Christianity: Details about 'Protestant Reformed Churches In America'

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The Protestant Reformed Churches in America (PRCA) are a denomination of 27 churches and almost 6000 members in the United States and Canada.

Founding and History

Founded as a separate denomination of Reformed churches in 1924, the PRC stand in the tradition of the Protestant Reformation of the 16th century. Their origin as a denomination was the doctrinal controversy over "common grace" within the Christian Reformed Church in the early 1920s, occasioned by that church's adoption of the doctrine of common grace as official church dogma. The result of the controversy was that several ministers with their congregations were put out of the Christian Reformed Church. These men then established the Protestant Reformed Churches.

Foremost among the founders of the PRC was Herman Hoeksema (1886-1965), long-time pastor in the First Protestant Reformed Church in Grand Rapids, Michigan; prolific author; professor of theology at the Protestant Reformed Seminary for 40 years; and outstanding theologian. In his book, A Half Century of Theology (Grand Rapids, Eerdmans, 1977), the well-known Dutch theologian G.C. Berkouwer, acknowledged that "the unquestionably sharp theological thought of the American theologian Herman Hoeksema



played an important role" in his theological development. In fact, Berkouwer chose Hoeksema as his "dialogue partner". The "dialogue," however, was profound disagreement, particularly Berkouwer's disagreement with Hoeksema's staunch adherence to the Reformed doctrine of predestination.

Locations

Congregations are located throughout the United States from New Jersey in the east to California in the west to Minnesota and Washington in the north. Recently, three new congregations have been organized in Canada:

  • Edmonton, Alberta
  • Lacombe, Alberta
  • Wingham, Ontario

Form of Government

Holding the Presbyterian form of church government, the denomination is organized in two classes, Classis East and Classis West (the eastern border of Illinois being the boundary), which meet two or three times a year, and in a Synod, which meets annually in June. Without detracting from the principle of the binding authority of the major assemblies, the Protestant Reformed Churches emphasize that each congregation is self-governing by a body of elders chosen out of the congregation (the "autonomy of the local congregation"). Hence, the name of the denomination -- not "Church" (singular), but "Churches" (plural).

Source

--Bill Brouwer 17:24, 5 January 2006 (UTC)


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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Protestant_Reformed_Churches_in_America". A list of the wikipedia authors can be found here.