| Fellowship of Evangelical Churches | |
|---|---|
| Location | 6535 Maplecrest Road Fort Wayne, Indiana 46835[1] |
| Country | United States |
| Denomination | Evangelical |
| Membership | 72 churches (2025) 9,777 congregants (2020) |
| Website | fecministries |
| History | |
| Former name(s) | Egly-Amish, Defenseless Mennonites, Evangelical Mennonite Church |
| Founded | 1866 |
| Events | FEC Conference (annual) |
TheFellowship of Evangelical Churches (FEC) is an evangelical body ofChristians with anAmish Mennonite heritage that is headquartered inFort Wayne, Indiana, United States. It contains 46 churches located in Colorado, Idaho, Illinois, Indiana, Kansas, Maine, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Ohio, and Pennsylvania.[2][3]
In the first half of the 19th century, the time before theAmish split into Amish Mennonites and Old Order Amish, several members of the Amish Egly family immigrated fromBaden, Germany, to North America. Among them was Henry Egly (1824–1890). Egly was elected deacon of aBerne-Geneva Amish church inIndiana. In 1858, Egly was then elected bishop of the Berne-Geneva Amish Church. Egly, who insisted on the new birth experience, withdrew from the Amish church. Approximately half of the congregation withdrew as well. In 1866, the first Egly-Amish church was created inBerne, Indiana.[4] In the beginning the Egly Amish church was very strict in regard to discipline and dress, but later developed in the same direction as theAmish Mennonites, that is towards the Mennonite mainstream, away from the Amish heritage.[5]
The Egly-Amish officially adopted the name "Defenseless Mennonite" on 6 November 1908 as the congregation wanted to be known as more Mennonite rather than Amish.[4]
In 1942, the Defenseless Mennonites were charter members in the founding of the National Association of Evangelicals. Later, in 1948, their name was changed to "Evangelical Mennonite Church" to reflect both their Anabaptist and Evangelical beliefs.[4]
On 2 August 2003, the Evangelical Mennonite Church voted to be known as the "Fellowship of Evangelical Churches", or FEC.[4]
The Defenseless Mennonite Conference published itsConfession of Faith, Rules and Discipline in 1917. The confession of faith was revised in 1937, 1949, 1961, and 1980. It contains 12 articles of faith.The Lord's Supper is observed with open communion.
The conference office is located inFort Wayne, Indiana. The FEC organization is governed through a congregational form of governance. Local congregations elect delegates to a delegate body, which in turn elects the conference leadership. As of 2010, the conference was composed of 46 churches in the Midwest of theUnited States, with 9,193 members. 55 percent of the churches are located inIllinois andIndiana. All FEC ministries are funded by voluntary donations of congregations and individuals.
These organizations have their own governing boards but are affiliated solely with the Fellowship of Evangelical Churches.