A History of Christian Denominations
By the Rev. Martin R.
Noland, Ph.D., version 2019
Introduction - This
essay is an attempt to explain in a brief way the historic origins of the
denominations of the Christian church that exist today. It was originally designed for my adult Bible
class group in Oak Park, Illinois, and first presented and discussed in the
Fall of 1991. Since then it has gone
through several revisions, and also been posted on the Internet by various
persons with my permission. I formerly
accompanied the essay with a chart that explains the taxonomy of denominations,
but the charts on Wikipedia are more accurate than my 1991 chart, so I refer
the reader to those charts at: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_denomination#Taxonomy
I. 49 AD - Council of Jerusalem (Acts 15:1-29; Gal 2:6-9) The leaders of the church
discussed the issue of the authority of the Old Testament Law for the Gentiles.
The presence of Paul and Peter preserved Jesus’ teaching. The result of the
council was the division of the Church into a Jewish-Palestinian church and
Gentile-mission churches. Gentile-mission churches were under the authority of
their founding apostle. Paul was the founder of Asian and Greek churches.
II. 50-100 AD - Apostolic Missions. The Twelve Apostles followed Paul’s example and
started mission churches: Peter in Rome, John in Ephesus, Andrew in Scythia,
Philip in Phrygia, Bartholomew in Armenia, Thomas in India, Matthew in
Mesopotamia, Simon the Zealot in Parthia, the lesser James in Arabia, Thaddeus
in Edessa, and Matthias in Egypt. Paul planned to start a church in Spain,
possibly in Gaul. The Jewish-Palestinian church ceased with the destruction of
Jerusalem in 70 AD. Palestine was thereafter off-limits to the Jews, and the
Christian Church was entirely Gentile, though it contained many families of
Jewish ancestry.
III. 100-313 AD - Roman Persecutions and Gnostic
Heretics. There were ten major
persecutions of Christians from Nero (64) to Diocletian (303). Theological
issues centered on the doctrine of the Trinity and Christology. The heretics
known as “Gnostics” claimed to have an authoritative oral tradition from the
apostles, which re-interpreted the apostolic writings (i.e., the New
Testament). In response to the Gnostic threat, Irenaeus (100-200), Bishop of
Lyons, Gaul, asserted the authority of the New Testament books over any other
writings or oral tradition, an argument later used by Augustine and Luther.
Cyprian (200-250), Bishop of Carthage, North Africa, asserted that the bishops
have the same Holy Spirit given to the apostles, and they are therefore the
authoritative interpreters of the Bible to preserve the church from schismatics
and heretics. Cyprian’s thought became the basis of the “episcopal” system of
church government.
IV. 313-381 AD – Organization of the Roman Imperial
Church under Constantine. The Arians,
who denied Jesus’ divinity and asserted that he was only a teacher of morality,
attempted to gain control of the church. The Arians were opposed by Athanasius,
Bishop of Alexandria, Egypt, whose orthodox Christology was officially adopted
at the Council of Nicaea (325). That
council adopted the original Creed of Nicaea, which was revised at the next
council, held at Constantinople (381), into the version called the
“Nicene–Constantinopolitan Creed.” The
version of 381 is commonly known today as the “Nicene Creed” and is the only
creed accepted by the Roman Catholic Church, the Eastern Orthodox Churches, the
“Oriental Orthodox” churches, the Church of the East, and much of Protestantism
including the Anglican communion. The
Apostles and Athanasian Creeds are not as widely accepted. The Roman Empire was
divided into church dioceses, with archbishops at Rome, Carthage, Thessalonica,
Constantinople, Nicomedia, Antioch, Jerusalem, and Alexandria.
