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Cumberland Presbyterian Church in America

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
African-American Presbyterian denomination
Cumberland Presbyterian Church in America
ClassificationProtestant
TheologyNew SchoolPresbyterian
GovernanceNeo-Presbyterian[1]
AssociationsWorld Communion of Reformed Churches
RegionUnited States
Origin1874
Huntsville, Alabama
Separated fromCumberland Presbyterian Church
Congregations153[2]

The Cumberland Presbyterian Church in America is a historicallyAfrican-Americandenomination which developed from theCumberland Presbyterian Church in 1874.

History

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The church was formed afterAfrican-American delegates to the Cumberland Presbyterian Church's May 1869 General Assembly asked for assistance in organizing a separate body for African Americans, allowing them to become more independent and self-reliant, develop their own clergy and other leaders, and maintain their own church buildings, all with financial support from the parent denomination. The new church was organized in May 1874 as theColored Cumberland Presbyterian Church.[3] It later was known as theSecond Cumberland Presbyterian Church before assuming its current name in 1992.[4]

Relations between the two Cumberland Presbyterian groups have for the most part been very cordial, and many of the CPCA ministers have trained atMemphis Theological Seminary. A reunion attempt on the part of both denominations failed to win approval in the late 1980s. The African American church wanted equal representation on all boards and agencies, feeling that otherwise they would be swallowed up by the larger white church. The joint committee drafting the plan of union agreed and made such a stipulation in its reporting to the General Assembly. However, many in the white, rural, southern-based church were not willing to cede that much power and balked at the plan. Both denominations are now working on a plan of organic merger. The two denominations continue to share a Confession of Faith and cooperate in many common ministries.

Organization and membership

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Denominational headquarters are located inHuntsville, Alabama. There are 153 congregations, which are organized into 15 presbyteries and four synods, inAlabama,Kentucky,Tennessee andTexas andIllinois.[5] Membership is primarily concentrated inAlabama,Tennessee, andTexas, but the church extends north toCleveland,Chicago,Oklahoma,Detroit andMarshalltown, Iowa.[3][6]

Governance

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The church adheres to the Presbyterian Church governance. It has 4Synods, the Texas Synod has 3 Presbyteries namely the Angelina (26 churches), Brazos River (58) and East Texas (4) Presbyteries. The Tennessee Synod has 3 Presbyteries, the Elk River (11), Hiawassee (9), New Hopewell Presbyteries (11). The Kentucky Synod has 3, the Cleveland Ohio (4), the Kansouri (12), and the Ohio (5), the Purchase (5) Presbyteries. The biggest synod is Alabama Synod with 6 Presbyteries, namely the Birmingham (6), the Florence (5), Huntsville (68), South Alabama (16), Tennessee Valley (8) and Tuscaloosa (7) Presbyteries.[7]

Unification issues

[edit]

In 2012 the general assemblies of both theCumberland Presbyterian Church and the Cumberland Presbyterian Church in America were agreed to the forming of a unification task force, to pursue organic union.[8][9]

References

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  1. ^Wagner, Michael."PALEOPRESBYTERIANISM VERSUS NEOPRESBYTERIANISM".SWRB.com. Michael Wagner. Retrieved22 September 2025.
  2. ^"View Group".Yearbook of Churches. Archived fromthe original on 28 July 2018. Retrieved28 July 2018.
  3. ^abYearbook of American and Canadian Churches.National Council of Churches. 2010. pp. 104–5.
  4. ^"Our History". Alabama Fork CPCA. Retrieved2024-03-23 – via Google sites.
  5. ^"Congregations". Archived fromthe original on 21 February 2014. Retrieved28 July 2018.
  6. ^"Cumberland Presbyterian Church in America : Map of Congregations in the United States"(PDF).M.b5z.net. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 22 February 2014. Retrieved28 July 2018.
  7. ^"Cumberland Presbyterian Church in America : Synods/Presbyteries"(PDF).M.b5z.net. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 22 February 2014. Retrieved28 July 2018.
  8. ^"Unification Task Force".Cumberland.org. Retrieved28 July 2018.
  9. ^"THERE'S A PLACE OF COMMANDED BLESSING"(PDF).M.b5z.net. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 22 February 2014. Retrieved28 July 2018.

External links

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  1. ^This denomination is the result of a merger betweenLutheran,German Reformed,Congregational andRestorationist churches and is such considered by some to no longer be a "Reformed denomination".
  2. ^abcdefThis refers to the denomination's heritage and not necessarily to the language in which the services are conducted in.
  3. ^abcdefghijkMember of theNAPARC.
  4. ^This is a reformed synod within theUnited Church of Christ that is distinct in heritage, doctrine and practice from the rest of the denomination.
  5. ^Those are denominations have their origins in theFundamentalist–modernist controversy of the 1920s.
  6. ^Although Presbyterianism itself originated inScotland, those denominations stand out as having a more prominent Scottish heritage and/or connection with Scottish Presbyterian denominations.
  7. ^Those denominations allow member churches to be more diverse as regards the reformed tradition that they adhere to.
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