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The United Church of Canada, the second-largest Christian denomination in Canada after the Roman Catholic Church,[1] is an evangelical Protestant denomination founded in 1925 as a merger of four Protestant denominations:
While other Evangelical Protestant denominations have tended in political and theological terms, to drift towards the right (the terms "Evangelical Protestant" and even the bare "Evangelical" have tended to be co-opted by a considerably different religious tradition) the United Church declines to have these traditional identities taken from it.[citation needed] The United Church has maintained theologically and politically liberal positions, especially regarding its stances toward the social gospel, women's and minority rights and relations with the wider Christian Church.[citation needed] The United Church of Canada has historically identified and prided itself politically as a uniquely Canadian institution and religiously as the voice of liberal Evangelical Protestant opinion in Canada.[citation needed] According to United Church statistics for 2008, about 200,000 people attend services in 3,362 pastoral charges[2], although some 2.8 million Canadians, or about 9% of the population, reported the United Church as their religious affiliation in the country's 2001 census[3]. Compared to figures from the 1991 census, the number of people claiming an affiliation with the United Church decreased by 8% over ten years. Compared to other mainstream Christian denominations in Canada, this was the third largest decrease over the 10-year period, only exceeded by the Presbyterian and Pentecostal churches.[4] The United Church is led by an elected Moderator. Currently, Mardi Tindal a lay person from Brantford, Ontario, holds the position after her election in August 2009 at the 40th General Council, held in Kelowna, British Columbia.
[edit] HistoryIn the early twentieth century, the main Evangelical Protestant denominations in Canada were the Presbyterian, Methodist and Congregational churches. Many small towns and villages across Canada had all three, with the town's population divided among them. Especially on the prairies, it was difficult to find clergy to serve all these charges, and there were several instances where one minister would serve his congregation, but would also perform pastoral care for the other congregations that lacked a minister. On the prairies, a movement to unite all three major Protestant denominations began: the result was the Association of Local Union Churches. This ecumenical movement to join together churches of like-minded theologies began to accumulate momentum, but it took decades of heated discussions and debate on what these denominations had in common before a Basis for Union was produced.[5]. However, not all elements of the churches involved were happy with the idea of uniting under one roof; the Presbyterians, who ironically had originally proposed a church union, especially faced a number of challenges.[citation needed] [edit] The non-concurring Presbyterians
A substantial minority of Presbyterians remained unconvinced of the virtues of church union. Their threat to the entire project was resolved by giving individual Presbyterian congregations the right to vote on whether to enter or remain outside the United Church. In the end, 302 out of 4,509 congregations of the Presbyterian Church (211 from southern Ontario)[6] chose to withdraw from the institutional Presbyterian Church and reconstitute themselves as a "continuing" Presbyterian Church in Canada. Continuing Presbyterians and reluctant Presbyterian members of the United Church in Western Canada would continue to refer to the United Church as the "Union Church" until well into the latter half of the 20th century. In the early days of the United Church, relations between "non-concurring" and "continuing" Presbyterians (it was a matter of some controversy which Presbyterians were entitled to the term "continuing") were somewhat abrasive, particularly in small towns where congregations were divided.[citation needed] The uniting Presbyterians in the United Church were assertive in their view that they were the continuing Presbyterian Church, and many historic United Church buildings to this day proudly bear cornerstones showing their original identity as Westminster or Knox or St Andrew's "Presbyterian Church." In due course, relations settled down and in today's Canada it is a matter of indifference.[citation needed] (A major legal issue in the 1930s was whether the non-concurring Presbyterians were entitled to designate themselves as the "Presbyterian Church in Canada," given that legally the body bearing that name continued as part of the United Church of Canada. Ultimately in 1938 the Supreme Court of Canada ruled that the non-concurring Presbyterians could so style themselves, the name having been in effect vacated by the United Church. Of more practical significance was the large volume of litigation through the 1920s and '30s regarding the ownership of disputed church property, including Knox College in the University of Toronto, whose faculty and students as well as the United Church itself had assumed it would become the principal clergy training facility of the United Church, and the interpretation of wills which contained bequests to "Presbyterian" churches. These "United Church cases" constitute a significant chapter in the evolving law of trusts in Canada.[7] [edit] Inauguration