V. 381-450 AD – Period of Christological
Controversies. The Church argued
about how Jesus could be both divine and human. Nestorius taught that Jesus was
actually two separate persons, one divine, one human, sharing one body. The
council of Ephesus (431) condemned Nestorius and his doctrine. As a result,
Nestorius’ followers in the far-eastern churches separated from the Roman
Imperial Church. The Nestorian churches included the Persian, Assyrian and
Arabian churches, all under the political influence of the kingdom of Parthia,
which was not part of the Roman Empire. The bishop of the Nestorian churches
became known as the “Catholicos-Patriarch of the East” and was the head of “The
Church of the East.” After its schism with the Roman-Imperial church, this
church sent missionaries to India, Ceylon, Burma, Thailand, Indochina, and as
far as northwest China in the seventh century AD. In 845 AD, Chinese emperor
Wu-Tsung persecuted, executed, or exiled all of the Christians in China.
Similar persecutions over the centuries by Hindu or Buddhist emperors in the
eastern part of Asia reduced the Church of the East to isolated pockets of the
faithful.
VI. 450-680 AD – Decline of the Roman Empire. After the fall of Rome in 410, both Church and State
slowly disintegrated. The Christological definition of the Council of Chalcedon
(450) was rejected by the churches on the outskirts of the Empire for political
reasons, and the Roman State was too weak to enforce the definition.
Non-Chalcedonian churches which left the Roman Imperial Church at this time
included those in Armenia, Syria, Egypt (i.e., the Coptic Church), Ethiopia,
and India (i.e., the Mar Thoma church of the Apostle Thomas). As a group, these
non-Chalcedonian churches are known today as the “Oriental Orthodox Churches”
or “miaphysites.” The term “Orthodoxy”
was originally used to distinguish those churches which followed Chalcedon, as
opposed to the non-Chalcedonian and Nestorian churches which did not. The Roman
Imperial Church lost territory and arch-episcopal sees to the Moslems from
630-690 at Alexandria, Jerusalem, Antioch, and Carthage.
VII. 680-1415 AD- The Middle Ages. The Sixth Ecumenical Council of Constantinople (680)
rejected Pope Honorius the First’s claim of papal infallibility because he
supported the mono-theletic error, i.e., that Christ had two natures but only
one will. The Council also declared Pope
Honorius to be a heretic. The Western churches, under the leadership of the
Pope, then seceded from the Eastern Imperial Church with the support of the
European-barbarian tribes. “Orthodox Christianity” was now divided into East,
i.e., the Byzantine Empire and Eastern Orthodox Churches, and West, i.e., the
Holy Roman Empire and the Roman Catholic Church. Due to the loss of the
traditional archbishoprics, the remaining arch-bishopric at Constantinople
became the spiritual head of all the Eastern Orthodox churches. Thus known as
“The Ecumenical Patriarch,” the archbishop of Constantinople sent missionaries
and founded churches in Russia, among the Slavs, and the Balkan areas. These
churches were later granted their own archbishops, and so became the Russian
Orthodox Church, Ukranian Orthodox Church, etc. The Ecumenical Patriarch and
the Christians of the Byzantine church came under Moslem subjugation in 1453
with the fall of Constantinople. From 1453-1830, the Patriarch was chosen by
the Moslem-Turkish sultan, thus diminishing his ecumenical authority. Following
the war of Greek independence in the 1820’s, the Ecumenical Patriarch once
again achieved his former position of leadership over the Eastern Orthodox
churches throughout the world.
The Western church, under the spiritual head of the Bishop
of Rome (i.e., the Pope), followed its own course of development. Pope Gregory the Great (pope 590-604) had
written about the doctrine of purgatory in his Dialogues, where he recounted the story of a priest who met a ghost
at Tauriana. The ghost told the priest
that saying Masses for the dead would eventually release him from
purgatory. This story was accepted as
the justification for the distinctly Roman Catholic idea of using the Lord’s
Supper to advance the souls of the dead through purgatory. Although there were monks and monasteries in
the early church and the Eastern Orthodox churches, the distinctly Roman
Catholic idea of monks, monasteries, and religious orders developed at the
Benedictine Abbey at Cluny in the forests of Burgundy in France, founded in
910. At Cluny, the idea of monastic life
was that the monk would not be involved in physical labor, but only “spiritual
labor,” especially in saying prayers and Masses for the living and the
dead. The idea of monasticism, as it
developed at Cluny, came to dominate the entire Western church during the time
of Pope Leo IX (pope 1049-1054) through Pope Gregory VII (pope 1073-1085). Both were “Cluniac” popes. Pope Leo IX was responsible for the Great
Schism in 1054, in which Eastern and Western churches became enemies due to
Pope Leo IX’s orders to excommunicate the eastern Ecumenical Patriarch, and
thus all of the Christians under his care.
