Two by Twos

Two by Twos

Old photograph depicting three bearded men seated outdoors on a bench with the man in the center holding a small dog

Prominent early Two by Twos preachers.
Left to right: William Gill, William Irvine, George Walker.
Classification
Polity Episcopal
Region Worldwide
Founder William Irvine[1]
Origin 1897[2]
Ireland
Separations
Members estimates vary[upper-alpha 1]
Tax status none
Other name(s) The Truth
Workers and Friends
Christian Conventions
Cooneyites
Assemblies of Christians
and additional
Official website none

Two by Twos is one of the names used to denote an international, home-based church that has its origins in Ireland at the end of the 19th century. Among members, the church is typically referred to as "The Truth" or "The Way". Those outside the church refer to it as "Two by Twos", "No-name Church", "Cooneyites", "Workers and Friends" or "Christians Anonymous." Church ministers are itinerant and work in groups of two, hence the name "Two by Twos". The church's registered names include "Christian Conventions" in the United States, "Assemblies of Christians" in Canada, "The Testimony of Jesus" in the United Kingdom, "Kristna I Sverige" in Sweden, and "United Christian Conventions" in Australia. These organization names are used only for registration purposes and are not used by members.

The church was founded in 1897 in Ireland by William Irvine, an evangelist with the interdenominational Faith Mission. Irvine began independently preaching a return to the method of itinerant ministry he claimed was set forth in the 10th chapter of Matthew. Church growth was rapid, spreading outside Ireland. Irvine eventually began preaching a new order in which the hierarchy that had developed within the church would have no placement. This teaching became controversial within the church and led to his expulsion by church overseers around 1914. One of the church's most prominent evangelists, Edward Cooney, was expelled a decade after Irvine. The church then became much less visible to outsiders for the next half-century. Publication of several articles and books, increased news coverage, and the appearance of the Internet have since opened the church to wider scrutiny.

The church does not explicitly publish any doctrinal statements, claiming these must be orally imparted by its ministers, referred to as "workers". Doctrine of the church teaches that salvation is available only by accepting the preaching of its homeless, penniless ministry workers and by attending the group's home meetings. The orthodox Christian Trinitarian doctrine is rejected, and members are told to deny any church name. Baptism by immersion as performed by one of the church's workers is required for full participation. Some in the church claim it is a direct continuation of the 1st-century Christian church, although some believe that a restoration of some sort may have occurred in the late 19th century.

Members hold regular weekly worship gatherings in local homes on Sunday and in the middle of the week. The church holds annual regional conventions and public Gospel meetings. The church claims no official headquarters or official publications. Its hymnbook and various other materials for internal use are produced by outside publishers and printing firms. Printed invitations and advertisements for its open gospel meetings are the only written materials which those outside the church are likely to encounter.

History

Founding

In 1896, William Irvine was sent from Scotland to southern Ireland as a missionary by the Faith Mission, an interdenominational organization with roots in the Holiness movement.[3] Because his mission was successful, he was promoted to superintendent of Faith Mission in southern Ireland.[4]

Monochrome line drawing depicting two men immersing two others in a river while others watch from a stone embankment
A drawing from 1907 depicting a baptismal rite. Its caption read "How 'Dippers' are Initiated".[5]

Within a few months of his arrival in Ireland, Irvine was already disillusioned with the Faith Mission.[6] There was friction over its Holiness teachings, and Irvine saw its organization as a violation of his concept of a faith-based ministry. Above all, Irvine was increasingly intolerant of the Faith Mission's cooperation with the other churches and clergy in the various communities of southern Ireland, regarding converts who joined churches as "lost among the clergy".[7][8] In 1897, he began preaching independently, proclaiming that true ministers must have no home and take no salary.[9] He became convinced that he had received this as a special revelation he referred to as his "Alpha message".[10] Opposed to all other established churches, he held that the manner in which the disciples had been sent out in chapter 10 of the Gospel of Matthew was a permanent commandment which must still be observed.[11] The passage reads in part:

These twelve Jesus sent forth, and commanded them, saying, Go not into the way of the Gentiles, and into any city of the Samaritans enter ye not: But go rather to the lost sheep of the house of Israel. And as ye go, preach, saying, The kingdom of heaven is at hand. Heal the sick, cleanse the lepers, raise the dead, cast out devils: freely ye have received, freely give. Provide neither gold, nor silver, nor brass in your purses, Nor scrip for your journey, neither two coats, neither shoes, nor yet staves: for the workman is worthy of his meat.

In October 1897, Irvine was invited by Nenagh businessman John "Jack" Carroll to preach in the Carroll's hometown of Rathmolyon. There he held a series of mission meetings in which all established churches were rejected, and Irvine's new doctrine and method of ministry were set forth. It was in Rathmolyon that he recruited the first adherents to his new message.[12] Aside from condemning all other churches, Irvine's doctrine included the rejection of church buildings, damnation of all followers of churches outside the new fellowship, rejection of paid ministry, rejection of collections[upper-alpha 2] during services and collection boxes, and the requirement that those seeking to join the ministry "sell all".[13]

Irvine's preaching during this latest mission influenced others who began to leave their respective churches and join Irvine to form an initial core of followers.[14] Some of these early adherents would become important members of the new church, including John Long,[upper-alpha 3] the Carroll family, John Kelly, Edward Cooney—an influential evangelist from the Church of Ireland[15]—and George Walker (an employee of the Cooney family's fabric business[16]), all of whom eventually "sold all" and joined the new movement as itinerant preachers.[17][18] Although other movements, such as the Plymouth Brethren and Elim have had strong Irish connections, the church founded by Irvine is the only religion known to have had its origin and early development in Ireland.[19][20]

Early growth

Scan of a 1910 newspaper article regarding Tramp Preachers, Doctrines, Methods, Money and Lapses
Extract of an article from The Impartial Reporter and Farmers' Journal from 1910[21] documenting the early phases of the church. See endnote for link to the full article.[upper-alpha 4]

Unlike later secretiveness,[22][23] initially, the church was in the public eye, with questions about it being raised in the British Parliament beginning in 1900.[24] Inspired by speakers such as Irvine and Cooney, membership growth was rapid. Rather than adding members to established denominations, as was the practice of the Faith Mission outreach, churches began noticing their congregations thinning after exposure to the Two by Two missions. Clerics soon began regarding the Two by Two preachers as "inimical to the membership of the church".[25] After receiving reports from Ireland, the Faith Mission in 1900 formally disassociated itself from Irvine and any of its workers found to be participating in the new Two by Two movement.[26]

The attention of Belfast newspapers was initially drawn to the Two by Twos church because of its open-air baptismal rites.[27] At that time, the baptisms took place in public settings such as streams, lakes or the sea, even in cold weather. Regarded as a novelty, the outdoor "dippings" and accompanying sermons attracted large crowds.[28][29] Further attention was given during the staging of large marches through boroughs and public preaching in town squares and on street corners.[30][31]

Workers, including Edward Cooney and George Walker, publicly preached that all members of other churches were damned.[32][33] They singled out prominent individuals, and even entire communities, for condemnation.[34][35] At times, missions were sited close to the meeting places of other denominations, which were denounced using "extreme language".[36][37] Consequences of these inflammatory remarks ranged from heckling and street violence[38] to the break-up of families,[39] all of which brought further attention to the church.[27] Newspapers in Ireland, Britain and North America followed the disturbances that arose over the church's activities and message.[40] Some hosted debates in their editorial columns.[41][42] One member of Parliament offered to join the Two by Twos if they would cease criticizing other religious bodies.[43]

As the ranks of its ministry increased, the church's outreach expanded. Large gatherings were held in Dublin, Glasgow and Belfast during 1899. Annual conventions, modeled after the evangelical Keswick Conventions in England,[44] began to be held regularly in Ireland starting in 1903. Later that year, William Irvine, accompanied by Irvine Weir and George Walker, took his message to North America.[upper-alpha 5] Missions to continental Europe, Australia and Asia followed.[45]

By 1904, the requirement to "sell all" was no longer mentioned in sermons.[46] A two-tiered system was instituted that made a distinction between homeless itinerant missionaries (called "workers") and those who were now allowed to retain homes and jobs (called "friends" or "saints").[14][47] Weekly home meetings began to be held and presided over by "elders", who was typically the householder. During the next few years, this change became universal. The church continued to grow rapidly and held regular annual conventions lasting several weeks at a time. Irvine traveled widely during this period, attending conventions and preaching worldwide, and began sending workers from the British Isles to follow up and expand interest in various areas.[48]