With the four denominations now in agreement about uniting, various Acts of Parliament were passed to facilitate the union. These Acts did not as such authorize the formation of the new denomination church—there was no state religion in Canada, mainly due to Egerton Ryerson, who had famously denounced state religion; the Acts passed by Parliament and various provincial legislatures merely concerned church property. With the agreement of the Methodists, the Congregationalists, the Union churches and 70% of the Presbyterian congregations, the United Church of Canada was inaugurated at a large worship service at Toronto's Mutual Street Arena on June 10, 1925 following the final sederunt of the Presbyterian Church in Canada at what immediately became College Street United Church, Toronto. The ecumenical tone of the new church was set at the first General Council in 1925 when the former Methodist General Superintendent S.D. Chown, an architect of church union and considered the leading candidate to become the first Moderator, stepped aside in favour of George C. Pidgeon, the moderator of the Presbyterian Church and principal spokesperson for the uniting Presbyterians. [edit] Similar church unions outside CanadaSuch a merger was unprecedented in world history: Canada was the first country where the Protestant churches elected to pool their resources and become one large nondogmatic church, and the creation of the United Church may have been a model for similar unions that followed in South India, North India, Papua New Guinea, Australia, the USA, England and elsewhere. The United Church has continued a policy of openness to church union: its motto, displayed on its Presbyterian-derived heraldic logo (see above) is Ut omnes unum sint: "That they all might be one" (John 17:21). [edit] Further church union discussions in CanadaIn 1968 the Evangelical United Brethren Church of Canada (EUB or "Unionists"), having been orphaned when the parent body in the United States joined what became the United Methodist Church, joined the United Church of Canada. Union talks between the United Church and the Anglican Church of Canada in the 1970s stalled when the Anglican houses of laity and clergy voted in favour of entering into organic union but the house of bishops voted against. (See immediately below). This was a hurtful episode: the United Church, a vastly larger denomination in Canada, had agreed to accept episcopacy and to enter into arrangements for the episcopal recognition of its clerical ordinations; numerous United Church clergy had sought episcopal re-ordination in order to serve in Anglican parishes and many Anglican clergy were already serving United Church pastoral charges.[citation needed] There have also been conversations about union with the Disciples of Christ, who were involved in the 1960s and 1970s discussions with the Anglicans.[citation needed] [edit] Relations with the Anglican Church of Canada
During the 1960s the ecumenical movement was strong and — particularly during the Anglican primacies of Arthur Michael Ramsay in England and Ted Scott in Canada — the Anglican Communion was receptive to increased intimacy with the Presbyterian and Methodist Churches. The United Church made overtures to the Anglican Church of Canada with respect to creating a broader Canadian church union along the lines of the Churches of North India, South India and Pakistan, to which the Anglican Church of Canada responded with alacrity.[citation needed] In the course of such church union discussions a compendious draft basis of union was prepared which involved the United Church agreeing to accept episcopacy and arrangements being contemplated for the episcopal recognition of United Church ordinations. A common hymn book was published, whose reception in both Anglican and United Church congregations in Canada was equivocal, suggesting that the grassroots were not quite ready for so radical a union,[citation needed] though the soon-to-be-united Presbyterian, Congregational and Methodist, together with the Anglican and Roman Catholic churches of Australia enthusiastically adopted a second, Australian edition of the Canadian hymn book.[8] The United Church Observer espoused the proposed further church union wholeheartedly. The Anglican Church adopted the joint Hymn Book, produced under the direction of Canadian composer F. R. C. Clarke, and began ordaining women clergy, as the United Church had done since 1936. United Church preachers in Anglican cathedrals were responded to with enthusiasm by Anglican congregations, who were excited by the preaching of such United Church divines as the charismatic then-moderator, the Right Reverend Bruce McLeod.[citation needed] However, the Anglican House of Bishops vetoed the church union despite the approval of the Anglican Houses of Laity and Clergy. It seemed to the bishops that the smaller Anglican Church of Canada would be swallowed up in the much larger United Church and that episcopalian sensibilities, despite the good will of United Church people — and indeed despite the United Church's express willingness to accept episcopacy — would be lost in a wider union.