Pope Gregory VII was responsible for excommunicating the Holy Roman
Emperor Henry IV three times (1076, 1080, and 1084), thus establishing in real
terms the absolute political power of the pope over all rulers on earth. Pope Gregory VII was also responsible for
creating the cardinal-election system that made the papacy non-reformable, for
mandating that all priests, including parish priests, must be celibate, and for
eliminating the power of lay rulers to participate in the election of bishops,
abbots, and other clergy. Before Pope
Gregory VII, parish priests were allowed to have wives and children, and most
of them did.
VIII. 1415-1580 AD - The Reformation of the Western
Church. Beginning with the
treacherous execution of John Huss, Professor at the Charles University of
Prague, Bohemia, by orders of the Council of Constance in 1415, the Western
church went into turmoil over the increasing corruption present in the Papal
Palace. This dissent was supported by many secular princes and kings who wanted
to be free from the Holy Roman Emperor and Pope, from their laws, mercenary
military, taxes, indulgences, etc. Martin Luther’s 95 Theses of 1517 found a ready audience because it challenged the
Pope, and ably refuted Roman Catholic theology regarding indulgences. After a
series of debates where the best theologians of the day could not refute Luther,
it became a matter of Luther and the Bible against the Pope. The Pope claimed
to be above the authority of Scripture, while Luther, quoting Augustine, said
that no word of man has higher authority than the Word of God. For this Luther
was excommunicated as a heretic and was proclaimed an “outlaw” who should be
killed by anyone loyal to the church.
Fortunately for Luther, the Turkish sultan and his armies were breaking
down the walls of the Emperor’s home capital of Vienna. Holy Roman Emperor
Charles V was thus forced to cooperate with the German princes in matters of
religion, in order to preserve the Empire. The Augsburg Confession of the
German princes of 1530 marked the division of the Western Church into Roman
Catholic and “Protestant” sectors. The Roman Catholics responded to the
Protestants with the “Decrees of the Council of Trent” (1545-1563). Luther died
in 1546. His theology and practice was
codified in the Book of Concord of 1580, which is the definitive collection of
Lutheran Confessional writings (see http://www.bookofconcord.org). Luther’s
theology and/or the Book of Concord were adopted in large portions of the
German territories of the Holy Roman Empire, and in the countries of Denmark,
Norway, Sweden, Finland, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Hungary, and parts of
Poland and Austria. The
counter-Reformation later purged Lutherans and their influence from most of
Poland and Austria.
The Reformed, Anglicans, and Anabaptists produced their own
confessions, creeds, and catechisms to define and defend their position. The
Reformed followed the theology of Ulrich Zwingli of Zurich, Jean Calvin of
Geneva, and John Knox of Scotland. The Anabaptists were political
revolutionaries advocating a communist society on the basis of Scriptures, but
most found a quick and bloody end. Only the pacifist Anabaptists, such as the
Amish and Mennonites, survived because they did not try to impose their ideas
on the whole society and, in fact, avoided the surrounding culture as much as
possible. The Anglicans went through
several stages of Reformation, being guided initially by King Henry VIII of
England. Although the Anglican church
initially headed in a Lutheran direction, after the purges of Queen Mary
(“Bloody Mary”) and the return of the Marian exiles (exiled 1553-58), the
Anglican church was guided by Queen Elizabeth I to adopt the Thirty-Nine
Articles of 1571. These articles have
been published in the Anglican Book of
Common Prayer ever since, and are understood to be a compromise (“middle
way”) between Roman Catholic and Reformed theology and practice.
IX. 1580-1650 – The Rise of Reformed Protestantism. Reformed theology was popular in Switzerland, the
Rhineland, southern Germany, the Netherlands, Scotland, and in parts of France.
Where Luther intended only to reform the Church, Reformed theology also
intended to reform the state and society. The Reformed intended to “complete
the Reformation.” The Reformed often allied themselves with enemies of the
Emperor or King, and were thus viewed by royalists as revolutionaries. The
Huegenots in France sparked the French Civil War, from 1560-1590, resulting in
their defeat and the mass exile of French-speaking Calvinists to Prussia,
Holland, England, and America. Reformed
Protestants did the same in the Netherlands, 1560-1580, but in that case were
the “winners” creating the Dutch Republic, a federal republic. The Calvinists
in southern Germany and the Rhineland were responsible for starting the Thirty
Years War, 1618-1648, which ended in the destruction of vast parts of Germany
and a stalemate between Catholic and Protestant powers. The Puritans in England joined with the
Parliamentarians and started the English Civil War, 1640-1660, resulting in the
short-lived Commonwealth of England, a republic based on the sovereignty of the
people. Exiles and revolutionaries from all these revolutions and wars sought
haven in the New World, which explains the dominant place of Reformed theology
in North America. Reformed theology thus gained in prestige and political power
because of its political value in justifying the surge towards more democratic
political structures in the nations where it gained a hearing.
X. 1650-1740 AD – The Factionalization of Reformed
Theology in England and the Rise of Pietism within Lutheranism. Having successfully won control of the British State
in the Commonwealth of 1649, the English Puritans split into factions over the
issue of church polity. The Scotch and English Presbyterians, the most
traditional and powerful of the Puritans, argued for a national church run
locally by “elders,” known as the presbytery. Their theology is found in the
Westminster Confession (1645) and its two catechisms. More radical were the English
Congregationalists, who argued for the independence of congregations, which
they believed should be ruled by a democracy of universal male suffrage, i.e.,
the right of all adult males to vote. The New England town meeting derived from
Congregationalist polity. The Congregationalist theory was set forth by Robert
Browne, who said that the church is a local community of saints constituted by
a voluntary covenant taken by Christian believers with God and each other. Because the covenant is sacred and local, it
must be kept free from outside control and be independent of the state. More
radical still were the English Baptists, who agreed with the Congregationalist
polity and theory. The Baptists also
thought that since infants and children cannot make a voluntary covenant with
God and the congregation, they should not be baptized until they are able to do
so. Most radical of the English Puritans
were the Independents, such as the Diggers, the Levelers, et.al., who saw
Christ’s teaching as primarily social and political, not religious in intent.
These Independent Puritans were the ancestors of eighteenth century Deists.
The German Lutheran princes tolerated Reformed theology and
preachers in their territories, and this contributed to the eventual demise of
Lutheranism in Germany. Pietism became popular with the writings of Phillip
Jacob Spener (e.g., the Pia Desideria, 1675).
Pietism accused the Lutheran preachers of being unloving and sub-Christian when
they criticized the theology of the Calvinists. Pietists argued that holy
living and obedience was the goal of the gospel, not salvation for Christ’s
sake through faith alone. There were several types of Pietism, but general
characteristics included: personal Bible study for devotional and practical
purposes; denigration of academic theology even for clergy; emphasis on the
feelings and will at the expense of the intellect; love of devotional
literature, especially of the mystical type; insistence on the necessity of growth
in Christian perfection; the ability to recognize a true kernel of believers
within the visible church, which contained both believers and unbelievers; and
the establishment of “pious societies” (collegia
pietatis) apart from the church and its ministry.
The Pietists gained the official support of the Prussian
prince, Frederick the Great, when the Pietist leader Hermann Francke agreed not
to protest Frederick’s innovation of military conscription, which the Lutherans
had opposed as “prince’s cannon fodder.” The subsequent military successes of
the Prussian princes united Germany, with Pietist religious conquests in its
wake. By 1720 traditional Lutheranism had completely succumbed to Pietism in
the universities and bureaucracies of Prussia and its dependent German states,
although some territories and isolated individuals continued in the theology of
Luther and the Lutheran Confessions. Lutheranism survived in this period
partially because of the continued use of Luther’s catechism, Luther’s liturgy,
and the Lutheran hymn-chorales in church services. Often the church cantors and
church musicians were more Lutheran than their pastors because of the theology
of the Lutheran chorales, Johann Sebastian Bach being the most prominent
example. The rise of Pietism in Germany also encouraged Pietist movements in
the Scandinavian countries.
