Congregational churches are
Protestant Christian churches practicing
Congregationalist church governance, in which each
congregation independently and autonomously runs its own affairs.
Many Congregational churches claim their descent from the original Congregational churches, a family of Protestant
denominations formed on a theory of union published by the theologian
Robert Browne in 1592. They arose from the
Nonconformist religious movement in England during the
Puritan reformation of the Church of England. In
Great Britain, the early congregationalists were called
separatists or
independents to distinguish themselves from the similarly
Calvinistic Presbyterians. Some congregationalists there still call themselves "Independents".
Congregational churches became widely established in the Massachusetts Bay Colony, later New England. The model of Congregational churches was carried by migrating settlers from New England into New York and the Northwest: Ohio, Indiana, Michigan and Illinois. With their insistence on the independence of local bodies, they became important in many reform movements, including those for
abolition of slavery, and women's
suffrage. As of the early 21st century, Congregationalism in the U.S. had split into three major bodies: the
United Church of Christ, which most local Congregational churches affiliated with, the
National Association of Congregational Christian Churches, a fellowship of churches and individuals formed to continue and foster classic Congregationalism as the merger that created the UCC was being debated, and the
Conservative Congregational Christian Conference, an evangelical group.
Origins
According to the congregationalist understanding of the history of the Christian Church, the early disciples of Jesus had little or no organization. Congregationalists believe that in the centuries after the spread of Christianity, leaders in centers like
Rome,
Antioch,
Alexandria,
Byzantium, and
Jerusalem attempted to gain influence over all the churches in certain regions by creating hierarchy and structure. Typically, congregationalists viewed this accumulation of power to be complete by the year AD 1000, with the bishop of Rome claiming authority over all Christendom. Many churches throughout the western part of Europe submitted to his authority.
The churches of eastern Europe, all of Asia, and Egypt likewise had been gathered under hierarchies of bishops, but retained independence from the Pope, according to this view.
Congregationalists sympathetically interpreted various dissident movements among the western churches, which were suppressed throughout the Middle Ages. By the sixteenth century, political and cultural changes had created a climate in which men such as
John Wycliffe,
John Hus,
Martin Luther, and
John Calvin sought change, with new ideas about the relationship of individual men to God. This influenced what they saw as the power of people without priests to intercede between them and God, the need for the people to read and interpret the Bible, and correction of distortions from original Christian thinking, as well as their protests against
church abuses. These reformers advocated a return to the simplicity and authenticity they believed was described in the
New Testament Church. Congregationalists believe their model of church governance fulfills the description of the early church and allows people the most direct relationship with God.
Congregationalism is more easily identified as a movement than a single denomination, given its distinguishing commitment to the complete autonomy of the local congregation. The idea that each distinct congregation fully constitutes the visible Body of the church can, however, be traced to
John Wyclif and the
Lollard movement, which followed Wyclif's removal from teaching authority in the
Roman Catholic Church.
The early Congregationalists shared with
Anabaptist theology the ideal of a pure church. They believed the adult conversion experience was necessary for an individual to become a full member in the church, unlike other
Reformed churches. As such, the Congregationalists were a reciprocal influence on the
Baptists. They differed in counting the children of believers in some sense members of the church. On the other hand, the Baptists required each member to experience conversion, followed by
baptism.
In England, the episcopal system of church government was taken over by the king,
Henry VIII. Influenced by movements for reform and by his desire to legitimize his marriage to
Anne Boleyn in 1533 (without the blessing of the Pope in Rome) after divorcing his first wife
Catherine of Aragon, Henry's government influenced Parliament to enact the 1st
Act of Supremacy in 1534. It declared the reigning sovereign of England to be 'the only supreme head on earth of the Church in England.' In the reign of Elizabeth I, this title was changed to Supreme Governor of the Church of England, an act still in effect. The Church of England replace Catholicism as the established state religion.
Robert Browne,
Henry Barrow,
John Greenwood,
John Penry,
William Brewster, and
John Robinson were notable people who established dissenting churches separate from the Church of England. In 1639
William Wroth, then
Rector of the parish church at
Llanvaches in
Monmouthshire, established the first
Independent Church in
Wales "according to the New England pattern", i.e. Congregational. The Taberacle
United Reformed Church at Llanvaches survives to this day.
With the demise of the monarchy, the
Westminster Confession of Faith (1646) was officially declared the statement of faith for both the Church of England (Anglican) and Church of Scotland (Presbyterian). In 1658 the Congregationalists created their own version of the Westminster Confession, called the
Savoy Declaration. The underground churches in England and exiles from Holland provided about 35 out of the 102 passengers on the
Mayflower, which sailed from
London in July 1620. They became known in history as the Pilgrim Fathers. The early Congregationalists sought to separate themselves from the Anglican church in every possible way and even forwent having church buildings. They met in homes for many years.
Congregational Christian Churches in Canada
The Congregational Christian Churches in Canada (or 4Cs) is an evangelical, Protestant, Christian denomination, headquartered in Brantford, Ont., and a member of the World Evangelical Congregational Fellowship. The name "congregational" generally describes its preferred organizational style, which promotes local church autonomy and ownership, while fostering fellowship and accountability between churches at the National level.
