United
Reformed Church - www.urc.org.uk

In October 1997 the United Reformed Church celebrated
its 25th anniversary. Formed in 1972 by the union of the Congregational
Church in England and Wales and the Presbyterian Church of England,
the United Reformed Church has continued to express its deep commitment
to the visible unity of the whole Church. In 1981 it entered into union
with the Re-formed Churches of Christ and in the year 2000 with the
Congregational Union of Scotland. The United Reformed Church is in
frequent dialogue on unity with other traditions and has more than
400 local churches united with other denominations.
The United Reformed Church comprises 150,000 adults
and 100,000 children and young people in 1750 congregations spread
throughout England, Scotland and Wales, served by some 1100 ministers,
both women and men.
Though one of the smaller of Britain’s ‘mainstream’ denominations,
the United Reformed Church stands in the historic Reformed tradition,
whose member denominations make up the largest single strand of Protestantism
with more than 70 million members world-wide. Along with other Reformed
churches the United Reformed Church holds to the Trinitarian faith
expressed in the historic Christian creeds and finds its supreme authority
for faith and conduct in the Word of God in the Bible, discerned under
guidance of the Holy Spirit. The United Reformed Church’s structure
also expresses its faith in the ministry of all God’s people
through the structure of democratic Councils by which the Church is
governed.
Theologically, the United Reformed Church is a
broad church. Its membership embraces congregations of evangelical,
charismatic and liberal understandings of the Christian faith – in
a variety of mixtures!
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Pour visualiser correctement les
fichiers PDF, vous avez besoin d'Acrobat Reader
To read correctly PDF files, you need Acrobat Reader

|