proceed to apply the appropriate censure. All
censures may be administered or announced in the absence of the offender,
but not without due notice having been given the offender. As in previous
judicial proceedings, the court shall, in the application of censures,
remind itself that the purpose of Christian discipline is the redemption
of the offender.
2. Admonition: this censure is to be administered in private.
3. Rebuke: where the offense is private, or where the witness of the church
will not be injured thereby, the rebuke shall be in private. But where
the offense is public, the rebuke shall ordinarily be pronounced in public.
In either case, a statement of the offense shall accompany any rebuke.
4. Suspension: this censure should generally be indefinite in its duration,
continuing until the person suspended gives such evidence of repentance
as may warrant its repeal. The good of the offender and/or the Church may
require that the offender be suspended for a definite length of time, even
though he confesses his sin and gives evidence of repentance. This censure
should, as a rule, be announced in the Church by a representative of the
court. If in the judgment of the court, however, the good of the offender
and/or the Church requires, this censure may be administered privately.
5. Deposition: the censure of deposition is to be announced in the Church
by a member of the court. The censure of deposition passed on a pastor
shall be publicly read to his congregation by a representative of the presbytery,
who shall then declare the pulpit vacant. Only in rare cases of gross offense,
the good of the offender and/or the Church may require that the offender,
even though he confesses his sin and manifests repentance, be deposed from
office. Except in such cases, deposition is to preceded by suspension to
give time for careful consideration before deposition is imposed.
6. Expulsion: the officiating minister shall read the decision of the court
in the presence of the congregation and recount the steps taken in the
case, showing the necessity of this censure. He is then to lead the congregation
in prayer for both the church court and the offender. After the announcement
of the censure, he is to instruct the members of the church that expulsion
does not destroy the bonds of natural and civil relations. Nor does expulsion
relieve them from their Christian responsibility to witness to the love
of God to the expelled person. The session, when it considers this censure
necessary, may refer the matter, along with a full record of the proceeding,
the evidence in the case, and its recommendations, to the presbytery. The
presbytery may then order such censures as it deems proper to be imposed
by the session.
7. In all cases of censure by lower church courts, the offender shall be
advised of his right of appeal to a higher court.
A. MINISTERS
1. When a minister unites with another denomination without a letter
of transfer, his presbytery, after assuring itself of his withdrawal, shall
remove his name from the roll and record his withdrawal and his ministerial
standing. When the interest and the honor of the Church requires, the presbytery
shall inform the body with which the minister has connected as to his ministerial
standing.
2. If a minister notifies the presbytery that he can no longer adhere to
the standards of the Church due to a change in his doctrinal views, the
presbytery shall endeavor to resolve his difficulties. Upon failure to
resolve, the presbytery shall grant the minister a certificate indicating
his relationship to the presbytery, stating reasons for his separation
from the presbytery, enter the facts on the record, and remove the minister's
name from the roll.
3. If a minister desires release from the office of the ministry, he shall
notify presbytery. The presbytery shall consider his request and being
satisfied that the reasons for release are sufficient, shall without censure,
grant the request and enter the facts upon the record.
4. In the event a minister ceases entirely to exercise the duties of his
office, devoting himself to other pursuits without satisfactory reason,
the presbytery shall endeavor to persuade him to return to his work of
the ministry. If unsuccessful in their persuasion, the minister's name
shall be removed from the roll with entry of the facts upon the record.
These circumstances may constitute a censurable offense.
5. In the event a minister becomes involved in areas of work outside the
normal bounds of General Synod, his presbytery shall have the responsibility
of determining his voting status.
B. ELDERS AND DEACONS
1. If an elder or deacon decides that he is unable to discharge the
duties of his office or that for some other reason his service is not for
the good of the congregation, he shall so notify the session. The session,
if unable to resolve these difficulties, shall release the officer from
his duties, either temporarily or permanently, as conditions dictate. The
recorded facts and action taken by the session shall be reported to the
presbytery.
2. If an elder or deacon ceases entirely to exercise the duties of his
office, the session shall endeavor to persuade him to perform his duties.
If unsuccessful in their persuasion, the name of the officer shall be removed
from the roll of officers with entry of the facts upon the record. These
circumstances may constitute a censurable offense.
3. Under circumstances in which the session feels incompetent to act on
such cases, the matter, including a full statement of facts, shall be referred
to the presbytery for action.
