Dictionary Definition
Congregationalism n : system of beliefs and
church government of a Protestant denomination in which each member
church is self-governing
User Contributed Dictionary
see Congregationalism
English
Noun
- Any of several forms of church organization in which each congregation is responsible for its own government
Related terms
Extensive Definition
portal Christianity
Congregationalist polity, often known as congregationalism, is a
system of church
governance in which every local church
congregation is independent, ecclesiastically
sovereign, or
"autonomous." Among
those major Protestant
Christian
traditions that employ congregationalism are those Congregational
Churches known by the "Congregationalist" name that descended
from the Anglo-American Puritan movement of
the 17th century, the Baptist churches,
and most of the groups brought about by the Anabaptist
movement in Germany that
immigrated to the U.S. in the late 18th century. More recent
generations have witnessed also a growing number of
non-denominational churches, which are most often
congregationalist in their governance. In Christianity,
congregationalism is distinguished most clearly from episcopal
polity, which is governance by a hierarchy of bishops. But it is also distinct
from presbyterian
polity, in which higher assemblies of congregational
representatives can exercise considerable authority over individual
congregations.
Congregationalism is not limited only to
organization of Christian congregations; the principles of
congregationalism have been inherited by the
Unitarian Universalist Association. Jewish synagogues in the U.S.
operate under congregational government as well, with no
hierarchies.
Theological foundations of congregationalism
Congregationalism expressed the viewpoint that (1) every local church is a full realization in miniature of the entire Church of Jesus Christ; and (2) the Church, while on earth, besides the local church, can only be invisible and ideal. While other theories may insist on the truth of the former, the latter precept of congregationalism gives the entire theory a unique character among plans of church government. There is no other reference than the local congregation for the "visible church" in Congregationalism. And yet, the connection of all Christians is also asserted, albeit in a way that defenders of this view usually decline, often intentionally, to elaborate more clearly or consistently. This first, foundational principle by which congregationalism is guided results in the extreme limitation of authority, confining it to operate with the consent of each gathering of believers.Although "congregational rule" may seem to
suggest that pure
democracy reigns in congregational churches, this is usually
seldom the case. It is granted, with few exceptions (namely in some
Anabaptist churches), that God has given the
government of the Church into the hands of an ordained ministry. What makes
congregationalism unique is its system of checks and balances,
which constrains the authority of the minister, the lay officers,
and the members.
Most importantly, the boundaries of the powers of
the ministers and church officers are set by clear and constant
reminders of the freedoms guaranteed by the Gospel to the laity,
collectively and individually. With that freedom comes the
responsibility upon each member to govern himself or herself under
Christ. This requires lay people to exercise great charity and
patience in debating issues with one another and to seek the glory
and service of God as the foremost consideration in all of their
decisions.
The authority of all of the people, including the
officers, is limited in the local congregation by a definition of
union, or a covenant,
by which the terms of their cooperation together are spelled out
and agreed to. This might be something as minimal as a charter
specifying a handful of doctrines and behavioral
expectations, or even a statement only guaranteeing specific
freedoms. Or, it may be a constitution describing a
comprehensive doctrinal system and specifying terms under which the
local church is connected to other local churches, to which
participating congregations give their assent. In
congregationalism, rather uniquely, the church is understood to be
a truly voluntary association.
Finally, the congregational theory strictly
forbids ministers from ruling their local churches by themselves.
Not only does the minister serve by the approval of the
congregation, but committees further constrain the pastor from
exercising power without consent by either the particular
committee, or the entire congregation. It is a contradiction of the
congregational principle if a minister makes decisions concerning
the congregation without the vote of these other officers.
The other officers may be called "deacons",
"elders" or "session" (borrowing Presbyterian
terminology), or even "vestry" (borrowing the Anglican term)
— it is not their label that is important to the theory,
but rather their lay status and their equal vote, together with the
pastor, in deciding the issues of the church. While other forms of
church government are more likely to define "tyranny" as "the
imposition of unjust rule", a congregationally-governed church
would more likely define tyranny as "transgression of liberty" or
equivalently, "rule by one man". To a congregationalist, no abuse
of authority is worse than the concentration of all decisive power
in the hands of one ruling body, or one person.
Following this sentiment, congregationalism has
evolved over time to include even more participation of the
congregation, more kinds of lay committees to whom various tasks
are apportioned, and more decisions subject to the vote of the
entire membership.
