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Congregationalism (also Congregationalist churches or Congregational churches) is a Reformed (Calvinist) tradition of Protestant Christianity in which churches practice congregational government. Each congregation independently and autonomously runs its own affairs.
Communion of Evangelical Episcopal Churches; Communion of Reformed Evangelical Churches; Congregational Christian Churches in Canada; Congregational Methodist Church; Convention of Southern Baptist Churches in Puerto Rico; Converge (United States) Costa Rican Evangelical Presbyterian Church
German Evangelical Immanuel Congregational Church: 1927 built 2005 NRHP-listed 209 Everett St. Brush, Colorado: Late Gothic Revival First Congregational Church (Colorado Springs, Colorado) 1889 built 2002 NRHP-listed
The First Congregational Church of Marietta, Ohio, gathered in 1796, is the oldest Congregational church in the region. [67] In 1798, the Connecticut General Association created the Connecticut Missionary Society to provide for the religious needs of the new settlements. Between 1798 and 1818, the society sent 148 ministers to the frontier ...
Marlborough Congregational Church; Merryall Union Evangelical Society Chapel; Methodist Episcopal Church (Greenwich, Connecticut) Metropolitan African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church; Mount Carmel Congregational Church and Parish House
The Evangelical Association of Reformed and Congregational Christian Churches is an evangelical protestant denomination in the United States. [3] It began as a fellowship of churches disaffected from the United Church of Christ [ 4 ] due to that denomination's liberal theology. [ 5 ]
The World Evangelical Congregational Fellowship (WECF) is a global association of evangelical Christian Congregational Churches, from various national associations around the world, which is united by a common belief in the lordship of Jesus Christ and the authority of the Bible, as well as by its common desire for evangelism.
The church spread to various parts of the United States. In 1894 the Esher-Dubbs dispute occurred and 1/3 of the church left to form the United Evangelical Church. In 1923, most of the disputing congregations returned and the church was renamed the Evangelical Church. The remaining churches became the Evangelical Congregational Church.