XI. 1740-1890 AD- Deists, Liberal Protestants,
Evangelicals, and Confessional Lutherans. The Puritan Commonwealth experiment in England from 1649-1660 failed
primarily because the Puritans were unable to work together theologically. They
could not agree on how much of the Old Testament was binding on
Christians. They were unable to follow
Luther’s “evangelical” principle, i.e. only the New Testament is binding today,
because the Puritans needed the Old Testament support for their theocracy. The
English Puritan theocracy was also not appreciated for its “Blue Laws.” The
Restoration period in England which followed the Puritan theocracy returned to
the “middle way” of the Thirty-Nine Articles, though the British rightly feared
the Pope’s influence. In the continued arguments between a
Catholic-look-and-feel “high church” and a Puritan-look-and-feel “low church,”
a “middle-of-the-road” group arose called the Latitudinarians, what we today
would call “moderates.” They argued that the commands of God in Scripture that
were not in keeping with Natural Law or Reason were only cultural
accommodations to that period of history and not binding on Christians today.
In the person of John Locke, the Latitudinarian and
Independent Puritan ideas combined to form Deism, a religion that was accepted
by the educated-merchant middle class. Deism is also the basic religious
teaching of the lodges such as the Masons and the Odd Fellows, which groups originated
in this period of time. The Deists argued that all of Christianity, at least in
its original form, conformed to Natural Law and Reason. At first the Deists
affirmed that there was a harmony between the traditional teachings of the
Church and Rationalism, but once they were accepted by society, they quickly
began to deny the miracles and prophecies of the Bible, Christ’s divinity and
resurrection, and the Trinity. They argued that Jesus was merely a prophet of
morality, whose disciples elevated him to the status of God. Deists were the
first Liberal Protestants and they detested and denounced all denominational or
doctrinal differences as a violation of Jesus’ command to love the neighbor.
Deism, in the form of Liberal Protestantism, was eventually to affect almost
every large Protestant denomination, both in the state churches of Europe and
the mainline churches in North America.
The growth of Deist thought in England occurred from 1690-1740.
It would be fair to say that by 1740, due to Deist theology,
the churches in England had become thoroughly liberalized and irrelevant to the
spiritual needs of the average Englishman and Englishwoman. John Wesley and his
followers, also known as the “Evangelicals,” rejected Deist religion. They
combined traditional Anglicanism with German Pietism, with an emphasis on the
experience of conversion (i.e., the “decision for Christ”), plus a method of
sanctification known as “Methodism.” In North America, Wesley’s teachings were
spread by George Whitefield and the First Great Awakening, and had a
significant influence on the Baptists. The “Evangelicals” were similar to the
traditional Protestants in most doctrines, but were different in the emphasis
they placed on religious experience and the necessity of growth in Christian
perfection. Where traditional Protestants were united on the basis of common
doctrine, Evangelicals were united on the basis of a common religious
experience. Ever since Wesley, the English-speaking Protestants have been
dominated by the polarity that first existed between Deist Liberals and
Evangelical Conservatives. The Evangelicals consisted of both revivalist and
denominational groups. Those who preferred a structured approach to religion
organized themselves as “Methodists,” while the revivalists remained
free-wheeling and independent.