Ministry and ordination in the Congregational Christian Churches/UCC
The understanding of ministry in the Congregational Christian Churches (pre-1957) generally followed a "priesthood of all believers" model in the sense that all Christians have ministry roles within the church, but that God calls certain people to be ordained ministers. The process of calling and ordaining ministers was managed by the congregation through an established system of process, but the ordination ceremony usually involved more than just the congregation calling the pastor. Typically, neighboring congregational churches within, originally, a vicinage council or, since the early 20th century, an association were invited to lay hands on the confirmed candidate, in a ceremony of ordination. http://www.naccc.org/Cong_Way_Series/Call_To_Settlement/Call_Settlement_04.htmSince the formation of the United
Church of Christ in 1957, most of the former CC churches
largely follow a more centralized system coordinated by their
associations and conferences to help them procure pastors or send
candidates into the ministry from their churches, one largely
designed to ensure a professional, credentialed pool of clergy.
Meanwhile, the
National Association of Congregational Christian Churches and
the
Conservative Congregational Christian Conference, two bodies
formed in reaction to the dominant liberalism (in the first
instance, political; the second, theological) of the majority of
Congregationalists, have retained something closer to the older,
more autonomous practices where associations do not supervise
clergy.
Some other mainline
groups governed by congregational polity, such as the
American Baptist Churches USA, the Alliance
of Baptists, and the
Christian Church (Disciples of Christ), employ a system of
clergy placement and supervision similar to that of the UCC.
Congregationalism as a theory of union
It may seem ironic given its adamant emphasis on independence, but one of the most notable characteristics of New England (or British)-heritage Congregationalism has been its consistent leadership role in the formation of "unions" with other churches. Such sentiments especially grew strong in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, when ecumenism evolved out of a liberal, non-sectarian perspective on relations to other Christian groups that accompanied the relaxation of Calvinist stringencies held by earlier generations. The congregationalist theory of independence within a union has been a cornerstone of most ecumenical movements since the 18th century.An older, competing, but somewhat related theory,
is sometimes called nationalism (in the Reformed
churches tradition), or autocephaly (in the Eastern
Orthodox Church tradition). Between these latter two there are
further differences. In both nationalism and autocephaly, one
unifying doctrine is given local expression, according to
differences in language and customs. Autocephaly is strictly
episcopal,
and assures the self-government of distinct patriarchates within a
structure of common doctrine, comparable practices, with some
degree of mutual accountability through which they remain in
communion with one another. In nationalism (in recent times, more
accurately called "culturalism"), there is no institutional
accountability to churches with separate general assemblies,
although churches with separate histories typically form voluntary
confederations with one another. Congregationalism, in contrast,
guarantees a completely independent government for all of the
uniting parties, down to the level of every local
congregation.
The congregationalist principles of complete
autonomy and strictly voluntary union produces a practically
indescribable diversity of beliefs within the congregational
unions. The UCC is the result of a union constructed according to
congregationalist theory between the
Evangelical and Reformed Church and the
Congregational Christian Churches. These uniting congregations
were themselves the result of several previous unions. The General
Council of Congregational Christian Churches was formed from a
merger between the National Council of Congregational Churches and
the General Convention of the Christian Church, also known as
Christian
Churches or Christian Connection (not to be confused with,
although partially related to, the Disciples of Christ). The
Evangelical and Reformed Church was the result of a partial union
of the Reformed Church in the United States and the Evangelical
Synod of North America (a union of Lutherans and
Reformed). The UCC is by far the most diverse of the Reformed
churches in the U.S. In the United
Kingdom, the United
Reformed Church was formed in 1972 by the merger of the
Presbyterian and the Congregational churches, on presbyterian
principles of union but within a continuing congregational regard
for local diversity.
Diversity and theology
Churches such as the Unitarian Universalists and the United Church of Christ are often reported by the press as being politically liberal. However, conservatives and more orthodox believers can also be found in large numbers in other congregations (in the UCC). In short, while the idea of congregationalism itself is tolerant of differences between congregations, this liberal theory in principle assures a place for both conservatives and liberals, as far as their uniting covenants allow. At least in principle, this kind of diversity may be regarded as both inevitable and tolerable under a congregational theory of union.In theory, the UCC is tolerant of all types of
theology. Paragraph 18 of the UCC constitution is a provision that
was specifically requested by the Congregational Christian
Churches, and it declares,
- ''"The autonomy of the Local Church is inherent and modifiable only by its own action. Nothing in this Constitution and the Bylaws of the United Church of Christ shall destroy or limit the right of each Local Church to continue to operate in the way customary to it; nor shall be construed as giving to the General Synod, or to any Conference or Association now, or at any future time, the power to abridge or impair the autonomy of any Local Church in the management of its own affairs, which affairs include, but are not limited to, the right to retain or adopt its own methods of organization, worship and education; to retain or secure its own charter and name; to adopt its own constitution and bylaws; to formulate its own covenants and confessions of faith; to admit members in its own way and to provide for their discipline or dismissal; to call or dismiss its pastor or pastors by such procedure as it shall determine; to acquire, own, manage and dispose of property and funds; to control its own benevolences; and to withdraw by its own decision from the United Church of Christ at any time without forfeiture of ownership or control of any real or personal property owned by it.''
