Misplaced Pages

African Union Methodist Protestant Church

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
(Redirected from A.U.M.P. Church) Methodist denomination
African Union Methodist Protestant Church
ClassificationMethodism
OrientationHoliness movement
TheologyWesleyan
PolityConnexionalism
SeparationsUnion American Methodist Episcopal Church (1865)
Congregations40
Part of a series on
Methodism
John WesleyJohn Wesley
Background
Doctrine
Doctrinal standards
Distinctive beliefs and practices
Worship
People
  • Groups
  • Churches
Organization
Related groups
Other relevant topics

ChristianityProtestantism

icon Christianity portal

The African Union Methodist Protestant Church (AUMPC), abbreviated as A.U.M.P. Church, is a Methodist denomination. It was chartered by Peter Spencer (1782–1843) in Wilmington, Delaware, in 1813 as the "Union Church of Africans", where it became known as the "African Union Church".

History

The formation of the African Union Methodist Protestant Church is a part of the history of Methodism in the United States; in 1866, the First Colored Methodist Protestant Church merged with it. This was a Maryland offshoot of the A.M.E. Church, which was based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The Delaware-Maryland denomination renamed itself, combining names, as the African Union First Colored Methodist Protestant Church and Connection, usually called the A.U.M.P. Church. In the 1860s, a schism resulted in some of the congregations forming the "Union American Methodist Episcopal Church" in 1865. The two denominations are now referred to collectively as the "Spencer Churches" (or, less often, the "Union Churches").

Although a decentralized Methodist Protestant church in its earlier years, the A.U.M.P. Church in the 1880s began to consider adopting an episcopal structure. In 1922 it consecrated its first bishop, Daniel J. Russell, Jr. But it was not until 1967 that the Church fully changed to an episcopal structure and consecrated its two leaders as bishops.

The A.U.M.P. Church has a total of about 40 congregations in the area of the mid-Atlantic and Upper South: the states of New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Delaware, and the District of Columbia.

Notable churches

References

  1. Dalleo, Peter T. (1997). Carole Marks (ed.). "The Growth of Delaware's Antebellum Free African Community". A HISTORY OF AFRICAN AMERICANS OF DELAWARE AND MARYLAND'S EASTERN SHORE. University of Delaware.

External links

Methodism
List of denominations
Background
Doctrine
Doctrinal
standards
Distinctive beliefs
and practices
Worship
People
Related
movements
Organization
Other relevant
topics
U.S. Black church denominations and leaders
General themes
Methodist
African Methodist Episcopal Church
African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church
A.U.M.P. Church
Christian Methodist Episcopal Church
Baptist
Dexter Avenue Baptist Church
First African Baptist Church (Richmond, Virginia)
First African Baptist Church (Savannah, Georgia)
Full Gospel Baptist Church Fellowship
Lott Carey Foreign Mission Convention
National Baptist Convention, USA, Inc.
National Baptist Convention of America, Inc.
National Missionary Baptist Convention of America
Progressive National Baptist Convention
United American Free Will Baptist Church
Pentecostal
Catholic
Other


Stub icon

This Methodism-related article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: