List of Christian denominations explained

A Christian denomination is a distinct religious body within Christianity, identified by traits such as a name, organization and doctrine. Individual bodies, however, may use alternative terms to describe themselves, such as church, convention, communion, assembly, house, union, network, or sometimes fellowship. Divisions between one denomination and another are primarily defined by authority and doctrine. Issues regarding the nature of Jesus, Trinitarianism, salvation, the authority of apostolic succession, eschatology, conciliarity, papal supremacy and papal primacy among others may separate one denomination from another. Groups of denominations, often sharing broadly similar beliefs, practices, and historical ties—can be known as "branches of Christianity" or "denominational families" (e.g. Eastern or Western Christianity and their sub-branches).[1] These "denominational families" are often imprecisely also called denominations.

Christian denominations since the 20th century have often involved themselves in ecumenism. Ecumenism refers to efforts among Christian bodies to develop better understandings and closer relationships.[2] [3] It also refers to efforts toward visible unity in the Christian Church, though the terms of visible unity vary for each denomination of Christianity, as certain groups teach they are the one true church, or that they were divinely instituted for the propagation of a certain doctrine.[4] The largest ecumenical organization in Christianity is the World Council of Churches.[5]

The following is not a complete list, but aims to provide a comprehensible overview of the diversity among denominations of Christianity, ecumenical organizations, and Christian ideologies not necessarily represented by specific denominations. Only those Christian denominations, ideologies and organizations with Wikipedia articles will be listed in order to ensure that all entries on this list are notable and verifiable. The denominations and ecumenical organizations listed are generally ordered from ancient to contemporary Christianity.

Terminology and qualification

See also: List of Christian denominations by number of members. Christianity can be taxonomically divided into six main groups: the Church of the East, Oriental Orthodoxy, Eastern Orthodoxy, Roman Catholicism, Protestantism, and Restorationism.[6] [7] Within these six main traditions are various Christian denominations (for example, the Coptic Orthodox Church is an Oriental Orthodox denomination). Protestantism includes many groups which do not share any ecclesiastical governance and have widely diverging beliefs and practices.[8] Major Protestant branches include Adventism, Anabaptism, Anglicanism, Baptists, Lutheranism, Methodism, Moravianism, Quakerism, Pentecostalism, Plymouth Brethren, Reformed Christianity, and Waldensianism.[8] Reformed Christianity itself includes the Continental Reformed, Presbyterian, Evangelical Anglican, Congregationalist, and Reformed Baptist traditions.[9] Anabaptist Christianity itself includes the Amish, Apostolic, Bruderhof, Hutterite, Mennonite, River Brethren, and Schwarzenau Brethren traditions.[10]

Within the Restorationist branch of Christianity, denominations include the Irvingians, Swedenborgians, Christadelphians, Latter Day Saints, Jehovah's Witnesses, La Luz del Mundo, and Iglesia ni Cristo.[11] [12] [13] [14] Among those listed, some bodies included do not consider themselves denominations, though for the purpose of academic study of religion, they are categorized as a denomination, that is, "an organized body of Christians."[15] For example, the Catholic Church considers itself the one true church and the Holy See as pre-denominational.[16] The Eastern Orthodox Church, and the Oriental Orthodox Church, also considers themselves to be the original Christian church along with the Catholic church.[17] [18] The Lutheran Churches have viewed themselves as the "main trunk of the historical Christian Tree" founded by Christ and the Apostles, holding that during the Reformation, the Church of Rome fell away.[19] Certain denominational traditions teach that they were divinely instituted to propagate a certain doctrine or spiritual experience, for example the raising up of Methodism by God to propagate entire sanctification (the "second blessing"),[20] or the launch of Pentecostalism to bestow a baptism with the Holy Spirit evidenced by speaking in tongues on humanity.[21] To express further the complexity involved, the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches were historically one and the same, as evidenced by the fact that they are the only two modern churches in existence to accept all of the first seven ecumenical councils, until differences arose, such as papal authority and dominance, the rise of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople, the fall of the Western Roman Empire, the continuance of emperors in the Eastern Roman Empire, and the final and permanent split that occurred during the Crusades with the siege of Constantinople.[22] This also illustrates that denominations can arise not only from religious or theological issues, but political and generational divisions as well.Other churches that are viewed by non-adherents as denominational are highly decentralized and do not have any formal denominational structure, authority, or record-keeping beyond the local congregation; several groups within the Restoration Movement and congregational churches fall into this category.Some Christian bodies are large (e.g. Catholics, Orthodox, Pentecostals and nondenominationals, Anglicans or Baptists), while others are just a few small churches, and in most cases the relative size is not evident in this list except for the denominational group or movement as a whole (e.g. Church of the East, Oriental Orthodox Churches, or Lutheranism). The largest denomination is the Catholic Church with more than 1.3 billion members.[23] The smallest of these groups may have only a few dozen adherents or an unspecified number of participants in independent churches as described below. As such, specific numbers and a certain size may not define a group as a denomination. However, as a general rule, the larger a group becomes, the more acceptance and legitimacy it gains.

Modern movements such as Christian fundamentalism, Radical Pietism, Evangelicalism, the Holiness movement and Charismatic Christianity sometimes cross denominational lines, or in some cases create new denominations out of two or more continuing groups (as is the case for many united and uniting churches, for example; e.g. the United Church of Christ).[24] [25] Such subtleties and complexities are not clearly depicted here.

Between denominations, theologians, and comparative religionists there are considerable disagreements about which groups can be properly called Christian or a Christian denomination as disagreements arise primarily from doctrinal differences between each other. As an example, this list contains groups also known as "rites" which many, such as the Roman Catholic Church, would say are not denominations as they are in full papal communion, and thus part of the Catholic Church.[26] For the purpose of simplicity, this list is intended to reflect the self-understanding of each denomination. Explanations of different opinions concerning their status as Christian denominations can be found at their respective articles.

There is no official recognition in most parts of the world for religious bodies, and there is no official clearinghouse which could determine the status or respectability of religious bodies. Often there is considerable disagreement between various groups about whether others should be labeled with pejorative terms such as "cult", or about whether this or that group enjoys some measure of respectability. Such considerations often vary from place to place, or culture to culture, where one denomination may enjoy majority status in one region, but be widely regarded as a "dangerous cult" in another part of the world. Inclusion on this list does not indicate any judgment about the size, importance, or character of a group or its members.

Early Christian

See main article: Early Christianity and Christianity in the 1st century. Early Christianity is often divided into three different branches that differ in theology and traditions, which all appeared in the 1st century AD/CE. They include Jewish Christianity, Pauline Christianity and Gnostic Christianity. All modern Christian denominations are said to have descended from the Jewish and Pauline Christianities, with Gnostic Christianity dying, or being hunted out of existence after the early Christian era and being largely forgotten until discoveries made in the late 19th and early twentieth centuries.[27] There are also other theories on the origin of Christianity.

The following Christian groups appeared between the beginning of the Christian religion and the First Council of Nicaea in 325.

Gnosticism

See main article: Gnosticism, Proto-Gnosticism and List of Gnostic sects.

