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CONGREGATIONALISM , the name given to that type of See also: 17), has expressed itself in varying degrees at different times, according as conditions were favourable or the See also:reverse. But catholicity of feeling is inherent in the congregational idea of the church, inasmuch as it knows no valid use of the See also:term intermediate between the local unit of habitual Christian fellowship and the church universal. On such a theory confusion between full Catholicity and See also:loyalty to some partial expression of it is minimized, and the feeling for Christians as such, everywhere and under whatever name, is kept pure. The Congregationalism of the Apostolic Church was, to begin with, See also:part of its heritage from Judaism. In the See also:record of Christ's own teaching the term " church " occurs only twice, once in the universal sense, as the true or PrCongregaimitive - Messianic " See also:Israel of God " (Matt. xvi. 18, cf. Gal. vi. uonalism. 16), and once in the local sense corresponding to the Jewish See also:synagogue (Matt. xviii. 17). As See also:Christianity passed to See also:Gentile See also:soil, the See also:sovereign See also:assembly (See also:ecclesia) of privileged citizens in each See also:Greek See also:city furnished an See also:analogy to the latter usage. These, the two senses recognized by Congregationalism, remained the only ones known to See also:primitive Christianity. See also:Writing of the unity of the church as set forth by See also:Paul in See also:Ephesians, Dr See also:Hort (The Christian Ecclesia, p. 168) says: "Not a word, in the See also:epistle exhibits the One Ecclesia as made up of many Ecclesiae. To each local Ecclesia St Paul has ascribed a corresponding unity of its own; each is a body of Christ and a See also:sanctuary of God: but there is no grouping of them into partial wholes or into one See also:great whole. The members which make up the One Ecclesia are not communities but individual men. The One Ecclesia includes all members of all partial Ecclesiae; but its relations to them all are See also:direct, not mediate. It is true that .. . St Paul anxiously promoted friendly intercourse and sympathy between the scattered Ecclesiae; but the unity of the universal Ecclesia as he contemplated it does not belong to this region: it is a bulk of See also:theology and religion, not a fact of what we See also:call ecclesiastical politics." Organization corresponded to the See also:life distinctive of the new Ecclesia. This was one of essential equality among " the See also:saints " or " the brethren," turning on See also:common See also:possession of and by the one Spirit of Christ. " The whole See also:congregation of the faithful was responsible for the whole life of the church—for its faith, its See also:worship, and its discipline " (See also:Dale). All alike were " priests unto God " in Christ (Apoc. i. 6; r Pet. ii. 9) and en-trusted with prerogatives of moral See also:jurisdiction (r See also:Cor. vi. I ff.). " The Ecclesia itself, i.e. apparently the sum of all its male adult members, is the See also:primary body, and, it would seem, even the primary authority." So says Dr Hort (p. 229), adding that " the very origin and fundamental nature of the Ecclesia as a community of disciples renders it impossible that the principle should rightly become obsolete." In the Apostolic See also:age local See also:office was determined, on the one See also:hand, by the divine gifts (charisms) manifesting themselves in certain persons (r Cor. xii.; Rom. xii. 3 ff.); and on the other by the recognition of such gifts by the inspired common consciousness of each Ecclesia (I Cor. xvi. 15–18; r Thess. v. 12 ff.). In most cases this took formal effect in a setting-apart by See also:prayer, sometimes with laying-on of hands. Such See also:consecration, however, whatever its form, was a See also:function of the local Ecclesia as a whole, acting through those of its members most fitted by See also:gift or See also:standing to be its representatives on the occasion. As to the specific See also:officers thus called into being, whether for supervision or See also:relief (I Cor. xii. 28), the New Testament knows none in the local church See also:superior to elders, the ruling order in Judaism also. " See also:Bishop " (overseer) was " mainly, if not always, not a See also:title, but a description of the See also:elder's function " (Hort, p. 232). Each church at first had at its head not a single See also:chief pastor, but a See also:plurality of elders (=bishops) acting as a See also:college. In course of time there emerged from this presbyterial body a primes inter pares, i.e. a permanent See also:leader, to whom henceforth the description " bishop " tended to be restricted. This is the " monarchical episcopate " which first meets us in the letters of See also:Ignatius, See also:early in the 2nd See also:century (see CHURCH HISTORY). But whatever its exact attributes, as he conceived it, it was still strictly a congregational office. Each normal church had its own bishop or pastor, as well as its See also:presbytery and body of deacons. " One city, one church (` See also:parish' in the See also:ancient sense) with its bishop," was the rule.' Hence " if we are to give a name to these primitive communities with their bishops, ` congregational ' will describe them better than ` diocesan ' (Sanday, Expositor, III. viii. p. 333). Nor did this See also:state of things See also:change so soon as is often supposed. It persisted in the main during the 2nd and 3rd centuries, and only faded before the growing See also:influence of See also:metropolitan or diocesan bishops in the 4th century. These, the bishops in the first instance of provincial capitals, gradually acquired a control over their episcopal brethren in lesser cities, analogous to that of the See also:civil See also:governor over other provincial officials. Indeed the development of the whole See also:hierarchy above the congregational bishop was largely influenced by the imperial See also:system, especially after Church and State came into See also:alliance under See also:Constantine. This See also:sacrifice of local autonomy was in a measure prepared for by an earlier centralizing See also:movement proper to the churches themselves, whereby those in certain areas met in See also:conference or " See also:synod " to formulate a common policy on local problems. Such inter-church meetings cannot be traced back beyond the latter See also:half of the 2nd century, and were purely ad hoc and informal, called to consider specific questions like See also:Montanism and See also:Easter observance. Nor were they at first confined to church officers, much less to bishops, but included " the faithful " of all sorts (Euseb. Hist. Eccl. v. 16, p. so), and were in fact "See also:councils composed of whole churches " (ex universis ecclesiis), where ' An ancient city generally included a See also:district around it, dwellers in which would go ecclesiastically, as well as politically, with those living within the city proper.929 there was a true " See also:representation of the whole Christian name " (Tert. De Jejun. 