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The Symbol
of the Church Of God In Christ
  
The Symbol of
the Church Of God In Christ is an outgrowth of the Presiding
Bishop's Coat of Arms which has become quite familiar to the
Church. The design of the Official Seal of the Church was
created in 1973 and adopted in the General Assembly in 1981
(April Session).
The obvious
GARNERED WHEAT in the center of the seal represents all of
the people of the Church Of God In Christ, Inc. The ROPE
of wheat which holds the shaft together represents the Founding
Father of the Church, Bishop Charles Harrison Mason, who, at the
call of the Lord, banded us together as a Brotherhood of
Churches in the First Pentecostal General Assembly of the
Church, in 1907.
The date in
the seal has a two-fold purpose; Firstly, to tell us that Bishop
Mason received the baptism of the Holy Ghost in March 1907; and,
Secondly, to tell us that it was because of this outpouring that
Bishop Mason was compelled to call us together in November of
1907, to organize the Church Of God In Christ.
The RAIN
in the background represents the Latter Rain or the End-time
Revivals which brought about the emergence of our Church along
with other Pentecostal Holiness Bodies in the same era. The rain
also serves as a challenge to the Church to keep Christ in the
center of our worship and service, so that He may continue to
use the Church Of God In Christ as one of the vehicles of
Pentecostal Revival before the return of the Lord.
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