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A
Congregational Church is a type of
Protestant church organization in which each congregation,
or local church, has free control of its own affairs. The underlying
principle is that each local congregation has as its head Jesus alone
and that the relations of the various congregations are those of
fellow members in one common family of God. Congregationalism
eliminated bishops and presbyteries. |
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Defined
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History of the
Movement
The movement to which the name came to be applied began in the 16th
and 17th cent. in England in a revolt against the Established Church.
Robert
Browne published in 1582 the first theoretical exposition of
Congregational principles and expressed the position of some of those
separatists. Churches established on such lines were started very
early in the 17th cent. in Gainsborough and Scrooby, but government
opposition drove them into exile in Holland. |
Robert Browne |
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Not until the
Protectorate did the Congregationalists make much progress. About that
time the name
Independents was first introduced, a term long common in Great
Britain (it is still used in Wales) but seldom used in America. In
1658, when the Savoy Synod met in London, over 100 churches were
represented. With the Restoration came repression for the
Independents, partly relieved by the Toleration Act of 1689.
A marked tendency among
English Congregationalists in the 19th cent. was toward combination in
larger fellowship. Churches of this denomination formed a union in
Scotland in 1812 and in Ireland in 1829; in 1831 the Congregational
Union of England and Wales was established. The Congregational Union
and the Evangelical Union were united in 1896. Membership in
Congregational churches in Great Britain has declined in the 20th
cent. Congregationalists have been active in ecumenical activities,
and in 1972 most British Congregationalists and Presbyterians merged
to form the United Reform Church.
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In Great Britain |
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In America |
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Jonathan Edwards |
Congregationalism was
carried to America in 1620 by the Pilgrims, who were members of John
Robinson's congregation in Holland, originally of Scrooby, England. In
America, Congregationalism reached its greatest public influence and
largest membership. In New England numerous communities were
established based on Congregational-type religious principles. In 1648
in the
Cambridge Platform a summary of principles of church government
and discipline was drawn up. Congregationalists took a leading part in
the
Great Awakening that, in New England, was started in 1734 by the
preaching of Jonathan
Edwards. As the country expanded, Congregational churches were
established in the newly opened frontier regions. |
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Congregational churches began to meet in local and then in statewide
conferences, out of which developed (1871) the National Council of the
Congregational Churches of the United States. But each local church
remained free to make its own declaration of faith and free to decide
its own form of worship; in the conduct of the local church each
member was granted an equal voice. The principal assistants of the
pastor are the deacons. In education Congregationalists were always
prominent, but the institutions of their founding–Harvard, Yale,
Williams, Amherst, Oberlin, and many others–have generally been free
from sectarianism. |

The Great
Awakening |
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In 1810 the American Board of
Commissioners for Foreign Missions began its work; in 1826 the
American Home Missionary Society was formed. These were followed
in 1846 by the American Missionary Association, primarily devoted to
missionary work among African Americans and Native Americans. The
early part of the 19th cent. brought the Unitarian secession, when
over 100 churches left the main Congregational body.
The trend toward broader
fellowship and larger cooperation was notably indicated in the merging
in 1931 of the National Council of the Congregational Churches of the
United States and the General Convention of the Christian Church (see
Christian Church (Disciples of Christ)) to form the General
Council of the Congregational and Christian Churches of the United
States. A move to unite the Congregational Christian Churches with the
Evangelical and Reformed Church was approved by the councils of the
two denominations in 1957, forming the
United Church of Christ. The National Association of
Congregational Christian Churches was formed in 1955 by churches that
chose not to join in the merger; it had about 70,000 members in 1997. |
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See W. Walker, The
Creeds and Platforms of Congregationalism (1907, repr. 1960); A. A.
Rouner, Jr., The Congregational Way of Life (1960); H. Davies, The
English Free Churches (2d ed. 1963); M. L. Starkey, The Congregational
Way (1966). |
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Bibliography |
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John Robinson's Farewell
Letter to the Pilgrims
This letter was written by
John Robinson, the pastor of the Pilgrims church in Leiden.
Since a majority of the church remained behind in Leiden, he
made the very difficult decision to stay and minister to those
remaining in Holland rather than come on the Mayflower.
He planned to come to America as soon as he could get more of
his church over, but his untimely death in 1626 prevented his
ever making it to the New World. He wrote this farewell letter,
which was read by John Carver to the Pilgrims gathered aboard
the Mayflower just prior to their first
attempted departure on August 5, 1620. This letter had a
profound influence on many of the Pilgrims, and the astute
reader will see that some of the concepts and wording even made
its way into the
Mayflower Compact.
Loving and Christian Friends,
I do heartily and in the Lord salute you all as being they
with whom I am present in my best affection, and most earnest
longings after you. Though I be constrained for a while to be
bodily absent from you. I say constrained, God knowing how
willingly and much rather than otherwise, I would have borne
my part with you in this first brunt, where I not by strong
necessity held back for the present. Make account of me in the
meanwhile as of a man divided in myself with great pain, and
as (natural bonds set aside) having my better part with you.
And though I doubt not but in your godly wisdoms you both
foresee and resolve upon that which concerneth your present
state and condition, both severally and jointly, yet have I
thought it but my duty to add some further spur of provocation
unto them who run already; if not because you need it, yet
because I owe it in love and duty. And first, as we are daily
to renew our repentance with our God, especially for our sins
known, and generally for our unknown trespasses; so doth the
Lord call us in a singular manner upon occasions of such
difficulty and danger sa lieth upon you, to a both more narrow
search and careful reformation of your ways in His sight; let
He, calling to remembrance our sins forgotten by us or
unrepented of, take advantage against us, and in judgment
leave us for the same to be swallowed up in one danger or
other. Whereas, on the contrary, sin being taken away by
earnest repentance and the pardon thereof from the Lord,
sealed up unto a man's conscience by His Spirit, great shall
be his security and peace in all dangers, sweet his comforts
in all distresses, with happy deliverance from all evil,
whether in live or in death.
Now, next after this heavenly peace with God and our own
consciences, we are carefully to provide for peace with all
men what in us lieth, especially with our associates. And for
that, watchfulness must be had that we neither at all in
ourselves do give, no, nor easily take offense being given by
others. Woe be unto the world for offenses, for though it be
necessary (considering the malice of Satan and man's
corruption) that offenses come, yet woe unto the man, or woman
either, by whom the offense cometh, saith Christ, Matthew
18:7. And if offenses in the unseasonable use of things, in
themselves indifferent, be more to the feared than death
itself (as the Apostle teacheth, 1 Corinthians 9:15) how much
more in things simply evil, in which neither honor of God nor
love of man is thought worthy to be regarded. Neither yet is
it sufficient that we keep ourselves by the grace of God from
giving offense, except withal we be armed against the taking
of them when they be given by others. For how unperfect and
lame is the work of grace in that person who wants charity to
cover a multitude of offenses, as the Scriptures speak!
Neither are you to be exhorted to this grace only upon the
common grounds of Christianity, which are, that persons ready
to take offense either want charity to cover offenses, or
wisdom duly to weigh human frailty; or lastly, are gross,
though close hypocrites as Christ our Lord teacheth (Matthew
7:1,2,3), as indeed in my own experience few or none have been
found which sooner give
offense than such as easily take it. Neither have they ever
proved sound and profitable members in societies, which have
nourished this touchy humor.
But besides these, there are divers motives provoking you
above others to great care and conscience this way: As first,
you are many of you strangers, as to the persons so to the
infirmities one of another, and so stand in need of more
watchfulness this way, lest when such things fall out in men
and women as you suspected not, you be inordinately affected
with them; which doth require at your hands much wisdom and
charity for the covering and preventing of incident offenses
that way. And, lastly, your intended course of civil community
will minister continual occasion of offense, and will be as
fuel for that fire, except you diligently quench it with
brotherly forbearance. And if taking of offense causelessly or
easily at men's doings be so carefully to be avoided, how much
more heed is to be taken that we take not offense at God
Himself, which yet we certainly do so oft as we do murmur at
His providence in our crosses, or bear impatiently such
afflictions as wherewith He pleaseth to visit us. Store up,
therefore, patience against that evil day, without which we
take offense at the Lord Himself in His holy and just works.
A fourth thing there is carefully to be provided for, to wit,
that with your common employments you join common affections
truly bent upon the general good, avoiding deadly plague of
your both common and special comfort all retiredness of mind
for proper advantage, and all singularly affected any manner
of way. Let ever man repress in himself and the whole body in
each person, as so many rebels against the common good, all
private respects of men's selves, not sorting with the general
conveniency. And as men are careful not to have a new house
shaken with any violence before it be well settled and the
parts firmly knit, so be you, I beseech you, brethren, much
more careful that the house of God, which you are and are to
be, be not shaken with unnecessary novelties or other
oppositions at the first settling thereof.
Lastly, whereas you are become a body politic, using amongst
yourselves civil government, and are not furnished with any
persons of special eminency above the rest, to be chosen by
you into office of government; let your wisdom and godliness
appear, not only in choosing such persons as do entirely love
and will promote the common good, but also in yielding unto
them all due honor and obedience in their lawful
administrations, not beholding in them the ordinariness of
their persons, but God's ordinance for your good; not being
like the foolish multitude who more honor the gay coat than
either the virtuous mind of the man, or glorious ordinance of
the Lord. But you know better things, and that the image of
the Lord's power and authority which the magistrate beareth,
is honorable, in how means persons soever. And this duty you
both may the more willingly and ought the more conscionably to
perform, because you are at least for the present to have only
them for your ordinary governors, which yourselves shall make
choice of for that work.
Sundry other things of importance I could put you in mind of,
and of those before mentioned in more words, but I will not so
far wrong your godly minds as to think you heedless of these
things, there being also divers among you so well able to
admonish both themselves and others of what concerneth them.
These few things therefore, and the same in few words I do
earnestly commend unto your care and conscience, joining
therewith my daily incessant prayers unto the Lord, that He
who hath made the heavens and the earth, the sea and all
rivers of water, and whose providence is over all His works,
especially over all His dear children for good, would so guide
and guard you in your ways, as inwardly by His Spirit, so
outwardly by the hand of His power, as that both you and we
also, for and with you, may have after matter of praising His
name all the days of your and our lives. Fare you well in Him
in whom you trust, and in whom I rest.
An unfeigned wellwiller of your happy success in this hopeful
voyage,
John Robinson
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The Valley of Vision
Lord,
high and holy, meek and lowly, Thou hast brought me to the
valley of vision, where I live in the depths but see Thee in
the heights; hemmed in by mountains of sin I behold Thy glory.
Let me learn by paradox that the way down is the way up, that
to be low is to be high, that the broken heart is the healed
heart, that the contrite spirit is the rejoicing spirit, that
the repenting soul is the victorious soul, that to have
nothing is to possess all, that to bear the cross is to wear
the crown, that to give is to receive, that the valley is the
place of vision. Lord, in the daytime stars can be seen from
deepest wells, and the deeper the wells the brighter Thy stars
shine; let me find Thy light in my darkness, Thy life in my
death, Thy joy in my sorrow, Thy grace in my sin, Thy riches
in my poverty, Thy glory in my valley.
Taken from The Valley of Vision:
A Collection of
Puritan Prayers & Devotions,
edited
by Arthur Bennett. Reformatted by Eternal Life Ministries.
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