28
May 1958 A.D. PCUSA/UPCNA Merger (1958)
May 28: PCUSA/UPCNA Merger (1958)
Union of Presbyterians
Ordinarily
when you read of an event which brought together two separate bodies of
Presbyterians, you would rejoice over the union. But when you read of a
conservative body of Presbyterians uniting with a liberal body of
Presbyterians, one tends to be sad. And yet the latter is what happened
on this day, May 28,
1958 when the United Presbyterians Church of North America
united with the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America in
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The new denomination arising from this union was
named the United Presbyterian Church in the United States of America (UPCUSA).
We
have in these historical devotionals spent enough time on the decline of
testimony of the historic Christian faith which the Presbyterian
Church, U.S.A. has had since the early part of the last century. What you may
not know is the history and testimony of the United Presbyterian Church
of North America.
It
was almost to the day of this union in 1958 that two Scotch-Irish
Presbyterians joined together in 1858 to make up the United Presbyterian
Church of North America. Those two bodies which made up that union were the
Seceders or Associate Presbyterians and the Associate Reformed Presbyterian
Church. They had in the old country of Scotland left the Church of Scotland,
and then immigrated over to what later became America. The latter Associate
Reformed Presbyterians had come from a union of the Associate Presbytery
and Reformed Presbytery in Pequea, Pennsylvania, on June 13, 1782
(see historical devotional for that date). The primary strength of
membership lay in western Pennsylvania and eastern Ohio.
What
is even more important than these facts is to sum up their faith and
life. With their Scotch-Irish roots, they held to the Westminster
Confession of Faith and catechisms as their subordinate standards, exclusive
psalmody, Sabbatarianism, being a part of the abolitionist movement, and strong
Protestantism. While the psalmody was abandoned in 1925, this church still
held to a conservative Calvinism.
All
this is then perplexing as to why they voted to merge into the
liberal Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. almost one hundred years later
in 1958. In less than ten years, the wider body would replace the
historic Westminster Standards with the Confession of 1967, relegating the
former to a book of confessions.
Words to Live By: All of us need to carefully examine what we will
gain and what will be lost in uniting together with others. Our associations
matter. Not just who our friends are, but what we read, watch, and listen to,
not to mention all the many social, religious and political groupings that we
may be involved with, all these things bring influences that affect us far more
than we may realize. Which is why prayerful, consistent time in the Word of God
is so important, as a anchor against anything that might seek to sway and
divert us away from honoring our Lord and Creator in all that we say and do.
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