Late ancient and Medieval Christian

See main article: History of late ancient Christianity, History of Christianity during the Middle Ages and State church of the Roman Empire. The following are groups of Christians appearing between the First Council of Nicaea, the East-West Schism and proto-Protestantism. Among these late ancient and Medieval Christian denominations, the most prominent and continuously operating have been the Church of the East and its successors in Assyrian Christianity; and the Oriental Orthodox Churches. Both the Church of the East and Oriental Orthodox separated from the imperial Roman church during the 5th century.

Church of the East

The Church of the East split from the Roman-recognized state church of Rome during the Sasanian Period. It is also called the Nestorian Church or the Church of Persia.[28] Declaring itself separate from the state church in 424–427, liturgically, it adhered to the East Syriac Rite.[29] Theologically, it adopted the dyophysite doctrine of Nestorianism, which emphasizes the separateness of the divine and human natures of Jesus, and addresses Mary as Christotokos instead of Theotokos; the Church of the East also largely practiced aniconism.[30] [31] Adhered to by groups such as the Keraites and Naimans (see Christianity among the Mongols), the Church of the East had a prominent presence in Inner Asia between the 11th and 14th centuries, but by the 15th century was largely confined to the Eastern Aramaic-speaking Assyrian communities of northern Mesopotamia, in and around the rough triangle formed by Mosul and Lakes Van and Urmia—the same general region where the Church of the East had first emerged between the 1st and 3rd centuries.[32]

Its patriarchal lines divided in a tumultuous period from the 16th-19th century, finally consolidated into the Eastern Catholic Chaldean Church (in full communion with the Pope of Rome), and the Assyrian Church of the East.[33] [34] Other minor, modern related splinter groups include the Ancient Church of the East (split 1968 due to rejecting some changes made by Patriarch Shimun XXI Eshai) and the Chaldean Syrian Church. In 1995 the Chaldean Syrian Church reunified with the Assyrian Church of the East as an archbishopric. The Chaldean Syrian Church is headquartered in Thrissur, India. Together, the Assyrian, Ancient, Chaldean Syrian and Chaldean Catholic Church comprised over 1.6 million in 2018.[35] [36] [37] [38]

Assyrian (Syriac) Christian

Assyrian Christianity comprises those Eastern churches who kept the traditional Nestorian christology and ecclesiology of the historical Church of the East after the original church reunited with the Catholic Church in Rome, forming the Chaldean Catholic Church in 1552. Assyrian Christianity forms part of the Syriac Christian tradition. The Assyrian Church of the East and the Ancient Church of the East together had over 0.6 million members .[39]

Oriental Orthodox

The Oriental Orthodox Churches are the Christian churches adhering to Miaphysite christology and theology, with a combined global membership of 62 million .[40] [41] [42] These churches reject the Council of Chalcedon in 451 and those after it. They departed from the state church of the Roman Empire after the Chalcedonian Council.[43] Other denominations, such as the Eastern Orthodox Church and bodies in Old and True Orthodoxy, often label the Oriental Orthodox Churches as "Monophysite". As the Oriental Orthodox do not adhere to the teachings of Eutyches, they themselves reject this label, preferring the term "Miaphysite".

Historically, the Oriental Orthodox Churches considered themselves collectively to be the one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church that Jesus founded. Some Christian denominations have recently considered the body of Oriental Orthodoxy to be a part of the one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church—a view which is gaining increasing acceptance in the wake of ecumenical dialogues between groups such as Eastern Orthodoxy, Roman and Eastern Catholicism, and Protestant Christianity.[44] [45]

All canonical or mainstream Oriental Orthodox Churches are part of the World Council of Churches, though only five form the Standing Conference of Oriental Orthodox Churches.[46] Throughout Oriental Orthodoxy, non-mainstream or non-canonical churches have passed in and out of recognition with the mainstream churches (e.g., British Orthodox Church).[47]

Canonical Oriental Orthodox

Independent Oriental Orthodox

Eastern Orthodox

See main article: articles and Eastern Orthodoxy. Eastern Orthodoxy is one of the main Chalcedonian Christian branches, alongside Roman Catholicism and Protestantism.[48] [49] Each Eastern Orthodox church considers itself part of the one true church, and pre-denominational. Though they consider themselves pre-denominational, being the original Church of Christ before 1054,[50] some scholars suggest the Eastern Orthodox and Catholic churches began after the East–West Schism.[51] [52]

Canonical Eastern Orthodox

See main article: Eastern Orthodox Church, Eastern Orthodox Church organization, Eastern Orthodox theology and Western Rite Orthodoxy. The Eastern Orthodox Church, officially the Orthodox Catholic Church, claims continuity (based upon apostolic succession) with the early Church as part of the state church of Rome. The Eastern Orthodox Church had about 230 million members, making it the second largest single denomination behind the Catholic Church.[53] [54] [55] Some of them have a disputed administrative status (i.e. their autonomy or autocephaly is not recognized universally). Eastern Orthodox churches by and large remain in communion with one another, although this has broken at times throughout its history. Two examples of impaired communion between the Orthodox churches include the Moscow–Constantinople schisms of 1996 and 2018.[56] [57] [58] [59] There are also independent churches subscribing to the Eastern Orthodox traditions.

Independent Eastern Orthodox

These Eastern Orthodox churches are not in communion with the mainstream or canonical Eastern Orthodox Church. Some of these denominations consider themselves as part of True Orthodoxy or the Old Believers. True Orthodoxy, or Genuine Orthodoxy, separated from the mainstream church over issues of ecumenism and calendar reform since the 1920s;[60] and the Russian Old Believers refused to accept the liturgical and ritual changes made by Patriarch Nikon of Moscow between 1652 and 1666. Several Old Believer denominations have reunified with the Russian Orthodox Church and subsequent wider Eastern Orthodox communion.

True Orthodoxy

Other Orthodox movements

Catholic

See main article: Catholic particular churches and liturgical rites. The Catholic Church, or Roman Catholic Church, is composed of 24 autonomous sui iuris particular churches: the Latin Church and the 23 Eastern Catholic Churches. It considers itself the one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church that Christ founded,[61] and which Saint Peter initiated along with the missionary work of Saint Paul and others. As such, the Catholic Church does not consider itself a denomination, but rather considers itself pre-denominational, the original Church of Christ.[62] [63] Continuity is claimed based upon apostolic succession with the early Church.[64] The Catholic population exceeds 1.3 billion, making up the majority of Western Christianity. Stemming from the one Roman Catholic institution, there exists several Independent Catholic churches which have expanded the Catholic denominational family, becoming Old and Old Roman Catholicism, and Liberal Catholics.

