• Source: Districts of the Church of the Brethren
  • The districts of the Church of the Brethren are twenty-four regional divisions that serve to administer approximately one thousand congregations of the Church of the Brethren in the United States and Puerto Rico. Districts are divided along state and county lines with membership and geographic scope varying widely.
    The Church of the Brethren is present in thirty-four U.S. states, Puerto Rico, and Washington, D.C. in addition to its overseas missions.


    History and purpose


    The district system has existed among Schwarzenau Brethren since 1856—prior to the 1881–1883 split—and served the administrative purpose of determining delegates to the Annual Conference who could represent the interests of various communities and report the proceedings back to church leaders.
    Delegates from districts serve the purpose of raising issues at annual conferences (called "queries"), which affect members of the Church of the Brethren at large or which have a scope greater than that of a single congregation or locality, e.g. the ordination of women or how to regulate funds for missions activities. Due to the increase in queries presented to the Annual Conference, in 1856, the Brethren approved the establishment of districts of no less than five churches that would answer queries that had a local scope.


    List of districts




    Churches by territory




    Churches outside the United States



    The Church of the Brethren began missionary activities in the late 19th century, which included the establishment of churches in Africa, the Americas, Asia, and Europe. Although most foreign missions closed by the middle of the 20th century, several remain worldwide.
    The most successful such mission has been Ekklesiyar Yan'uwa a Nigeria (EYN) (Hausa for "Church of the Children of the Same Mother"), the Nigerian church which was granted autonomy in 1975.


    = Current foreign missions

    =


    = Former foreign missions

    =
    Canada
    Alberta
    Arrowwood, Bow Valley (1917–68)
    Irricana (1910–68)
    Mountain View (1907–22)
    Pleasant Ridge (1908–17)
    Pleasant Valley (1909–20)
    Redcliffe Mission (1917–?)
    Second Irricana (1924–64)
    Sharon (1906–17)
    Saskatchewan
    Fairview (1903–33)
    Merrington (1920–49)
    Vidora: Battle Creek (1910–56)
    Mainland China
    Guangdong
    On Fun, San Tai (1918–48)
    Shanxi
    Tsin (Chin) Chou
    Liao Chou (1912–50)
    Ping Ting Choll (1912–50)
    Shou Yang Hsien (Show Yang) (1919–50)
    T'ai Yuan Fu (1923–50)
    Cuba

    Omaja (1908?–19)


    References




    Further reading


    Durnbaugh, Donald F., ed. (December 1983). The Brethren Encyclopedia (Hardback). Vol. 1. Elgin, Illinois, United States: Brethren Encyclopedia, Inc. ISBN 0-936693-03-7.
    Durnbaugh, Donald F., ed. (December 1983). The Brethren Encyclopedia (Hardback). Vol. 2. Elgin, Illinois, United States: Brethren Encyclopedia, Inc. ISBN 0-936693-03-7.
    Durnbaugh, Donald F., ed. (December 1983). The Brethren Encyclopedia (Hardback). Vol. 3. Elgin, Illinois, United States: Brethren Encyclopedia, Inc. ISBN 0-936693-03-7.
    Durnbaugh, Donald F.; Ulrich, Dale V.; Bowman, Carl F. (contributing editor), eds. (2006). The Brethren Encyclopedia (Hardback). Vol. 4. Elgin, Illinois, United States: Brethren Encyclopedia, Inc. {{cite book}}: |editor3-first= has generic name (help)
    Stoffer, Dale R. (1989). William R. Eberly (ed.). Background and Development of Brethren Doctrines 1650–1987 (Hardback). Brethren Encyclopedia Monograph Series. Vol. 2 (1st ed.). Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States: Brethren Encyclopedia, Inc. ISBN 0-936693-22-3.


    External links


    Church directory from the Church of the Brethren Archived 2010-04-07 at the Wayback Machine

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