C. CHURCH MEMBERS
1. A member uniting with another church body without a certificate of
transfer shall have his name removed from the roll of the congregation
after the session assures itself of this change of membership.
2. A church member shall notify the session if his doctrinal views have
so changed that he can no longer adhere to the standards of the Church.
The session, if failing in its attempts to change his views, shall make
record of the facts and remove his name from the roll.
3. If a member habitually absents himself from the communion table and
gives other convincing evidence of indifference to his religious obligations,
he shall be privately admonished. Should private admonition fail, the session
shall apply whatever higher censure it deems necessary.
4. The congregation shall normally be informed of any withdrawal or removal
of a church member's name from the roll by censure.
5. The session shall endeavor to communicate with members who have moved
beyond the geographic boundaries of the congregation. Such members shall
be retained on the roll so long as interest in the congregation is maintained.
After one year the session may either drop such names from the roll or
transfer members to the list of inactive members.
1. Restoration is the culmination of the element of mercy in the discipline
of the Church; therefore, it is to be regarded as the goal of judgment.
There is no degree of guilt which automatically precludes the restoration
of an offender to full church privileges, following satisfactory evidence
of repentance and reformation.
2. An offender is to be restored by the same authority which censured him
or by the authority of a higher court.
3. The act of restoration may be publicly announced or privately conveyed.
The court shall determine the option based on the good of the offender
and/or the Church.
4. An offender desiring restoration shall make application to the court
by which he was censured, acknowledging his offense and expressing his
desire to be restored to the privileges of the Church. The necessity of
initiative on the part of the offender is in no manner to be seen as releasing
the Church from its responsibility in pursuing the repentance and restoration
of the offender.
5. The Court is to consider carefully the request of the offender with
the evidence of his repentance; and if satisfied of his sincerity and of
the earnestness of his purpose to live a Christian life, the court is to
remove the sentence and to restore him to the privileges of the Church.
6. In the case of expulsion, when the session has referred the matter to
the presbytery for the ruling on the censure imposed, the session shall
in like manner refer the restoration to the presbytery along with the evidence
in the case. The presbytery, if satisfied of the sincerity of the offender's
repentance, shall issue a warrant to the session for the act of restoration.
7. An officer who has been suspended or deposed from office and has had
the privileges of the Church suspended is to be restored to the church
privileges on satisfactory evidence of repentance. He is not to be restored
to the exercise of his office until such time that the witness of the Church
will not be impaired by such restoration.
8. When an offender has been restored he is, as one forgiven through Christ
who claims God's covenant promises, to be received by the Church as a brother.
A. INTRODUCTION
1. Transfer of jurisdiction to a higher court is provided in order to
remedy, in an orderly way, wrongs that may be done. When those who had
no concern in the origin of proceedings review and confirm or amend the
proceedings judgments, the possibility of permanent wrongs is reduced as
much as our present imperfect state allows.
2. The decisions of all church courts, with the exception of the highest,
are subject to investigation by a higher court. The decision of the lower
court may be brought before the higher court by review, reference, appeal,
complaint, or declinature
B. REVIEW
1. The records of all lower courts are subject to the review of the
next higher court at any time the higher court shall require.
2. In reviewing the records of a lower court, it is proper for the higher
court to examine: first, whether the proceedings have been constitutional
and regular; second, whether the proceedings have been equitable, faithful,
and prudent; third, whether the proceedings have been properly recorded.
3. The review may be conducted by a committee of the court which shall
make its report at the meeting at which it was appointed. If any censure
or correction appears to be necessary, the members of the lower court present
shall be heard in defense, and then the higher court shall make its judgment
on the matter. This judgment shall be entered both on the records of the
court and on the records reviewed.
4. If the review indicates irregular proceedings which require correction,
the lower court shall be required to review and correct its proceedings,
and to report the correction to the higher court as soon as possible.
5. No judicial decision shall be reversed by a court sitting in review
unless the decision is regularly brought to the court by appeal or complaint.
6. If, however, the higher court is advised of unrecorded neglect and/or
irregularities of a lower court, it shall cite the lower court to appear
and answer the charges. If the charges are found to be true, the higher
court shall impose such censures and give such orders as it may judge necessary
in the case.
C. REFERENCE
1. A reference is a written representation made by a lower court to
a higher court for advice or other action on a matter pending before a
lower court.
