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Presbyterian Church History
The earliest Christian church consisted
of Jews in the first century who had known Jesus and heard his
teachings. It gradually grew and spread from the Middle East to
other parts of the world, though not without controversy and hardship
among its supporters.
During the 4th century, after more than
300 years of persecution under various Roman emperors, the church
became established as a political as well as a spiritual power
under the Emperor Constantine. Theological and political disagreements,
however, served to widen the rift between members of the eastern
(Greek-speaking) and western (Latin-speaking) branches of the
church. Eventually the western portions of Europe, came under
the religious and political authority of the Roman Catholic Church.
Eastern Europe and parts of Asia came under the authority of the
Eastern Orthodox Church.
In western Europe, the authority of the
Roman Catholic Church remained largely unquestioned until the
Renaissance in the 15th century. The invention of the printing
press in Germany around 1440 made it possible for common people
to have access to printed materials including the Bible. This,
in turn, enabled many to discover religious thinkers who had begun
to question the authority of the Roman Catholic Church. One such
figure, Martin Luther, a German priest and professor, started
the movement known as the Protestant Reformation when he posted
a list of 95 grievances against the Roman Catholic Church on a
church door in Wittenberg, Germany in 1517. Some 20 years later,
a French/Swiss theologian, John Calvin, further refined the reformers'
new way of thinking about the nature of God and God's relationship
with humanity in what came to be known as Reformed theology. John
Knox, a Scotsman who studied with Calvin in Geneva, Switzerland,
took Calvin's teachings back to Scotland. Other Reformed communities
developed in England, Holland and France. The Presbyterian church
traces its ancestry back primarily to Scotland and England.
Presbyterians have featured prominently in United States history. The Rev. Francis Makemie, who arrived in the U.S. from Ireland in 1683, helped to organize the first American Presbytery at Philadelphia in 1706. In 1726, the Rev. William Tennent founded a ministerial 'log college' in Pennsylvania. Twenty years later, the College of New Jersey (now known as Princeton University) was established. Other Presbyterian ministers, such as the Rev. Jonathan Edwards and the Rev. Gilbert Tennent, were driving forces in the so-called "Great Awakening," a revivalist movement in the early 18th century. One of the signers of the Declaration of Independence, the Rev. John Witherspoon, was a Presbyterian minister and the president of Princeton University from 1768-1793.
The Presbyterian church in the United
States has split and parts have reunited several times. Currently
the largest group is the Presbyterian Church (U.S.A.), which has
its national offices in Louisville, Ky. It was formed in 1983
as a result of reunion between the Presbyterian Church in the
U.S. (PCUS), the so-called "southern branch," and the United Presbyterian
Church in the U.S.A. (UPCUSA), the so-called "northern branch."
Other Presbyterian churches in the United States include: the
Presbyterian Church in America, the Cumberland Presbyterian Church
and the Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church. |
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