Latin (Roman) Catholic

The Latin Church is the largest and most widely known of the 24 sui iuris churches that together make up the Catholic Church. It is headed by the Bishop of Rome—the Pope—with headquarters in Vatican City, enclaved within Rome, Italy., the Latin Church comprised 1.255 billion members.[65]

Eastern (Oriental) Catholic

All of the following are particular churches of the Catholic Church. They are all in communion with the Pope as Bishop of Rome and acknowledge his claim of universal jurisdiction and authority. They have some minor distinct theological emphases and expressions (for instance, in the case of those that are of Greek/Byzantine tradition, concerning some non-doctrinal aspects of the Latin view of Purgatory and clerical celibacy).[66] The Eastern Catholic Churches and the Latin Church (which are united in the worldwide Catholic Church) share the same doctrine and sacraments, and thus the same faith. The total membership of the churches accounted for approximately 18 million members .[67]

Alexandrian Rite
Armenian Rite
Byzantine Rite
East Syriac Rite
West Syriac Rite

Independent Catholic

See main article: Independent Catholicism and Old Catholic Church. Independent Catholics consists of those denominations embodying catholicity, and have initially separated from the Latin Church in 1724 through the consecrations of bishops for the present-day Old Catholic Archdiocese of Utrecht without papal approval.[68] [69] Largely distinguished by their rejection of papal infallibility and supremacy, most Independent Catholic churches are unrecognized by the Vatican, although their sacraments have been recognized as valid but illicit.[70]

Catholic movements

Protestant

See main article: Protestantism and List of the largest Protestant denominations. Protestantism is a movement within Christianity which owes its name to the 1529 Protestation at Speyer, but originated in 1517 when Martin Luther began his dispute with the Roman Catholic Church. This period of time, known as the Reformation, began a series of events resulting over the next 500 years in several newly denominated churches (listed below). Some denominations were started by intentionally dividing themselves from the Roman Catholic Church, such as in the case of the English Reformation while others, such as with Luther's followers, were excommunicated after attempting reform.[71] New denominations and organizations formed through further divisions within Protestant churches since the Reformation began. A denomination labeled "Protestant" subscribes to the fundamental Protestant principles—though not always—that is scripture alone, justification by faith alone, and the universal priesthood of believers.[72]

The majority of contemporary Protestants are members of Adventism, Anglicanism, the Baptist churches, Calvinism (Reformed Protestantism), Lutheranism, Methodism and Pentecostalism.[73] Nondenominational, Evangelical, charismatic, neo-charismatic, independent, Convergence, and other churches are on the rise, and constitute a significant part of Protestant Christianity.[74]

This list gives only an overview, and certainly does not mention all of the Protestant denominations. The exact number of Protestant denominations, including the members of the denominations, is difficult to calculate and depends on definition. A group that fits the generally accepted definition of "Protestant" might not officially use the term. Therefore, it should be taken with caution. The most accepted figure among various authors and scholars includes around 900 million to a little over 1 billion Protestant Christians.[75] [76]

Proto-Protestant

See main article: Proto-Protestantism. Proto-Protestantism refers to movements similar to the Protestant Reformation, but before 1517, when Martin Luther (1483–1546) is reputed to have nailed the Ninety-Five-Theses to the church door. Major early Reformers were Peter Waldo (c. 1140–c. 1205), John Wycliffe (1320s–1384), and Jan Hus (c. 1369–1415). It is not completely correct to call these groups Protestant due to the fact that some of them had nothing to do with the 1529 protestation at Speyer which coined the term Protestant. In particular, the Utraquists were eventually accommodated as a separate Catholic rite by the papacy after a military attempt to end their movement failed. On the other hand, the surviving Waldensians ended up joining Reformed Protestantism, so it is not completely inaccurate to refer to their movement as Protestant; the Waldensian Evangelical Church is a well known existing body in that tradition. The Hussites are presently represented in the Moravian Church, Unity of the Brethren and the Czechoslovak Hussite Church.

Arnoldists
  • Berengarians
  • Devotio Moderna
  • Friends of God
  • Henricans
  • Hussites
  • Lollards
  • Pataria
  • Petrobrusians
  • Piagnoni
  • Strigolniki
  • Waldensians
  • Lutheran

    See main article: Lutheranism and List of Lutheran denominations.

    See also: Lutheran church bodies in North America. Lutherans are a major branch of Protestantism, identifying with the theology of Martin Luther, a German friar, ecclesiastical reformer, and theologian. Lutheranism initially began as an attempt to reform the Catholic Church before the excommunication of its members. Lutherans are divided among High Church, Confessional, Pietist and Liberal churchmanships, though these can overlap, e.g. the Communion of Nordic Lutheran Dioceses is High Church and Confessional. The whole of Lutheranism had about 70-90 million members in 2018.[77] [78] [79] [80] The largest non-United Lutheran denomination was the Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus, an Eastern Protestant Christian group.[81]

    Radical Pietist

    See main article: Radical Pietism. Those who separated from established Lutheran churches to form their own denominations are known as Radical Pietists (as opposed to Pietistic Lutherans, who remain in the Lutheran churches (such as the Church of the Lutheran Brethren) and combine its emphasis on Biblical doctrine with the importance of individual piety and living a holy Christian life.[82] Although the Radical Pietists broke with Lutheranism, its influence on Anglicanism, in particular John Wesley, led to the spawning of the Methodist movement.

    Reformed

    See main article: Calvinism and List of Reformed denominations. Calvinism, also known as the Reformed tradition or Reformed Protestantism is a movement which broke from the Catholic Church in the 16th century. Reformed Christianity is represented in the Continental Reformed, Presbyterian, and Congregationalist traditions, along with Reformed Anglican and Reformed Baptist denominations (the latter two are listed under the Anglican and Baptist sections of this article, respectively). Calvinism follows the theological traditions set down by John Calvin, John Knox and other Reformation-era theologians. Calvinists differ from Lutherans on the nature of the real presence of Christ in the Eucharist, theories of worship, and the use of God's law for believers, among other things. There are from 60 to 80 million Christians identifying as Reformed or Calvinist according to statistics gathered in 2018.[83] [84]

    Continental Reformed churches

    See main article: Continental Reformed church.

    Presbyterianism

    See main article: Presbyterianism.

    Congregationalism

    See main article: Congregational church.

    Anglican

    See main article: Anglicanism. Anglicanism or Episcopalianism has referred to itself as the via media between Lutheranism and Reformed Christianity,[85] as well as between Roman Catholicism and Protestantism.[86] [87] The majority of Anglicans consider themselves part of the one, holy, catholic and apostolic Church within the Anglican Communion. Anglicans or Episcopalians also self-identify as both Catholic and Reformed. Although the use of the term "Protestant" to refer to Anglicans was once common, it is controversial today, with some rejecting the label and others accepting it. Anglicans numbered over 85 million in 2018.[88]

    Anglican Communion

    United and Uniting churches

    Other Anglican churches and Continuing Anglican movement

    See main article: Continuing Anglican movement. There are numerous churches following the Anglican tradition that are not in full communion with the Anglican Communion. Some churches split due to changes in the Book of Common Prayer and the ordination of women, forming Anglo-Catholic, Anglican Papal or Evangelical Anglican communities.[89] A select few of these churches are recognized by certain individual provinces of the Anglican Communion.