Beginning in 1906, unwelcome attention came in the form of leaflets and billboard notices. W. D. Wilson, an English farmer whose unmarried children had left home and joined the Two by Twos, began publishing articles stating girls were being recruited by the church for immoral purposes.[49] In response, Edward Cooney brought a widely publicized suit for libel that was resolved by a settlement between the parties by the end of 1913.[50]

A hierarchy was instituted by Irvine and his most trusted associates in various regions were designated as "overseers" or "head workers". Each worker was assigned a particular geographical sphere and then coordinated the efforts of the ministry within his area.[51] Among the overseers were William and Jack Carroll, George Walker and Willie Gill. Irvine continued to have the ultimate say over worker conduct and finances, and his activities within their fields became regarded as "interference".[52][53] Except for such annual conventions as he was able to attend across the globe, communications and instructions from Irvine passed through the overseers.[54]

Schism

William Irvine's progressive revelation continued to evolve over this time, and eschatological themes began to appear in sermons.[55][upper-alpha 6] By 1914, he had begun to preach that the Age of Grace, during which his "Alpha Gospel" had been proclaimed, was coming to a close. As his message turned towards indicating a new era, which held no place for the ministry and hierarchy[56] that had rapidly grown up around the "Alpha Gospel", resentment arose on the part of overseers who saw him as a threat to their positions.[57][56]

Australian overseer John Hardie was the first to break with Irvine and excluded him from speaking at the South Australia convention in late 1913. As 1914 progressed, he was excluded from speaking in a growing number of regions, as more overseers broke away from him.[58] Rumors circulated about Irvine's comfortable lifestyle and supposed weakness for women, though nothing concrete was ever exposed.[59] It was put about that Irvine "had lost the Lord's anointing" in an effort to explain his ouster. He was shunned and his name was no longer mentioned, making him a nonperson in the church he founded.[56] There were many excommunications of Irvine loyalists in various fields during the following years, and by 1919, the split was final, with Irvine moving to Jerusalem and transmitting his "Omega Message" to his core followers from there. Lacking any organizational means of making his case before the membership, Irvine's ouster occurred quietly.[54] Most members continued following the overseers, and few outside the leadership knew the details behind Irvine's disappearance from the scene, as no public mention of the split seems to have been made.[60] Mention of Irvine's name was forbidden, and a new explanation of the group's history was introduced from which Irvine's role was erased.[upper-alpha 7]

Although the threat posed by Irvine to the church's organization had been dealt with, the prominent worker Edward Cooney refused to place his evangelistic efforts under the control of the overseers. Cooney himself adhered to the earlier, unfettered style of itinerant ministry, moving about wherever he felt he was needed.[61] He rejected the appointment of head workers to geographic regions and criticized their lifestyles.[62] He also preached against the "Living Witness" doctrine (i.e., that salvation entails hearing the gospel preached directly by a worker and seeing the gospel made alive in the sacrificial lives of the ministry), the bank accounts controlled by the overseers, use of halls for meetings, conventions, the hierarchy that had developed and the ministry and the registrations under official names.[14][62] For a time, his message urging a return to the original principles of Matthew 10 gained a following, even among some Australian overseers.[63]

A second division occurred in 1928 when Edward Cooney was expelled for criticizing the hierarchy and other elements that had arisen within the church, which he saw as serious deviations from the church's original message. The overseers seized upon a failed attempt at performing a faith healing as a pretext to excommunicate him.[64] Cooney's loyal supporters joined him, including some of the early workers, and they stayed faithful to what they perceived to be the original tenets.[65] The term "Cooneyite" today chiefly refers to the group which separated (or were excommunicated) along with Cooney and who continue as an independent group. Prior to the schism, onlookers had labeled the entire movement as "Cooneyites" due to Edward Cooney's prominence in the early growth of the church. There are areas where this older usage continues.[66]

Consolidation

These schisms were not widely publicized, and few were aware that they had occurred. Most supporters of Irvine, and later Cooney, were either coaxed into abandoning those loyalties or put out of the fellowship. Among these were the early workers May Carroll (who eventually abandoned Irvine), Irvine Weir (one of the first workers in North America, who was excommunicated for continued contact with Cooney and for his objection to registration of the church under names)[67][68] and Tom Elliot (who had conducted baptisms of the first workers and was nicknamed "Tom the Baptist").[69]

The emergence of the Two by Twos caused severe splits within local Protestant churches in Ireland at a time of increased pressure for independence by the Catholic majority. Because of animosity, they did not form a united front with other Protestant communities.[70][71] Although the church was noted for extreme anti-Catholic views, it played a very minor role during the struggle for Irish independence. One exception was the involvement of the Pearson family in the still-controversial Coolacrease incident.[72][73]

In the mid-1920s, a magazine article entitled "The Cooneyites or Go-Preachers"[74] disturbed the leadership, who made efforts to have it withdrawn,[75] particularly when material from the article was added to the widely distributed reference Heresies Exposed.[76] During this period, the church modified its evangelical outreach. The public preaching of its early days was replaced with low-key "gospel meetings", which were attended only by members and invitees. The church began to assert that it had a 1st-century origin.[60][77] It asserted that it had no organization or name and disclaimed any unique doctrines. The church shunned publicity, making the church very difficult for outsiders to follow.[78][79]

Scan of page 3 of a 1942 statement written and signed by overseer George Walker on Christian Conventions stationery which addressed questions posed by the United States Selective Service
Last page of senior overseer George Walker's statement to the U.S. Selective Service in 1942 under the name "Christian Conventions"[upper-alpha 8]

The North American church saw a struggle for influence between overseers George Walker in the east and Jack Carroll. In 1928, an agreement was forged between the senior overseers which limited workers operating outside of their appointed geographical spheres, known as "fields": workers traveling into an area controlled by another overseer had to first submit their revelation to,[80] and obtain permission from, the local overseer. [81] The exact boundaries between fields was worked out over time, and there were areas where workers under the control of more than one overseer operated, causing conflict.[82]

During the First World War, the church obtained exemption from military service in Britain under the name "The Testimony of Jesus". However, there were problems with recognition of this name outside the British Isles, and exemption was refused in many other areas.[83][84] In New Zealand during World War I, members of the church could not prove their conscientious objector status, and formed the largest segment of those imprisoned for refusal to serve.[85] Members and ministers also had difficulty establishing their conscientious objector status in the United States during the First World War.[79] With the start of the Second World War, formal names were adopted and used in registering the church with various national governments.[upper-alpha 9][14][86] These names continued to be used for official business, and stationery bearing those names was printed for the use of overseers. Most members were not aware of these names. Some who dissented after learning of the practice were expelled by the workers.[67]

After the death of Australian overseer William Carroll in 1953, an attempt was made to reintegrate the repudiated adherents of William Irvine and Edward Cooney. Rather than producing further unity, the attempt produced conflicts over the church's history which was exposed, the existence of legal names, disagreements over the hierarchy which had developed and other controversies. Many excommunications took place in the subsequent effort to enforce harmony.[87][88]

The earliest workers and overseers were succeeded by a new generation of leaders. In Europe, William Irvine died in 1947,[89] Edward Cooney died in 1960,[90] and John Long (expelled in 1907) died in 1962. British overseer Willie Gill died in 1951. In the South Pacific, New Zealand overseer Wilson McClung died in 1944, and Australian overseer John Hardie died in 1961. In North America, both Jack Carroll,[91] the Western overseer, and Irvine Weir died in 1957 while Eastern overseer George Walker died in 1981.[92]

Its policy of not revealing its name, finances,[93] doctrine or history,[upper-alpha 10] and avoidance of publicity.[upper-alpha 11][94] largely kept the church from public notice.[95] A few authors of popular literature noted the church, even using it as background for various novels.[96] Notes regarding the Two by Twos appeared even more infrequently in religious journals and sociological works, with some writers assuming that the church had greatly declined, with nothing published regarding it.[97][98] The publication of The Secret Sect in the early 1980s, followed by press reports and public statements by former members, however, increased public awareness of the church.[99][100] Availability of information on the Internet since the 1990s has also resulted in a loosening of the strict standards demanded of members.[101]

Doctrine

Apart from their hymnals, officially published documentation or statements from the church are scarce, which makes it difficult to speak in depth about its beliefs. Some former members and critics of the church have made statements about its beliefs, although these points have rarely been publicly responded to by any authorities within the church.[102]

All the church's teachings are expressed orally, and the church does not publish doctrine or statements of faith.[103][104] Workers hold that all church teachings are based solely on the Bible.[upper-alpha 12][upper-alpha 13] A catchphrase frequently used to describe the church is: "The church in the home, and the ministry without a home".[14][105] The church does not own church buildings. These are seen as inconsistent with biblical Christianity and were strongly denounced by early workers.[106] Its ministers do not own homes or draw a salary. The church has upheld these practices since its inception.[107][108] Notwithstanding this tradition, buildings specially constructed or repurposed for the use of the church do exist, including convention buildings, meeting halls,[109] tents and caravans and portable halls.[110] Real properties are held and maintained on behalf of the church by certain members.[111][112]

The Bible is the only book used in services. The Bible itself is held as insufficient for salvation unless its words be made "alive" through preaching of its ministers.[upper-alpha 14][113] The extemporaneous preaching of the ministry is considered to be guided by God[114][115] and must be heard directly.[9][116] Great weight is given to the thoughts of workers, especially more senior workers.[117] Salvation is achieved through willingness to uphold the church's standards, by faithfully following in "the way", and by personal worthiness.[118] Doctrines such as predestination, original sin, justification by faith alone, and redemption as the sole basis of salvation are rejected.[upper-alpha 15][119] Some members, however, embrace salvation by grace and justification by faith alone. The church is exclusive[120] — all other churches, religions and ministries are held to be false and salvation is only obtainable through them.[121] Again, not all members adhere to this belief.