2. Among proper subjects for reference are matters which are new, delicate,
or difficult; which have produced a serious division among the members
of the lower court; or with which a number of the members are so connected
as to render it improper for them to sit in judgment.
3. In making a reference the lower court may ask either for advice or for
final disposition of the matter referred. In case of referral for advice,
the effect is to suspend the judgment of the lower court. In the case of
referral for trial decision, the effect is for the lower court to relinquish
jurisdiction to the higher court.
4. A reference may be presented to the higher court by one or more representatives
appointed by the lower court for this purpose, and it should be accompanied
with the records necessary for proper understanding and consideration of
the matter referred.
5. In cases of reference for advice the higher court ought, as a rule,
to give the advice asked for. It may, however, in cases of reference for
decision, decline to give judgment, and remit the whole case, with or without
advice, to the court referring it.
6. Notice of reference must be given to parties concerned in the case,
and all evidence should be duly prepared and in readiness so that the higher
court may be able to hear and issue the case with as little delay as possible.
D. APPEALS
1. An appeal is a legal proceeding by which a case is brought from a
lower to a higher court for rehearing. The effect of an appeal is to suspend
all further proceedings in the case, including the sentence, until the
case has been finally decided in a higher court. If a sentence of suspension
or deposition be appealed from, however, it shall be considered in force
until the matter is decided.
2. An appeal can normally be made only by an accused party, called the
appellant, who has submitted to a regular trial. An appellant who has not
submitted to a regular trial is not entitled to an appeal.
3. An appeal can be made only to the next higher court, except with the
express consent of that court.
4. An appeal may be made either from a definite sentence or from any particular
part of the proceedings. The grounds for an appeal include matters such
as any irregularity in the proceedings of the lower court; hindrance of
procedural rights; refusal of reasonable indulgence to a party on trial;
receiving improper or declining to receive proper evidence; rendering a
decision before all testimony is taken; evidence for bias or prejudice
in the case; and an unjust or mistaken sentence.
5. The appellant must make his appeal, together with the reasons for it,
in writing, either to the court hearing his case before it adjourns or
to the moderator or the clerk of that court within ten days after the judgment
appealed from is pronounced. The appeal, however, should not be refused
if reasons for unavoidable delay can be demonstrated.
6. The appellant shall lodge his appeal, with the reasons for it, with
the clerk of the higher court prior to the beginning of its next regular
meeting. The clerk of the lower court appealed from shall send the full
record of the case or a certified copy to the higher court by the same
time.
7. Evidence that has come to light at the first trial may be presented
by either the appellant or appellee in an appeal.
E. COMPLAINTS
1. A complaint is a representation made to a higher court in respect
to a decision of the lower court regarded as being irregular or unjust.
2. It differs from an appeal in that it does not suspend proceedings in
the case and is the privilege of any one under the jurisdiction of the
court. In judicial cases, however, a party declining to appeal shall not
be allowed to enter a complaint.
3. Complaints are usually to be entertained only where the complainants
do not have the right of appeal or where an appeal is refused.
4. A complaint brings the whole proceedings of the lower court in the case
under review of the higher, and if the complaint is found to be well grounded,
the higher court may not only reverse the decision of the lower court,
either in whole or in part, but may also subject it to such censure as
the case may require.
5. The same rules of procedure are to be allowed in complaints as in appeals.
F. DECLINATURE
1. A declinature is the refusal of a party under process to submit to
trial by that particular court.
2. Declinature is warrantable where the court betrays unfairness or partiality;
where it prejudices the case; where it goes beyond its lawful authority;
or where it permits persons closely related to either party, at enmity
with either party, or who have themselves been active as parties to sit
and vote in the case after they have been challenged.
3. A declinature is to be admitted by a court only when it is accompanied
with reasons and notice of appeal. It in no case ends the matter, but only
removes it by appeal to the higher court, where it is to be considered
according to the rules already given.
Any matters of discipline or details of process not provided for are left to the judgment of the court having jurisdiction in the case. The court, however, is to be governed by the general principles and rules set forth in the Constitution of the Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church, and specifically in this Book of Discipline.
A search of Associate Reformed Presbyterian brought me
to our Book of Discipline attached to your home page. I agree that it is
a good process for church discipline, I wish we ARPs
used it more faithfully. You may want to see our new home
page at http://www.arpsynod.org
.