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INSTITUTIONAL See also: British Isles and in See also: America to a type of See also: church which supplements its ordinary
See also: work by identifying itself in various ways with the secular interests of those whom it seeks to influence
.
The idea of such extension of See also: function See also: grew out of the recognition of the fact that the normal activities of church work entirely failed to retain the See also: interest of a large class of the population to whom the ritual formality of ordinary services was unacceptable
.
Various attempts were made to overcome this deficiency, e.g. by modifying the See also: form of service or of some services, by the addition to the ordinary services of more or less informal meetings (e.g. the Pleasant See also: Sunday Afternoon services), by specially excusing persons from wearing the normal church-going attire in See also: holiday resorts, and by holding services out of doors
.
The principle underlying all these changes is systematized in the Institutional Church which, in addition to its See also: main See also: building for
specifically religious services, provides other rooms or buildings which during the week are open for the use of members and See also: friends
.
Lectures, concerts, debates and social gatherings are organized; there are See also: reading rooms, gymnasiums and other recreations rooms; various clubs (See also: cycling, See also: cricket, See also: football) are formed
.
The organization of the whole is subdivided into See also: special departments managed by committees
.
By these various means many persons are attracted into the atmosphere of the church's work who could not be induced to attend the formal services
.
This expansion of normal church work may be traced back in See also: England to at least as early as 184o, but the full development of the Institutional Church belongs only to the latter' years of the 19th century
.
The chief example in England is See also: Whitefield's Central See also: Mission in See also: Tottenham See also: Court Road, See also: London, a church which, in addition to an elaborate organization on the lines above described, has an official journal
.
In the See also: United States the See also: movement may be said to date from about 1880
.
The name " Institutional " was first applied to See also: Berkeley See also: Temple, See also: Boston, by Dr See also: William
See also: Jewett Tucker, then president of See also: Dartmouth See also: College
.
The obvious See also: criticism that this epithet emphasizes the administrative and secular See also: side to the exclusion of the spiritual led to the tentative adoption of other titles, e.g. the " Open Church," the " See also: Free Church," the former of which is the more commonly used
.
In 1894 was formed the " Open and Institutional Church See also: League " at New See also: York, which held a number of conventions and served as a headquarters for the numerous See also: separate churches
.
In connexion with this league was formed the " See also: National Federation of Churches and Christian Workers," which held a See also: convention in 1905
.
,
See C
.
See also: Silvester See also: Horne, The Institutional Church (London, 1906); G
.
W
.
Mead, See also: Modern Methods in Church Work (New York, 1897); R
.
A
.
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