Salvation is deemed to require self-sacrifice in following the example and commandments of Jesus[upper-alpha 16] and suffering is revered.[122] Members are encouraged to attend meetings and to speak at them.[123] Although the church has roots in the Holiness movement and has inherited some of its features, charismatic elements are suppressed.[44] Other standards include modest dress, not wearing jewelry, long hair for women and short hair for men, not getting piercings, not dying hair, not getting a tattoo, and avoiding activities deemed to be worldly or frivolous[103][124] (such as smoking, television, and viewing motion pictures).[125] Standards and practices vary geographically: for example, in some areas fermented wine is used in Sunday meetings, in other areas grape juice is used; in some areas people who have divorced and remarried are not allowed to participate in meetings, in others they may.[126] The use of television and other mass media is discouraged in some areas, based on the stance of the local workers and overseers.[127] Some requirements have been loosened in recent years in response to criticisms aired on the Internet.[101]

Christology

The church has rejected the doctrine of the Trinity[128] since its inception.[129][upper-alpha 17] Though members believe in the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, they hold a unitarian view of Christ.[130] The Holy Spirit is held as an attitude or force from God. Jesus is God's son, a fully human figure who came to earth to establish a way of ministry and salvation,[131] but not God himself.[132][133] Great stress is laid upon the "example life" of Jesus, as a pattern for the ministry,[134][135] and less emphasis "as Saviour and little as Redeemer."[19]

Baptism

Baptism by one of the church's ministers is considered a necessary step for full participation, including re-baptism of persons baptized by other churches.[136] Candidates approved by the local workers are baptized by immersion.[137][138]

Church name

Scan of the application for incorporation in the Province of Alberta signed by overseer Willis Propp and senior workers Jim Knipe and Dennis Einboden
Application for incorporation in the Province of Alberta under the name "Alberta Society of Christian Assemblies"

The church represents itself as nondenominational and without a name.[115] Those outside the church often use descriptive terms such as "Two by Twos" (from their method of sending out ministers in pairs),[139][140] "No-name Church", "Cooneyites", "Workers and Friends", "Christian fellowship", "disciples of Jesus", "Friends", "Go-preachers", "People on the Way", "Tramp Preachers", among other titles.[141] The new movement was originally called "Tramp Preachers" or "Tramp Pilgrims" by observers.[142] During the early years, they called themselves by the name "Go-Preachers".[143] By 1904, the terms "Cooneyism" and "Cooneyite" had been coined in those areas in which Edward Cooney established churches and where he was a vocal promoter.[144] The term "Two by Twos" was in use in Canada by the early 1920s[145] and in the United States by the 1930s.[146] In Germany, bynames for the church have included "Die Namenlosen"[147](the nameless), and in France "Les Anonymes"[148](the anonymous or no-names).

Though overseers and head workers use registered names when necessary to conduct official business, most members do not associate a formal name with the church.[149] Instead, they refer to the church as "The Truth", "The Way", "The Jesus Way" or "The Lowly Way".[150] Few members are aware that the church has official names[151] used for church business,[152] including seeking military exemptions.[153] Registered names vary from nation to nation. In the United States, the name used is "Christian Conventions",[151][154] in Canada "Assemblies of Christians" is used,[155] in Britain it is "the Testimony of Jesus",[156][157] in Sweden the registered name is "Kristna I Sverige",[158] and "United Christian Conventions" has been used in Australia and other nations[159] (Australian members previously adopted the name "Testimony of Jesus" during World War I, and registered as "Christian Assemblies" during World War II).[160] In 1995, controversy arose in Alberta, Canada, when part of the church incorporated as the "Alberta Society of Christian Assemblies". The entity was dissolved in 1996 after its existence became generally known.[161]

Restorationism

Many church members hold to a long-standing view that the church has no earthly founder,[162] and that only they represent the "true Christian Church", originating directly with Christ during the 1st century AD.[163] Some members have more recently made statements which diverge from that view and hint either at a beginning during the closing years of the 19th century[164] or at a notable resurgence or restoration around that time.[44][165]

Terminology

The following are terms used by the church with the definitions giving the sense commonly intended and understood by members.[upper-alpha 18]

Church
generally, a small, local congregation that meets in a home; can refer to a larger group of believers or to the church as a whole. This term is never used to refer to a building, except when referring to church buildings of other denominations, or occasionally when speaking metaphorically. Used colloquially when talking to strangers to refer to Sunday/Wednesday activity, e.g., "I'll be at church until midday."
Meeting
formal religious gatherings.
Field
a geographical region to which workers have been assigned (similar to parishes).
Mission
a series of larger meetings known as gospel meetings the function of which is proselytizing. Generally a sequence of such gospel meetings will conclude with a day during which—as a hymn is sung—those interested may rise to their feet and thereby profess their willingness to follow the teachings of the church (or "the way").
Friend, saint
adherent or member, the laity. Collectively "the friends," or "the saints."
Profess
to make a public declaration of one's willingness to become a member, which is generally a sign that a person may then participate in the prayer and testimony sections of Wednesday night and Sunday morning meetings or at designated testimony times in larger gatherings. Professing constitutes an intermediate stage. Following baptism, the partaking of bread and grape juice (or wine) is also permitted, which in some fields occurs between the elder's testimony and the final hymn.
Bishop, elder, deacon
a chairman of a local meeting. Normally the male head of the house in which meetings are held. The bishop/elder is usually the person in charge of calling the start of the meeting. When a worker is present, he or she will generally initiate and direct the gathering instead. The deacon is considered to be an alternate to the elder in some areas.
Worker, servant, apostle
terms used to denote the church's semi-itinerant, homeless ministers. These are unmarried (several exceptions were made during the first half of the 20th century to allow married couples to enter the ministry), and do not have any formal training. Workers go out in same-sex pairs (hence the term "Two by Two"), consisting of a more experienced worker with a junior companion.
Head worker, overseer
the senior worker in charge of a geographic area, roughly corresponding to the position of a bishop in Catholicism. There is no hierarchical position higher than overseer—such as a pope—which might guarantee doctrinal and practical unanimity.

Practice and structure

Ministry

The church holds that faith and salvation may only be obtained by hearing the preaching of its ministers (typically called workers),[21] and by observing their sacrificial lives. During the early years, this requirement was referred to as the "Living Witness Doctrine," though that term is no longer used. The minister must be heard and observed in person, rather than by broadcasts, recordings, books or tracts, or other indirect communication.[102][166] The church's ministerial structure is based on Jesus' instructions to his apostles found in Matthew Chapter 10, verses 8–16 (with similar passages in Mark and in Luke). The church's view is that, following these Biblical examples, its ministers have no permanent dwelling places, minister in pairs, sell all and go out with only minimal worldly possessions, and rely only upon hospitality and generosity.[167][168] Most ministers receive their support and income directly from lay members, and have no fixed address except for mail collection.[14]

The option of entering the ministry is theoretically open to every baptized member, although it has been many decades since married people were accepted into the ministry. Female workers operate in the same manner as male workers. However, they cannot rise to the position of overseer, do not lead meetings when a male worker is present, and occupy a lower rank than male workers.[169]

Workers do not engage in any formal religious training.[170] Overseers pair new workers with senior companions until they are deemed ready to move beyond a junior position.[171] The workers are assigned new companions annually.[115] Workers organize and assign members to the home meetings, appoint elders, and decide controversies among members. Workers are not registered marriage celebrants, so members are married by secular functionaries (such as a justice of the peace). However, workers will give sermons and prayers at members' weddings if requested, and they officiate at the funerals of members.[172]

Gatherings

The church holds several types of gatherings throughout the year in various locations.[upper-alpha 19]