13). In a word, they were " councils of churches " (id. De Pud. ro) and not merely of church officers. Naturally, however, as the areas represented increased, the more indirect and partial became the representation possible. Thus far, however, synods were still compatible with local autonomy and so with Congregationalism. But as the idea that bishops were successors of the apostles came to prevail, presbyters, though sharing in the deliberations, gradually ceased to See also:share in the voting; while synods insensibly acquired more and more coercive control over the churches of the See also:area represented. Yet the momentous change which finally crushed out Congregationalism, by substitution of legal See also:coercion for moral suasion as the final means of securing unity, came relatively See also:late in the history of the ancient Catholic Church. The seat of authority in Discipline, the means by which the church strives to preserve the Christian See also:standard of living from serious dishonour in its own members, is the See also:touch-See also: The central idea was the sanctity of the church-members as such, rather than of the ministry as a clerical order. This is implied in the See also:oldest ordination rules and forms of prayer, such as those underlying the " Canons of See also:Hippolytus " and related collections. It is also implied in the congregational form and spirit of the earliest liturgies; but most of all in the discipline of the church before Constantine. But from the time of Cyprian (A.D. 250) the idea of the ministry as See also:clergy or priesthood gained ground, parallel with the more mixed quality of those admitted by See also:baptism to the status of " the faithful," and with the increasingly sacramental conception of the means of See also:grace. In both respects the reflex See also:action of the Novatianist and Donatist controversies upon Catholicism was disastrous to the earlier idea of church-fellowship. Formal and technical tests of membership, such as the reception of sacraments from a duly authorized clergy, came to replace Christ's own test of See also:character. The church ceased even to be thought of as a society of " saints," or to be organized on that basis. The gulf between the " laity " and " clergy " went on widening during the 5th and 6th centuries; and the people, stripped of their old prerogatives (See also:save in form here and there), passed into a spiritual pupillage which was one distinctive See also:note of the See also:medieval Church. In such a Catholic See also:atmosphere Congregationalism could have no being, save among little See also:groups of men who protested against the existing order. These, in proportion as they revived a primitive type of piety, tended to recover also some of its forms of organization. " They See also:bore See also:witness to the loss of the true idea of the Christian church," though they did not avail to restore it. Still, a See also:good See also:deal of semi-congregationalism probably did exist in obscure circles which preluded the wider See also:Reformation and were merged in it. So was it among the Waldenses, who reasserted the priesthood of all believers: still more among the See also:Lollards,3 who produced 2 So not only the See also:Didache (xv. 3, cf. xiv. 1, 2), but also See also:Tertullian (Apo'. ch. 39), and even Cyprian and the 4th-century Apostolic Constitutions (ii. 47), as well as the Didascalia, its 3rd-century basis. G. M. Trevelyan, See also:England in the Age of Wycliffe (1899) ; W. H. Summers, Our Lollard Ancestors (1906), pp. 51, 92, 509 if.
a " conventicle " type of Christian fellowship, supplementary to attendance at the parish church. This, while far.See also:short of theoretic Congregationalism, was a prophecy of it.
Congregationalism proper, as a theory of the organized Christian life contemplated in the New Testament, re-emerges
only at the Reformation, with its wide recovery of Modem such aspects of evangelic experience as See also:acceptance
Congrega-
tionalism. with God and See also:constant See also:access to Him through the See also:sole
See also:mediation of Christ. The See also:practical corollary of this, " the Priesthood of Believers," though grasped by See also:Luther (cf. Lindsay, Hist. of the Reformation, i. 435 ff.) and See also:continental reformers generally, was not fully carried out by them in church organization. This was due partly to a sense that only here and there was there a body of believers ripe for the congregational form of church-fellowship, which Luther himself regarded as the New Testament ideal (Dale, pp. 40-43), partly to fear of, See also:Ana-baptism, the See also:radical wing of the Reformation movement, which first strove to recover primitive Christianity apart altogether from traditional forms. In ' certain Anabaptist circles the primitive idea of a " See also:covenant " between believers and God as conditioning all their life, especially one with another, was revived (Champlin Burrage, The Church-Covenant Idea, See also:Philadelphia, 1904). Their local church life, as moulded by this idea (found even in the church constitution adopted by See also:Hesse in 1526), was congregational in type. But Anabaptism was not to remain an abiding force on the See also:continent; and though colonies of its exiles settled in England, they did not produce the Congregationalism which sprang up there under See also: 58 f. 61). Already in 1550 See also:Strype refers to certain " sectaries " in See also:Essex and See also:Kent, as " the first that made separation from the Reformed Church of England, having gathered congregations of their own." Then, during See also:Mary's reign, secret congregations met under the leadership of See also:Protestant clergy, and, when these were lacking, even of laymen. But these " private assemblies of the professors in these hard times," as Strype calls them, were congregational simply by See also:accident. On Elizabeth's See also:accession they ceased to assemble, until it was See also:plain that she did not intend a radical reformation. Then only did some of their members resume secret assembly, with a more definite view to conformity in all things to the New Testament type and that alone.