Currently, the 4Cs is led by a National Board of Directors, representing different areas of the country and coordinated by the Chairman and the National Pastor who give spiritual oversight to the broader Church. The denomination meets annually at a National Conference, which confirms a new location (West, Maritimes or Central Canada) for the following year.
The roots of Congregational Christianity can be traced back to the Protestant Reformation in England. Congregational Churches were established in the New World by non-Conformist Christians, some of these arriving (in what would become Canada) out of roots in New England. The revivals of the Great Awakening also contributed to the spread of congregational style and ministry.
As a name, the movement was probably better known (and understood) in the 19th Century in Canada, but many Congregational churches voted to join with Methodists and Presbyterians to form the United Church of Canada in 1925, and the term "congregational" fell into disuse. The remnant of churches still congregational in polity were concentrated in Southern Ontario, and were known as the "Ontario Christian Churches". Officially, these churches affiliated with the Conservative Congregational Christian Conference in the United States in 1965, but retained their independence as a separate Conference.
In 1988, with the advance of theological liberalism within the United Church of Canada, a group of conscientious objectors who had left that denomination, began looking for ways in which to cultivate their evangelical Christian faith, and to affiliate with others of like mind. This group became aware of the Ontario Christian Churches, and began the process of joining with them. Out of these discussions, a new organization was formed: The Congregational Christian Churches in Canada.
Today, the 4Cs represent a family of about 75 churches across Canada committed to the Gospel of Jesus Christ— both its Great Commands and Great Commission. The 4Cs is a member of the Evangelical Fellowship of Canada. Its congregations have a strong desire to work hand-in-hand with committed Christians of other denominations, and have a growing interest in evangelism, church planting, and both global and local mission projects. They are varied in worship style, and in local focus, but are united in a common Biblical creed, and in fellowship with one another.
Their national website is: www.cccc.ca
United States
right|thumb|175px|A Congregational church in Michigan (1880)./" class="wiki">Detroit,
Michigan (1880).
right|thumb|175px|A Congregational church in Ceredo, West Virginia.
The
Pilgrims sought to establish at
Plymouth Colony a Christian fellowship like that which gathered around Jesus himself. Congregationalists include the
Pilgrims of
Plymouth, and the
Puritans of the
Massachusetts Bay Colony, which were organized in union by
the Cambridge Platform in 1648. These settlers had
John Cotton as their most influential leader, beginning in 1633. Cotton's writings persuaded the
Calvinist theologian
John Owen to separate from the
Presbyterian church. He became very influential in the development of Congregationalist theology and ideas of church government.
Jonathan Edwards, considered by some to be the most important theologian produced in the United States, was also a Congregationalist.
The history of Congregational churches in the United States is closely intertwined with that of American
Presbyterianism, especially in New England where Congregationalist influence spilled over into Presbyterian churches farther west. Some of the first colleges and universities in America, including
Harvard,
Yale,
Dartmouth,
Williams,
Bowdoin,
Middlebury, and
Amherst, all were founded by the Congregationalists, as were later
Carleton,
Grinnell,
Oberlin, and
Pomona.
Without higher courts to ensure doctrinal uniformity among the congregations, Congregationalists have been more diverse than other
Reformed churches. Despite the efforts of Calvinists to maintain the dominance of their system, some Congregational churches, especially in the older settlements of New England, gradually developed leanings toward
Arminianism,
Unitarianism,
Deism, and
transcendentalism.
By the 1750s, several Congregational preachers were teaching the possibility of
universal salvation, an issue that caused considerable conflict among its adherents on the one side and hard-line Calvinists and sympathizers of the
First Great Awakening on the other. In another strain of change, the first church in the United States with an openly
Unitarian theology, the belief in the single personality of God, was established in
Boston, Massachusetts in 1785 (in a former
Anglican parish.) By 1800, all but one Congregational church in Boston had
Unitarian preachers teaching the
strict unity of God, the subordinate nature of Christ, and salvation by character.
Harvard University, founded by Congregationalists, became a center of
Unitarian training. Prompted by a controversy over an appointment in the theology school at Harvard, in 1825 the Unitarian churches separated from Congregationalism. Most of the Unitarian "descendants" hold membership in the
Unitarian Universalist Association, founded in the 1960s by a merger with the theologically similar
Universalists. This group had dissented from Calvinist orthodoxy on the basis of their belief that all persons could find salvation (as opposed to the Calvinist idea of
double predestination, excluding some from salvation.)
Congregational churches were at the same time the first example of the American
theocratic ideal and also the seedbed from which American liberal religion and society arose. Many Congregationalists in the several successor denominations to the original tradition consider themselves to be
Reformed first, whether of traditional or
neo-orthodox persuasion.
In 1931 the Congregational Churches and the General Convention of the Christian Church, a body from the
Restoration Movement tradition of the early 19th century, merged to form the
Congregational Christian Churches. The Congregationalists were used to a more formal, less evangelistic form of worship than Christian Church members, who mostly came from rural areas of the
South and the
Midwest. Both groups, however, held to local autonomy and eschewed binding creedal authority.
