National Conservative Presbyterian Church in Mexico explained

National Conservative Presbyterian Church in Mexico
Main Classification:Protestant
Theology:Orthodox Reformed
Governance:Presbyterian
Founded Date:1954
Founder:Eleazar Z. Perez
Founded Place:Mexico City
Area:Mexico
Congregations:64
Members:unknown

The National Conservative Presbyterian Church in Mexico (Spanish; Castilian: Iglesia Nacional Presbiteriana Conservadora de Mexico) is a Christian denomination in Mexico.

Origin

It was founded in 1954 when a conflict within the National Presbyterian Church in Mexico led the formation of this denomination. It was established by Eleazar Z. Perez, pastor of El Divido Parish.[1]

The National Presbytery of Mexico City worked independently from the National Presbyterian Church in Mexico from 1954. It adopted the name National Conservative Presbyterian Church in Mexico. This denomination consisted of one solely presbytery until October 16, 1996, when 2 presbyteries was organised and the first General Assembly was held. The National Conservative Presbyterian Church in Mexico differ from the National Presbyterian Church in Mexico for his stance of the preservation of pure doctrine, not included modernism, ecumenism, charismatism. In 2004 there were 1,600 members in the denomination, and 20 ordained clergy.[2]

Theology

Statistics

The church currently has 63 congregations and 3 presbyteries, these are the Mexico City presbytery, the Eastern Mexico National Presbytery and the Western National Presbytery.[4]

References

  1. Web site: Address data base of Reformed churches and institutions.
  2. [:es:Iglesia Nacional Presbiteriana Conservadora de México, A.R.#Historia]
  3. [:es:Iglesia Nacional Presbiteriana Conservadora de México, A.R.#Bases Doctrinarias]
  4. Web site: TEMPLOS | Iglesia Nacional Presbiteriana Conservadora de México A.R. . 2013-03-30 . 2013-02-12 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130212021142/http://inpc.com.mx/templos/ . dead .

External links