翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Evangelio Nocturno
・ Evangelion
・ Evangelion (album)
・ Evangelion (mecha)
・ Evangelion movie
・ Evangelions
・ Evangelisch-Lutherische Gebetsbruderschaft
・ Evangelische Allianz
・ Evangelische Lutherische Emanuels Kirche
・ Evangelische Michaelsbruderschaft
・ Evangelische Omroep
・ Evangelische Theologische Academie
・ Evangelischer Buchpreis
・ Evangelisches Gesangbuch
・ Evangelical Presbyterian Church (Ireland)
Evangelical Presbyterian Church (United States)
・ Evangelical Presbyterian Church in Bolivia
・ Evangelical Presbyterian Church in Chile
・ Evangelical Presbyterian Church in England and Wales
・ Evangelical Presbyterian Church in Portugal
・ Evangelical Presbyterian Church in South Africa
・ Evangelical Presbyterian Church in Southern Africa
・ Evangelical Presbyterian Church in Spain
・ Evangelical Presbyterian Church in Uganda
・ Evangelical Presbyterian Church of East Timor
・ Evangelical Presbyterian Church of Iran
・ Evangelical Presbyterian Church of Ivory Coast
・ Evangelical Presbyterian Church of Malawi
・ Evangelical Presbyterian Church of Myanmar
・ Evangelical Presbyterian Church of Peru


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Evangelical Presbyterian Church (United States) : ウィキペディア英語版
Evangelical Presbyterian Church (United States)

The Evangelical Presbyterian Church (EPC) is an American church body holding to presbyterian governance and Reformed theology, expressed in an orthodox, conservative vein.
The motto of the Evangelical Presbyterian Church is "In Essentials, Unity. In Non-Essentials, Liberty. In All Things, Charity; Truth In Love."
The Office of the General Assembly is located in Livonia, Michigan, near Detroit.
==History==

The EPC began as a result of prayer meetings in 1980 and 1981 by pastors and elders increasingly alienated by liberalism in the "northern" branch of Presbyterianism (the United Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A., a predecessor of the Presbyterian Church USA). Two cases served as important catalysts in their separation: the Kenyon Case of 1975 and the Kaseman Case of 1981. Winn Kenyon was a seminary graduate who in good conscience declared that he would refuse to participate in the ordination of a woman, although he affirmed that he would willingly serve in a pastorate with ordained women on the staff. Though he had been ordained by the Pittsburgh Presbytery, in 1975 the Permanent Judicial Commission of the UPCUSA General Assembly overturned Kenyon's ordination because accepting women's ordination was "an explicit constitutional provision." Six years later, a Maryland presbytery permitted Mansfield Kaseman, a United Church of Christ minister whom conservative Presbyterians accused of denying the divinity of Jesus, to become pastor of one of its churches.〔http://www.opc.org/nh.html?article_id=290〕
The first general assembly of the church met at Ward Evangelical Presbyterian Church in suburban Detroit, Michigan in late 1981, drafting a list of essential beliefs. This list was intentionally short in order to help preserve the unity of the church around the essentials of the faith in theology, church government, and evangelism.〔(Evangelical Presbyterian Church > History )〕
At its foundation, the EPC adopted a list of essential beliefs, "The Essentials of Our Faith," to state what the EPC views as the ''sine qua non'' of Evangelical Christianity (see below), in part to seek to guarantee that it would not succumb to the theological problems that had plagued its parent denominations during the Fundamentalist-Modernist Controversy. "The Essentials" is a fuller version of the "Five Fundamentals" that many PCUSA ministers had rejected in the "Auburn Affirmation" of 1923. Originally titled "The Fundamentals of Our Faith," the name was changed to avoid the negative connotations that the term "fundamentalism" had gained. This document has served to assure that the EPC has always kept what is of primary importance for all evangelical Christians (namely the Gospel, or Good News about Jesus), as well as to maintain the irenic orthodoxy that has always been the hallmark of the denomination. (See "Ethos," below.)
In the more than thirty years of its existence, the EPC has become active as a missional church,〔http://www.epc.org/about-the-epc/missional-church-and-denomination/〕〔http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2008/march/16.56.html〕〔http://sites.silaspartners.com/CC/article/0,,PTID314526|CHID598014|CIID2265778,00.html〕 through church planting in the United States as well as in a variety of foreign fields, particularly in the 10/40 Window. One significant step was the incorporation of the St. Andrews Presbytery (Argentina) as one of its presbyteries. This presbytery was released to independence as the national St. Andrews Presbyterian Church of Argentina after many years of mutual cooperation and benefit.
As of the 2007 General Assembly, the EPC has created〔http://www.epc.org/general-assembly/EPNews2007/EPNews_6.28.07.html〕 a temporary, non-geographic "New Wineskins Presbytery" (NWEPC) to provide a home for churches associated with the New Wineskins Association of Churches (NWAC)〔http://www.newwineconvo.com/〕 that are seeking to find a new denominational home after finding that their current home in the PC(USA) is no longer suitable to them theologically, organizationally, or missionally. The New Wineskins Presbytery was dissolved in 2011, as its mission was completed.
Jeff Jeremiah, the stated clerk, announced at the 2012 General Assembly, held at the First Presbyterian Church of Baton Rouge, Louisiana, that the number of EPC congregations had increased from 182 in 2007 to 364 in 2012, exactly doubling in number. The number of congregations had further increased to more than 570 by November 2015.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Evangelical Presbyterian Church (United States)」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.