Still, the development of congregational churches proper was See also:gradual, the result of constant study of " the Word of God " in the See also:light of experience. The See also:process can be traced most clearly in London.' There, owing to See also:measures taken in 1565–1566 to enforce clerical subscription to the authorized order of worship, especially touching See also:vestments, certain persons of humble station began to assemble in houses " for See also:preaching and ministering the sacraments " (See also:Grindal's Remains, lxi.). This led in See also:June 1567 to the See also:arrest of some fifteen out of a See also:hundred men and See also:women met in Plumbers' See also: It advocated " the polity that our Saviour Jesus Christ See also:bath established," with " pastors, superintendes, deacons "; so that " all true pastors have equal power and authority . and for this cause, that no church ought to pretend any rule or lordship over other "; and none ought " to thrust himself into the government of the Church [as by ordination at large], but that it ought to be done by See also:election." See Burrage, The Church-Covenant Idea, p. 43.lxi.). This See also:act of ordaining ministers, probably after the Genevan order—which they certainly used from May 1568—and their See also:excommunication of certain deserters from their " church " (so Grindal), clearly See also:mark the fact that this body of some 200 persons had now deliberately taken up a position outside the See also:national church, as being themselves a " church " in a truer sense than any parish church, inasmuch as they conformed to the primitive See also:pattern. Their ideal is embodied in a manifesto set forth about 1570 under the title The' True Marks of Christ's Church, &c., and signed by " See also:Richard Fytz, Minister," as being " the order of the Privy Church in London, which by the malice of Satan is falsely. slandered." " The minds of them that by the strength and working of the Almighty, our See also:Lord Jesus Christ, have set their hands and See also:hearts to the pure, unmingled and sincere worshipping of God, according to his blessed and glorious Word in all things, only abolishing and abhor-See also:ring all traditions and inventions of man whatsoever, in the See also:sauce Religion and Service of our Lord God, knowing this always, that the true and afflicted Church of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ either hath, or else ever more continually under the See also:cross striveth for to have, " First and foremost, the Glorious word and Evangel preached, not in bondage and subjection [i.e. by episcopal See also:licence], but freely and purely. ` Secondly, to have the Sacraments ministered purely, only and altogether according to the institution and good worde of the Lord Jesus, without any tradition or invention of man. " And last of all, to have not the filthy See also:Canon See also:law, but discipline only and altogether agreeable to the same heavenly and almighty worde of our good Lord, Jesus Christ." Here we have essential Congregationalism, formulated for the first time in England as the See also:original and genuine Christian polity, and as such binding on those loyal to the Head of the Church. All turns, as we see from the See also:petition addressed in 1571 to the See also:queen by twenty-seven persons (the See also:majority women, possibly wives in some cases of men in prison), upon the See also:duty of separation with a view to purity of Christian fellowship (2 Cor. Vi. 17 f.), and upon moral discipline " by the strength and sure See also:warrant of the Lord's good word, as in Matt. xviii. 15–18 (1 Cor. v.)" were it only in a church of " two or three " gathered in the Name. Whatever may be thought of their application of these principles, there is no mistaking the deeply religious aim of these separatists for conscience' See also:sake, viz. the realizing of the Christian ideal in See also:personal conduct, in a See also:fellow-See also:ship of souls alike devoted to the Highest; nor can it be doubted that the mingled " communion of the parish churches made church " fellowship " in the apostolic sense a practical impossibility. This was confessed alike by the bishops (e.g. See also:Whitgift) and by the Puritans, who maintained the See also:paramount duty of remaining within the queen's church and there working for the further reformation which they recognized as sadly needed by See also:English religion. But the radical " Puritans " (the above documents in the State See also:Paper Office are endorsed " Bishop of London: Puritans ") See also:felt that this meant See also:treason to the Headship of Christ in His Church; and that until the See also:prince should set aside " the superstition and commandments of men," and " send forth princes and ministers [like another See also:Josiah], and give them the See also:Book of the Lord, that they may bring See also:home the people of God to the purity and truth of the apostolic Church," they could do no other than themselves live after that divine ideal. They were not separated of their own choice, but by the word of God acting on their consciences.
" Reformation without tarrying for Anie " was the See also:burden laid on the See also:heart of the Congregational pioneers in 1567–1571; and it continued to See also:press heavily on many, both " Separatists" and conforming " Puritans " (to use the nicknames used by foes), before it became written theory in See also:Robert See also: It has been debated how far Browne derived this idea from Dutch See also:Anabaptists in See also:Norwich and elsewhere. Doubtless the " covenant " idea was most characteristic of Anabaptists. But they connected it closely with adult baptism, whereas Browne enjoined baptism for the See also:children of those already in covenant, and in no See also:case taught re-baptism. Thus he evidently made " the willing covenant " of conscious faith the essence of the See also:matter, and regarded the sign or See also:seal as secondary. Considering, then, his other See also:differences from Anabaptist theories, and the See also:absence of any hint to the contrary in his own autobiographical references, " it is safe to affirm that he had no conscious indebtedness to the Anabaptists " (Williston See also: Thus the " authority and office " of " church See also:governors " is not derived from the people, but from God, " by due consent and agreement of the church." Conference between See also:sister churches for counsel is provided for; so that, while autonomous, they do not live as isolated See also:units. Such were the leading features of Browne's Congregationalism, as a polity distinct from both Episcopacy and Presbyterianism. Any varieties in the congregational genus which emerge later on, keep within his See also:general outlines. To this fact the very See also:nickname " Brownists," usually given to early " Separatists " by accident, but Congregationalists in essence, is itself witness. " The See also:kingdom of God was not to be begun by whole parishes, but rather of the worthiest, were they never so few." This See also:sentence from Browne's spiritual autobiography contains the See also:root of the whole matter, and explains the title of his other chief work, also of 1582, A See also:Treatise of Reformation without tarrying for any, and of the wickedness of those Preachers which will not reform till the See also:Magistrate command or compel them. Here he, first of known English writers, sets forth a See also:doctrine which, while falling short of the Anabaptist theory that the civil ruler has no standing in the affairs of the Church, in that religion is a matter of the individual conscience before God, yet marks a certain advance upon current views. Magistrates " have not that authority over the church as to be . . . spiritual See also:Kings . . . but only to rule the See also:commonwealth in all outward See also:justice. . . . And therefore also because the Church is in a commonwealth, it is of their See also:charge; that is, concerning the outward See also:provision and outward justice, they are to look to it. But to compel religion, to plant churches by power, and to force a submission to ecclesiastical government by laws and penalties, belongeth not to them . . . neither yet to the Church " (Treatise, &c., p. 12). Here Browne distinguishes acceptance of the covenant relation with God (religion) and the forming or " planting " of churches on the basis of God's covenant (with its laws of government), from the enforcing of the covenant voluntarily accepted, whether by church-excommunication or by civil penalties—the latter only in cases of flagrant impiety, such as See also:idolatry, See also:blasphemy or See also:Sabbath-breaking. In virtue of this distinction which implied that the nation was not actually in covenant with God, he taught a relative See also:toleration. In this he was in advance even of most Separatists, who held with See also:Barrow 1 " that the Prince ought to compel all their subjects to the hearing of God's Word in the public exercises of the church." As, however, the prince might approve a false type of Church, in spite of what they 2 both assumed to be the clear teaching of Scripture, and should so far be resisted, Browne and Barrow found themselves practically in the same attitude towards the prince's religious coercion. It was part of their higher See also:allegiance to the King of kings. Between 158o and 1581, when Browne formed in Norwich the first known church of this order on definite scriptural theory, and See also:October 1585, when, being convinced that the times were not yet ripe for the realization of the perfect polity, and taking a more charitable view of the established Church, he yielded to the pressure brought to See also:bear on him by his kinsman Lord See also:Burghley, so far as partially to conform to parochial public worship as defined by law (see BROWNE, ROBERT), the history of Congregationalism is mainly that of Browne and of his writings. Their effect was considerable, to judge from a royal See also:proclamation against them and those of his friend Robert See also:Harrison, issued in June 1583. But the repression of " sectaries " was now, and onwards until the end of the reign, so severe as to prevent much action on these lines. Still See also:Sir See also:Walter See also:Raleigh's rhetorical estimate of " near 20,000 " Brownists existing in England in See also:April 1593, at least means something. We hear 3 of " Brownists in London about 1585, while the London petitioners of 1592 refer to their See also:fellows in " other gaols throughout the See also:land "; and the True Confession of 1596 specifies Norwich, See also:Gloucester, See also:Bury St See also:Edmunds, as well as " many other places of the land." But of organized churches we can trace none in England, until we come in 1586 to See also:Greenwood and Barrow, the men whose devotion to a cause in which they felt the imperative call of God seems to have rallied into church-fellowship the Separatists in London, whether those of Fytz's See also:day or those later convinced by the failure of the Puritan efforts at reform and by the writings of Browne. At what exact date this London church—which had a more or less continuous history down to and beyond 1624—was actually formed, is open to doubt. It was only in See also:September 1592 that it elected officers, viz. a pastor (See also:Francis See also: S. Bredwell, The Rasing of the See also:Foundations of Brownisme (1588), p. 135. See also F. J. ,Powicke, " Lists of the Early Separatists," in Cong. Hist. See also:Soc. Transactions, i. 146 if. elders. Both equally See also:teach the supremacy of " the whole church " in all discipline, including that upon elders or officers generally, if need arise. Possibly Barrow laid more stress also on the orderly " rules of the Word " to be followed in all church actions, and so conveyed a rather different impression.
