Apostolic Church (Czech Republic) Explained

The Apostolic Church (Czech: Apoštolská církev) is a Pentecostal denomination in Czech Republic. It is affiliated with the World Assemblies of God Fellowship.

History

Pentecostalism came in 1910 to the present Czech and Slovak lands, and spread to Brno, Prague and other places and was registered as The Union of Resolved Pentecostal Christians. The church passed through many difficulties under the Nazi occupation and during the Communist regime, when 1948 it was abolished. Only in 1977 the Pentecostals could set up an organisation and the Apostolic Church was founded on Czechoslovakia. After the separation of Slovakia the church was officially legalized in 1989 by the Czech Republic government. Today, the Apostolic Church keeps close fellowship with its Slovak counterpart and both maintain a Bible school in Kolín, close to Prague.

In 2008 there was nearly 3400 members in 110 communities, and the church polity is episcopal. The 2021 census counted 4,958 members.[1]

References

Notes and References

  1. Population of believers - belonging to a church by church, religious society and region in 2021 https://scitani.gov.cz/docs/42301/d834822b-249c-c062-2bf1-87a53f21381f/sldb2021_pv_obyvatelstvo_podle_cirkvi_a_kraju_en.xlsx downloaded from https://scitani.gov.cz/religious-beliefs