Around 1800 in America, the revivalists began the Second
Great Awakening in Kentucky and the Ohio River valley. The revivalists Thomas
and Alexander Campbell stressed the restoration of original Christianity. Their followers founded the
non-denominational “Christian Church,” which ironically was a
denomination. Unlike Methodists, the
revivalists and the “Christians” rejected infant baptism and urged their
followers to get “back to the Bible,” instead of Wesley’s Anglican mix of
Bible, tradition, experience, and reason. The “Christian Church” later split
into a conservative branch, the “Churches of Christ,” and a liberal branch, the
“Disciples of Christ” which publishes the popular magazine The Christian Century. Revivalists who remained independent
included figures such as Timothy Dwight, Lyman Beecher, Charles Finney, and
Dwight Moody, the founder of Moody Bible Institute in Chicago. These
independents were the real ancestors of twentieth-century Fundamentalists and
Evangelicals.
In Germany around 1740, the Rationalism of the English
Deists began to influence the universities and seminaries. The most severe
attack from Deism came from German theologian Gotthold Lessing in the
1770’s. Lessing argued that the
historical evolution of religion was part of God’s plan, from the primitive
pagans, to the crude Jewish sacrifices, to the humane Sacraments of Christ, to
the most reasonable and ethical Christianity of pure Reason. Friedrich
Schleiermacher in the early 1800s combined these ideas with the experientialism
of Pietism. He became the father of Liberal Protestantism in its classic form,
which is an evolutionary form of Deism united by a common “religious
experience.” American and British forms of Liberal Protestantism stressed the
“social gospel,” and were often indistinguishable from socialism.
A conservative reaction to Liberalism in Germany came with
an Evangelical influence known as Neo-Pietism, which stressed the “awakening”
of conversion and getting “back to the Bible.” The 1817 Prussian Union State
church attempted to merge Pietists, Lutherans and Calvinists, in spite of the
protests of the “Old Lutherans”. The “Old Lutherans” urged a movement of “back
to Luther” similar to the Neo-Pietist’s “back to the Bible.” In the 1830s “Old
Lutheran” pastors in Prussia were imprisoned and their lay-members’ property
confiscated, when they refused to use the new generic-Protestant liturgy.
Groups of the “Old Lutherans” emigrated in the 1830s and 1840s: to Australia
under August Kavel; to Buffalo, New York under Johann Grabau; to Frankenmuth,
Michigan under Friedrich Craemer; and to Saint Louis and Perry County, Missouri
under Martin Stephan. Those who didn’t emigrate formed the “free churches” in
Germany, with leaders such as August Vilmar and Wilhem Loehe. All of these
groups were known as “confessional Lutherans” because they adhered to the
traditional teaching of Luther and the Lutheran Confessions. These
“confessional Lutherans” resisted all influences from Liberals, Evangelicals,
Reformed, as well as the cultural-Lutherans who urged cooperation with
heterodox church-bodies. The Saint Louis group rose to dominance in America
under C.F.W. Walther, who organized and united many of the “Old Lutherans” in the
United States into the “Evangelical Lutheran Synod of Missouri, Ohio, and other
States,” later known as the “Lutheran Church- Missouri Synod.” This denomination has managed to remain
faithful to the Book of Concord,
including the Lutheran doctrines of Scripture, i.e., sola Scriptura and the inerrancy of Scripture, and Justification,
i.e., justification by grace alone for Christ’s sake alone through faith alone,
in spite of some wavering in the 1960s and early 1970s.
XII. 1890-2019 AD- The Holiness Movement, Ecumenism,
and Modern Evangelicalism. In 1880
several groups of the “Christian Church” restorationists and revivalists formed
evangelistic associations to propagate the doctrine of the necessity of growth
in Christian perfection. This holiness movement splintered into countless
factions over the issue of the definition of holiness. The most traditional
view, very similar to the Methodist teaching on sanctification, was propounded
by the Nazarenes, now known as the “Church of the Nazarenes.” The more radical
views were found in the Latter Rain movement, which argued that the
supernatural gifts of Pentecost are necessary for the church today. The Latter Rain movement is represented by
today’s “Churches of God,” who include their headquarter’s city in their name
(e.g., Cleveland, Tennessee). The emphasis on “speaking in tongues,” which is
not the foreign language gift of the apostles but mere babbling, rose to
prominence in Pentecostal churches, such as the “Four Square Gospel Church,”
the “Pentecostal Church,” and the “Assemblies of God.” Evangelistic
associations formed to propagate these holiness teachings in other
denominations through the charismatic movement, which has adherents in almost
every denomination today.
