Online Encyclopedia

FREE CHURCH FEDERATION

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V11, Page 70 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

See also:
FREE CHURCH FEDERATION  , a voluntary association of
See also:
British
See also:
Nonconformist churches for co-operation in religious, social and
See also:
civil
See also:
work . It was the outcome of a unifying tendency displayed during the latter
See also:
part of the 19th century . About 1890 the proposal that there should be a Nonconformist Church Congress analogous to the
See also:
Anglican Church Congress was seriously considered, and the first was held in Manchester on the 7th of November 1892 . In the following
See also:
year it was resolved that the basis of representation should be neither
See also:
personal (as in the Anglican Church Congress) nor denominational, but territorial . England and Wales have since been completely covered with a network of
See also:
local
See also:
councils, each of which elects its due proportion of representatives to the
See also:
national gathering . This territorial arrangement eliminated all sectarian distinctions, and also the possibility of committing the different churches as such to any particular policy . The representatives of the local councils attend not as denominationalists but as Evangelical
See also:
Free Churchmen . The name of the organization was changed from Congress to National Council as soon as the assembly ceased to be a fortuitous concourse of atoms, and consisted of duly appointed representatives from the local councils of every part of England . The local councils consist of representatives of the Congregational and Baptist Churches, the Methodist Churches,the Presbyterian Church of England, the Free Episcopal Churches, the Society of Friends, and such other Evangelical Churches as the National Council may at any time admit . The constitution states the following as the
See also:
objects of the National Council: (a) To facilitate fraternal intercourse and co-operation among the Evangelical Free Churches; (b) to assist in the organization of local councils; (c) to encourage devotional fellowship and mutual counsel concerning the spiritual
See also:
life and religious activities of the Churches; (d) to advocate the New Testament
See also:
doctrine of the Church, and to defend the rights of the associated Churches; (e) to promote the application of the law of Christ in every relation of human life . Although the objects of the Free Church councils are thus in their nature and spirit religious rather than
See also:
political, there are occasions on which
See also:
action is taken on
See also:
great national affairs . Thus a thorough-going opposition was offered to the
See also:
Education Act of 1902, and whole-hearted support accorded to candidates at the general election of 1906 who pledged them-selves to altering that measure .

A striking feature of the

See also:
movement is the adoption of the parochial
See also:
system for the purpose of local work . Each of the associated churches is requested to look after a parish, not of course with any attempt to exclude other churches, but as having a
See also:
special responsibility for those in that
See also:
area who are not already connected with some existing church . Throughout the
See also:
United
See also:
Kingdom local councils are formed into federations, some fifty in number, which are intermediate between them and the national council . The local councils do what is possible to prevent overlapping and excessive competition between the churches . They also combine the forces of the local churches for evangelistic and general devotional work, open-air services, efforts on behalf of
See also:
Sunday observance, and the prevention of gambling . Services are arranged in connexion with workhouses, hospitals and other public institutions . Social work of a varied character forms a large part of the operations of the local councils, and the Free Church Girls' Guild has a
See also:
function similar to that of the Anglican Girls' Friendly Society . The national council engages in
See also:
mission work on a large scale, and a considerable number of
See also:
periodicals, hymn-books for special occasions, and
See also:
works of different kinds explaining the
See also:
history and ideals of the Evangelical Free Churches have been published . The churches represented in the National Council have 9966 ministers, 55,828 local preachers, 407,991 Sunday-school teachers, 3,416,377 Sunday scholars, 2,178,221 communicants, and sitting accommodation for 8,555,460 . A remarkable manifestation of this unprecedented
See also:
reunion was the fact that a committee of the associated churches prepared and published a catechism expressing the positive and fundamental agreement of all the Evangelical Free Churches on the essential doctrines of
See also:
Christianity (see The Contemporary Review,
See also:
January 1899) . The catechism represents substantially the creed of not less than 8o,000,000 Protestants . It has been widely circulated throughout Great Britain, the British Colonies and the United States of
See also:
America, and has also been translated into Welsh, French and
See also:
Italian .

The movement has spread to all parts of

See also:
Australia, New Zealand, South Africa,
See also:
Jamaica, the United States of America and India . It is perhaps necessary to add that it differs essentially from the Evangelical
See also:
Alliance, inasmuch as its unit is not an individual, private Christian, but a definitely organized and yisible Church . The essential doctrine of the movement is a particular doctrine of churchmanship which, as explained in the catechism, regards the Lord Jesus Christ as the
See also:
sole and Divine Head of every branch of the
See also:
Holy Catholic Church throughout the
See also:
world . For this reason those who do not accept the deity of Christ are necessarily excluded from the national council and its local constituent councils .

End of Article: FREE CHURCH FEDERATION
[back]
FREE BAPTISTS
[next]
FREE CHURCH OF ENGLAND

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.