Gospel meeting
Gospel meeting is the gathering that is most likely to be open to those considered to be "outsiders".[173] At one time, Gospel meetings were typically held in tents, set up by workers as they traveled; they are now most commonly held in a rented space.[upper-alpha 20] Gospel meetings are held specifically to attract new members, though professing members typically make up the majority of attendees. The Gospel meeting consists of a quiet period, congregational singing (frequently accompanied by piano) and using the church's approved hymnal, and sermons delivered by the church's workers. Gospel meetings are regularly scheduled for portions of the year in areas where the group is well-established. They may also be held when a worker believes there may be people in the region who would be receptive to the church's message.
Sunday morning meeting
Participation in this closed[174] meeting is generally restricted to members. It is usually held in the home of an elder, and consists of a cappella singing from the regular hymnal,[175] partaking of communion emblems[137][176] (a piece of leavened bread and a cup of wine or grape juice),[177] prayer and sharing of testimonies by members in good standing.[178]
Bible study
Participation in this closed meeting is generally restricted to members, and is usually held in the home of an elder. Members are assigned a list of Bible verses or a topic of study for consideration during the week, for discussion at the next meeting. As the meeting progresses, each member shares thoughts regarding the scripture or topic. Thoughts are shared by individual members in turn, and members do not engage in discussions during the meeting. The Bible study meeting includes hymns and prayers.
Union meeting
This is a monthly gathering of several congregations, and follows the format of the Sunday morning meetings. Union meetings are not open to the public.
Special meeting(s)
Special meetings are annual gatherings of members from a large area. Each is held as a private gathering, often in a rented hall. Special meetings last a single day, and include sermons by local and visiting workers. The sermons are interspersed with prayers, hymns, and testimonies.
Convention
These annual events are attended by members from within a larger geographical area than for the special meetings. Conventions are held over several days, usually in rural areas on properties with facilities to handle housing, feeding, and other necessities for those who attend. These services generally follow the format used for special meetings. Conventions are not open to the public, although outsiders often attend by invitation. In older conventions, members were segregated by sex during services.[112]
Workers' meeting
These gatherings are not open to either the public or general membership. Attendance and participation are restricted to workers and certain invited members. The meeting may be a regular Bible study, or it may be used to disseminate any instructions from senior workers or to issue decisions about controversial matters. They are held during conventions, or as necessary. These meetings include prayer, a period for testimonies from any workers wishing to share, and may include statements by senior workers in attendance.

Organization

Members claim the church does not have a formal organization.[179] Members do not participate in, and many are unaware of, the church's governance.[upper-alpha 21] Although in the early years of the church, a headquarters was maintained in Belfast,[44] no official headquarters currently exist and the church remains largely unincorporated. Both expenditures and funds collected remain secret from the membership and no accounting is made public.[95] Funds are handled through stewardships, trusts, and cash transactions.[upper-alpha 22]

No materials are published by the church for outside circulation other than invitations to open Gospel meetings.[180][181] Printed materials are published for circulation among the members and include sermon notes, convention notes, Bible study lists, convention lists, and worker lists.[9] Some members of the group see the internal dissemination of worker letters as continuing the practice of the early Church and the epistolary work of the original apostles.[182]

Hierarchy

The church is controlled by a small group of senior male overseers with each having oversight of an specific geographic region. Under each senior overseer are male head workers who have oversight of a single state, province or similar area, depending on the country.[183] These head workers handle the two-by-two pairing and field assignments of workers for that area. Each pair of workers has charge over several local meetings with the senior worker of the two having authority over his junior. Local meetings are hosted in the homes of elders who report to the workers. Correspondence such as reporting, finances, and instructions are often communicated according to the set hierarchy.[184] The administration of the church and its annual process of assigning of workers to fields are rarely discussed among the membership.[100]

Hymnals

The church's first hymnal, The Go-Preacher's Hymn Book, had been compiled by 1909,[185] and contained 125 hymns. The English-language hymn book currently used is Hymns Old and New[175] and was first published in 1913[186] with several subsequent editions and translations. It contains 412 hymns, many of which were written or adapted by workers and other members of the church and is organized into "gospel" and "fellowship" hymns.[187] A smaller, second hymnal, also titled Hymns Old and New, consists of the first 170 songs found in the full hymnal. Another version of the hymn book contains words without musical notation and is used primarily by children and those who cannot read music.[175] Hymn books in other languages, such as "Himnos" in Spanish, contain many hymns translated from English and sung to the same tunes, as well as original non-English hymns.

Endnotes

  1. The church does not publish any membership statistics; outside researchers give a wide range of estimates. In part, this depends on who is included as a member (children of members, unbaptized participants, lapsed members, etc) and whether the metric estimates are based upon known numbers of annual conventions, numbers of ministers, etc. One researcher has said that people on the fringes of church membership can be up to twenty times the number of regular members.(Hosfeld 17 August 1983, pp. 1–2) During the 1980s, the Sydney Morning Herald gave an estimate of between 1 and 4 million members worldwide,(Gill 30 June 1984, p. 37) while a 2001 estimate put Australian membership at 70,000.(Giles 25 July 2001, p. 014) A sociology masters thesis from 1964 estimated U.S. membership at 300,000 to 500,000 and world membership as between 1 and 2 million.(Crow 1964, pp. 2, 16) Benton Johnson updated the metrics to arrive at a figure of 48,000 to 190,000 for the United States alone.(Johnson 1995, pp. 43–44) George Chryssides states that membership numbers are uncertain, giving an estimate for the United States during 1998 as ranging from 10,000 to 100,000 and a worldwide membership probably three times that figure.(Chryssides 2001b, pp. 330–331) Estimates in other reference materials fall somewhere in between these.
  2. Collection refers to the donation money collected from a church congregation during a service, normally by means of a collection plate or box.
  3. John Long (1872–1962) traced his conversion experience to a mission held by Methodist evangelist Gabriel Clarke in 1890. He became a colporteur for the Methodists in Ireland, where he encountered William Irvine. He eventually joined Irvine's workers, until publicly expelled in 1907 for disagreeing with the group's exclusivist position (Robinson 2005, p. 36). Long returned to his work as a colporteur (Lennie 2009, p. 426) and joined the Elim evangelists for a time. From there he went on to become a noted Pentecostal preacher in Ireland, Scotland, Wales and England (Robinson 2005, p. 36). The editor of Heresies Exposed included a correction by Long of the name of the church's original leader and the year of its founding in 1897 (Irvine 1929, p. 73(fn)). He also left his memoirs (in journal form, though redacted many years later) (Long 1927).
  4. To view the complete 1910 article shown above, see here.
  5. The immigration record shows Irvine, Walker and Weir stating that they were joining a relative, "George McGregor" living at Coffey Street in Brooklyn New York (R.I.S. 2009a).
  6. "As early as 1912, Irvine was exercising his charismatic imagination in ways that must have been unsettling to those in the movement with an interest in routinization. In that year he told conventions that it might be possible to travel to the stars and act as saviours to them as Jesus acted for us. He spoke of Christ's imminent return and referred to his movement as the 144,000 mentioned in the Book of Revelation." Benton Johnson (Johnson 1995, p. 50).
  7. "The workers declared that Irvine 'had lost the Lord's anointing' and banned him from all assemblies. But they also had to devise a new source of authority for the movement's very special brand of Christianity. They did this by an ingenious falsification of their own history, in which Irvine's role was obliterated. And armed with this new history and the unity to enforce a ban on Irvine, the workers declared that the founder's name was not to be mentioned within the movement. He was excised from the shared memory of the organization he had founded." Johnson in Klass and Weisgrau (Johnson 1999, p. 378).
  8. For full text of the letter, see The Secret Sect (Parker and Parker 1982, pp. 117–119).
  9. This is the subject of letters from Rittenhouse and Sweetland, given in full in Reinventing the Truth (Daniel 1993, pp. 281, 283–284).
  10. "In very short order they also destroyed Irvine's earlier stature as a charismatic innovator by explaining that the sect he had founded was actually a collective rediscovery of the earliest form of Christianity, which had existed as small persecuted bands since the first century." Benton Johnson (Johnson 1995, p. 50).
  11. "The Cooneyites, also called the Two-by-Two’s, have developed the shunning of publicity into a fine art." —Melton (Melton 2009, p. 554).
  12. "Two by twos use the Bible as their sole source of authority and have developed no statement of belief apart from Scriptures. They practice the Lord's Supper (communion) weekly and practice believer's baptism, rebaptizing new members. Their lifestyle includes modesty of appearance, avoidance of worldly activities such as watching television, and usually pacificism." George D. Chryssides (Chryssides 2001b, p. 330).
  13. "Members shun publicity, refuse to acquire church property, and issue no ministerial credentials or doctrinal literature, believing that the Bible (King James Version) is the only textbook and that, to be effective, the communication of spiritual life must take place orally, person to person. The only printed documents are hymnals." J. Gordon Melton (Melton 2009, p. 554).
  14. "They [the ministers] are considered 'the word made flesh' in our day." Christian Research Institute (C.R.I. 2009).
  15. Hymns which contained hints of salvation by grace, trinitarianism or redemption based upon the blood of Christ were purged or changed in a 1987 revision (Kropp 2006d).
  16. "Moreover, no-names do not believe that Jesus's death on the cross will wash away the sins of all who accept him as their savior; salvation only comes through a life of sacrificial obedience to the instructions and examples of Jesus. All recent authorities agree that the road to salvation for these sectarians is a hard one. Carol Woster, who spent two years in the group, recalls that one long-time member she knew 'seemed to see life as a grieving journey, where after the [Sunday] meeting, the next day she would 'take up the struggle' to go on...' There is, she found, little 'Christian joy or confident hope' among the no-names." Benton Johnson (Johnson 1995, p. 44).
  17. "It appears that the sect's theological position on the divinity of Christ, the atonement, and man's justification before God, has never changed, yet at mission meetings and in private discussion with people whom they successfully proselytized, preachers gave the misleading impression that their church was evangelical, and that in no way did it deviate from basic Christian beliefs." Doug Parker and Helen Parker (Parker and Parker 1982, pp. 102–193).
  18. These terminology definitions follow Fortt 1994, pp. 15–202.
  19. This list of meeting types follows the list given in Daniel 1993, pp. 13–15.
  20. "Ordinary meetings among lay believers are held in houses, but periodically the itinerants visit each district, and there they borrow a hall (often the Church hall of an unsuspecting minister) for a preaching meeting for the public at large." Bryan R. Wilson (Wilson 1993).
  21. "A concern for public exposure may be the principal reason why the no-name sect has no newsletters or other publications even for its own members. The lack of such internal documents makes it difficult for members to know what is going on within the group, but, as Simmel observes, the less the members know, the less they will be able to tell outsiders if they decide to talk openly about it. The need for internal secrecy also may explain why the nameless sect has no system of government in which ordinary members participate. I[n] fact, most members seem unaware that a system of government even exists.." Benton Johnson (Johnson 1995, p. 43).
  22. "All property at the group's disposal is in the hands of individuals who are expected to make use of it for the good of the movement. Sites where conventions take place are owned by members and the monetary donations workers receive are theirs to spend as they see fit. Funds and other assets held in trusts are also secret with no public accounting given." Benton Johnson (Johnson 1995, p. 42).

