Online Encyclopedia

EVANGELICAL UNION

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V10, Page 1 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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EVANGELICAL

UNION  , a religious denomination which originated in the suspension of the Rev . James Morison (1816-1893), minister of a
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United
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Secession congregation in
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Kilmarnock, Scotland, for certain views regarding faith, the
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work of the
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Holy Spirit in salvation, and the extent of the
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atonement, which were regarded by the supreme court of his church as anti-Calvinistic and heretical . Morison was suspended by the
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presbytery in 1841 and thereupon definitely withdrew from the Secession Church . His
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father, who was minister at
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Bathgate, and two other ministers, being deposed not long afterwards for similar opinions, the four met at Kilmarnock on the 16th of May 1843 (two days before the " Disruption " of the
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Free Church), and, on the basis of certain doctrinal principles, formed themselves into an association under the name of the Evangelical Union, " for the purpose of countenancing, counselling and otherwise aiding one another, and also for the purpose of training up spiritual and devoted young men to carry forward the work and ` pleasure of the Lord.' " The doctrinal views of the new de-nomination gradually assumed a more decidedly anti-Calvinisticform, and they began also to find many sympathizers among the Congregationalists of Scotland . Nine students were expelled from the Congregational Academy for holding " Morisonian " doctrines, and in 1845 eight churches were disjoined from the Congregational Union of Scotland and formed a connexion with the Evangelical Union . The Union exercised no jurisdiction over the individual churches connected with it, and in this respect adhered to the
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Independent or Congregational form of church government; but those congregations which originally were Presbyterian vested their government in a
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body of elders . In 1889 the denomination numbered 93 churches; and in 1896, after prolonged negotiation, the Evangelical Union was incorporated with the Congregational Union of Scotland . See The Evangelical Union
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Annual;
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History of the Evangelical Union, by F . Ferguson (
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Glasgow, 1876) ; The Worthies of the E . U . (1883); W . Adamson,
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Life of Dr James Morison (1898) .

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