Christianity: Details about 'Reformed Church In America'

Index / Christianity / Lutheranism / Reformed Church In America /

Web christianity-guide.com

Navigation

Home
One level up
Back
Index of contents
Links
Jesus-Shop

Useful Links


Christianity Portal
History of christianity Jesus Christ Old testament New testament Apocrypha Christian_music
Roman catholic Orthodox Christianity Protestantism Christian movements Mormons Baptists

The Reformed Church in America (RCA) is a Calvinist Reformed Protestant denomination that was formerly known as the Dutch Reformed Church. The denomination has about 300,000 members and has congregations in both the U.S. and Canada. The RCA is a founding member of the National Council of Churches and the World Council of Churches and some parts of the denomination belong to the National Association of Evangelicals.

The Reformed Church uses several statements of doctrine and faith. These include the historic Apostles' Creed, Nicene Creed, and Athanasian Creed; the traditional Reformed Belgic Confession, Heidelberg Catechism, and Canons of Dort; and the modern "Our Song of Hope".

Contents

History

It is the oldest Protestant church with a continuous ministry - and also the oldest corporation - in North America. The early Dutch settlers in New Netherland held



informal meetings for worship until Jonas Michaelius organized a congregation in New Amsterdam in 1628, called the Reformed Protestant Dutch Church. Four churches in New York City (the Fort Washington Collegiate Church, Middle Collegiate Church, Marble Collegiate Church, and West End Collegiate Church - now known as the Collegiate Church Corporation) are descendants of this early activity.

The Reformed Church was the established church of New Netherland. Although the British captured the colony in 1664, all RCA ministers were still trained in the Netherlands under the auspices of the denominational classis of Amsterdam, and services in the Reformed Church remained in the Dutch language until 1764. (Dutch language use faded thereafter until the new wave of Dutch immigration in the mid-1800s, which prompted a temporary revival of it.) In 1747 the denomination gave permission to form an assembly in America, which in 1754 declared itself independent of the classis of Amsterdam. This American classis secured a charter in 1766 for Queens College (now Rutgers University) in New Jersey. The appointment in 1784 of John Henry Livingston as professor of theology marked the beginning of the New Brunswick Theological Seminary. In 1792, a formal constitution was adopted; in 1794 the Reformed



Church held its first general synod; and in 1867 formally adopted the name "Reformed Church in America".

The church embraced many of the historic colonial churches of New York and New Jersey, the denominational stronghold; fresh immigration from the Netherlands in the mid-19th century led to the development of the church in the Midwest. Hope College and Western Theological Seminary were founded in Holland, Michigan, and Central College at Pella, Iowa. In 1857 a group of Dutch settlers in Michigan led by Gijsbert Haan separated from the Reformed Church and organized the Christian Reformed Church, and other churches followed. In 1882 another group of churches left for the CRC, mirroring developments in the church in the Netherlands. A small part of the Eureka classis, organized in 1910 in South Dakota, continued as the Reformed Church in the United States after the majority of the body merged (1934) into the Evangelical and Reformed Church. In the post-World War II years the church expanded in Canada, which was the destination of a large group of Dutch emigrants. Between 1949 and 1958 the church opened 120 churches among non-Dutch suburban communities.

In 1955, the Rev. Dr. Robert H. Schuller was dispatched by the Reformed Church to start a new congregation in Garden Grove, California. Services were initially conducted at a drive-in theater. Developed under Rev. Schuller's leadership to become the Crystal Cathedral, the church is now one of the best known Reformed Church congregations in the world.

Ecumenical relations

The RCA maintains a relationship of full communion with the Presbyterian Church (USA), the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America and the United Church of Christ through a document known as the Formula of Agreement.

Noteworthy members

  • Everett Dirksen, U.S. senator
  • Norman J Kansfield, theologian
  • Norman Vincent Peale, preacher
  • Theodore Roosevelt, U.S. president
  • Robert Schuller, preacher
  • Martin Van Buren, U.S. president

RCA colleges and seminaries

  • Central College, Pella, Iowa
  • Hope College, Holland, Michigan
  • New Brunswick Theological Seminary, New Brunswick, New Jersey
  • Northwestern College, Orange City, Iowa
  • Western Theological Seminary, Holland, Michigan

See also

Sources

  • M. G. Hansen, The Reformed Church in the Netherlands, 1340–1840 (1884)
  • J. J. Birch, The Pioneering Church in the Mohawk Valley (1955)

Reformed Church in America


Visitors who viewed this also viewed:

Christianity: 1 John 5 7
Christianity: Indian Shakers
Christianity: Patriarch Of Alexandria
Buddhism: Khandro Rinpoche
New Age: Sunrise Magazine


 





Click here for our Jesus-Shop


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