On June 10, 1925 member
congregations in the Toronto area held
their first worship service as part of the new United Church of Canada. The
denomination was an amalgam of Canadian Congregationalist,
Methodist, most Presbyterians,
and Prairie provinces churches which
had already federated locally and were loosely formed as the Association of Local Union Churches. The United Church instantly became,
behind the Roman Catholics, the
second largest Christian church body
in Canada and despite recent declines in membership mirroring similar trends
for mainline Protestants in the United States remains so to this day.
The Canadians
accomplished what American Protestants had often claimed they yearned to do but
never did. Instead, American Protestantism
remained mired in sectarianism and the tendency of church bodies to schizmatize over doctrinal, ritual,
political, and sectional differences.
The Congregationalists tried valiantly
to do the same, but were rebuffed by most of the largest potential allies, notably
the Presbyterians with whom they
shared nearly identical theological roots.
Of course they also spurned potential allies like the Universalists and their cousin Unitarians over doctrinal
differences. In the end the
Congregationalists could join only with a faction of the Reform Church and a few small sects to form the United Church of Christ in the 1950’s. Hope that the creation of the UCC would spur
other to join proved fruitless.
The impetus for the
amalgamation actually came from the Provinces outside the Protestant motherland
of Ontario. Many small towns had churches from all
three of the founding denominations but had trouble finding and keeping highly
educated clergy willing to work in the “wilds” for little pay. They also struggled to maintain separate buildings. It became common for a minister of one
denomination to provide pastoral care for the others when they had no settled
ministry. This led to preaching from
their pulpits on occasion and eventually to the creation of local Union
churches serving adherents of all groups.
By the turn of the 20th Century the
situation was becoming so common that the Association of Local Union Churches
was formed to provide some moderate level of support and coordination.
This spurred talks
among the parent organizations. Talks
dragged on for years before an agreement was made between the governing bodies
of each church. Then it had to be
ratified by votes of member congregations.
The Methodists, largest of the groups, and Congregationalists voted
overwhelmingly to participate. But there
was a split among Presbyterians. 302 out
of 4,509 Presbyterian congregations, mostly concentrated it the Scots heartland
of southern Ontario, voted against affiliation.
Under a freedom of association clause, they were allowed to go their own
way and set up their own new Presbyterian
Church in Canada.
The next step was
untangling the various property issues resulting from different polities.
That required an act of Parliament
which was passed in June, 1924 to go into effect a year later.
On Sunday, June 10,
1924 thousands jammed Mutual Street
Arena in Toronto for a gala opening worship. It must have been quite an event. Worshipers were handed a 38-page order of
service containing the full text of the liturgy, prayers, hymns, and music. The program aimed to be inclusive and
respectful of all traditions so hymns and prayers from all were included. Clergy from all joined in leading prayers,
offering greetings, and in the sermon.
The first General Council, the governing body of
the new denomination, selected the Rev. George
C. Pidgeon, last Moderator of
the Presbyterian Church as he first Moderator of the United Church. The leader of the Methodists, who had been
expected to take the position, withdrew in hopes that Pidgeon could convince
the recalcitrant Presbyterians to join the fold.
Structurally, the
Methodists gave up their Episcopal structure. What became of unemployed Bishops is not
clear. The church was organized around
localized Presbyteries, but local
congregations had much more autonomy than under the classic Presbyterian model, a nod to the Congregationalists. 85 or so Presbyteries were organized in 18 Conferences which elect members of the
General Council which meets every three years.
Theologically the
United Church has always been liberal and has grown more so. It offers open communion in memory of the Last Supper. There is
infant baptism, but adults have to
be confirmed as members after making
a public confession of faith to the
congregation. Originally that confession
was expected to reflect basic Christian tenets, but most congregations now
admit wide personal statements and admit non-traditional Christians, theists,
agnostics, and in some cases even atheists. Adults entering the church are baptized.
Not all attending
United Church worship are members. In
fact the United Church now claims about 300,000 members but over a million “adherents.” Many of these are regular church goers and
participate fully in congregational life but choose for one reason or another
not to formally join—most because of the baptism and profession of faith requirements. Adherents can’t vote for officers or on ministerial
calls, but on all other congregational issues are typically included by a
motion at the beginning of annual congregational meetings to allow voting by, “all
who are present.”
The United Church and
the Anglican Church have been in
discussions for decades and in 1943 signed a statement permitting mutual ministry, but the Episcopal
structure of Anglicanism and the status of their ministers as priests has prevented formal
merger.
Always promoting
ecumenicalism, the United Church helped found the Canadian Council of Churches in 1944 and the World Council of Churches in 1946.
In 1988 the General
Council voted to allow “all persons, regardless of sexual orientation, who
profess their faith in Jesus Christ
are welcome to be or become members of The United Church of Canada” and that “all
members…are eligible to be considered for ordered ministry.” This created a minor schism. Membership fell nearly 75,000 over the next
four years and a number of congregations left.
Despite this, the United Church has continued its commitment, which is
now widely supported in the pews.
The church has also had
to deal with the heritage of operating government sanctioned native residential schools that were
designed to assimilate native children into Canadian culture. These had been inherited from the founding
denominations. By the late 40’s the
United Church began to close the schools as assimilation was recognized as
destructive to First Nations peoples
and culture. But the hangover has
lingered for decades, spurred in recent years of accounts of sexual exploitation
at some of the schools. The United Church
has dealt with it repeatedly. It elected
a Cree, the Reverend Stan McKay as Moderator in 1992 and two years it set
up a “Healing Fund” and later issued a formal apology to the First
Nations. In 2006 the church signed the Indian Residential Schools Settlement
Agreement, a part of a formal agreement between the Government and the
First Nations which had the support of the Church.
The United Church
struggles now with declining membership, but still stands at the forefront of
social justice in Canada. Here’s wishing
them a happy birthday!
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