| |
Church of the Nazarene
:
The Church of the Nazarene is a Protestant
denomination within the tradition of evangelical Methodism. It was
founded through mergers in 1907 and 1908 that united three smaller
regional Wesleyan-holiness churches that were located principally
on America's East Coast, West Coast, and South.
History
:
The spiritual vision of early Nazarenes was derived from the doctrinal
core of John Wesley's preaching and the holiness movement. The affirmations
of the church include justification by grace through faith, sanctification
by grace through faith, entire sanctification as an inheritance
available to every Christian, and the witness of the Spirit to God's
work in human lives. The holiness movement arose in the 1830s to
promote these doctrines, especially entire sanctification, but had
splintered by 1900.
The Church of the Nazarene today was
the product of a three-way merger that occurred at the First and
Second General Assemblies, held respectively at Chicago, Illinois,
and Pilot Point, Texas in 1907 and 1908. The First General Assembly
brought together the Association of Pentecostal Churches of America,
a denomination formed in 1896 through the merger of two older bodies,
that lay principally along America's northeast coast and stretched
from Nova Scotia to Iowa; and the Church of the Nazarene, founded
in 1895 in Los Angeles, California by Phineas Bresee and J. P. Widney.
Bresee, a former Methodist minister, sought to return to John Wesley's
original goals of preaching to the poor and needy. The name of the
united body adopted at the First General Assembly was Pentecostal
Church of the Nazarene. The following year, at the Second General
Assembly, the Holiness Church of Christ, located in the southern
United States, merged with the Pentecostal Nazarenes. The Holiness
Church of Christ, like the eastern group, was also the result of
an earlier merger between two slightly older denominations. Between
the First and Second General Assemblies, there also occurred major
accessions of members from the Holiness Association of Texas and
the merger in September 1908 of the Pennsylvania Conference of the
Holiness Christian Church.
The term "Pentecostal" in the church's original name soon
proved to be problematic. In the Wesleyan-holiness movement, the
word was used widely as a synonym simply for "holiness."
But the rise of 20th century Pentecostalism, especially after 1906,
gave new meanings and associations to the term--meanings that the
Pentecostal Nazarenes rejected. In 1919, the name was shortened
to avoid any confusion in the public mind about the church's place
on the theological spectrum.
Other independent bodies joined at later dates, including the Pentecostal
Church of Scotland and Pentecostal Mission, both in 1915. At this
point, the Church of the Nazarene now embraced seven previous denominations
and significant parts of two other groups. In time the Church of
the Nazarene and the Wesleyan Church would emerge as the two major
denominations to gather in the smaller bodies of the 19th century
Wesleyan-holiness movement.
In subsequent decades, there were new accretions and merges. In
the 1920s there were major accessions from the Laymen's Holiness
Association located in the Dakotas. In the 1950s there were mergers
with the International Holiness Mission and the Calvary Holiness
Church, both located primarily in the United Kingdom; the Hephzibah
Faith Missionary Association in Iowa; the Gospel Workers Church
of Canada; and an indigenous Church of the Nazarene in Nigeria.
Today the church is present in over 151 areas of the world. Its
global membership is nearly 1.6 million, distributed in 14,000 churches.
It also supports 56 educational institutions of various types around
the world.[1] The church also participates in revivals and missionary
work. It is currently a member of the World Methodist Council and
the National Association of Evangelicals.
| |