Southern Methodist Church

Southern Methodist Church
ClassificationMethodist
OrientationHoliness movement
TheologyWesleyan
Origin1940
Separated fromMethodist Episcopal Church, South (1940)
Congregations73
Members3,200
Official websitethesmc.org

The Southern Methodist Church is a Methodist denomination of Protestant Christianity. The church maintains headquarters in Orangeburg, South Carolina.

The church was formed in 1940 by conservative members of the former Methodist Episcopal Church, South, which in 1939 had reunited with the Methodist Episcopal Church to form the Methodist Church.

In 2017, the Southern Methodist Church had approximately 85 churches and 3,200 members.[1][2] Over 50% of the churches (47) are located in South Carolina.[3] The denomination describes itself as seeking "to continue the doctrinal heritage of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South and to spread the message of salvation and Biblical holiness that John Wesley preached."[4]

The denomination maintains Southern Methodist College, a four-year Bible college with a Christian liberal arts and ministerial program, in Orangeburg, South Carolina, near the church's headquarters.[5] The denomination also supports foreign missionaries. The Woman's Missionary Society (WMS), the Epworth League children and youth program, and the Cartwright Men's Fellowship serve as specialized ministry and training efforts within the local churches and on the district and conference levels.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ "2008 Yearbook of American & Canadian Churches". The National Council of Churches. Retrieved 2009-12-08.
  2. ^ "Locations".
  3. ^ "Eastern Churches".
  4. ^ Southern Methodist Church: About us
  5. ^ Peterson's Colleges in the South. Peterson's. 2009. p. 159. ISBN 978-0-7689-2695-8.

External links

  • Southern Methodist Church website
  • Southern Methodist College
  • Woman's Missionary Society
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Methodist Episcopal Church
HistoryDerivatives
Republican Methodist Church
(1792)
Wesleyan Methodist Church
(1841)
Methodist Episcopal Church, South
(1844)
Free Methodist Church
(1860)
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