    Anabaptist

    See main article: Anabaptists. The Anabaptists trace their origins to the Radical Reformation. Alternative to other early Protestants, Anabaptists were seen as an early offshoot of Protestantism, although the view has been challenged by some Anabaptists.[90] There were approximately 2.1 million Anabaptists as of 2015. Anabaptists are categorized into Old Order Anabaptism (such as the Old Brethren German Baptist), Conservative Anabaptism (such as the Pilgrim Mennonite Conference, Beachy Amish and Dunkard Brethren Church), and mainline/assimilated Anabaptism.

    Hutterites
    Mennonites
    River Brethren
    Schwarzenau Brethren
    Other Anabaptists

    Baptist

    See also: List of Baptist confessions, List of Baptist denominations and List of Reformed Baptist denominations. Baptists emerged in 1609 under the teachings of John Smyth, and along with Methodism, grew in size and influence after they sailed to the New World (the remaining Puritans who traveled to the New World were Congregationalists). Some Baptists fit strongly with the Reformed tradition theologically but not denominationally. Some Baptists also adopt presbyterian and episcopal forms of governance. In 2018, there were about 75-105 million Baptists.[91] [92]

    Baptist movements

    Methodist

    See main article: Methodism and List of Methodist denominations. The Methodist movement emerged out the work of Anglican priest John Wesley, who taught a personal conversion to Christ (the New Birth) and holiness of heart.[93] Calling it "the grand depositum" of the Methodist faith, Wesley specifically taught that the propagation of the doctrine of entire sanctification was the reason that God raised up the Methodists in the world.[20] While some Methodists retained the episcopacy (such as the Free Methodist Church, Global Methodist Church and United Methodist Church), others, such as the Congregational Methodist Church have a congregational polity. Methodists were among the first Christians to accept women's ordination since the Montanists. Some 60-80 million Christians are Methodists and members of the World Methodist Council.[94] [95] The holiness movement emerged within Methodism in the 19th-century., churches of the movement had an estimated 12 million adherents.[96] As Methodist denominations have historically preached two works of grace taught by John Wesley, (1) New Birth and (2) entire sanctification, and many denominations aligned with the holiness movement use Methodist in their name, it is difficult to draw a line between Holiness Methodist denominations and those not aligned with the holiness movement.[97] [98] For example, the Free Methodist Church and the Church of the Nazarene are widely regarded as being aligned with the holiness movement and are core members of the World Methodist Council, along with denominations with mixed churchmanship, such as the United Methodist Church.[99]

    Albright Brethren

    The Albright Brethren were organized under the leadership of Jacob Albright, who converted to Methodism and preached to German-speaking people. Although the majority of the Albright Brethren merged with the United Brethren, two extant bodies continue today:

    Evening Light

    Churches of the Evening Light Reformation in 1880 emerged under the direction of Daniel Sidney Warner, and while they emerged under the influence of the holiness movement, they adhere to a position of antidenominationalism.[100] Classified as Holiness Restorationists, the Church of God (Anderson, Indiana) was the original work founded by Warner and its conservative holiness offshoot is the Church of God (Guthrie, Oklahoma).[101] While the Church of God (Restoration) is listed here, it is distinguished from the two aforementioned bodies by unique doctrines that have taken it in a direction of its own.[102]

    Keswickian

    See main article: Higher Life movement. The Higher Life movement emerged in the United Kingdom and emphasized the importance of sanctification, "the deeper and higher life".[103] It became popularized through the Keswick Conventions; W.E. Boardman's Keswickian theology had an influence on A.B. Simpson, who established the Christian and Missionary Alliance.[104]

    Quaker

    See main article: Quakers. Quakers, or Friends, originated under the work of George Fox, who taught personal conversion to Christ, along with the doctrine of Christian perfection.[105] [106] The Friends have historically held that Christians are guided by the inward light to "make the witness of God" known to everyone.[107]

    Shaker

    The United Society of Believers in Christ's Second Appearing was founded by Jane Wardley, Ann Lee, and Lucy Wright in 1747. At present, one active Shaker community remains, the Sabbathday Lake Shaker Village.[108]

    Plymouth Brethren

    See main article: Plymouth Brethren. Plymouth Brethren is a conservative, low church, non-conformist, evangelical Christian movement whose history can be traced to Dublin, Ireland, in the late 1820s, originating from Anglicanism.[109]

    Irvingist

    See main article: Catholic Apostolic Church. The Catholic Apostolic churches were born out of the 1830s revival started in London by the teachings of Edward Irving, and out of the resultant Catholic Apostolic Church movement.[110]

    Pentecostal and Charismatic

    See also: Gay Apostolic Pentecostals. Pentecostalism and Charismatic Christianity began in the 1900s. The two movements emphasize direct personal experience of God through baptism with the Holy Spirit. They represent some of the largest growing movements in Protestant Christianity.[111] Pentecostalism is divided between its original branch, Holiness Pentecostalism (which teaches three works of grace) and Finished Work Pentecostalism (which views sanctification only in a progressive manner). Oneness Pentecostalism, which rejects the doctrine of the Holy Trinity, split from Finished Work Pentecostalism and is covered in its own section in this article. The charismatic movement (including the Catholic Charismatic Renewal) was established within historic denominational traditions due to influence from Pentecostalism. According to the Pew Research Center, Pentecostals and Charismatics numbered some 280 million people in 2011.[79]

    Holiness Pentecostalism

    See main article: Holiness Pentecostalism.

    Finished Work Pentecostalism

    See main article: Finished Work Pentecostalism.

    Charismatics

    See main article: Charismatic Christianity.

    Neo-charismatic movement

    See main article: Neo-charismatic movement.

    Convergence

    See main article: Convergence Movement.

    The Convergence Movement originated from "The Chicago Call" in 1977, urging evangelical Protestants to reconnect with the liturgical historic roots of the Christian Church.[112] It emphasizes the convergence of sacramental, evangelical, and charismatic streams;[113] promoting biblical fidelity, creedal identity, and church unity.

    Uniting and united

    See main article: United and uniting churches. These united or uniting churches are the result of a merger between distinct denominational churches (e.g., Lutherans, Anglicans, Presbyterians and the Continental Reformed churches). As ecumenism progresses, unions between various Protestants are becoming more and more common, resulting in a growing number of united and uniting churches. Major examples of uniting churches are the United Protestant Church of France (2013) and the Protestant Church in the Netherlands (2004).[114] [115] Churches are listed here when their disparate heritage marks them as inappropriately listed in the particular categories above.

    Stone–Campbellite

    See main article: Stone–Campbell Movement. Nondenominational Christianity arose in the 18th century through the Stone–Campbell Movement, with followers organizing themselves simply as "Christians" and "Disciples of Christ".[116] [117] [118] The Stone–Campbell Movement was led by Barton Stone and Alexander Campbell.[117]

    Adventism

    See main article: Adventism. Adventism originated from the work of William Miller, who preached the end of the world and the second coming of Christ in 1843/44.[119] After the Great Disappointment, this year was reinterprted by Adventists as being the start of the investigative judgment.[120]

    Sunday observing
    Saturday observing
    Other Adventist

    Nondenominational and other Evangelicals

    See main article: Nondenominational Christianity. The term Evangelical appears with the reformation and reblossoms in the 18th century and in the 19th century.[121] Evangelical Protestantism modernly understood is an inter-denominational Protestant movement which maintains the belief that the essence of the Gospel consists of the doctrine of salvation by grace through faith in Jesus Christ's atonement.[122]

    International Evangelicalism

    See main article: Internet church.

