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Methodist Protestant Church
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{{short description|Methodist denomination in the U.S.}} <!--please leave "More footnotes" here until References created--> {{Expert needed|Christianity | ex2 = religion | reason = need citations; possible help from ''Methodism Workgroup'' | date = January 2019 }} <!--please leave "Expert needed" here--> {{Infobox Christian denomination |name = Methodist Protestant Church |image = |alt = |imagewidth = |caption = |main_classification = [[Methodism]] |orientation = [[Holiness movement]] |theology = [[Wesleyan theology|Wesleyan]] |polity = |founder = [[John Wesley]] |founded_date = 1828 |founded_place = |separated_from = [[Methodist Episcopal Church]] (1828) |merger = |merged_into = |separations = |associations = [[American Council of Christian Churches]], [[International Council of Christian Churches]] |area = |congregations = 42 |members = |website = [http://www.themethodistprotestantchurch.org/ themethodistprotestantchurch.org] }} The '''Methodist Protestant Church''' ('''MPC''') is a [[Methodism|Methodist]] denomination of Christianity that is based in the [[United States]]. It was formed in 1828 by former members of the [[Methodist Episcopal Church]], being [[Wesleyanism|Wesleyan]] in doctrine and worship, but adopting [[Congregational church|congregational]] governance. A majority of the Methodist Protestants merged with the [[Methodist Episcopal Church]] in 1939, and for that reason, the historic Methodist Protestant Church is regarded as one of the predecessors of the present-day [[United Methodist Church]].{{sfn|Melton|2018 |p=}}{{page missing|date=October 2024}} The Mississippi MPC delegation to the 1939 Uniting Conference withdrew from the proceedings, due to worries about developing liberal elements within the UMC; most of the congregations in the Mississippi conference reorganized and continued as the Methodist Protestant Church in name, doctrine and practice.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.themethodistprotestantchurch.org/about-us/ |title=About Us |author=<!--Not stated--> |date= |website=MPC official website |publisher= |access-date=2024-06-06}}</ref> In 2024, the MPC headquarters are in [[Mississippi]].<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.themethodistprotestantchurch.org/ |title=MPC |author=<!--Not stated--> |date= |website=MPC official website |publisher= |access-date=2024-06-06}}</ref> As of 2008, the MPC consists of 42 churches in the United States, located in [[Alabama]], [[Arkansas]], [[Louisiana]], [[Mississippi]], and [[Oklahoma]] and a mission conference in the country of [[Belize]]. ==History== {{Methodism}} ===A Methodist reform movement begins=== The particular issue which would eventually give rise to the organization of the Methodist Protestant Church was one of [[Church governance]] rather than [[doctrine]]. Dissatisfaction among some Methodists with regard to the increasingly exclusive power of the clergy, particularly bishops, and the exclusion of laymen from the councils of the Church, including the Annual (regional) and General (national) Conferences. ===Establishment=== In response to actual and threatened expulsions, a convention was held in [[Baltimore]], November 12, 1828, an initial organization was formed with the provisional name of "The Associated Methodist Churches," temporary Articles of Association adopted, and its first General Conference scheduled for 1830. The intervening time was used to form local churches and organized into annual (regional) conferences. Fourteen Annual Conferences were represented by one hundred and fourteen delegates at the first General Conference, called to order on November 2, 1830. The delegates adopted the permanent name "Methodist Protestant Church" to denote its connection to the reform movement, adopted a Constitution and Discipline reflecting the representative form the reformers had sought within the Methodist Episcopal Church. Unlike the Methodist Episcopal Church, the Methodist Protestant Church rejected the use of bishops. In the MEC, the bishops had the power to appoint pastors to local churches. The Methodist Protestant Church appointed pastors by a president of the conference. The conference then affirmed the appointment.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=Airhart|first=Phyllis D.|date=December 1997|title=Wesley and the People Called Methodists. By Richard P. Heitzenrater. Nashville, Tenn.: Abingdon Press, 1995. xii + 338 pp. $19.95.