Christianity: Details about 'Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church'
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The Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church is a small denomination, formed from the merger of the Associate (Seceder) and the Reformed Presbyterian (Covenantor) churches in Philadelphia in 1782. Presbyterian pastor Ebenezer Erskine led a group of Christians in separating from the Church of Scotland into a separate Associate Presbytery. Other similar offshoots had formed the Reformed Presbytery. These emigrated to Ireland, and later to the United States, establishing congregations from around 1750 to 1770, mostly in Pennsylvania, New York, Ohio, North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia. Some churches of the two movements came together officially in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1782. Another synod was formed of churches in South Carolina and Georgia in 1803 and still another in Texas. The northern Synod merged with the Old Light Presbyterians in 1853 to become the United Presbyterians. The Modern A. R. P. church descends from the southern Synod. The modern A. R. P. Church in America contains in and thirty thousand members. It has Bonclarken, a campground in Flat Rock North Carolina and its headquarters in Greenville, S. C. It has churches in most states and Canada. Separate Synods exist in Mexico and Pakistan. The A. R. P. church is affiliated with the North American Alliance of Reformed Churches and shares a common theology with conservative Presbyterian denominations. It holds to the infallibility of the Bible and does not ordain women as ministers or elders, though it does permit women deacons. In 1835 the church established in Due West, South Carolina, an academy for men, which in 1839 became Erskine College, the first four-year church-related college in South Carolina. The tiny school is very highly ranked for academic quality. Erskine Theological Seminary is the professional school of Erskine College. While the college had a professor of divinity since its inception, the seminary was established as a separate but associated school in 1858. Today the seminary provides training for students of a number of denominations, especially the United Methodist Church.
Purpose StatementWho We are in Christ, Facing the 21st Century "We, the members of the Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church,in order to carry out God's mission and move forward together into the next century, profess our life together in Christ and our desire to set forth a united strategy for the work of His church. We express our desire to continue to be a Presbyterian and Reformed church, committed to the Lordship of Jesus Christ and to the Bible as the Word of God." - Basic Beliefs
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