Footnotes

  1. See:
  2. See:
  3. Warburton 1969, pp. 82–83.
  4. Parker and Parker 1982, pp. 1–2.
  5. Irish Independent 20 August 1907, p. 7.
  6. Dair Rioga Local History Group 2005, p. 322.
  7. Warburton 1969, p. 84.
  8. Parker and Parker 1982, p. 2.
  9. 1 2 3 Nichols 2006, p. 88.
  10. See:
  11. See:
  12. Dair Rioga Local History Group 2005, pp. 323–325.
  13. See:
  14. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Wilson 1993.
  15. Robinson 2005, pp. 34–35.
  16. Impartial Reporter 28 July 1910, p. 8.
  17. 1905 "List of Workers" in Daniel 1993, pp. 276–279.
  18. Kropp 2006b.
  19. 1 2 Robinson 2005, p. 34.
  20. O'Brien 1997, p. xxiv.
  21. 1 2 Impartial Reporter 25 August 1910, p. 8.
  22. Johnson 1999, p. 378.
  23. Hilliard 2005.
  24. See:
  25. Hill 2004, p. 403.
  26. Govan August 1901, p. 175.
  27. 1 2 Scollon 27 July 1930, p. 4.
  28. Anglo-Celt 10 June 1905, p. 4.
  29. Freeman's Journal 7 July 1923, p. 8.
  30. Anglo-Celt 30 December 1905, p. 12.
  31. Nenagh Guardian 6 June 1906, p. 2.
  32. Impartial Reporter 5 August 1909, p. 8.
  33. Impartial Reporter 14 July 1910, p. 5.
  34. Impartial Reporter 22 January 1903, p. 8.
  35. Anglo-Celt 29 April 1905, p. 7.
  36. Anglo-Celt 5 May 1906, p. 1.
  37. Anglo-Celt 28 October 1911, p. 5.
  38. Anglo-Celt 28 July 1906, p. 8.
  39. See:
  40. Accounts of some of the many incidents include:
  41. Johnson 1995, p. 46.
  42. Fermanagh Times 16 March–18 July 1907.
  43. Anglo-Celt 26 November 1904, p. 10.
  44. 1 2 3 4 Robinson 2005, p. 35.
  45. Parker and Parker 1982, p. 46.
  46. Impartial Reporter 13 October 1904, p. 8.
  47. Wallis 1981, p. 123.
  48. See:
  49. Anglo-Celt 5 October 1907, p. 1.
  50. Freeman's Journal 2 December 1913, p. 10.
  51. Johnson 1995, p. 48.
  52. Daniel 1993, pp. 173–175.
  53. Kropp 2009a.
  54. 1 2 Wallis 1981, p. 130.
  55. New York Times 6 August 1909, p. 4.
  56. 1 2 3 Johnson 1995, p. 50.
  57. Parker and Parker 1982, p. 62.
  58. Parker and Parker 1982, p. 63.
  59. Johnson 1995, p. 49.
  60. 1 2 Parker and Parker 1982, p. 64.
  61. Johnson 1995, pp. 51, 55.
  62. 1 2 Johnson 1995, p. 51.
  63. Johnson 1995, pp. 51, 52.
  64. Johnson 1995, p. 52.
  65. Roberts 1990, pp. 145–154.
  66. Melton 2009, pp. 554–555.
  67. 1 2 Parker and Parker 1982, pp. 85–86.
  68. Kropp 2009b.
  69. Roberts 1990, p. 153.
  70. Dair Rioga Local History Group 2005, p. 333.
  71. Megahey 2000, p. 155.
  72. McConway 7 November 2007, p. 15.
  73. McConway 14 November 2007, p. 16.
  74. Rule January 1924, pp. 18–20.
  75. Parker and Parker 1982, p. 82.
  76. Irvine 1929, pp. 73–78.
  77. Dair Rioga Local History Group 2005, pp. 329–330.
  78. Johnson 1995, pp. 37–38, 42.
  79. 1 2 Indianapolis News 26 September 1921, p. 11.
  80. Roberts 1990, p. 143.
  81. Dair Rioga Local History Group 2005, p. 330.
  82. Parker and Parker 1982, p. 85.
  83. St. Clair and St. Clair 2004, p. 223.
  84. Wilson 1994, p. 49.
  85. Wilson 1994, p. 56(fn).
  86. Wilson 1994, p. 68.
  87. Parker and Parker 1982, pp. 88–92.
  88. Roberts 1990, pp. 225–226.
  89. Palestine Post 10 March 1947, p. 2.
  90. Impartial Reporter 23 June 1960.
  91. Fiset 29 March 1957, p. 15.
  92. Evening Bulletin 8 November 1981.
  93. Wilson and Barker 2005, p. 299.
  94. Mann 1955, p. 15.
  95. 1 2 Gill 30 June 1984, p. 37.
  96. Uses as background for fiction include,
  97. Jackson 1977, p. 298.
  98. Borhek 1979, p. 69.
  99. Daniel 1993, p. 176.
  100. 1 2 Johnson 1995, p. 43.
  101. 1 2 Cimino July–August 1999, p. 3.
  102. 1 2 Melton 2009, p. 554.
  103. 1 2 Sanders 1969, p. 166.
  104. Irvine 1929, p. 76.
  105. Overseer John "Jack" Carroll quoted in Parker and Parker 1982, p. 99.
  106. See:
  107. Newtownards Chronicle 28 May 1904, p. 3.
  108. Impartial Reporter 20 August 1908, p. 8.
  109. See:
  110. Irish Independent 14 November 1907, p. 7.
  111. Martineau 14 July 2000, p. A1.
  112. 1 2 Peterborough Examiner 9 June 1931, p. 9.
  113. See:
  114. Parker and Parker 1982, pp. 16, 105.
  115. 1 2 3 Kalas 30 January 2010.
  116. Woster 1988, pp. 12, 15.
  117. Fortt 1994, pp. 31, 114–115, 192.
  118. See:
  119. See:
  120. See:
  121. See:
  122. Johnson 1995, pp. 44, 46.
  123. Worker Leo Stancliff quoted in Daniel 1993, pp. 128–129.
  124. Chryssides 2001a, pp. 330–331.
  125. See:
  126. See:
  127. See:
  128. Kropp 2008.
  129. See:
  130. See:
  131. Parker and Parker 1982, pp. 101–103.
  132. Fortt 1994, pp. 241–243.
  133. Worker Eldon Kendrew quoted in Climenhaga 30 July 1994, p. E7.
  134. Parker and Parker 1982, p. 102.
  135. C.R.I. 2009.
  136. See:
  137. 1 2 Lewis 1998, p. 494.
  138. Parker and Parker 1982, p. 14.
  139. Enroth 1992, p. 133.
  140. Walker 2007, p. 118.
  141. See:
  142. Impartial Reporter 15 January 1903, p. 8.
  143. Impartial Reporter 19 July 1917, p. 6.
  144. See:
  145. Hasell 1925, p. 244.
  146. Concordia Theological Monthly 1938, p. 863.
  147. Müller 1990.
  148. Mayer 2000, p. 141.
  149. Nervig 1941, p. 132.
  150. See:
  151. 1 2 Wilkens 2007, p. 132.
  152. Parker and Parker 1982, p. 86.
  153. See:
  154. Walker 2007, p. 117.
  155. Parker and Parker 1982, p. 107.
  156. Robinson 2009.
  157. Parker and Parker 1982, p. 73.
  158. AnotherStep 2009.
  159. Parker and Parker 1982, pp. 107, 124.
  160. See:
  161. R.I.S. 2009b.
  162. Chandler 13 September 1983, p. A2.
  163. See:
  164. Worker Walter Pollock quoted in Preecs 5 June 1983, p. B6.
  165. Jaenen 2003, pp. 517–535.
  166. Anderson 20 August 1983, p. 4a.
  167. Mann 1955, p. 110.
  168. Courier Mail 29 August 1936, p. 22.
  169. Fortt 1994, pp. 96, 117–118, 193.
  170. See:
  171. Fortt 1994, pp. 59, 236–237.
  172. See:
  173. Paul 1977, p. 8.
  174. See:
  175. 1 2 3 Hymns Old and New 1987.
  176. Chryssides 2001b, p. 330.
  177. Crow 1964, p. 10.
  178. Jones 2013, p. 8.
  179. See:
  180. Kropp 2006c.
  181. Daniel 1993, pp. 9–11.
  182. Crow 1964, p. 27.
  183. See:
  184. Daniel 1993, pp. 11–16.
  185. Impartial Reporter 7 October 1909, p. 8.
  186. Impartial Reporter 3 July 1913, p. 8.
  187. Fortt 1994, p. 197.