[citation needed] Since then, institutional relations with Anglicanism have been cool; the joint Hymn Book of 1972 has been resoundingly denounced by both denominations, for musical as well as ecclesiastical reasons. Both denominations have produced separate successor hymnals, and common endeavour has been somewhat soured at the national level.[citation needed] [edit] Church organization[edit] The ModeratorMain article: Moderator of the United Church of Canada The polity of the United Church is largely presbyterian, with a hierarchy of governing bodies (Presbyteries, Conferences, and the General Council) each having equal membership from ministers and lay people; conference presidents and moderators of the national church may be clergy or lay people. Its social policies owe the most to the Methodist strain in its heritage. The freedom available to individual congregations owes much to the Congregationalist part of its roots. The Moderator presides over its highest governing body known as the General Council and is elected for a three-year term. It is a perhaps largely symbolic post, but particularly in past times Moderators have taken an extremely high profile in national life corresponding to the moral voice of the Archbishop of Canterbury in England: Moderators Mutchmor, McLeod and McClure have been in particularly high profile. [edit] United Church HymnodyThe United Church has issued three hymn books:
United Church of Canada churchmanship in the early 21st century appears to be drifting into bifurcation,[citation needed] with some congregations becoming increasingly liturgical, and with the decline of Anglicanism in Canada rather low church Anglican in ethos, with formal proceedings, communion at altar rails and clergy in sacramental (albeit severely Protestant) vestments; others are increasingly free-form Evangelical Protestant.[citation needed] [edit] Liturgy
For its first 40-odd years United Church congregations largely followed the historic Presbyterian Book of Common Order in the layout of their Sunday worship services, and United Church people could expect to find a familiar liturgy in Presbyterian, Congregational, Methodist and Baptist churches anywhere in the anglophone world.[citation needed] Some Baptist Churches in Canada, indeed, not only used the United Church's Presbyterian Book of Common Order as the template for their worship services but adopted the United Church Hymnary as the basis for their official hymn book, substituting the infant baptism section with sections on the dedication of children and believer's baptism.[12] Beginning in the late 1960s, as Roman Catholics and Anglicans began experimenting with new liturgies, United Church congregations also began relaxing their style of worship and liturgy became less recognisably denominational.[citation needed] Nowadays one may find United Church congregations that worship in a wide range of styles, from free-form Evangelical Protestant prayer meetings with Pentecostal gospel music to essentially Anglican Book of Common Prayer or Presbyterian Book of Common Order sobriety, with a highly literate set liturgy and communion at what amounts to an altar rail. Liberal Evangelical Protestants in Canada have a wide range of choices among congregations of the United Church as to preference in liturgy. There, however, always remains an acute awareness and inclusion of the United Church's historic heritage of the great 18th century English non-conformist hymnodists, the Wesleys and of the Presbyterian metrical Psalter.[citation needed] And, notwithstanding the criticism of more fundamentalist constituencies, close and literate study of Scripture remains a sine qua non of United Churchmanship: despite overtures in recent decades to other socially, politically and ethnically comfortable Christian denominations, the United Church remains an essentially and fundamentally Protestant church. [edit] Official doctrineThe Basis of Union sets out the doctrines concurred in by the uniting denominations; it
Weekly recitation of the Apostles Creed was a routine feature of Sunday worship[citation needed] until 1968 when the Church promulgated an additional specifically United Church Creed, entitled A New Creed. It should be noted that the United Church emphasises its participation in the universal small-C catholic church,[citation needed] and that the ancient creeds are not displaced but only supplemented; that being said, it is the new United Church Creed rather than the ancient creeds that is most often recited during Sunday worship. [edit] Universities founded by antecedent denominations of the United Church
as well as numerous similar federated or residential colleges in universities across Canada including Victoria and Knox Colleges in the University of Toronto and St Andrew's College in the University of Saskatchewan. [edit] Public positions and policies[edit] General
