Protestant Reformed Churches in America
| Protestant Reformed Churches in America (PRC or PRCNA) | |
| Classification | Protestant |
|---|---|
| Orientation | Calvinistic/Reformed |
| Polity | Presbyterian |
| Founder | Herman Hoeksema |
| Origin | 1924-1925 United States and Canada |
| Separated from | Christian Reformed Church in North America |
| Separations | 1953 over half of the denomination left to form the Orthodox PRC |
| Congregations | 31 |
| Members | 7,877 |
| Primary schools | 3 |
| Secondary schools | 1[1] |
The Protestant Reformed Churches in America (PRC) or (PRCA) is a Protestant denomination of 31 churches and over 7,800 members.[2][3]
Contents |
History [edit]
Beginning and Formation [edit]
The PRC was founded in 1924 as a result of a controversy regarding common grace in the Christian Reformed Church. At that time the Christian Reformed Church had adopted three doctrinal points on the subject of common grace. Reverends Herman Hoeksema, George Ophoff, and Henry Danhof rejected these three points and maintained them to be contrary to the Reformed confessions of faith.[4] Soon thereafter, when these men said they could not abide by these three points, they were disciplined through suspension, or deposition, from the ministry by their respective classes. The CRC maintained that the position of these three men was inconsistent with the Bible's teachings. The men objected to this deposition also from a church political point of view, arguing that only the consistory has the right to depose their minister, not a classis. The CRC disagreed, and these ministers, as well as their followers, left the CRC and organized into a new denomination, taking the name of Protesting Christian Reformed Churches. The denomination later renamed itself the Protestant Reformed Churches in America.[5]
Schism [edit]
The Protestant Reformed Churches grew rapidly in the following years, but in the 1950s the denomination struggled because of internal, doctrinal controversies in defense of the unconditionality of the Covenant of Grace. Membership declined by over one half, and over half of the ministers left the PRC during this period under the leadership of Rev DeWolf. Most departing churches eventually returned to the Christian Reformed Church in North America.[6]
Statistics [edit]
According to the Yearbook 2012 of the Protestant Reformed Churches the communicant (4,591) and non-communicant (3,286) members numbers exactly 7,877. The PRCNA has 1,971 family units and 31 churches in Classis East and Classis West combined. The denomination has three missionaries and three professors.[7]
Distinctive doctrine [edit]
The PRC believes that the Bible is the infallible and inerrantly inspired word of God and that the message therein is well summarized in the Three Forms of Unity: the Heidelberg Catechism, the Belgic Confession, and the Canons of Dordt. While the PRC approves of most of the Westminster Confession of Faith, it does not endorse it. This is partly due to a different understanding of marriage and divorce and the covenant of works.[8]
The PRC believes that marriage is a lifelong bond and that, although an individual may divorce his or her spouse for continued infidelity, the marriage bond is not dissolved apart from death. Hence, neither party is permitted to remarry while the other person is still living. Those who do divorce and remarry while their first spouse is still alive are considered adulterers, regardless of the circumstances of the divorce.[9]
The PRC holds that God's covenant is only with His elect and that it is unconditional (meaning that there are no conditions that people must fulfill to enter into the covenant or to stay in the covenant). The PRC rejects Antinomianism, believing instead that God calls the people of the covenant to believe and obey and that He personally and entirely produces in them the required faith and works.
In public worship services, the PRC mostly sings the Psalms with organ accompaniment, but in contrast to exclusive psalmody, it does permit the singing of certain hymns. PRC believes in the preaching being the most important part of a worship service. Article 69 of the church order adopted by the Synod of Dordt states that: "In the churches only the 150 Psalms of David, the Ten Commandments, the Lord's Prayer, the Twelve Articles of Faith, the Songs of Mary, Zacharias, and Simeon, the Morning and Evening Hymns, and the Hymn of Prayer before the sermon shall be sung." It is a common practice within PRC services to open with the singing of the "Praise God from Whom All Blessings Flow" doxology and some end the service with the singing of "May the Grace of Christ the Savior" doxology. Outside of the official church service, members are free to sing hymns and carols. Also, the PRC uses the King James Version of the Bible, although they do not endorse the King James Only movement and members are free to use other Bible veiws.[8]
Church government [edit]
| This section does not cite any references or sources. (November 2012) |
The denomination holds to the presbyterian form of church government and is organized in two classes, Classis East and Classis West (the eastern border of Illinois is the boundary between the two), which meet two or three times a year and in an annual Synod.
As reflected in the denominations use of the plural "Churches" in its name, the PRC maintains that a denomination is not a church but a federation of churches, and that each of these churches is self-governing by a body of elders chosen out of the congregation. The PRC holds that God has given the "keys of the kingdom of heaven" (Matt. 16:18, which is understood as granting authority for the preaching the gospel, and the exercise of church discipline) to the instituted church, not the denomination. Thus in the PRC only an instituted church can place an individual or a church officer under discipline. The PRC denies that a meeting of Classis or Synod has the authority to do this, though they may advise a congregation to do so.