    African Evangelicalism

    See main article: Zionist Churches.

    See also: African-initiated church.

    P'ent'ay

    See main article: P'ent'ay. P'ent'ay, simply known as Ethiopian-Eritrean Evangelicalism are a group of indigenous Protestant Eastern Baptist, Lutheran, Pentecostal, and Mennonite denominations in full communion with each other and believe that Ethiopian and Eritrean Evangelicalism are the reformation of the current Orthodox Tewahedo churches as well as the restoration of it to original Ethiopian Christianity. They uphold that in order for a person to be saved one has to accept Jesus as their Lord and Savior for the forgiveness of sins; and to receive Christ one must be "born again" .[123] Its members make up a significant portion of the 2 million Eastern Protestant tradition.

    Eastern Protestant

    See main article: Eastern Protestant Christianity. These churches resulted from a post–1800s reformation of Eastern Christianity, in line with Protestant beliefs and practices.

    Defunct Protestant churches and movements

    These are protestant denominations, movements and organizations that existed historically, but no longer exist in modern times.

    Other Protestant churches and movements

    These are denominations, movements, and organizations deriving from mainstream Protestantism but are not classifiable under historic or current Protestant movements nor as parachurch organizations.

    Miscellaneous

    The following are independent and non-mainstream movements, denominations and organizations formed during various times in the history of Christianity by splitting from mainline Catholicism, Eastern or Oriental Orthodoxy, or Protestantism not classified in the previous lists.

    Christian Identitist

    See main article: Christian Identity.

    Esoteric Christianity

    See main article: Esoteric Christianity and Western esotericism.

    Neo-Gnostic

    See main article: Neo-Gnosticism.

    Judeo-Christian

    See main article: Judaizers and Judeo-Christian.

    See also: Christian Zionism and List of Sabbath-keeping churches.

    Messianic Judaism

    See main article: Messianic Judaism.

    Nontrinitarian

    See main article: Nontrinitarianism.

    See also: Christomonism. These groups or organizations diverge from historic trinitarian theology (usually based on the Council of Nicaea) with different interpretations of Nontrinitarianism.

    Bible Students and splinter groups

    See main article: Bible Student movement.

    Christian Science

    See main article: Christian Science.

    Latter Day Saint movement

    See main article: Latter Day Saint movement and Mormonism.

    See also: List of denominations in the Latter Day Saint movement and Mormonism and Christianity.

    Most Latter Day Saint denominations are derived from the Church of Christ established by Joseph Smith in 1830. The largest worldwide denomination of this movement, and the one publicly recognized as Mormonism, is the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Some sects, known as the "Prairie Saints", broke away because they did not recognize Brigham Young as the head of the church, and did not follow him West in the mid-1800s. Other sects broke away over the abandonment of practicing plural marriage after the 1890 Manifesto. Other denominations are defined by either a belief in Joseph Smith as a prophet or acceptance of the Book of Mormon as scripture. The Latter Day Saints comprise a little over 16 million members collectively.[124]

    Swedenborgianism

    See main article: The New Church.

    Unitarianism and Universalism

    See main article: Unitarianism and Christian Universalism.

    Oneness Pentecostalism

    See main article: Oneness Pentecostalism and Gay Apostolic Pentecostals.

    Other Nontrinitarians

    Chinese salvationist and other East Asian

    See main article: Chinese salvationist religions.

    Southcottist

    See main article: Southcottism.

    Other

    Parachurch

    See main article: Parachurch organization. Parachurch organizations are Christian faith-based organizations that work outside and across denominations to engage in social welfare and evangelism. These organizations are not churches but work with churches or represent a coalition of churches.

    Ideologies

    See main article: List of Christian movements. A Christian movement is a theological, political, or philosophical interpretation of Christianity that is not necessarily represented by a specific church, sect, or denomination.

    British Israelism

    See main article: British Israelism.

    Syncretic

    See main article: Syncretism.

    See also: Folk Catholicism and Folk Orthodoxy. The relation of these movements to other Christian ideas can be remote. They are listed here because they include some elements of Christian practice or beliefs, within religious contexts which may be only loosely characterized as Christian.

    African diaspora religions

    African diaspora religions are a number of related religions that developed in the Americas in various nations of the Caribbean, Latin America and the Southern United States. They derive from traditional African religions with some influence from other religious traditions, notably Christianity and Islam. Examples incorporating elements of Christianity include but are not limited to:

    New Thought

    See main article: New Thought. The relation of New Thought to Christianity is not defined as exclusive; some of its adherents see themselves as solely practicing Christianity, while adherents of Religious Science say "yes and no" to the question of whether they consider themselves to be Christian in belief and practice, leaving it up to the individual to define oneself spiritually.

    Other syncretists

    Other Christian or Christian-influenced syncretic traditions and movements include:

    Historical movements with strong syncretic influence from Christianity but no active modern membership include