After the See also:execution of Greenwood, Barrow and the ex-Puritan See also:Penry (a See also:recent recruit to Separatism), in the See also:spring of 1593, it seemed to some that Separatism was " in effect extinguished." This was largely true for the time as regards England, thanks to the rigour of See also:Archbishop Whitgift, aided by the new act which See also:left deniers of the queen's power in ecclesiastical matters no See also:option but to leave the See also:realm. Even this hard See also:fate the bulk of the London church was ready to endure. Gradually they resumed church-fellowship in 'See also:Amsterdam, where they See also:chose the learned Henry See also:Ainsworth (q.v.) as teacher, in place of See also:Green-See also:wood, but elected no new pastor, as they expected Francis Johnson (1562–1618) soon to be released and to rejoin them. This he did at the end of 1597, after a vain See also:attempt to find See also:asylum under his See also:country's See also:flag' in See also:Newfoundland. It was here and now that divergent ideals as to the See also:powers of the eldership really emerged. Johnson, a man autocratic by nature, and leaning to his old Presbyterian ideals on the point, held that the church had no power to control its elders, once elected, in their exercise of discipline, much less to depose them; while Ainsworth, true to Barrow and the " old way " as he claimed, sided with those who made the church itself supreme throughout. The church divided on the issue; but neither See also:section has further See also:historical importance. Far otherwise was it with the church which was formed originally at See also:Gainsborough (?16o2), by " professors " trained under zealous Puritan clergy in the district where See also:Nottinghamshire, See also:Yorkshire and See also:Lincolnshire meet, but which about 1606 reorganized itself for reasons of convenience into two distinct churches, meeting at Gainsborough and in Scrooby See also:Manor House. Erelong these were forced to seek See also:refuge, in 1607 and 1608 respectively, at Amsterdam, whence the Scrooby church moved to See also:Leiden in 1609 (See also:Bradford's History of See also:Plymouth See also:Plantation, chs. 1-3). The permanent issues of the Gainsborough-Amsterdam church are connected with the origins of the Baptist wing of Congregationalism, through See also: As for the Scrooby-Leiden church under John See also:Robinson (q.v.), it was in a sense the direct See also:parent of historical " Congregationalism " alike in England and See also:America (see below, section See also:American).
Separatism was now passing into Congregationalism,' both in sentiment and in See also:language. The emphasis changes from protest to See also:calm exposition. In the freer atmosphere of Holland the exiles lose the antithetical attitude, with its narrowing and exaggerative tendency, and gain breadth and See also:balance in the assertion of their distinctive testimony. This comes out in the writings both of Robinson and of Henry See also:Jacob, both of whom passed gradually from See also:Puritanism to Separatism at a time when the silencing of some 300 Puritan clergy by the Canons of 1604, and the exercise of the royal supremacy under Archbishop See also:Bancroft, brought these " brethren of the Second Separation " into closer relations with the earlier Separatists. In a work of 1610, the sequel to his Divine Beginning and Institution of Christ's true Visible and Ministerial Church, Jacob describes " an entire and See also:independent 3 body-politic," " endued with power immediately under and from Christ, as every proper church is and ought to be." But his claim for " independent " churches no longer denies that true Christianity exists within parish assemblies. Similarly Robinson wrote about 162o a Treatise of the Lawfulness of hearing of the Ministers of the Church of England which shows a larger catholicity of feeling than his
' So the Amsterdam church petitioned See also: Such, then, was the type of church formed in 1616 by Henry Jacob in London. It was founded under the tolerant Archbishop See also:George See also: Yet the " Five Dissenting Brethren " would have failed to secure toleration even for themselves as Congregationalists—such was the dread felt by the assembly for Anabaptists, See also:Antinomians, and other " sectaries "—had it not been for the vaguer, but widespread Independency existing in parliament and in the See also:army. Here, then, we meet with a distinction (cf. Dale, p. 374 ff.) of moment for the Commonwealth era, between " Independency " as a principle and " Congregationalism " as an ideal of church polity. Independency, like See also:Nonconformity, is primarily a negative term. " It simply affirms the right of any society of private persons to meet together for worship . . . without being interfered with' by any external authority." Such a right may be asserted on other theories than the congregational or even the Christian. Congregationalism, however, " denotes a positive theory of the organization and powers of Christian churches," having as corollary independency of external control, whether civil or ecclesiastical. " Historically the two terms have been used interchangeably " during the last two hundred years. But under the Commonwealth many professed the one without fully accepting the other. During the Civil See also:War Congregationalism broadened out into reciprocal relations with the national life and history. Thenceforth ' The opposite of this external Independency, See also:admission of civil oversight even for churches enjoying See also:internal ecclesiastical self-government, was also common, being the outcome of the traditional Puritan attitude to the state. See A. See also:Mackennal, The See also:Evolution of Congregationalism (1901), pp. 43 if. it involves not only the story of Nonconformity and the growth of religious liberty, but also the whole development of See also:modern England. To See also:sketch even in outline " The Evolution of Congregationalism " in See also:correspondence with so complex an environment is here impossible. Only salient points can be indicated. During the See also:Protectorate, with its practical See also:establishment of Presbyterians, See also:Independents and See also:Baptists, the position of Congregationalism was really anomalous, in so far as any of its pastors became parish ministers,' and so received " public See also:maintenance " and were expected to administer the sacraments to all and sundry. But the Restoration soon changed matters, and by forcing Presbyterians and Congregationalists alike into Nonconformity, placed the former, instead of the latter, in the anomalous position. In practice they became Independents, after trying in some cases to create voluntary presbyteries, like See also:Baxter's Associations,' adopted partially in 1653-166o, in spite of repressive legislation. But though Presbyterians did not in many instances become Congregationalists also, until a later date, the two types of Puritanism were See also:drawn closer together in the half-century after 1662. The approximation was mutual. Both had given up the strict jure divino theory of their polity as apostolic. The Congregationalism of the See also:Savoy See also:Declaration (Oct. 12, 1658), agreed on by representatives—the majority non-ministerial—from 120 churches, is one tempered by experience gained in Holland and New England, as well as in the Westminster Assembly. Hence when, after the Toleration Act of 1689, a serious attempt was made to draw the two types together on the basis of Heads of Agreement assented to by the See also:United Ministers in and about London, formerly called Presbyterian and Congregational, the basis partook of both (much after the See also:fashion of the New England Way), though on the whole it favoured Congregationalism (see Dale, pp. 474 ff.). In many See also:trust-deeds of this date (which did not contain doctrinal clauses), and for long after, the phrase " Presbyterian or Independent " occurs. Yet the two gradually drifted apart again owing to doctrinal differences, emerging first on the Calvinistic doctrine of grace, such as See also:broke up the See also:joint " Merchants' Lecture " started in 1672 in Pinners' Hall, and next on Christology. In both cases the Congregationalists took the " high," the Presbyterians the " moderate " view. These specific differences revealed different religious tendencies,' the one type being more warmly Evangelical, the other more " rational " and congenial in See also:temper with 18th-century See also:Deism. The theological See also:division was accentuated by the Salters' Hall Controversy (1717-1719), which, nominally touching religious liberty versus subscription, really involved differences as to Trinitarian doctrine. Ere long Arianism and Socinianism were general among English Presbyterians (see See also:UNITARIANISM). Congregationalists, on the other hand, whether Independents or Baptists, remained on the whole See also:Trinitarians, largely perhaps in virtue of their very polity, with its intimate relation between the piety of the people and that of the ministry. Yet the relation of Congregational polity to its religious ideal had already become less intimate and conscious than even half a century before: the system was held simply as one traditionally associated with a serious and unworldly piety. " Church privileges " meant to many only the sacred duty of electing their own ministry and a formal right of See also:veto on the proposals of pastor and deacons. The See also:fusion into one office of the functions of " elders " and " deacons " (still distinguished in the Savoy Declaration of 1658) was partly at least a symptom of the decay of the church-idea in its original fulness, a decay itself connected with the general decline in spiritual intensity which marked 18th-century religion, after the overstrain of the preceding age. Yet long before the Evangelical Revival proper, ' For the distinction between " Gathered " and " Re-formed " churches in this connexion, see Dale, p. 376. ' A parallel is afforded by the history of Congregationalism in See also:Scotland, which arose early to the 19th century through the evangelistic fervour of the Haldanes in an era of " moderatism "; also by the rise of the kindred Evangelical See also:Union, shortly before the Disruption in 1843. These two movements coalesced in a single Congregational Union in 1897.partial revivals of a warmer piety occurred in certain circles; and among the Independents in particular the new type of hymnody initiated by See also:Isaac See also:Watts (1707) helped not a little. The Methodist movement touched all existing types of English religion, but none more than Congregationalism. While the " rational " Presbyterians were repelled by it as " See also:enthusiasm," the Independents had sufficient in common with its spirit to assimilate—after some distrust of its See also:special ways and doctrines—its See also:passion of Christlike pity for " those out of the way," and so to take their share in the wider evangelization of the people and the Christian philanthropy which flowed from the new inspiration. For underneath obvious differences, like the Arminian theology of the Wesleys and the Presbyterian type of their organization, there was latent See also:affinity between a " methodist society " and the original congregational idea of a church; and in practice See also:Methodism, outside the actual control of the Wesleys, in various ways worked out into Congregationalism (see Mackennal, op. cit. pp. 156 if., Dale, pp. 583 ff.). So was it in the long run with the Countess of See also:Huntingdon's Connexion, springing from See also:Whitefield's Calvinistic wing of the Revival, not to mention the congregational See also:strain in some See also:minor Methodist churches. But whilst Congregationalism See also:grew thereby in See also:numbers and in a sense of See also:mission to all sorts and conditions of men—lack of which was one of the disabilities3 due in part to its sectarian position before the law (see Mackennal, pp. 142 ff.)—it modified not only its Calvinism but also its old church ideal' in the process. During most of the next century it inclined to an See also:individualism untempered by a sense of mystic union with God and in Him with all men (see Dale, pp. 387 if., for an estimate of these and other changes). It lost, however, its exclusive spirit. Its See also:pulpit, which had always been the centre of power in the churches, has for a century or more taken a wider range of influence in a See also:succession of notable preachers. Congregationalists generally have been to the fore in attempts to apply Christian principles to matters of social, municipal, national and See also:international importance. They have been steady friends of See also:foreign See also:missions in the most catholic form (supporting the London Missionary Society, founded in 1795 on an inter-denominational basis), of See also:temperance, popular See also:education and international See also:peace. Their weakness as a See also:denomination has lain latterly in their very catholicity of sympathy. Thus it was left to the See also:Oxford Revival, with its emphasis on certain aspects of the Church idea, to help to re-awaken in many Congregationalists a due feeling for specific church-fellowship, which was the main passion with their forefathers. Another influence making in the same direction, but in a different spirit, was the Broad Church ideal represented in various forms by Thomas See also:Erskine of Linlathen, F. W. See also:Robertson of See also:Brighton and F. D. See also:Maurice. In the last of these the conception of Christ's Headship of the human See also:race assumed a specially inspiring form. This conception, in a more definitely Biblical and Christian shape, attained forcible expression in the writings of R. W. Dale of See also:Birmingham, the most influential Congregationalist in the closing decades of the 19th century, in whom lived afresh the high Congregationalism of the early Separatists. Modern Congregationalism, as highly sensitive to the Zeitgeist and its solvent influence on See also:dogma, shared for a time the See also:critical and negative attitude produced by the first impact of a culture determined by the conception of development as applying to the whole realm of experience. But it has largely outgrown this, and is addressing itself to the progressive re-interpretation of Christianity, in an essentially constructive spirit. Similarly its ecclesiastical statesmen have been developing the full possibilities of its polity, to suit the demands of the time for co-ordinated effort. While its principle of congregational autonomy has been gaining ground in the more centralized systems, 3 Another See also:disability, acutely felt by all Nonconformists, created by the act of 1662, viz. exclusion from the national centres of education, they strove earnestly to remedy by their See also:academies, the story of which is sketched by Dale, pp. 499 if., 559-561. 