In the early 20th century some Congregational (later Congregational Christian) churches took exception to the beginnings of a growth of regional or national authority in bodies outside the local church, such as mission societies, national committees, and state conferences. Some congregations opposed liberalizing influences that appeared to mitigate traditional views of sin and corollary doctrines such as the
substitutionary atonement of Jesus. In 1948, some adherents of these two streams of thought (mainly the latter one) started a new fellowship, the
Conservative Congregational Christian Conference (CCCC). It was the first major fellowship to organize outside of the mainstream Congregational body since 1825, when the
Unitarians formally founded their own body.
In 1957, the General Council of Congregational Christian Churches in the U.S. merged with the
Evangelical and Reformed Church to form the
United Church of Christ. About 90% of the CC congregations affiliated with the General Council joined the United Church of Christ. Some churches abstained from the merger while others voted it down. Most of the latter congregations became members of either the CCCC (mentioned above) or the
National Association of Congregational Christian Churches. The latter was formed by churches and people who objected to the UCC merger because of concerns that the new national church and its regional bodies represented extra-congregational authorities that would interfere with a congregation's right to govern itself. Thus, the NACCC includes congregations of a variety of theological positions. Still other congregations chose not to affiliate with any particular association of churches, or only with regional or local ones.
Mergers in other countries
Argentina
The mission to Argentina was the second foreign field tended by German Congregationalists. The work in South America began in 1921, when four Argentine churches urgently requested that denominational recognition be given George Geier, who was serving them. The Illinois Conference licensed Geier, who worked among Russia Germans who were alike in every way to those in the United States and in Canada. The South American Germans from Russia had learned about Congregationalism in letters from relatives in the United States.
In 1924 general missionary John Hoelzer, in Argentina for a brief visit, organized six churches.
Australia
In 1977, most congregations of the
Congregational Union of Australia merged with all Churches of the
Methodist Church of Australasia and a majority of Churches of the
Presbyterian Church of Australia to form the
Uniting Church in Australia. Those congregations that did not join the Uniting Church formed the
Fellowship of Congregational Churches or continued as Presbyterians. Some more
ecumenically minded Congregationalists left the Fellowship of Congregational Churches in 1995 and formed the
Congregational Federation of Australia.
Canada
In Canada, the first foreign field, thirty-one churches that had been affiliated with the General Conference became part of the United Church of Canada when that denomination came into being. In 1925, the
United Church of Canada was founded by the merger of the Canadian Congregationalist and
Methodist churches, and two-thirds of the congregations of the
Presbyterian Church of Canada (or in French, Église Presbyterienne du Canada). In 1988, a number of UCC congregations separated from the national church, which they felt was moving away theologically and in practice from Biblical Christianity. Many of the former UCC congregations banded together as the new
Congregational Christian Churches in Canada.
Ireland
The Congregational Union of Ireland was founded in the early 1800s and currently has 29 member churches.
Samoa
The
Christian Congregational Church of Samoa is the largest group of churches throughout the Pacific Ocean, founded by John Williams on the Island of Savaii, the church grew and built theological colleges in Samoa and Fiji. Today there are over 2,000 congregations throughout the world, most of which are located in Samoa, American Samoa, New Zealand, Australia and America. The
Christian Congregational Church of Jamaica fall under the constitution of the Samoan Church.
United Kingdom
In 1972, about three quarters of English Congregational churches merged with the
Presbyterian Church of England to form the
United Reformed Church (URC). However about six hundred Congregational churches have continued in their historic independent tradition. Under the Act of Parliament that authorised the merger between what had become by then the Congregational Church of England and Wales and the Presbyterian Church of England, certain assets were divided between the various parties.
In England there are three main groups of continuing Congregationalists. These are the
Congregational Federation, which has offices in Nottingham, the
Evangelical Fellowship of Congregational Churches, and about 100 Congregational churches that are loosely federated with other congregations in the
Fellowship of Independent Evangelical Churches, or are unaffiliated.
In 1981, the URC merged with the Re-formed Association of Churches of Christ and, in 2000, just over half of the churches in the
Congregational Union of Scotland also joined the URC. The remainder of Congregational churches in Scotland joined the Congregational Federation.
Wales traditionally is the part of Europe which has the largest share of Congregationalists among the population, most Congregationalists being members of
Undeb yr Annibynwyr Cymraeg (the Union of Welsh Independents), which is particularly important in
Carmarthenshire and
Brecknockshire. Among its leaders up to the end of the 20th century was
R Tudur Jones.
The Congregational Federation,
, and the URC enjoy good relations and share certain aspects of church life together including their joint involvement in the
Council for World Mission.
Mission
The
London Missionary Society was effectively the world mission arm of British Congregationalists - it sponsored missionaries including
Eric Liddell and
David Livingstone.
As thinking developed, particularly in the context of decolonisation, and churches wanted to recognise the gifts of people of the South, the London Missionary Society transformed into the
Council for World Mission - an organisation in which the United Reformed Church is no more important than the
Church of South India (for example).
See also