    See also

    References

    Citations

    Notes and References

    1. Web site: Eastern Christianity and Western Christianity. 2020-05-03. courses.lumenlearning.com.
    2. Web site: Ecumenism. 2020-05-03. Anglican Communion Website. en.
    3. Web site: The WCC as a Fellowship of Churches. 2020-05-03. www.oikoumene.org. en.
    4. Book: McGoldrick, James Edward. Baptist Successionism: A Crucial Question in Baptist History. 1 January 1994. Scarecrow Press. 9780810836815. 1–2. Although the two most popular textbooks used in America to teach Baptist history cite Holland and England early in the seventeenth century as the birthplace of the Baptist churches, many Baptists object vehemently and argue that their history can be traced across the centuries to New Testament times. Some Baptists deny categorically that they are Protestants and that the history of their churches is related to the success of the Protestant Reformation of the sixteenth century. Those who reject the Protestant character and Reformation origins of the Baptists usually maintain a view of church history sometimes called "Baptist successionism" and claim that Baptists have represented the true church, which must be, and has been, present in every period of history. The popularity of the successionist view has been enhanced enormously by a booklet entitled The Trail of Blood, of which thousands of copies have been distributed since it was published in 1931..
    5. Web site: History of the World Council of Churches. 2020-04-15. Encyclopedia Britannica. en.
    6. Book: Riswold . Caryn D. . Feminism and Christianity: Questions and Answers in the Third Wave . 1 October 2009 . Wipf and Stock Publishers . 978-1-62189-053-9 . English.
    7. Web site: Gao . Ronnie Chuang-Rang . Sawatsky . Kevin . Motivations in Faith-Based Organizations. . 22 November 2023 . English . 7 February 2023 . For example, Christianity comprises six major groups: Church of the East, Oriental Orthodoxy, Eastern Orthodoxy, Roman Catholicism, Protestantism and Restorationism..
    8. Book: Encyclopedia of World Religions . 2008 . . 978-1-59339-491-2 . en . Amid all this diversity, however, it is possible to define Protestantism formally as non-Roman Western Christianity and to divide most of Protestantism into four major confessions or confessional families – Lutheran, Anglican, Reformed, and Free Church..
    9. Book: The New Encyclopaedia Britannica . registration . 1987 . Encyclopaedia Britannica . 978-0-85229-443-7 . 244 . en.
    10. Book: Brewer . Brian C. . T&T Clark Handbook of Anabaptism . 30 December 2021 . Bloomsbury Publishing . 978-0-567-68950-4 . 564 . en.
    11. Book: Lewis . Paul W. . Mittelstadt . Martin William . What's So Liberal about the Liberal Arts?: Integrated Approaches to Christian Formation . 27 April 2016 . Wipf and Stock Publishers . 978-1-4982-3145-9 . en . The Second Great Awakening (1790-1840) spurred a renewed interest in primitive Christianity. What is known as the Restoration Movement of the nineteenth century gave birth to an array of groups: Mormons (The Latter Day Saint Movement), the Churches of Christ, Adventists, and Jehovah's Witnesses. Though these groups demonstrate a breathtaking diversity on the continuum of Christianity they share an intense restorationist impulse. Picasso and Stravinsky reflect a primitivism that came to the fore around the turn of the twentieth century that more broadly has been characterized as a "retreat from the industrialized world.".
    12. Book: Bloesch . Donald G. . The Holy Spirit: Works Gifts . 2 December 2005 . InterVarsity Press . 978-0-8308-2755-8 . 158 . en.
    13. Book: Spinks . Bryan D. . Reformation and Modern Rituals and Theologies of Baptism: From Luther to Contemporary Practices . 2 March 2017 . . 978-1-351-90583-1 . en . However, Swedenborg claimed to receive visions and revelations of heavenly things and a 'New Church', and the new church which was founded upon his writings was a Restorationist Church. The three nineteenth-century churches are all examples of Restorationist Churches, which believed they were refounding the Apostolic Church, and preparing for the Second Coming of Christ..
    14. Book: Lewis . Paul W. . Mittelstadt . Martin William . What's So Liberal about the Liberal Arts?: Integrated Approaches to Christian Formation . 27 April 2016 . Wipf and Stock Publishers . 978-1-4982-3145-9 . en . The Second Great Awakening (1790-1840) spurred a renewed interest in primitive Christianity. What is known as the Restoration Movement of the nineteenth century gave birth to an array of groups: Mormons (The Latter Day Saint Movement), the Churches of Christ, Adventists, and Jehovah's Witnesses. Though these groups demonstrate a breathtaking diversity on the continuum of Christianity they share an intense restorationist impulse. Picasso and Stravinsky reflect a primitivism that came to the fore around the turn of the twentieth century that more broadly has been characterized as a "retreat from the industrialized world.".
    15. Book: Ballantine . Jeanne H. . Roberts . Keith A. . Our Social World: Introduction to Sociology . 17 November 2008 . Pine Forge Press . 978-1-4129-6818-8 . 400 . en.
    16. Web site: Dominus Iesus. Vatican.va. 2017-09-14.
    17. Web site: The Original Christian Church. 2018-09-05. oca.org. en.
    18. Web site: History of the Orthodox Church. 2020-08-26. www.goarch.org. en-US.
    19. Book: Junius Benjamin Remensnyder . The Lutheran Manual . 1893 . Boschen & Wefer Company . 12 . English.
    20. Book: Davies. Rupert E.. George. A. Raymond. Rupp. Gordon. A History of the Methodist Church in Great Britain, Volume Three. 2017. Wipf & Stock Publishers. en. 978-1532630507. 225.
    21. Book: Yongnan . Jeon Ahn . Interpretation of Tongues and Prophecy in 1 Corinthians 12-14, with a Pentecostal Hermeneutics . 21 May 2019 . Brill Academic Publishers . 978-90-04-39717-0 . 9-10 . en.
    22. News: The differences between the Catholic and Orthodox churches. The Economist. 2018-09-05. en.
    23. Web site: Presentazione dell'Annuario Pontificio 2018 e dell' "Annuarium Statisticum Ecclesiae" 2016. press.vatican.va. 2018-09-04.
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    28. Book: Wilmshurst, David. The Ecclesiastical Organisation of the Church of the East, 1318-1913. 2000. Peeters Publishers. 9789042908765. en.
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    32. Book: Frazee, Charles A.. Catholics and Sultans: The Church and the Ottoman Empire 1453-1923. 2006-06-22. Cambridge University Press. 9780521027007. en.
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    35. Web site: Mar Thoma Syrian Church of Malabar. 2018-09-05. www.oikoumene.org. January 1948 . en.
    36. Web site: Holy Apostolic Catholic Assyrian Church of the East. 2018-09-05. www.oikoumene.org. January 1948 . en.
    37. Book: Baumer, Christoph. The Church of the East: An Illustrated History of Assyrian Christianity. 28 April 2006. I.B. Tauris. 1-84511-115-X.
    38. Web site: The Eastern Catholic Churches (2016). Catholic Near East Welfare Association. 5 September 2018. 20 October 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20161020094357/http://www.cnewa.org/source-images/roberson-eastcath-statistics/eastcatholic-stat16.pdf. dead.
    39. Baumer, Christoph (2006). The Church of the East: An Illustrated History of Assyrian Christianity (1st ed.). London, England, United Kingdom: I.B. Tauris. p. 272. .
    40. Book: Lamport . Mark A. . Encyclopedia of Christianity in the Global South . 2018 . Rowman & Littlefield . 978-1-4422-7157-9 . 601 . en . Today these churches are also referred to as the Oriental Orthodox Churches and are made up of 50 million Christians..