At the same time the PRC maintains the binding authority of the decisions of the broader assemblies. Individuals and congregations must submit to these decisions if they are going to remain in the denomination, and if an individual congregation refuses to do so, the broader assembly has the authority to declare that congregation to be outside the federation of churches.
Only male members who have made a public confession of faith and are in good standing may vote for church officers or be ordained.
Churches and missions [edit]
The PRC currently has 31 member churches scattered throughout the United States and in Canada. A majority of the churches in the United States are located in western Michigan but there are also churches in the midwestern and western United States. The PRC has few formal relationships with most reformed denominations and organizations. The PRC contributed greatly to the development of two churches in Singapore, the First Evangelical Reformed Church in Singapore and Covenant Evangelical Reformed Church. The PRC also has relationships with a small fellowship in New Zealand; the Evangelical Presbyterian Church in Australia; a sister churches in Northern Ireland, the Covenent Protestan reformed Church in Ballymena, and Limerick Reformed Fellowship was founded with the help of the PRC and; the Protestant Reformed Churches in Myanmar.
The PRC has also developed contacts in India, Germany, Myanmar, Venezuela and in Singapore; there is a sister Reformed Church in Singapore. Currently, the PRC is engaged in missions in a few locations in the United States, and they have recently organized a church in the Philippines and several mission churches were started. The First Reformed Church in Bulacan, the Berea Reformed Church was organised in 2006, and the All of Grace Protestant Reformed Fellowship in Gabaldon, the Philippines, recently a new work is undervay, the Provident Christian Church in Manila. The Georgetown PRC is involved in mission in India.[10] In 2005, the Synod of the PRC closed the denomination's missionary field work in Ghana, due to a lack of membership.[2]
Christian Education [edit]
The PRC holds that "it is necessary for them to maintain good, Christian schools in which their children are educated".[11] To this end, Protestant Reformed parents maintain twelve primary and three high schools for the education of approximately 1500 children.
Home schooling in the PRC is strongly discouraged when a Protestant Reformed school is available. The 2009 PRC Synod forbad office bearers from using home education for their children in most situations, stating that an office bearer is 'expected to send his children to those (PRC) schools unless there are special circumstances judged by his consistory to be valid.'[12] David Engelsma, Professor Emeritus of the Protestant Reformed Seminary writes that "Even though home-schooling of their children might be possible for a few, specially gifted parents whose circumstances provide the time that is needed, home-schooling is still not an option".[13]
The denomination supports the Protestant Reformed Theological School in Grandville, Michigan.
Organizations [edit]
The denomination also sponsers the Reformed Free Publishing Association, a publisherof theological and other Christian books by PRC authors and of a semi-monthly magazine The Standard Bearer, located in Jenison, Michigan. It also sponsors The Reformed Witness Hour, a radio broadcast.
References [edit]
- ^ http://www.prcs.org/
- ^ a b Acts of Synod & Yearbook of the Protestant Reformed Churches in America. 2005.
- ^ http://prca.org/current/Protestant_Reformed_Churches.htm
- ^ http://prca.org/current/HistArchivesofPRCA.html
- ^ http://www.prca.org/prc.html#history
- ^ http://www.reformiert-online.net/adressen/detail.php?id=12219&lg=eng
- ^ http://www.prca.org/Synod%20News/Info/Yearbook www.prca.org/Synod News/Info/Yearbook
- ^ a b http://www.prca.org/prc.html#beliefs
- ^ Gritters, Barry (1998). The Family: Foundations are Shaking. Hudsonville MI Protestant Reformed Church.
- ^ http://www.prca.org/Missions/index.htm
- ^ Gritters, Barry. The AntiChrist. Hudsonville MI Protestant Reformed Church.
- ^ Acts of Synod & Yearbook of the Protestant Reformed Churches in America. 2009.
- ^ Engelsma, David (2000). Reformed Education. Reformed Free Publishing Association.
Further reading [edit]
- Acts of Synod & Yearbook of the Protestant Reformed Churches in America. 2005.
- Our Goodly Heritage Preserved. 2000. ISBN 0-916206-62-9.
- Hanko, Herman (2000). For Thy Truth's Sake. Reformed Free Publishing Association. ISBN 0-916206-61-0.
- Gritters, Barry (1998). The Family: Foundations are Shaking. Hudsonville, Michigan Protestant Reformed Church.
- Gritters, Barry. The AntiChrist. Hudsonville, Michigan Protestant Reformed Church.
- Engelsma, David (2000). Reformed Education. Reformed Free Publishing Association.