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Origins
The United Church of Christ came into being
in 1957 with the union of two Protestant denominations: the
Evangelical and Reformed Church and the Congregational Christian
Churches. Each of these was, in turn, the result of a union of two
earlier denomination.
The Congregational Churches were organized
when the Pilgrams of Plymouth Plantation (1620) and the Puritans of
the Massachusetts Bay Colony (1629) acknowledged their essential
unity in the Cambridge Platform of 1648. The Reformed Church in the
United States traced its beginnings to congregations of German
settlers in Pennsylvania founded from 1725 on. Later, its ranks
were swelled by Reformed folk from Switzerland and other countries.
The Christian Churches sprang up in the late
1700s and early 1800s in reaction to the theological and
organizational rigidity of the Methodist, Presbyterian, and Baptist
churches of the time.
The Evangelical Synod of North America
traced its beginning to an association of German Evangelical pastors
in Missouri. This association, founded in 1840, reflected the 1817
union of Lutheran and Reformed churches in Germany.
Through the years, members of other groups
such as Native Americans, African American, Asian Americans, Volga
German, Armenians, Hungarians, and Hispanic Americans have joined
with the four earlier groups. Thus the United Church of Christ
celebrates and continues a wide variety of traditions in its common
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