4 The modern use of the term " See also:chapel " seems to date only from Methodism (Mackennal, p. 165). whether Episcopal or Presbyterian, its own latent capacity for co-operation has been evoked by actual needs to a degree never before realized in England. Association for mutual help and counsel, contemplated in some degree in the early days, from Browne to the Savoy Declaration of 1658, but thereafter forced into See also:abeyance, began early in the 19th century to find expression in See also:County Unions on a voluntary basis, especially for promoting home missionary work. These in turn led on to the Congregational Union of England and See also:Wales, formed in 1832, and consisting at first of " County and District Associations, together with any ministers and churches of the Congregational Order recognized by an Association." Later it was found that an assembly so constituted combined the incompatible functions of a See also:council for the transaction of business and a See also:congress for shaping or expressing common See also:opinion: and its constitution was modified so as to secure the latter See also:object only. But after half a century's further experience, public opinion, stimulated by growing need for common action in relation to certain practical problems of home and foreign work, proved ripe for the realization of the earlier idea in its See also:double form. In 1904 the Union was again modified so as to embrace (I) a council of 300, representative of the county associations, to direct the business for which the Union as such is responsible, and (2) a more popular assembly, made up of the council and a large number of direct representatives of the associated churches. Association, however, remains as before voluntary, and some churches are outside the Union; nor has a See also:resolution of the assembly more than moral authority for any of the constituent churches. As regards the " Declaration of Faith, Church Order and Discipline " adopted in 1833, and still printed in the official Year Book " for general See also:information " as to " what is commonly believed " by members of the Union, what is characteristic is the attitude taken in the preliminary notes to " creeds and articles of religion." These are disallowed as a bond of union or test of communion, much as in the Savoy Declaration of 1658 it is said that constraint " causeth them to degenerate from the name and nature of Confessions," " into Exactions and Impositions of Faith." Among topics which have exercised the collective mind of modern Congregationalism, and still exercise it, are church-aid and home missions, church See also:extension in the colonies, the conditions of entry into the ministry and sustentation therein, See also:Sunday school work, the social and economic See also:condition of the people (issuing in social settlements and institutional churches), and, last but not least, foreign missions. Indeed the support of the London Missionary Society has come to devolve almost wholly on Congregationalists, a responsibility recognized by the Union in 1889 and again in 1904. To afford a home for the centralized activities of the Union, the Memorial Hall, Farringdon See also:Street, London, was built on the site of the See also:Fleet prison—soil consecrated by sacrifice for conscience under Elizabeth—and opened in 1875. There the Congregational Library, founded a See also:generation before, is housed, as well as a publication See also:department. A congregational hymn-book (including Watts' collection) was issued by the Union in 1836, and again in fresh forms in 1859, 1873 and 1887.
The theological colleges which See also:train for the Congregational ministry have themselves an interesting history, going back to the private " academies " formed by ejected ministers. They underwent great extension owing to the Evangelical Revival, and became largely centres of evangelistic activity (Dale, p. 593 ff.). But they were burdened by the See also:necessity of supplying See also:literary as well as theological training, owing to the disabilities of Non-conformists at Oxford and Cambridge till 1871. Even before that, however, owing partly to the impulse given by the university of London after 1836, the standard of learning in some of the colleges had been rising; and the last generation has seen marked advance in this respect. In 1886 Spring See also: Congregational See also:statistics are very uncertain before 1832, when the Union began to make such matters its concern. About 1716 See also:Daniel See also:Neal knew of 1107 dissenting congregations; 86o Presbyterian or Independent (of which perhaps 350 were Independent), and 247 Baptist. During the 18th century, though the Independents increased at the expense of the Presbyterians, it is doubtful whether they kept See also:pace with the increase of See also:population, until the Evangelical Revival. In 1832 they reckoned some 800 churches, the Baptists 532. In 1907 the figures were, for Great Britain1 as a whole: Churches, See also:branch churches and mission stations, 4928; sittings, 1,801,447; church members, 498,953; Sunday school scholars, 729,347, with 69,575 teachers; ministers (with or without See also:pastoral charge), 3197, together with 299 evangelists and lay pastors; lay preachers, 5603. In other parts of the See also:British See also:empire there are some 1045 churches and mission stations (many native), See also:South See also:Africa, 385; See also:Australia, 311, and See also:Tasmania, 49; British See also:North America, 151; British See also:Guiana, 50, and See also:Jamaica, 48; New See also:Zealand, 35; See also:India, 15; Hongkong, 1. There are also congregational churches in See also:Austria, See also:Bulgaria, Holland, See also:Norway, See also:Portugal, See also:Spain, See also:Sweden and in See also:Japan (93). Apart from these, however, and some 150,000 communicants in its foreign missions, British and American " Congregationalism " reckons more than a million and a See also:quarter church members; while, including those known as Baptists (q.v.), the See also:total amounts to several millions more. The Union of 1832 led indirectly to two further developments. In the first place it fostered the growth of Congregationalism in British colonies. Beginnings had already been made—partly by help of the London Missionary Society—in British North America (from New England), South Africa, Australia and British Guiana. But in 1836 a Colonial Missionary Society was founded in connexion with the Union. Secondly, a See also:medium now existed for See also:drawing closer the bonds between English and American Congregationalists. This gradually led to the idea of " An Ecumenical Council of Congregational Churches," broached in 1874, and first realized in 1891, in the London International Council under the See also:presidency of Dr R. W. Dale (q.v.). The second council met in See also:Boston in 1899, and the third in See also:Edinburgh in 1908. Their proceedings were issued in full, and the institution promised to take a permanent place in Congregationalism. I In See also:Ireland the oldest existing Congregational church (at See also:Cork) dates from 176o; but most belong to the 19th century. There are now 41 churches, attended by about 'See also:moon persons. The Channel Islands have 12 churches, the oldest founded in 1803. J. Ogle, Congr. Churches of See also:Dorset (1899) ; W. H. Summers, History of the Berks, S. Bucks, and S. Oxon. Cong. Churches (1905) ; and F. J. owicke, History of the See also:Cheshire Cong. Union, 18o6-1906. The Victorian County Histories (See also:Constable) may also be consulted. Important documents for Congregational Faith and Order, with historical introductions, are printed in Williston Walker's Creeds and Platforms of Congregationalism (New York, 1893). A classic exposition of Congregational theory is contained in R. W. Dale's See also:Manual of Cong. Principles (1884). (J. V. B.)