References

Books

Bates, Shelley (2004). Grounds to Believe. Toronto, Ontario: Harlequin/Steeple Hill. ISBN 978-0-373-78512-4. 
Beckford, James (2003). Challenging Religion: Cults and Controversies. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-30948-6. 
Beit-Halahmi, Benjamin (1993). The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Active New Religions, Sects, and Cults. New York: Rosen Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-8239-2586-5. 
Borhek, James T.; Curtis, Richard Farnsworth, eds. (1979). A Sociology of Belief. New York, New York: John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-0-471-08895-0. 
Bruce, Steve (1996). Religion in the Modern World: from cathedrals to cults. New York, New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-878151-6. 
Chryssides, George D. (2001a). The A to Z of New Religious Movements. Lanham, Maryland: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-8108-5588-5. 
Chryssides, George D. (2001b). Historical Dictionary of New Religious Movements. Lanham, Maryland and London: Scarecrow Press. ISBN 978-0-8108-4095-9. 
Clark, Elmer T. (1949). The Small Sects in America (Revised ed.). New York, New York: Abingdon Press. 
Dair Rioga Local History Group (2005). Mallon; Greaney, eds. All in Good Faith: A History of Christianity in Enfield, Rathmolyon, Rathcore and Associated Areas. Ireland: Dair Rioga Local History Group and the Meath Leader under the NRDP Programme of the Department of Community, Rural and Gaeltacht Affairs / National Development Plan. 
Daniel, Kevin N. (1993). Reinventing the Truth: Historical Claims of One of the World's Largest Nameless Sects. Sisters, Oregon: Research and Information Services. ISBN 978-0-9639419-0-9. 
Enroth, Ronald M. (1992). Churches That Abuse. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan Publishing House. ISBN 978-0-310-53299-6. 
Fortt, Lloyd (1994). A Search for the Truth: The Workers' Words Exposed. Sisters, Oregon: Research and Information Services. ISBN 978-0-9639419-2-3. 
Hasell, P. H. Eva (1925). Through Western Canada in a Caravan. Westminster, England: The Society for the Propagation of the Gospel in Foreign Parts. 
Hill, Myrtle (2004). "Protestantism in County Fermanagh, c. 1750–1912". In Murphy, Eileen M.; Roulston, William J. Fermanagh History and Society: Interdisciplinary essays on the history of an Irish County. Dublin, Ireland: Geography Publications. ISBN 978-0-906602-52-2. 
House of Commons (1912). The Parliamentary Debates (Official Report). Fifth Series—Volume XLIII. Second Session of the Thirtieth Parliament of the United Kingdom of Great Britain & Ireland. Third Year of the Reign of His Majesty King George V. House of Commons. Tenth Volume of Session 1912, Comprising period from Monday, 28th October 1912, to Thursday, 14th November, 1912. Fifth. XLIII. London: His Majesty's Stationery Office. 
Hymns Old and New. Basingstoke, Hants (United Kingdom): R.L. Allan and Son. 1987. Archived from the original on 11 October 2009. Retrieved 11 October 2009. 
Irvine, William C., ed. (1929). Heresies Exposed (Tenth ed.). Neptune, New Jersey: Loizeaux Brothers (reprint by Kessinger Publishing). ISBN 978-0-7661-4269-5. 
Jackson, Samuel Macauley; Loetscher, Lefferts Augustine, eds. (1977). The New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge 14. Grand Rapids, Michigan: Baker Book House. ISBN 978-0-8010-7947-4. 
Jaenen, Cornelius J. (2003). The Apostles' Doctrine and Fellowship: A documentary history of the early church and restorationist movements. Ottawa, Ontario: Legas Publishing. ISBN 978-1-894508-48-3. 
Johnson, Benton (1995). "Christians in Hiding: The 'No Name' Sect". In Bromley, David G.; Neitz, Mary Jo; Goldman, Marion S. Sex, Lies and Sanctity: Religion and Deviance in Contemporary North America 5. Greenwich, Connecticut: JAI Press. ISBN 978-1-55938-904-4. 
Johnson, Benton (1999). "On Founders and Followers: Some Factors in the Development of New Religious Movements". In Klass, Morton; Weisgrau, Maxine K. Across the Boundaries of Belief: Contemporary Issues in the Anthropology of Religion. Boulder, Colorado and Oxford, United Kingdom: Westview Press. ISBN 978-0-8133-2695-5. 
Joyce, James (2001). Deane, Vincent; Ferrer, Daniel; Lernout, Geert, eds. The Finnegans Wake Notebooks at Buffalo. VI.B.10. Belgium: Brepols Publishers. ISBN 978-2-503-50959-4. 
Lennie, Tom (2009). Glory in the Glen: A History of Evangelical Revivals in Scotland 1880–1940. Fearn, Ross–shire, Scotland: Christian Focus Publications. ISBN 978-1-84550-377-2. 
Lewis, James R. (1998). The Encyclopedia of Cults, Sects and New Religions. Amherst, New York: Prometheus Books. ISBN 978-1-57392-222-7. 
Mann, William E. (1955). Sect, Cult and Church in Alberta. Toronto, Ontario: University of Toronto Press. 
McIntosh, Amy (1965). Journey into Malaya (Condensed ed.). Westchester, Illinois: Good News Publishers; China Inland Mission. 
Megahey, Alan (2000). The Irish Protestant Churches in the Twentieth Century. New York, New York: St. Martin's Press. ISBN 978-0-312-23601-4. 
Melton, J. Gordon (2009). "The Two-By-Two's". Melton's Encyclopedia of American Religions (8 ed.). Detroit, Michigan: Gale, Cengage. ISBN 978-0-7876-9696-2. 
Melton, J. Gordon (2005). Encyclopedia of Protestantism. New York, New York: Facts On File. ISBN 978-0-8160-5456-5. 
Montgomery, L. M. (1935). Mistress Pat: A Novel of Silver Bush. New York, New York: Grosset & Dunlap, Publishers. 
Nervig, Casper B. (1941). Christian Truth and Religious Delusions. Minneapolis, Minnesota: Augsburg Publishing House (reprint by Kessinger Publishing). ISBN 978-1-4191-7328-8. 
Nichols, Larry A.; Mather, George A.; Schmidt, Alvin J., eds. (2006). "Church Without a Name, The; Go Preachers; No Name Church, Two By Twos, The Nameless House Sect, Cooneyites". Encyclopedic Dictionary of Cults, Sects, and World Religions (Revised and updated ed.). Grand Rapids, Michigan: Zondervan. ISBN 978-0-310-23954-3. 
O'Brien, George; Dunne, Seán, eds. (1997). The Ireland Anthology. New York, New York: St. Martin's Press. ISBN 978-0-312-30027-2. 
Parker, Doug; Parker, Helen (1982). The Secret Sect. Sydney, Australia: Macarthur Press. ISBN 978-0-9593398-0-2. 
Paul, William E. (1977). They Go About Two by Two: The History and Doctrine of a Little Known Cult. Robbinsdale, Minnesota: Religion Analysis Service. 
Roberts, Patricia (1990). The Life and Ministry of Edward Cooney 1867–1960. Enniskillen, Northern Ireland: Wm. Trimble. ISBN 978-0-9510109-4-5. 
Robinson, James (2005). Pentecostal Origins: Early Pentecostalism in Ireland in the Context of the British Isles. Studies in Evangelical History and Thought. Milton Keynes, United Kingdom: Paternoster. ISBN 978-1-84227-329-6. 
Sanders, John Oswald (1969). Cults and Isms. London, United Kingdom: Lakeland. ISBN 978-0-551-00458-0. 
St. Clair, William; St. Clair, John (2004). The Road to St. Julien: Letters of a Stretcher-bearer from the Great War. Barnsley, South Yorkshire, United Kingdom: Leo Cooper. ISBN 978-1-84415-017-5. 
Walker, James K. (2007). The Concise Guide to Today's Religions and Spirituality. Eugene, Oregon: Harvest House Publishers. ISBN 978-0-7369-2011-7. 
Wallis, Roy (1981). "Yesterday's Children". In Wilson, Bryan. The Social Impact of New Religious Movements. New York, New York: Rose of Sharon Press. ISBN 978-0-932894-09-0. 
Wilkens, Steve (2007). "A Church with No Name". The Original Dr. Steve's Almanac of Christian Trivia: A Miscellany of Oddities, Instructional Anecdotes, Little-Known Facts and Occasional Frivolity. Downers Grove, Illinois: InterVarsity Press. ISBN 978-0-8308-3438-9. 
Wilson, Bryan R.; Barker, Eileen (2005). "What are the New Religious Movements Doing in a Secular Society?". In Heath, Anthony Francis; Ermisch, John; Gallie, Duncan. Understanding Social Change. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-726314-3. 
Woster, Carol (1988). The No-Name Fellowship. Belfast, Northern Ireland: Great Joy Publications. 