Baptist churches/Churches of Christ
Contrary to the congregationalism to which the above-mentioned churches adhere, congregationalism obtains in two large fundamentalist groups mainly found in the Southern U.S. A large number of Baptist churches and the Churches of Christ are two traditions whose churches stand autonomously from each other.These churches have developed ideas about
independence of congregational authority that are quite different
from the UCC and its New England-heritage predecessors, usually
deriving from intense convictions about supposed patterns of
government among the early churches described in the New Testament.
Both traditions were also shaped culturally by the agrarian traditions in the
rural South from the late 19th through the middle 20th centuries,
the poverty of which largely did not permit much of the population
to acquire significant formal education. These conditions enabled
preachers to disseminate highly sectarian viewpoints such as the
Landmarkist
Baptist movement and doctrinare Restorationism
without significant opposition on the part of potential
converts.
Independent Baptist churches and Churches of
Christ typically do not condone the theories of unity and "merger"
outlined above, as such consolidation constitutes a threat to the
sovereignty of individual congregations. Interdenominational unity
is generally eschewed; calls for tolerance are almost invariably
viewed as attempts to weaken their distinctive doctrines and
separatist ecclesiologies. Church government beyond the level of
the congregation does not exist. Even in small towns or in rural
areas, most independent Baptist and Churches of Christ preachers do
not meet on a regular basis. Preachers are not formally ordained in
the Churches of Christ, because of the belief that performance of
such a rite would constitute a transcongregational authority.
Practices likely vary on this point among independent Baptists,
according to local customs.
The CoC base these convictions upon their general
consensus that the New
Testament practice of epistle-writing had some
practical, doctrinal, or interpretational authority because the
letters were written by apostles and/or those directly inspired by
God, but do not retain similar authority in modern times. The
practice of writing rather than meeting is what gave rise to a
colloquial maxim that "Churches of Christ don't have Bishops; they have
editors instead." These editors (usually elders) publish such
magazines as the Gospel
Advocate and the Herald of Truth. Other than these editors and
the occasional lectureship (in which preachers from many churches
come together to speak publicly on pressing issues), the only ways
in which Churches of Christ generally coordinate is in disaster
relief.
Such rigorous independence even extends to some
CoC-founded colleges, such as Florida
College, which does not accept donations from churches for fear
of undue influence and because the college's leaders hold to a
policy that strict adherence to certain Biblical passages does not
permit churches to donate money to education. However, most
mainstream
universities and colleges affiliated with the Church of Christ,
such as Pepperdine,
Harding
University, and Lipscomb
University, do accept money from churches; the schools, in
turn, generally reflect the peculiar doctrinal platforms of those
contributing churches. The Churches of Christ have steadfastly
refused to organize along national or regional lines.
As for Baptists, a variety of parachurch agencies
and evangelical educational institutions may be supported
generously or not at all, depending entirely upon the local
congregation's customs and predilections. Usually doctrinal
conformity is held as a first consideration when a church makes a
decision to grant or decline financial contributions to such
agencies, which are legally external and separate from the
congregations they serve. These practices also find currency among
non-denominational fundamentalist or charismatic fellowships,
many of which derive from Baptist origins, culturally if not
theologically.
Most Southern Baptist congregations and African-American
Baptist churches, by contrast, generally relate more closely to
external groups such as mission agencies and educational
institutions than do those of independent persuastion. However,
they adhere to a very similar ecclesiology, refusing to permit
outside control or oversight of local affairs.
See also
References
External links
- Baptist World Alliance (BWA)
- BWA Heritage and Identity Commission
- International Congregational Fellowship
- National Association of Congregational Christian Churches
- World Evangelical Congregational Fellowship
- World Convention - Christian - Churches of Christ - Disciples of Christ
- Conservative Congregational Christian Conference
- The Evangelical Fellowship of Congregational Churches
- United Church of Christ
- The Union of Welsh Independents
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congregationalism in Spanish: Iglesia
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