    41. Orthodox Christianity in the 21st Century . Pew Research Center's Religion & Public Life Project . 8 November 2017 . Oriental Orthodoxy has separate self-governing jurisdictions in Ethiopia, Egypt, Eritrea, India, Armenia and Syria, and it accounts for roughly 20% of the worldwide Orthodox population..
    42. Web site: Orthodox churches (Oriental). www.oikoumene.org. en.
    43. Book: The Popular Encyclopedia of Church History. Harvest House Publishers. 2013. 978-0-7369-4806-7. 108.
    44. Web site: The Sacraments in the Life of the Church . 2024-02-23 . www.christianunity.va.
    45. Book: Growth in Agreement II. Reports and Agreed Statements of Ecumenical Conversations at World Level 1982–1998 . 2000 . World Council of Churches . Jeffrey Gros . Michigan . Harding Meyer . William G. Rusch.
    46. Web site: Standing Conference of Oriental Orthodox Churches . 2024-02-23 . en.
    47. Web site: Joint announcement from the Coptic Orthodox Church in the United Kingdom and the British Orthodox Church of the British Isles . 2024-02-23 . British Orthodox Church.
    48. Book: McAuliffe, Garrett . Culturally Alert Counseling: A Comprehensive Introduction . . 2008 . 978-1-4129-1006-4 . 532 . About one-third of the world's population is considered Christian and can be divided into three main branches: (1) Roman Catholicism (the largest coherent group, representing over one billion baptized members); (2) Orthodox Christianity (including Eastern Orthodoxy and Oriental Orthodoxy); and (3) Protestantism (comprising many denominations and schools of thought, including Anglicanism, Reformed, Presbyterianism, Lutheranism, Methodism, Evangelicalism, and Pentecostalism)..
    49. Book: Mirola . William . Religion Matters: What Sociology Teaches Us About Religion In Our World . Monahan . Susanne C. . . 2016 . 978-1-317-34451-3 . . Orthodox Churches represent one of the three major branches of Christianity, along with Roman Catholicism and Protestantism..
    50. Web site: About the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America. 2018-06-02. www.goarch.org. en-US.
    51. Web site: Eastern and Orthodox by Tom Shoemaker. 2020-07-22. www.mesacc.edu.
    52. Web site: 2020-04-06. Great Schism. 2020-07-22. National Geographic Society. en.
    53. Orthodox Christianity in the 21st Century . Pew Research Center's Religion & Public Life Project . 8 November 2017 . Eastern Orthodoxy is split into 15 jurisdictions heavily centered in Central and Eastern Europe, accounting for the remaining 80% of Orthodox Christians..
    54. Web site: Status of Global Christianity, 2019, in the Context of 1900–2050 . Center for the Study of Global Christianity.
    55. News: Who Are Eastern Orthodox Christians and What Do They Believe?. ThoughtCo. 2018-09-04. 5 June 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160605234938/http://christianity.about.com/od/easternorthodoxy/p/orthodoxprofile.htm. dead.
    56. Web site: Statement of the Holy Synod of the Russian Orthodox Church 8 November 2000 : Russian Orthodox Church (archive). mospat.ru. 2020-05-03. 12 June 2018. https://web.archive.org/web/20180612143211/https://mospat.ru/archive/en/2000/11/se011081/. dead.
    57. Web site: CNEWA – The Estonian Apostolic Orthodox Church. cnewa.org. 2020-05-03.
    58. Web site: Statement by the Holy Synod of the Russian Orthodox Church concerning the encroachment of the Patriarchate of Constantinople on the canonical territory of the Russian Church The Russian Orthodox Church. en-US. 2020-05-03.
    59. News: MacFarquhar. Neil. 2018-10-15. Russia Takes Further Step Toward Major Schism in Orthodox Church. en-US. The New York Times. 2020-05-03. 0362-4331.
    60. Web site: Ko su ziloti, pravoslavni fundamentalisti . Who are Zealots, Orthodox Fundamentalists . . 1 May 2010 . 5 August 2014 . Beoković, Jelena.
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    68. Web site: Dominique Marie Varlet . 2020-09-06 . www.britishmuseum.org.
    69. Book: Varlet, Dominique-Marie . Domestic Correspondence of Dominique-Marie Varlet: Bishop of Babylon 1678–1742 . 1986-01-01 . BRILL . 978-90-04-07671-6 . fr.
    70. Web site: The Validity of Old Catholic Church Sacraments . 2024-02-23 . Catholic Answers.
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    77. News: Member Churches. 2013-05-19. The Lutheran World Federation. 2018-09-05. en.
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    80. Book: Melton. J. Gordon. Religions of the World: A Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Beliefs and Practices, 2nd Edition [6 volumes]]. Baumann. Martin. 2010-09-21. ABC-CLIO. 978-1-59884-204-3. en.
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    82. Web site: Pietism and the Brethren. 2020-07-17. www.cob-net.org.
    83. Web site: About The World Communion of Reformed Churches (WCRC) :: World Communion of Reformed Churches (WCRC). https://web.archive.org/web/20141027032357/http://wcrc.ch/our-story/. dead. 2014-10-27. 2014-10-27. 2018-09-04.
    84. Web site: Brown . Andrew . Chinese Calvinism flourishes Andrew Brown . . 27 May 2009.
    85. Book: Anglican and Episcopal History. 2003. Historical Society of the Episcopal Church. en. 15. Others had made similar observations, Patrick McGrath commenting that the Church of England was not a middle way between Roman Catholic and Protestant, but "between different forms of Protestantism," and William Monter describing the Church of England as "a unique style of Protestantism, a via media between the Reformed and Lutheran traditions." MacCulloch has described Cranmer as seeking a middle way between Zurich and Wittenberg but elsewhere remarks that the Church of England was "nearer Zurich and Geneva than Wittenberg..
    86. Web site: Whatever happened to the Anglican Via Media?. Bevins. Winfield. 2018-01-30. Anglican Compass. en-US. 2020-05-03.
    87. Web site: Via Media. 2012-05-22. Episcopal Church. en. 2020-05-03.
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    89. Web site: 2015-01-31. Fellowship of Concerned Churchmen - Directory of Jurisdictions. 2020-07-17. https://web.archive.org/web/20150131140728/http://www.anglicanchurches.net/jurisdictions.html. 31 January 2015.
    90. Book: Winckelmann, Johann Joachim. Winckelmann's Werke. 1808. Walther. de.
    91. News: Christian Traditions (Protestant). 2011-12-19. Pew Research Center's Religion & Public Life Project. 2018-09-04. en-US.
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    93. Web site: Danker . Ryan N. . A Wesleyan Account of Sanctifying Grace . Seedbed . 1 July 2024 . 15 February 2024.
    94. News: Member Churches. 2012-08-20. World Methodist Council. 2018-09-04. en-US.
    95. Web site: Membership. www.methodist.org.uk. en. 2018-09-04.
    96. Web site: Holiness churches — World Council of Churches. www.oikoumene.org. en. 2018-09-05.
    97. Web site: Holiness Family . . 3 July 2024.