Journals, newspapers, periodicals

(Advertiser. staff) (10 February 1943). "Conscientious Objector Courtmartialled". The Advertiser (Adelaide, South Australia). 
(A.R. staff) (15 September 1997). "Doubts About A Mystery Church". Alberta Report (Edmonton, Alberta). 
(A.G. staff) (16 September 1908). "The Irvinites". Alexandria Gazette (Alexandria, Virginia). Retrieved 21 July 2014 via Newspapers.com. 
(A.C. staff) (8 October 1904). "Co. Fermanagh News. Enniskillen. Enniskillen Jottings.". The Anglo-Celt (Cavan, Ireland). 
(A.C. staff) (26 November 1904). "Co. Fermanagh News. Enniskillen. Enniskillen Jottings.". The Anglo-Celt (Cavan, Ireland). 
(A.C. staff) (29 April 1905). "Co. Fermanagh News. Enniskillen. Enniskillen Jottings.". The Anglo-Celt (Cavan, Ireland). 
(A.C. staff) (10 June 1905). "Co. Fermanagh News. Enniskillen. Enniskillen Jottings.". The Anglo-Celt (Cavan, Ireland). 
(A.C. staff) (30 December 1905). "Co. Fermanagh News. Enniskillen. Enniskillen Jottings.". The Anglo-Celt (Cavan, Ireland). 
(A.C. staff) (5 May 1906). "Aggessive 'Dippers.' Cooneyites in Irvinestown.". The Anglo-Celt (Cavan, Ireland). 
(A.C. staff) (28 July 1906). "Co. Monaghan News. Monaghan. Monaghan Petty Sessions. Alleged Serious Assault.". The Anglo-Celt (Cavan, Ireland). 
(A.C. staff) (5 October 1907). "An Indignant Father And Fermanagh Dippers". The Anglo-Celt (Cavan, Ireland). 
(A.C. staff) (16 November 1907). "Son Disinherited For Joining the 'Cooneyites.'". The Anglo-Celt (Cavan, Ireland). 
(A.C. staff) (28 October 1911). "Shercock: Evangelisers". The Anglo-Celt (Cavan, Ireland). 
(A.C. staff) (13 January 1917). "Clones Notes". The Anglo-Celt (Cavan, Ireland). 
(Argus staff) (9 November 1916). "Exemption Appeals. Cases Before Mr. Justice Hood.". The Argus (Melbourne, Victoria Australia). 
(B.M. staff) (24 November 1916). "Defense of Australia. Conscientious Objectors. Scripture Lessons in Court.". Barrier Miner (Broken Hill, New South Wales Australia). 
Anderson, Kathie (20 August 1983). "Church without a Name". The Bellingham Herald (Bellingham, Washington). 
(C.C. staff) (30 April 1940). "Funeral of Mr. Angus McKenzie". Camperdown Chronicle (Camperdown, Victoria Australia). 
Chandler, Russell (13 September 1983). "Nameless Sect Travels 'Secret' Path". The Los Angeles Times (Los Angeles, California). 
Cimino, Richard P., ed. (July–August 1999). "Proselytizing Hindered by Internet". Religion Watch (North Bellmore, New York: Religion Watch). 
Climenhaga, David (30 July 1994). "Invisible Sect Has Thousands of Followers". The Calgary Herald (Calgary, Alberta). 
(D.M. staff) (29 March 1905). "From Far and Near. Interesting News by Telegraph and Telephone. County Down. Incursion of 'Cooneyites'". Daily Mail (London, England). 
Devlin, George (2 December 1968). "R.U.C. blamed for not enforcing law". The Irish Independent (Dublin, Ireland). 
(E.B. staff) (8 November 1981). "George Walker Dead at 104". The Evening Bulletin (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania). 
(F.T. staff) (16 March – 18 July 1907). "The Pilgrims at Ballycassidy. The Question of Infant Baptism". The Fermanagh Times (Enniskillin, Ireland). 
Fiset, Bill (29 March 1957). "700 Attend Rites for John Carroll". The Oakland Tribune (Oakland, California). 
(F.J. staff) (2 December 1913). "'The Cooneyites.' Libel Action Settled.". The Freeman's Journal (Dublin, Ireland). 
Foote, George William, ed. (26 May 1907). "Acid Drops". The Freethinker (London, England: The Secular Society). XXVII (21). 
Gerrand, R. K. (29 August 1936). "Sect Which Says: 'Sell All thou Hast and Give to the Poor', Rochedale the Centre of a Body which Teaches Renunciation and Seeks Converts in Tent or the Open". The Courier-Mail (Brisbane, Queensland Australia). 
Giles, Tanya (25 July 2001). "Secretive Sect Leader Dies". The Herald Sun (Melbourne, Australia). 
Gill, Alan (30 June 1984). "The Most Secret Society in the World". The Sydney Morning Herald (Sydney, Australia). 
Govan, John George, ed. (August 1901). "General Notes and News". Bright Words (Rothesay, Scotland: Faith Mission). 
Hilliard, David (June 2005). "Unorthodox Christianity in South Australia: Was South Australia really a paradise of dissent?". History Australia (Sydney, New South Wales: Australian Historical Association) 2 (2). doi:10.2104/ha050038. ISSN 1833-4881. 
Hosfeld, Kathleen (17 August 1983). "Criticism clouds church's gathering". The Skagit Valley Herald (Mount Vernon, Washington). 
(Ideas staff) (13 July 1917). "Romance of the Tramp Preachers". Ideas (Manchester, England). 
(I.N. staff) (26 September 1921). "Religious Group, Led by 'Tramp Preachers,' in State Convention.". The Indianapolis News (Indianapolis, Indiana). 
(I.R. staff) (15 January 1903). "The 'Pilgrims' or 'Tramps.' Preaching the Terrors of Hell! Believe That God Is with Them. The Dress and Peculiarities.". The Impartial Reporter and Farmers Journal (Enniskillin, Ireland). 
(I.R. staff) (22 January 1903). "The 'Pilgrims' or 'Tramps.' A Hot Time for Enniskillen. The 'Damnation Army.' Their Ideas of Persecution.". The Impartial Reporter and Farmers Journal (Enniskillin, Ireland). 
(I.R. staff) (2 June 1904). "Tit-Bits of 'Cooneyism.' The Pride of Newtownards". The Impartial Reporter and Farmers Journal (Enniskillin, Ireland). 
(I.R. staff) (13 October 1904). "The Tramps. Change In Their Views". The Impartial Reporter and Farmers Journal (Enniskillin, Ireland). 
(I.R. staff) (2 June 1906). "Scenes at Aughnacloy. Police Called On. Extravagant Language Used". The Impartial Reporter and Farmers Journal (Enniskillin, Ireland). 
(I.R. staff) (23 July 1908). "Convention of 'Tramps' Held at Crocknacrieve". The Impartial Reporter and Farmers Journal (Enniskillin, Ireland). 
(I.R. staff) (20 August 1908). "The Recent Tramp Convention Held at Crocknacrieve. What the Tramps Believe. A Reply from Within". The Impartial Reporter and Farmers Journal (Enniskillin, Ireland). 
(I.R. staff) (5 August 1909). "The Tramp Preachers. Mr. Edward Cooney's Invective. A Torrent of Denunciation. All Creeds Going to Hell (But Those Who Think With Him). Scene at Crocknacrieve. Mr. Edward Cooney Speaks. Denunciation of all the Churches. The Clergy, the Devil and Sabbath Schools". The Impartial Reporter and Farmers Journal (Enniskillin, Ireland). 
(I.R. staff) (7 October 1909). "The Tramps. The 'Jesus Way.' Do They Follow It?". The Impartial Reporter and Farmers Journal (Enniskillin, Ireland). 
