- Source: United Zion Church
- Jeremiah Wright
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- Teori konspirasi Pemerintahan Pendudukan Zionis
- Perang Utah
- Agama di Amerika Serikat
- Albert Einstein
- Albany, Georgia
- Anne Hutchinson
- Bibliografi Paus Benediktus XVI
- Isaac Watts
- United Zion Church
- African Methodist Episcopal Zion Church
- Zion Christian Church
- Zion
- Radical Pietism
- Zion Church
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- Mount Zion United Methodist Church
- River Brethren
- Zion (Latter Day Saints)
The United Zion Church is a River Brethren Christian denomination with roots in the Mennonite Church and the Radical Pietistic movement.
A body that became known as River Brethren began about 1778 in Pennsylvania. They were a group of brethren near the Susquehanna River that had separated from the Mennonites. As such groups of brethren were often named by their location, they were called River Brethren. The majority of churches descending from the River Brethren are known as the Brethren in Christ Church.
Bishop Matthias Brinser was excluded from the River Brethren in 1855, and he organized his followers into a separate group, originally known as United Zion's Children. The reason for the exclusion of Brinser and his followers was that he had led them in building a meeting house for worship. The church incorporated as United Zion Church in 1954. They are similar in doctrine and practice to the Brethren in Christ Church. Church organization allows for settling basic matters at the district conference, with a general conference being the highest level of church authority.
As of 2010 the church consisted of 721 members in 12 congregations in three Pennsylvania counties. Also there are 2 overseas churches located in Santiago, Chile. These churches began as a single church plant in 1988 in the Maipú suburb of Santiago. This church was locally given the name Fuente de Vida.
References
Churches and Church Membership in the United States (1990), Glenmary Research Center
External links
Official website
United Zion Church at Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online