Methodist Episcopal Church
Learn about this topic in these articles:
African Methodist Episcopal Church
- In African Methodist Episcopal Church
…Bishop Francis Asbury of the Methodist Episcopal Church. In 1807 and again in 1815, Allen successfully sued in the Pennsylvania courts to establish Bethel’s independence from white Methodists. In 1816 Asbury consecrated Allen bishop of the newly organized AME Church, which accepted Methodist doctrine and discipline. The church speaks of…
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association with Jarratt
- In Devereux Jarratt
…in 1784 and formed the Methodist Episcopal Church, Jarratt became alienated from them. He also opposed the Methodists’ strict condemnation of slavery.
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fundamentalism and liberalism
- In Christian fundamentalism: The late 19th to the mid-20th century
foothold in Episcopal, Congregational, Methodist Episcopal, American Baptist, and Presbyterian denominations in the North. The stage was set for major confrontations during the 1920s, and it remained to be seen only whether the modernists could be forced out of their denominations.
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Methodism
- In Methodism: America
…Church into two bodies: the Methodist Episcopal Church and the Methodist Episcopal Church, South (organized in 1845). A third church formed as a result of the slavery question, the all-African American Colored (now “Christian”) Methodist Episcopal Church (1870), split from the southern Methodist church. After the Civil War the two…
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role of Allen
- In Richard Allen
…first general conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church at Baltimore, Allen was considered a talented candidate for the new denomination’s ministry. In 1786 he bought his freedom and went to Philadelphia, where he joined St. George’s Methodist Episcopal Church. Occasionally he was asked to preach to the congregation. He also…
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United Methodist Church
- In United Methodist Church: History
The autonomous Methodist Episcopal Church was organized in 1784 in Baltimore, Maryland, with Thomas Coke and Francis Asbury as superintendents (later called bishops). The church grew rapidly, but various schisms developed. In 1830 a dissenting group organized the Methodist Protestant Church, a nonepiscopal church. The slavery question…
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