First let me say I am surprised at the number of views this post has received yet without anything close to the answer.Before telling that answer and where I found it, I want to say that the little that my dad and my former pastor, Bro TV Burroughs recalled was accurate, though limited.Dad thought that Bro James L Slay was on the committee, and possibly the chair, which was correct. He also thought Bro James Cross was on the committee, and that also was correct. He didn't have a guess as to when it was adopted, but Bro Burroughs this past Sunday told me that for some reason he thought he recalled it being adopted in 1948. That too was correct.I just got off the phone with a fellow, last name Mills, at Dixon Pentecostal Research.He confirmed the above and gave me the full list ofmembers of the committee:James L Slay, chairmanEarl PaulkGlenn PetijohnJ L GowinsJames CrossPaul H WalkerR P JohnsonE M EllisR C MuncyIn our discussion I noted that much earlier the church had taken the firm position that the Church of God would have no creed, but allow scripture, rightly divided, to settle all these questions about 'what do you folks believe'?He told me that the Declaration of Faith was constructed in order for the CoG to become aligned with the National Association of Evangelicals. It was their requirement that any member denomination affirm certain specifics about what it meant to be Christian.I didn't think to ask him if we were the only ones who also passed a resolution requiring the DoF be displayed in every sanctuary, nor did I think to ask when that requirement went away.******************A little rabbit trail from that is in the following personal experience.A friend at work once asked me what denomination I was. I told him Church of God. (He was southern Baptist) And he responded, So y'all think you are the only ones going to Heaven, right?I told him, Shoot, we don't even think most of us are going.Then I told him he was confusing us with Church of Christ.I only recently learned that Baptists dis-fellowshipped R G Spurling for his rejection of Landmarkism, an ecclesiology which held that only churches descending from churches with Baptist doctrine were true Church and that they should not associate with Christians of other traditions.I have always found it interesting that one thing eternal security would not cover, is if the believer received the baptism of the Holy Ghost with the initial evidence of speaking in tongues. When several of the women in the women's prayer group at Mt Pisgah Baptist church (including my maternal grandmother) received, they too were dis-fellowshipped.