By 1890, the enduring influence of the Liberals and
Evangelicals had overridden the old denominational differences in the
Protestant world. The result were social and political demands for cooperation
between church-bodies under the direction of church federations. This new
development in church structure was known as the “Ecumenical Movement,” which
had its roots in the “Evangelical Alliance” of 1846. Although the ecumenical
movement began as an Evangelical phenomenon, it was soon taken over by Liberal
Protestant leadership. It began with a youth movement, the World’s Student
Christian Fellowship in 1895, then added the International Missionary
Conference in 1910, then the Faith and Order group in 1920, and finally the
Life and Work group in 1925. Progress in ecumenism was interrupted by World War
II.
Karl Barth, a Liberal Protestant Swiss theologian who had
opposed Hitler, became a leader in ecumenical endeavors following the war. Dr.
Hermann Sasse, the last “Old Lutheran” professor in the German State Church,
left both the ecumenical movement and Germany when Barth’s theology became the
theology of the ecumenical organizations. The final result was the World
Council of Churches, founded in 1948, in Amsterdam. This was coordinated with
national groups, such as the National Council of Churches in the USA, and
denominational groups such as the Lutheran World Federation. Participants in
the World Council of Churches (hereafter WCC) originally included all of the
Eastern Orthodox, Non-Chalcedonian, and Nestorian churches, and almost all of
the State church and Protestant churches. The Pope has resisted joining the
WCC, because he believes that they should someday join “Mother Church” under
his tutelage, as was affirmed by the Second Vatican Council in 1965.
Evangelicals who protested the Liberalism of the WCC became
known as “fundamentalists,” a derogatory term invented by the American media,
but they applied the term “Evangelical” to themselves in the post-war period to
indicate their traditional link with Wesley and revivalism. The post-war Evangelicals
formed their own pan-denominational organizations, such as the National
Association of Evangelicals, and became prominent especially in the United
States through publishing, radio, TV, and national crusades. Evangelical
figures in the latter twentieth-century included Billy Graham, Pat Robertson,
Jerry Falwell, Carl Henry, Harold Lindsell, and Francis Schaeffer. A few large
denominations also did not join the WCC, namely the Southern Baptists and the
Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod, which are the last large denominations in the
United States devoted to traditional Protestant teachings and the authority of
Scripture.
The ecumenical movement also resulted in the formation of
numerous Liberal “United” churches, such as the “Presbyterian Church in the
USA” and the “Evangelical Lutheran Church in America.” More diverse ecumenical
denominations included the “United Church of Canada”, a merger of
Presbyterians, Congregationalists, and Methodists; and the American “United
Church of Christ”, a merger of the Congregationalists, one faction of the
Christian Church, the German Reformed Church, and the German Evangelical-Union
Church. A major setback for the ecumenical movement occurred in 1991, when the
Russian Orthodox archbishops withdrew their church from the WCC, because of the
neo-pagan rituals performed at that year's conference in Australia. The world-wide ecumenical movement is today
seeing a transition, as WCC churches in Africa, Asia, and Oceania are withdrawing
from the WCC due to its advocacy of LGBTQ+ agenda.
Today traditional Protestant doctrine and practice is found
mostly in independent congregations (i.e., non-denominational churches) and
small denominations, such as the Wesleyans, the Congregational Christians, the
Orthodox Presbyterians, confessional Lutherans, and confessional Calvinist
denominations, as well as the Southern Baptists and Missouri Synod Lutherans as
already mentioned.
XIII.
Bibliography - The best
classic, updated, single-volume book in English on the history of the Christian
churches is: Williston Walker, Richard A. Norris, David W. Lotz, and Robert
Handy, A History of the Christian Church,
4th edition (New York: Scribners, 1985). The fourth edition is preferable to the first
edition, as it features extensive revisions based on advances in scholarship,
historical discoveries, and new interpretations.
XIV. Copyright
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author, Martin R. Noland, for this version and all previous versions of this
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