Metropolitan United Church, Toronto The United Church consists of a range of congregations from moderately conservative to very liberal, but it is one of the most socially liberal of the world's large Evangelical Protestant denominations.[citation needed] It began ordaining female ministers in 1936 and has long shied away from a rigidly literal interpretation of the Bible. Canadian United Church people moving to the United States may find themselves at home in the United Church of Christ, the Presbyterian Church (USA) and the United Methodist Church; to the United Kingdom in the Methodist Church of Great Britain, United Reformed Church or, in Scotland, the Church of Scotland and to Australia in the Uniting Church in Australia, none of these denominations entirely corresponds in ethos to the uniquely Canadian United Church. The limits of the Church's broad-mindedness are tested from time to time. Apart from the difficulties over inclusion of gays and lesbians (see below), in 1997 the Church's then-Moderator, the now-Very Rev'd Bill Phipps revived an old controversy in Evangelical Protestantism by disclosing a personal Unitarian bias when he commented that he was not sure the resurrection of Jesus was a scientific fact and additionally asserted that Jesus' nature was fully human.[13] This sparked great debate in the church, and heated condemnation from some former moderators for what they considered a departure from basic Christian doctrine, not to speak of the Basis of Union, with some congregations passing motions asserting their faith in Jesus' literal resurrection.[citation needed] Former Moderator the Very Rev'd Bruce McLeod, who had been an especially high profile spokesman for the United Church during his Moderacy and whose doctorate is from Union Theological Seminary in New York, where an early 19th century New England bifurcation between an élite clerical drift into Unitarianism and a mainstream affinity for historic Christian trinitarianism is no novelty, was particularly forthright in his disquiet.[citation needed] [edit] Liberal political causesCanadian Methodism in particular but also Canadian Presbyterianism and liberal Evangelical Protestantism in general were early associated with the rights of women, the right to vote, the right to contraception. The United Church took up such causes; broader causes took some time but ultimately the position of Jews, other non-Anglo-Saxons and indeed GLBT people in Canadian society at large and the Church in particular became issues for the United Church. The United Church has been forthright in the defence of liberal social causes — often well in front of more conservative Evangelical Protestants, and often followed at greater or lesser remove by theologically more cautious but politically akin episcopal denominations such as the Anglican Church of Canada and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Canada. Many of its historic causes which may initially have been controversial have in the long term become matters of common Canadian accord:
[edit] Indigenous peopleOne notable lack in the United Church (and its antecedent denominations)’s mission may have been a ministry to indigenous peoples. Apart from a notable mission among the indigenous people of the Queen Charlotte Islands and elsewhere in British Columbia, the United Church has not especially ministered to aboriginal Canadians. In the short run this has been a financial boon to the church in that claims against the Anglican Church and against Roman Catholic orders by persons who were abused by sexually disordered mission personnel have not correspondingly involved the United Church in so large a degree of humiliating and financially crippling litigation.[14] In the long run, the credibility of the United Church in speaking on behalf of the interests of indigenous Canadians may be limited since there are very few aboriginal United Church clergy and laity.[citation needed] [edit] Positions on homosexualityMain article: Homosexuality and the United Church of Canada In 1988 the United Church of Canada began accepting openly gay, lesbian and transgendered ministers for ordination[15] United Church delegates lobbied for same-sex marriage in the House of Commons Justice Committee during its cross-country hearings in 2003 and welcomed court decisions that legalized same-sex marriage in certain provinces.[16] [edit] Abortion, family planning and women's rightsThe United Church has historically taken a position of urgent support for women's rights, moderated by an awareness of the value of human life and a commensurate consciousness of the ethical and theological difficulties of its small-C catholic sister communions of Roman Catholicism, Anglicanism, Eastern Orthodoxy and Oriental Orthodoxy and of its more conservative Evangelical Protestant fellows. The United Church's historic positions on the legalisation of contraception, which it early espoused, are now politically largely uncontroversial in Canada. Its more recent positions on abortion have perhaps been more contentious: recent positions have consistently asserted that women have a right to self-determination with regard to abortion and in summary have been as follows:
[edit] Criticism from outside the churchThe right-wing National Post has criticised the United Church for a perceived association with left-wing political groups, suggesting that the Church's support for policies such as abortion rights and same-sex marriage have removed it from the mainstream of Christian thought,[20]. The Post, owned by the pro-Israel Asper family, has also criticised the United Church for what it considers to be condemnations and boycotts of Israel,[21] and "non-theist beliefs" as exemplified by Rev. Gretta Vosper, minister at West Hill United Church in Toronto.[22] The Rev. AC Forrest, the editor of the United Church Observer in the 1960s and '70s, and by extension the United Church itself, came under strong attack from the Canadian Jewish community for his frequent editorial espousal of Palestinian rights in Israel and the West Bank and Gaza; many within the United Church were also discomfited, though ultimately the Church concluded that a plurality of opinion on this and other matters was consistent with United Church open-mindedness.[23] [edit] The United Church in popular culture[edit] The United Church in national life
Canada has not officially endorsed any religious persuasion since the 1840s when the establishment of the Anglican Church and the issue of clergy reserves became a major focus of popular discontent with the colonial government in Upper Canada. But the numerical significance of the Presbyterians and Methodists and later the United Church in anglophone Canada has until recent times given the Church considerable political influence. According to John English in Shadow of heaven: The life of Lester Pearson there was a time when Canadian prime ministers consulted with United Church moderators as British Prime Ministers did with Archbishops of Canterbury. The United Church followed its antecedent Presbyterian and Methodist constituents in promoting the social gospel and United Church clergy have historically taken strong stands in provincial and national political discourse.[citation needed] Many political leaders have been United Church clergy, including David MacDonald (federal Conservative cabinet minister in the 1980s), Stanley Knowles (elder statesman of the CCF-NDP), Don Faris (former Saskatchewan NDP cabinet minister), Mark Wartman (former Saskatchewan minister of agriculture), Lorne Calvert (former Saskatchewan NDP Premier) and Bill Blaikie (NDP Member of Parliament). Numerous non-clerical political leaders and persons of influence have demonstrated the influence on them of United Church priorities: Prime Minister Lester B. Pearson, whose views on Canada's role in the world and whose outlook on foreign aid continue to inform Canadian foreign policy into the 21st century was a son of the United Church manse[24]: ; Madam Justice Bertha Wilson of the Supreme Court of Canada, who together with Mr Justice Brian Dixon formulated the modern constructive trust in Pettkus v. Becker as a remedy for unjust enrichment and in particular to protect the property interests of separated common law spouses — and soon also adopted by the High Court of Australia in Muschinski v Dodds (1985) 160 CLR 583 — was a wife of the manse.[25] The church newspaper the United Church Observer, particularly under its 1960s editor A.C. Forrest, took an early stand in promoting the interests of Palestinians, both Christian and Muslim, vis-à-vis the state of Israel, at time when wider Evangelical Protestant opinion was generally uncritical of Israeli government policy, determinedly maintaining a stance of objectivity with respect to developments in the Middle East while seeking to avoid accusations of anti-semitism.[26] Until recent times when public sensibilities became more attuned to the undesirability of imposing the views of majorities on minorities, it was common for the United Church Hymnary to be distributed to public school children for use in daily and weekly assemblies, and Presbyterian and Methodist hymnody was a common fund of reference and allusion in public discourse.[citation needed] Several United Church moderators, notably the Very Reverend Bruce McLeod and the Very Reverend Art Moore, have expounded on the heritage of Evangelical Protestantism of literacy, both literal (so to speak) and figurative (in terms of broad awareness of the world of letters beyond narrow Evangelical Protestantism), as demonstrated in antecedent denominations' founding of many Canadian universities. [edit] Prominent United Church members in national life
[edit] United Church of Canada theologians and important thinkersThe United Church has followed closely in the footsteps of its English Puritan and Scottish Reformation forebears in championing education and literacy in the broadest sense.
[edit] Native residential schoolsUntil 1969, the United Church of Canada was involved with and supported Canada's Indian Residential Schools system, which resulted in a painful legacy for many Aboriginal people and their communities. While the United Church's level of involvement was perhaps less egregious than its sister churches the Anglican Church of Canada and assorted Roman Catholic orders[27], its contribution was significant. Of approximately 80,000 students alive today, about 10 percent attended United-Church run schools.[28] [edit] See also
[edit] Notes
[edit] External links
[edit] Bibliography
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