Australian Free Church

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Australian Free Church
ClassificationProtestant
OrientationCalvinism
PolityPresbyterian
Origin1979
Chadstone, Victoria
Separated fromPresbyterian Church of Eastern Australia
Congregations2 [1]
Membersabout 30

Australian Free Church is a Presbyterian denomination in Australia.

History

The Australian Free Church was established in 1979 when Eric Turnbull (1928-2013) was removed from being a minister of the Presbyterian Church of Eastern Australia. According to Rowland Ward and Robert Humphreys, this was for "refusing to desist from teaching that the King James Bible is the very Word of God to the exclusion of other translations,"[2] such as the NIV or NASB, although the church's website states that it was formed "out of a desire to maintain the standards of doctrine, worship and church government held by our Scottish spiritual forebears."[3] The website also states that the church uses "the King James Version as a faithful translation."[4]

Turnbull was the minister at East St Kilda and took the more active part of the congregation with him. After several moves a church building was purchased in Chadstone in 1988. A number of people in Hamilton also adhered to the Australian Free Church. In 1994 the Australian Free Church applied to join the Free Presbyterian Church of Scotland but their application was declined.[2] The first Presbytery of the Australian Free Church was constituted in 2002.[3]

Statistics

There are currently congregations in Chadstone, and Hamilton,.[1] The Rockhampton congregation was received in 2009 and had previously been a congregation of the Evangelical Presbyterian Church that had withdrawn from that body, but subsequently broke up. The Deep Lead/Stawell congregation was established in early 2012-but disassociated in 2015, the minister moving to an independent group in Rockhampton. The total following is about 30 people including three ministers, one with seven children residing in Beaufort (Vic).

Theology

The Australian Free Church holds to the historic Presbyterian confessions, these are:

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Places of Worship
  2. ^ a b Rowland Ward and Robert Humphreys, Religious Bodies in Australia, 3rd edition (Wantirna, Victoria: New Melbourne Press, 1995), 88.
  3. ^ a b "Our History". Australian Free Church. Retrieved 8 April 2011.
  4. ^ Australian Free Church
  5. ^ Standards, Australian Free Church

External links