    98. Book: Sanders . Fred . Wesley on the Christian Life: The Heart Renewed in Love . 31 August 2013 . Crossway . 978-1-4335-2487-5 . 209 . en . Wesley's understanding of the normative Christian experience was that after conversion, believers would have a gradual expansion of their knowledge and understanding of their own sin and of God's holiness. With the regenerate nature working within them, the increasing awareness of spiritual reality would produce a mounting tension, with greater grief over sin an greater desire to be delivered from it. Then, at a time and in a manner that pleased him, God would answer the Christian's faithful prayer for a deliverance from indwelling sin. Wesley thought this change happened in a moment, just like regeneration itself, although Methodists reported different levels of awareness of it: "an instantaneous change has been wrought in some believers," but "in some...they did not perceive the instant when it was wrought." The pattern was event-process-event-process; conversion, gradual growth, entire sanctification, then more gradual growth. Concluding his 1764 review of the subject, Wesley wrote, "All our Preachers should make a point of preaching perfection to believers constantly, strongly, and explicitly; and all believers should mind this one thing, and continually agonize for it." An in letters through the 1770s, we hear Wesley urging that: "Never be ashamed of the old Methodist doctrine. Press all believers to go on to perfection. Insist everywhere on the second blessing as receivable now, by simple faith." There are several threads woven together in the Wesleyan teaching on Christian perfection. Everything Wesley has taught about the distinction between justification and sanctification, of regeneration as initial sanctification, and about the Christian life as being normed and formed by the law comes together here. To this are joined new threads such as the idea of a second definite work of grace subsequent to conversion, and the need to ask God for that second blessing. But the dominant theme in Wesley's teaching on Christian perfection is the renewed heart..
    99. Book: Fahlbusch . Erwin . Bromiley . Geoffrey William . The Encyclopedia of Christianity . 1999 . Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing . 978-0-8028-2415-8 . 513 . en . Some denominations belonging to the World Methodist Council are international in character. These bodies are the United Methodist Church, Wesleyan Church, Free Methodist Church, Church of the Nazarene, and three historic black denominations—the African Methodist Episcopal, African Methodist Episcopal Zion, and Christian Methodist Episcopal Churches..
    100. Book: Goff . Philip . The Blackwell Companion to Religion in America . 25 March 2010 . John Wiley & Sons . 978-1-4443-2409-9 . 574 . en.
    101. Book: Melton . J. Gordon . The Encyclopedia of American Religions . 1987 . Gale Research Company . 978-0-8103-2133-5 . 287 . English . In doctrine and practice the Church of God (Guthrie, Oklahoma) is almost identical with the Church of God (Anderson, Indiana), but it is stricter in its practice of holiness and refusal to compromise with the world..
    102. Book: Indianapolis Monthly . 2005 . Emmis Communications . 256-257 . en.
    103. Book: Sanner . A. Elwood . Harper . Albert Foster . Exploring Christian Education . 1978 . Beacon Hill Press of Kansas City . 978-0-8341-0494-5 . 101 . en.
    104. Book: Burgess . Stanley M. . Maas . Eduard M. van der . The New International Dictionary of Pentecostal and Charismatic Movements: Revised and Expanded Edition . 3 August 2010 . Zondervan . 978-0-310-87335-8 . English . A.B. Simpson, founder of the Christian and Missionary Alliance (CMA), influenced by A.J. Gordon and W.E. Boardman, adopted a Keswickian understanding of sanctification..
    105. Dandelion, Pink, 'Who are the Quakers?', The Quakers: A Very Short Introduction, Very Short Introductions (Oxford, 2008; online edn, Oxford Academic, 24 Sept. 2013)
    106. Book: Stewart . Kathleen Anne . The York Retreat in the Light of the Quaker Way: Moral Treatment Theory: Humane Therapy Or Mind Control? . 1992 . William Sessions . 978-1-85072-089-8 . en. On the other hand, Fox believed that perfectionism and freedom from sin were possible in this world..
    107. Book: Hodge, Charles. Systematic Theology. 12 March 2015. Delmarva Publications, Inc.. en. 137. This spiritual illumination is peculiar to the true people of God; the inward lihgt, in which the Quakers believe, is common to all men. The design and effect of the "inward light" are the communication of new truth, or of truth not objectively revealed, as well as the spiritual discernment of the truths of Scripture. The design and effect of spiritual illumination are the proper apprehension of truth already speculatively known. Secondly. By the inner light the orthodox Quakers understand the supernatural influence of the Holy Spirit, concerning which they teach, – (1.) That it is given to all men. (2.) That it not only convinces of sin, and enables the soul to apprehend aright the truths of Scripture, but also communicates a knowledge of "the mysteries of salvation." ... The orthodox Friends teach concerning this inward light, as has been already shown, that it is subordinate to the Holy Scriptures, inasmuch as the Scriptures are the infallible rule of faith and practice, and everything contrary thereto is to be rejected as false and destructive..
    108. Web site: Williams . Kevin . A few good Shakers wanted . Al Jazeera . 17 June 2024 . https://web.archive.org/web/20160625182454/https://america.aljazeera.com/articles/2015/5/3/last-shakers-hope-novice-can-revive-communal-society.html . 3 May 2015. 25 June 2016.
    109. Web site: Arquivo.pt. http://arquivo.pt/wayback/20160518150855/http://brethrenonline.org/faqs/Brethren.htm. dead. 18 May 2016. arquivo.pt. 2020-04-19.
    110. Web site: Catholic Apostolic Church. 2018-09-05. InfoPlease. en.
    111. Web site: Spirit and Power - A 10-Country Survey of Pentecostals. 2006-10-05. Pew Research Center's Religion & Public Life Project. en-US. 2020-04-19.
    112. Hopkins, Joseph (April 21, 1978). "Schism in the Order". Christianity Today. Vol. 22 no. 14. p. 45.
    113. Book: Kurian. George Thomas. Encyclopedia of Christianity in the United States. Lamport. Mark A.. 2016-11-10. Rowman & Littlefield. 978-1-4422-4432-0. en.
    114. Web site: United Protestant Church of France. 2020-07-17. www.oikoumene.org. en.
    115. Web site: Protestant Church in the Netherlands. 2020-07-17. www.oikoumene.org. January 1948 . en.
    116. Book: The Journal of American History . 1997 . . 1400 . en . Richard T. Hughes, professor of religion at Pepperdine University, argues that the Churches of Christ built a corporate identity around "restoration" of the primitive church and the corresponding belief that their congregations represented a nondenominational Christianity..
    117. Book: Hughes . Richard Thomas . Roberts . R. L. . The Churches of Christ . 2001 . Greenwood Publishing Group . 978-0-313-23312-8 . 63 . en. Barton Stone was fully prepared to ally himself with Alexander Campbell in an effort to promote nondenominational Christianity, though it is evident that the two men came to this emphasis by very different routes..
    118. Book: Cherok . Richard J. . Debating for God: Alexander Campbell's Challenge to Skepticism in Antebellum America . 14 June 2011 . . 978-0-89112-838-0 . en . Later proponents of Campbell's views would refer to themselves as the “Restoration Movement” because of the Campbellian insistence on restoring Christianity to its New Testament form. ... Added to this mix were the concepts of American egalitarianism, which gave rise to his advocacy of nondenominational individualism and local church autonomy, and Christian primitivism, which led to his promotion of such early church practices as believer's baptism by immersion and the weekly partaking of the Lord's Supper..
    119. Book: Mayer . Robert J. . Adventism Confronts Modernity: An Account of the Advent Christian Controversy over the Bible's Inspiration . 16 February 2017 . Wipf and Stock Publishers . 978-1-4982-9526-0 . 7 . en.
    120. Web site: MacPherson . Anthony . Investigative Judgment . Encyclopedia of Seventh-Day Adventists . 4 July 2024 . 26 September 2022.
    121. Web site: When Did Evangelical Christianity Begin?. Kidd. Thomas. The Gospel Coalition. 20 March 2018 . en-US. 2020-01-30.
    122. Web site: Glossary Operation World. www.operationworld.org. en. 2018-09-06.
    123. Web site: Evangelical Church Fellowship of Ethiopia. www.ecfethiopia.org. 2019-07-19.
    124. News: 15 Million Member Milestone Announced at LDS Church Conference. 2013-10-05. www.mormonnewsroom.org. 2018-09-05. en.