(I.R. staff) (14 July 1910). "Tramp Preachers' Convention Opens at Crocknacrieve. Address by Mr. Geo. Walker. Some Local Reminiscences". The Impartial Reporter and Farmers Journal (Enniskillin, Ireland). 
(I.R. staff) (28 July 1910). "The Convention at Crocknacrieve. Outline of Proceedings". The Impartial Reporter and Farmers Journal (Enniskillin, Ireland). 
(I.R. staff) (25 August 1910). "The Tramp Preachers. Doctrines They Preach". The Impartial Reporter and Farmers Journal (Enniskillin, Ireland). 
(I.R. staff) (3 July 1913). "Pilgrim Convention at Crocknacrieve". The Impartial Reporter and Farmers Journal (Enniskillin, Ireland). 
(I.R. staff) (18 December 1913). "Go-Preachers Awarded Damages. Mr. Eddy Cooney Wins". The Impartial Reporter and Farmers Journal (Enniskillin, Ireland). 
(I.R. staff) (19 July 1917). "The Tramp Preachers or 'Go Preachers.' The Hostility They Aroused.". The Impartial Reporter and Farmers Journal (Enniskillin, Ireland). 
(I.R. staff) (23 June 1960). "Edward Cooney. A Great Figure Passes". The Impartial Reporter and Farmers Journal (Enniskillin, Northern Ireland). 
(I.I. staff) (8 July 1905). "Dispersing 'Dippers.' Street Scenes in Arklow". The Irish Independent (Dublin, Ireland). 
(I.I. staff) (7 May 1906). "Pithy Provincial News: Ulster". The Irish Independent (Dublin, Ireland). 
C.H. (I.I. staff) (20 August 1907). "The 'Dippers' and Their Ways". The Irish Independent (Dublin, Ireland). 
(I.I. staff) (14 November 1907). "Derry Tramp Apostles". The Irish Independent (Dublin, Ireland). 
(I.I. staff) (17 October 1908). "Pilgrims' Presence Resented. Week of Turmoil in Swords. Origin of Outbreak. Window Smashing, Bands, Disorder and 'Religion". The Irish Independent (Dublin, Ireland). 
C.H. (I.I. staff) (13 August 1909). "Dippers' Convention in Fermanagh". The Irish Independent (Dublin, Ireland). 
(I.I. staff) (5 July 1910). "Items of Interest (By Wire and Despatch): Cooneyite Convention". The Irish Independent (Dublin, Ireland). 
(I.I. staff) (29 September 1916). "Dispersing 'Dippers.' Street Scenes in Arklow". The Irish Independent (Dublin, Ireland). 
Kalas, Stacey (30 January 2010). "Group Forgoes Name in Mission to Follow Jesus". The La Crosse Tribune (La Crosse, Wisconsin). 
(K.C.C.. staff) (12 April 1900). "Religious Intolerance in North Tipperary". King's County Chronicle (Offaly, Ireland). 
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(L.D.H. staff) (29 August 1910). "'Go Preachers' Were Attacked: Their Religion Causes Free Fight in Prince Edward Island". Lethbridge Daily Herald (Lethbridge, Alberta). 
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Martineau, Kim (14 July 2000). "Farm Plays Host to a Low Profile Sect". The Albany Times Union (Albany, New York). 
Martineau, Kim (18 July 2000). "Conservative religious group peacefully goes about its business". The Albany Times Union (Albany, New York). 
Martineau, Kim (20 July 2000). "Sect Told It Must Find New Lodgings". The Albany Times Union (Albany, New York). 
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(P.E. staff) (9 June 1931). "Disciples Hold Annual Outing at Ryler Farm". Peterborough Examiner (Peterborough, Ontario). 
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Rule, W.M. (January 1924). "The Cooneyites or Go-Preachers – A Warning". Our Hope (New York, New York). 
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Special correspondent (17 September 1908). "Irvinites Pull Up Stakes". Washington Post (Washington, D.C.). Retrieved 7 August 2014 via Newspapers.com. 
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(S.I. staff) (10 June 1906). "The Tramps; Glorified into a New Sect. Weird Workers". Sunday Independent (Dublin, Ireland). 
(Truth staff) (18 May 1907). "A New Religion Operating in Australia". The Truth (Auckland, New Zealand). 
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Papers and theses

Crow, Keith W. (March 1964). The Invisible Church (Thesis). Eugene, Oregon: Department of Sociology, University of Oregon. 
Jones, Julene L. (2013). "Motivations for Disaffiliation from the Two-by-Two sect (Thesis).". University of Kentucky. Retrieved 1 May 2013. 
Wilson, Bryan R. (1993). "The Persistence of Sects". DISKUS. Archived from the original on 14 December 2009. Retrieved 14 December 2009. 
Wilson, Elisabeth Kay (November 1994). Brethren Attitudes to Authority and Government: with Particular Reference to Pacifism (Thesis). Hobart, Tasmania: Department of History, University of Tasmania. 

Websites

"Swedish Incorporation Papers" (in Swedish). AnotherStep.net. Archived from the original on 14 June 2009. Retrieved 14 June 2009. 
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Kropp, Cherie (19 January 2006a). "Life and Ministry of William Irvine". Telling The Truth. Archived from the original on 10 August 2009. Retrieved 17 July 2009. 
Kropp, Cherie (19 January 2006b). "Life and Ministry of William Irvine". Telling The Truth. Archived from the original on 10 August 2009. Retrieved 17 July 2009. 
Kropp, Cherie (19 January 2006c). "Life and Ministry of William Irvine". Telling The Truth. Archived from the original on 10 August 2009. Retrieved 17 July 2009. 
Kropp, Cherie (19 January 2006d). "Life and Ministry of William Irvine". Telling The Truth. Archived from the original on 10 August 2009. Retrieved 17 July 2009. 
Kropp, Cherie (20 April 2008). "2x2 Fact Sheet". Telling The Truth. Archived from the original on 10 August 2009. Retrieved 21 July 2009. 
Kropp, Cherie (8 January 2009a). "Life and Ministry of William Irvine". Telling The Truth. Archived from the original on 10 August 2009. Retrieved 17 July 2009. 
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Kropp, Cherie (7 February 2010). "Life and Ministry of William Irvine". Telling The Truth. Archived from the original on 27 July 2010. Retrieved 27 July 2010. 
Long, John (1927). "The Journal of John Long III". Telling The Truth. Archived from the original on 3 August 2010. Retrieved 3 August 2010. 
Müller, Winfried (1990). "Die Namenlosen". Winfried Müller and Dialog-Zentrum, Berlin. Archived from the original on 1 December 2009. Retrieved 1 December 2009. 
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Robinson, B.A. (22 April 2009). "The Church with no name". Ontario Consultants on Religious Tolerance. Archived from the original on 1 December 2009. Retrieved 1 December 2009. 
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