Church of Christ in Japan

The Church of Christ in Japan is an existing religious denomination that has 13,102 members and 137 congregations,[1] and is a member of the World Communion of Reformed Churches.[2][3] It sponsors missionaries in Korea, Hong Kong and Singapore.

History

The Church of Christ in Japan was founded by American missionaries in 1872. J.C. Presbyterians Hepburn, S. R. Brown and the Reformed J. H. Ballagh were among the founders, in Yokohama. In 1877 the church unified with the Presbyterian Association. By the end of the 19th century membership was 10,500 and there were 72 congregations. In the following fifty years it was among Japan's largest churches. In 1941 the denomination became part of the United Church of Christ in Japan. In 1951, 39 congregations reconstructed themselves as the Church of Christ in Japan.

gollark: No, YAML giant and horrendous.
gollark: HTML would also be shipped this way instead of its accursed custom inconsistent parsing.
gollark: Oh, and if I were entirely redesigning the web more, HTTP would lose the weird case-insensitivity thing too. And maybe just work using JSON or some JSON-equivalent (well, we're using Lua here, so stricter Lua table syntax) instead of being a custom textual protocol.
gollark: News sites: they have a few kilobytes of text a page. They do not need to download megabytes of JS to render that, because the HTML renderer is perfectly good.
gollark: This is in fact something HTML is capable of.

References

  1. Johannes a Lasco Library. "Address data base of Reformed churches and institutions". Reformiert-online.net. Retrieved 2013-05-02.
  2. "Member churches | Bringing together 80 million Reformed Christians worldwide". Wcrc.ch. 2013-02-14. Archived from the original on 2012-08-08. Retrieved 2013-05-02.
  3. Earle West, Marlboro NJ ehwest@gmail.com. "Directory of congregations of the church of Christ in Japan". Churchzip.com. Retrieved 2013-05-02.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.