|journal=Church History|volume=66|issue=4|pages=840β842|doi=10.2307/3169257|jstor=3169257|s2cid=162363477 |issn=0009-6407}}</ref> ===Reunification and organized dissent=== After the formation of the Methodist Protestant Church, the [[Methodist Episcopal Church]] had become further fractured by the corresponding division of the nation during the [[American Civil War]]. At the conclusion of that military conflict, the corresponding division between Northern and Southern Methodist Episcopal Churches remained. While discussion toward reunification went forward slowly, many of the democratic reforms of church governance were adopted which had led to a separate Methodist Protestant Church. Consequently, the reunification process was broadened to include all three major "streams" of American Methodism, and resulted in a Uniting Convention being convened in 1939 with representatives of the General and Annual Conferences of the three separate bodies as delegates. Some of the original differences between Methodist Protestant Church and the Methodist Episcopal Church remained unresolved. Additionally, many Methodist Protestants objected to liberalization on the part of the Methodist Episcopal Church with respect to the inspiration and authority of the Scriptures, the deity of Christ and Wesley's teachings on the work of the Holy Spirit. This opinion was the minority view in most Methodist Protestant Annual Conferences, the Mississippi Conference being the sole exception. The Uniting Convention proceeded to effect the merger, which formed [[The Methodist Church (USA)|The Methodist Church]], which in 1968 merged with the [[Evangelical United Brethren]] to form the [[United Methodist Church]]. Those who objected to the merger continued as the Methodist Protestant Church. ==Notable people== * [[Daniel Bagley]] (1818–1905), preacher, educational booster, industrialist * [[Ancel Henry Bassett]] (1809β1886), minister, author, editor, historian * [[John Calvin Broomfield]] (1872β1950), pastor and bishop * [[Aubrey Franklin Hess]] (1874β1935), theologian and educator * [[Hubert D. Humphreys]] (1923β2009)) engaged in research on the history of the Methodist Protestant Church * [[Eugenia St. John Mann]] (1847-1932), ordained minister in the Kansas Conference of the Methodist Protestant Church; first woman in the U.S. to sit as a delegate in the General Conference of the Methodist Protestant Church * [[Mary A. Miller]] (1837 β 1925), editor and publisher of Methodist Protestant Church missionary periodicals * [[James O'Kelly]] (1735–1826), clergyman * [[Thomas H. Stockton]] (1808β1868), Chaplain of the United States House of Representatives * [[Lula Wardlow]] (1876β1970), businesswoman, minister, first woman ever elected mayor of a Louisiana community ==References== {{Reflist|30em}} ===Works cited=== * {{cite book |last1=Melton |first1=J. Gordon |title=Religious Bodies in the U.S.: A Dictionary |date=7 December 2018 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-135-52353-4 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=gHh0DwAAQBAJ }} ===General references=== *"A Concise History of the Methodist Protestant Church" by Ancel H. Bassett, published by Wm. McCracken, Jr., Pittsburgh, 1887. *{{cite web | last = Lewis | first = T. H. | title = Historical Sketch of the Origin of the Methodist Protestant Church | work = Constitution and Discipline of the Methodist Protestant Church | publisher = General Conference of the Methodist Protestant Church | year = 1964 | url = http://www.themethodistprotestantchurch.com/ | accessdate = 2006-11-22}} ==External links== *[http://www.themethodistprotestantchurch.org Denominational website] *''[http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/webbin/serial?id=jcmethpgen Journal of the Quadrennial Session of the General Conference of the Methodist Protestant Church]'' *''[http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/webbin/serial?id=jcmethpnc Journal of the Annual Session of the North Carolina Conference of the Methodist Protestant Church]'' *''[http://onlinebooks.library.upenn.edu/webbin/serial?id=jcmethpmi Minutes of the Session of the Michigan Annual Conference, Methodist Protestant Church]'' *[https://divinityarchive.com/bitstream/handle/11258/3173/historyofwomansf01mrse.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y Divinity Archive, ''History of the Woman's Foreign Missionary Society of the Methodist Protestant Church'' by Mrs E. C. Chandler (1920) (online copy)] {{Methodist Episcopal Church}} <!-- Navboxes go here --> {{Subject bar|Portal1= Christianity |Portal2= United States}} {{Authority control}} [[Category:History of Methodism in the United States]] [[Category:Religious organizations established in 1828]] [[Category:Methodist denominations in North America|Protestant]] [[Category:Methodist denominations established in the 19th century]] [[Category:United Methodist Church predecessor churches]] [[Category:1828 establishments in the United States]] [[Category:Christian denominations founded in the United States]]
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