]
The main problem with your premise is that the older the creeds, confessions or catechisms are the more sound you think they are. Whereas some of us do not trust those older creeds and such based on the people that introduced them.
I personally believe antichrist [Satan] turned Christianity early and the real church had to go into hiding. Like through the Crusades and the Spanish Inquisitions where Christianity became very ugly under Rome's leadership. My second book points out that sullied history that we get our traditions from.
Whereas you think that the Adventist Movement in the mid Nineteenth and the Pentecostal of the early Twentieth are bad things, I think just the opposite. I am sorry that pushy Adventists and Pentecostals have put you off. They have me also but I am not going to let Satan steal the truths they introduced because of that. I understand the spirit within you will not let you agree with me and I am alright with that. I believe we are slowly finding our way back to the real truths of God's word and prophecies.
That God's word is debated and discussed in truth or in error is good for all involved. You can proclaim your version from the rooftops and I can proclaim mine. When all is said and done we will see which version God backs up.
I think you need to be aware that my association with Adventist-type theology is more than simple observance.
I am a former Armstrongite. His theology came largely from Adventists.
And, I will note to others that the above words are the typical metanarrative of virtually all Restorationist cults. Restorationist cults formed in the early 1800's, and claim to be a restoration of the true church. Somehow, though, they often proclaim a parallel stream of believers that continued from the apostolic church to our day, and THEY are this parallel stream.
This metanarrative is conveyed time after time by various cultic groups.
In regards to Sabbathkeepers, a typical book involving such claims was AN Dugger's book "A History of the True Church". Dugger was a Church of God - Seventh Day pastor. He claimed that Arius was a great defender of the true faith, which is enough to make any intelligent Christian laugh.
He traces a lineage of his church movement from the apostolic days to our day. His book was used by several cults as support material.
Anyways, he fails to note that many of the groups he promotes were not Trinitarian Christians. Additionally, he didn't realize that many of these groups were heretics in regards to the nature of God and the Trinity, as well as the deity of Christ. Additionally, while he thought that they were Sabbathkeepers, the reality was that they used the word "Sabbath" to mean "Sunday" and considered it the NT equivalent. Finally, he based his teachings on conjecture. An example of this is the name for one of the groups. The group was called the "Sabati". He claimed this had to do with the Sabbath, and their Sabbath-keeping, but in reality it did not have to do with the Sabbath, it had to do with their footwear, which were a certain kind of sandal.
So, my history is replete with listening to wild-eyed fanatics who have listened to men such as these. I was one of the most avid followers of their nonsense.
Along with this, they quote rabid anti-Roman Catholics like Alexander Hislop, whose book "Two Babylons" claims that Roman Catholics, in reality, worship Nimrod, Semiramis and Tammuz, just like all other pagan religions. The problem with this is that Nimrod and Semiramis didn't even exist in the same century, so they couldn't have been the husband-wife combo he claimed.
His book is full of bad logic and false claims. While I don't agree with Roman Catholicism, and believe she is a fallen church, I certainly don't believe Hislopite propaganda. Yet, it forms the grist mill of teachings like Sabbatarians utilize.
And, in regards to the SDAs in particular, their own historian, Samuele Bacchiocchi, researched the Sabbath/Sunday issue and acknowledged that Ellen G. White's vision about the Pope changing the Sabbath could not be true because the Sabbath had ceased to be observed by the vast majority of Christians by AD 135. This is long before there was any such thing as a pope. There was a bishop in many cities including Rome, but the Roman bishopric made no such decision.
The reality is that the Roman Catholic church evolved over a very long period of time, and could not seriously be considered a ruling authority within Christianity until much, much later. Different historians would place this date at different junctures. However, if you believe Sabbathkeepers, they will have you thinking that this occurred centuries before the vast majority of credible historians would place this date. I don't think you could place it before 600 AD. Others would say 1054 AD or later.
Regarding Pentecostalism, I would be willing to consider the claim that "tongues" are still for today..although I hate using that word..but almost every organization exercises them in an unbiblical way, even if their claims were true. For instance, Paul says that only one person is to speak at once, and he is to be interpreted. So, almost all Pentecostals I know have a massive blabfest where they all speak at once. At best they are disobedient Christians, and at worst deceived, in this regard. Additionally, I believe that this is the gift of languages and not "tongues". The fact that they use the word "tongues" is annoying to me alone.
However, the Pentecostal issue is not an essential doctrine. I simply don't like the downplay of academic learning within Christianity that some groups have brought about, and these groups have been influenced by the Revivalist movement in many ways.
Regarding creeds, confessions and catechisms, it is notable that the heretic Joseph Smith, founder of the Mormons, attacked these teaching tools specifically when he proclaimed himself to be the one God was using to restore "true religion" to the world.
By the way, just so you guys know, many Sabbatarians refer to their teachings as "the Truth". It is as if they don't believe other Christians are saved. For example, in the Armstrongite movement, a common discussion topic at church meals was "When did you come into the knowledge of the Truth?". And, by this, they mean Armstrongism, not Christianity. I understand SDAs use the same language, and so do a lot of cultic groups.