In America.—The history of American Congregationalism during its early years is practically that of the origin of New England. It may be said to begin with the arrival in 1620 of a small See also:company including See also: Certain differences in opinion on See also:franchise questions led to the See also:founding of the colony of See also:Connecticut in 1634-1636 by settlers led by Thomas See also: Winthrop's company were nonconformists but not separatists, esteemed it "an See also:honour to call the Church of England, from whence we rise, our dear See also:mother," emigrated that they might be divided from her corruptions, not from herself. But the new conditions, backed by the specialinfluence of the Plymouth See also:settlement, were too much for them; they became Independent, first, perhaps; of necessity, then of conviction and choice. Only so could they guard their ecclesiastical and their civil liberties. These, indeed, were at first formally as well as really identical. In 1631 the general court of the Massachusetts colony resolved, " that no man shall be admitted to the freedom of this body politic, but such as are members of some of the churches within the limits of the same." This lasted till 1664. In New Haven the same system prevailed from 1639 till 1665. Church and State, citizenship in the one and membership in the other, thus became identical, and the See also:foundation was laid for those troubles and consequent severities that vexed and shamed the early history of Independency in New England, natural enough when all their circumstances are fairly considered, indefensible when we regard their idea of the relation of the civil power to the conscience and religion, but explicable when their church idea alone is regarded. And this latter was their own standpoint; their acts were more acts of church discipline than those of civil See also:penalty. The years following the settlement of the four colonies were occupied in the See also:solution of problems in church and civil government and in the preparation for the proper training of ministers. The relation between membership of the church and membership of the civic community has been mentioned. The principal problem which divided the settlers was that known as the " Half Way Covenant," which concerned the status of the children of original church members. The difficulty was that, according to the principles held by the founders of the churches, the admission to membership of a parent involved a similar status in the case of his children; on the other hand, no adult could be admitted unless the church as a whole was convinced that he was a man of proved Christian character. A See also:compromise was arrived at by two assemblies, the first a See also:convention of ministers held at Boston in 1657, the second a general synod of the churches of Massachusetts in 1662. As a result of these assemblies it was decided that those who had become members in childhood simply by virtue of their parents' status could not subsequently join in the celebration of the Lord's Supper nor record votes on ecclesiastical issues, unless they should approve themselves fit; they might, however, in their turn bring their children to baptism and hand on to them the degree of membership which they themselves had received from their own parents. This See also:classification of the members into those who were in full communion and those who belonged only to the "Half Way Covenant " was vigorously attacked by See also:Jonathan See also:Edwards, but it was not abolished until the early years of the 19th century. Of far greater importance not only to Congregationalism but also to the future of the American colonies was the care taken by the settlers to provide adequate training for their ministers. As early as 1636 they founded Harvard College, and in 1701 Yale College was established. The emphasis laid by the Congregationalists on this branch of their work has been characteristic of their successors both in America and in Great See also:Britain. Ten years after the foundation of Harvard, missionary work among the Indians was undertaken by John Eliot and Thomas See also:Mayhew. Eliot produced his See also:Indian See also:translation of the Scriptures in 1661-1663, and by about 1675 there were six Indian churches with some 4000 converts. The enthusiasm which thus marked the early years of American Congregationalists rapidly cooled from one generation to another. It was not until 1734 that a new outburst of zeal was aroused by the " revivalist " work of Jonathan Edwards, followed in 1740--1742 by George Whitefield. This See also:wave of enthusiasm spread from See also:Northampton, See also:Mass., till it swept New England. Unfortunately, however, the solid work achieved was accompanied by much superficial excitement among emotional persons for whom the so-called " Great Awakening " was merely a passing sensation. Moreover there was considerable controversy between the " Old See also:Lights," who regarded the " revival " as positively pernicious, and the "New Lights," who approved it. Partly owing to its own faults and partly owing to the stress of See also:political excitement which followed it, the Edwardean revival was followed by nearly half a century of lethargy, during which the chief See also:interest centred in the gradual growth of doctrinal controversy. Two new theological See also:schools began to emerge from the old Calvinistic theology of the early settlers. The first owed its origin to Jonathan Edwards (the elder) and was carried on by Samuel See also:Hopkins (1721-1803), Joseph See also:Bellamy (1719—1790), Nathaniel See also:Emmons (1745-1840), Jonathan Edwards (the younger) and See also:Timothy See also:Dwight (1752-1817). This system of thought, known as the "New England Theology," rapidly became predominant, and by the beginning of the 19th century was generally adopted. An equally important school, though numerically smaller, came into existence in eastern Massachusetts under the leadership of Charles See also:Chauncy (1592—1672) and Jonathan Mayhew (1720-1766). During the events which led up to the Declaration of See also:Independence this school, known as the "Liberal" school, was not prominent though the number of its adherents steadily grew. Subsequently, however, largely owing to the activity of men like William See also:Ellery See also:Channing, it acquired great importance. As early as 1805 it was recognized as predominant in Harvard College, and in 1815 it had become a distinct denomination under the new title "Unitarian" (see UNITARIANISM). When the excitement caused by the Revolution had subsided, Congregationalism entered upon a new period of See also:energy. From 1791 onwards revival work again became prominent with results which far surpassed those of the Edwardean period. The number of church members steadily increased, and activities of wider and more lasting importance were undertaken. The loss of Harvard College compelled the provision of new seminaries, and missionary work both home and foreign was vigorously carried on. The following are the seminaries founded since 1800: See also:Andover (1808), See also:Bangor (1816), See also:Hartford (1834), the theological school of See also:Oberlin College (1835), See also:Chicago (1858), Pacific (1869; now at See also:Berkeley, Cal.), and See also:Atlanta (See also:Georgia), 19o1. In 1822 a special theological department was organized at Yale. Up to 1810 missionary work had been carried on at home by several local See also:societies, but in that year the American See also:Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions was organized. Other societies undertook various departments of work at home: the Congregational Education Society, for assisting candidates for the ministry (1815); the American Missionary Association (1846), founded by the See also:anti-See also:slavery party 'for the See also:conversion of the negroes, which subsequently devoted its energies to work among the Indians of the See also:west, the negroes of the south, the See also:Chinese of the west See also:coast and the See also:Eskimo in See also:Alaska; to aid in the See also:building of churches and mission rooms the American Congregational Union was formed in 1853 (now called the Congregational Church Building Society). To these last societies is largely due the growth of the Congregational body in the west. In the early days of this expansion Congregationalism and Presbyterianism worked hand in hand, but the so-called "See also:Plan of Union" (18o1) was successively abandoned by the Conservative Presbyterians in 1837 and by the Congregationalists through the "See also:Albany Convention" in 1852. It was this decision which for the first time gave to Congregationalists a true feeling of denominational unity (see below). The 19th century was a period of considerable progress for the Congregational body, and on the whole the same may be said for the first seven years of the 20th century. On the other hand, the numerical increase had not kept pace with the increase of population. The English Congregational Year Book for 1908 said, in reference to the United States: "In spite of phenomenal increase of population Congregationalism in the states, as here in London, is only marking time. If other sister churches were See also:reporting progress, or were simply keeping abreast of the population, these facts would not be so ominous as they undoubtedly are. But we hear no good See also:news of that See also:kind, and gather small comfort from the See also:mere fact that Congregational churches are holding their own as well as any of their neighbours." It must, therefore, be admitted that the great expansion which marked the first half of the 19th century has not been proportionately maintained. None the less, Congregationalism has through itsleading representatives taken an increasingly important part in theological controversy and scholarship generally. Among the followers of Jonathan Edwards the more prominent have been N. W. See also: Meanwhile, without giving up the main principle of the autonomy of the local church, they have See also:developed in various ways an active disposition to co-operate as a united religious body. This tendency to denominational union is See also:manifest partly in the work of the various educational and missionary societies which have been enumerated, but more strikingly in the institution of the National Council, which is convened at intervals of three years, and is composed of ministers and lay delegates representing the churches. The council, like the minor advisory councils which have been from early times called together for the guidance of particular churches on occasions of special difficulty, is each time dissolved at its See also:adjournment. It is possessed of no authority. Its function is to deliberate on subjects of common concern to the entire denomination, and to publish such opinions and counsels as a majority may see fit to send forth to the churches. The first of the National Councils (held at Boston in 1865) issued a brief statement of doctrine (the " See also:Burial Hill Declaration"), descriptive of the religious tenets generally accepted by the denomination. Later (1883) a large See also:committee, previously appointed, framed a more full confession of faith (the " See also:Commission Creed "), with the same end in view. Of course neither of these creeds was in the least binding upon ministers or upon churches, except so far as in each instance they might be voluntarily adopted. The movement in the direction of union has been still further promoted by the International Councils referred to above (section on British Congregationalism ad fin.), in which the American Congregationalists have met the representatives of their brethren in Great Britain and its colonies having the same faith and polity. In the different states, conferences, composed likewise of representatives of the several churches and their pastors, have sprung up. These meet at stated intervals for the See also:consideration of practical subjects of moment, and for the promotion of a religious spirit. There is a tendency, moreover, to See also:accord to the conferences the function of determining the tests of ministerial standing in the Congregational denomination. In some of the states the licensing of preachers, which was formerly left to the voluntary associations of ministers in the different localities, has been made a function of the state conferences. At the very first, in New England, the theory was held that a minister, on ceasing to be the pastor of a particular church, falls into the See also:rank of laymen. But the view was very soon adopted, and since has universally prevailed, that a minister in such cases still retains his clerical character. In later times the measure of authority conceded to a pastor as the shepherd of a See also:flock has been much diminished in consequence of the gradual development of democratic feeling in both minister and congregation. This loss of clerical See also:prestige has been due in no small degree to the increasing See also:habit of dispensing with a form of See also:installation, and of substituting for a permanent pastorate, instituted with the See also:advice and consent of a council, an engagement to serve as a minister for a fixed term of one or more years. Under ,this See also:custom of "stated supplies" ordination may be granted to those whose ministry in a particular church is made and dissolved by no other process than a mutual agreement. The Congregational churches, as distinct from the churches retaining the same polity, but separated by the See also:adoption of Unitarian opinions, have in times past professed to be Calvinists of stricter or more moderate types. But as tearly as 1865, Arminians were welcomed to Congregational fellowship. In the last few decades, with the spread in the community of innovations in doctrinal and critical opinions, a wider diversity of belief has come to prevail, so that " Evangelical," in the popular sense of the term, rather than " Calvinistic," is the epithet more suit- able to American Congregational preachers and churches. The Year-Book for 1907 reported the total number of communicants in all the states at 708,913 (in 1857, 224,732) ; Sunday-school scholars, 679,044 (in 1857, 195,572) ; churches, 5989 (in 1857, 2350) ; ministers, 5972 (in 1857, 2315) ; the amount of benevolent contributions by the churches as $2,591,693, in addition to a total home See also:expenditure of $8,986,727. In the theological seminaries there were 417 students in 1907-1908, as compared with a maximum of 596 in 1891-1892, and a minimum of 181 in 1864-1865. The American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions reported for the year ending See also:August 31, 1907: 579 missionaries and 4135 native workers; 580 churches with 68,000 communicants and 65,000 scholars. See Williston Walker, History of the Congregational Churches in the United States (1894) ; A. Dunning, The National Council See also:Digest (Boston, 1906). Additional information and CommentsThere are no comments yet for this article.
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