

The United Church of Christ is a blend of four
principal traditions—Congregational, Christian,
Evangelical, and Reformed. Each of these traditions has
left a mark on U.S. religious and political history.
| 1620: Pilgrims seek spiritual
freedom |
Seeking spiritual
freedom, forbears of the United Church of Christ prepare
to leave Europe for the New World. Later generations
know them as the Pilgrims. Their pastor, John Robinson,
urges them as they depart to keep their minds and hearts
open to new ways. God, he says, "has yet more light and
truth to break forth out of his holy Word."
| 1630: An early experiment in
democracy |
The Congregational
churches founded by the Pilgrims and other spiritual
reformers spread rapidly through New England. In an
early experiment in democracy, each congregation is
self-governing and elects its own ministers. The
Congregationalists aim to create a model for a just
society lived in the presence of God. Their leader, John
Winthrop, prays that "we shall be as a city upon a hill
... the eyes of all people upon us."
| 1700: An early stand against
slavery |
Congregationalists
are among the first Americans to take a stand against
slavery. The Rev. Samuel Sewall writes the first
anti-slavery pamphlet in America, "The Selling of
Joseph." Sewall lays the foundation for the abolitionist
movement that comes more than a century later.
| 1730s: The Great
Awakening |
The first Great Awakening sweeps
through Congregational and Presbyterian churches. One of
the great thinkers of the movement, Jonathan Edwards,
says the church should recover the passion of a
transforming faith that changes "the course of [our]
lives."
| 1773: First act of civil
disobedience |
Five thousand angry colonists gather
in the Old South Meeting House to demand repeal of an
unjust tax on tea. Their protest inspires the first act
of civil disobedience in U.S. history—the "Boston Tea
Party."
| 1773: First published African
American
poet |
A young member of
the Old South congregation, Phillis Wheatley, becomes
the first published African American author. "Poems on
Various Subjects" is a sensation, and Wheatley gains her
freedom from slavery soon after. Modern African American
poet Alice Walker says of her: "[She] kept alive, in so
many of our ancestors, the notion of song."
| 1777: Reformed congregation
saves the Liberty
Bell |
The British
occupy Philadelphia—seat of the rebellious Continental
Congress—and plan to melt down the Liberty Bell to
manufacture cannons. But the Bell has disappeared. It is
safely hidden under the floorboards of Zion Reformed
Church in Allentown.
| 1785: First ordained African
American
pastor |
Lemuel Haynes is the
first African American ordained by a Protestant
denomination. He becomes a world-renowned preacher and
writer.
| 1798: 'Christians' seek
liberty of
conscience |
Dissident preacher James O'Kelly is
one of the early founders of a religious movement called
simply the "Christians." His aim is to restore the
simplicity of the original Christian community. The
Christians seek liberty of conscience and oppose
authoritarian church government. O'Kelly writes that
"any number of Christians united in love, having Christ
for their head, ... constitutes a church."
| 1810: First foreign mission
society |
America's first
foreign mission society, the American Board of
Commissioners of Foreign Missions (ABCFM) is formed by
Congregationalists in Massachusetts
| 1812: First
foreign missionaries to
India |
ABCFM sends its first group of five
missionaries to India, (including Adoniram Judson and
Luther Rice).
| 1819: Missionaries arrive in Near
East |
ABCFM sends first missionaries to
Near East, including Turkey and Palestine.
ABCFM
sends first missionaries to Sandwich Islands.
| 1821: Missionary Herald first
published |
The Missionary Herald, ABCFM's
magazine of missionary reports is established.
| 1839: A defining moment for
abolitionist
movement |
Enslaved Africans
break their chains and seize control of the schooner
Amistad. Their freedom is short-lived, and they are held
in a Connecticut jail while the ship's owners sue to
have them returned as property. The case becomes a
defining moment for the movement to abolish slavery.
Congregationalists and other Christians organize a
campaign to free the captives. The Supreme Court rules
the captives are not property, and the Africans regain
their freedom.
| 1840: First united church in
U.S.
history |
A meeting of pastors in Missouri
forms the first united church in U.S. history—the
Evangelical Synod. It unites two Protestant traditions
that have been separated for centuries: Lutheran and
Reformed. The Evangelicals believe in the power of
tradition, but also in spiritual freedom. "Rigid
ceremony and strong condemnation of others are terrible
things to me," one of them writes.
| 1845: 'Protestant
Catholicism' |
Theologian Philip Schaff scandalizes
the Reformed churches in Pennsylvania when he argues for
a "Protestant Catholicism" centered in the person of
Jesus Christ. The movement founded by Schaff and his
friend, John Nevin, revives sacramental worship in the
Reformed church and sets the stage for the 20th-century
liturgical movement.
| 1846: First integrated
anti-slavery
society |
The Amistad
case is a spur to the conscience of Congregationalists
who believe no human being should be a slave. In 1846
Lewis Tappan, one of the Amistad organizers, organizes
the American Missionary Association—the first
anti-slavery society in the U.S. with multiracial
leadership.
Antoinette Brown is
the first woman since New Testament times ordained as a
Christian minister, and perhaps the first woman in
history elected to serve a Christian congregation as
pastor. At her ordination a friend, Methodist minister
Luther Lee, defends "a woman's right to preach the
Gospel." He quotes the New Testament: "There is neither
male nor female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus."
| 1897: Social Gospel movement
denounces economic
oppression |
Congregationalist
Washington Gladden is one of the first leaders of the
Social Gospel movement—which takes literally the
commandment of Jesus to "love your neighbor as
yourself." Social Gospel preachers denounce injustice
and the exploitation of the poor. He writes a hymn that
summarizes his creed: "Light up your Word: the fettered
page from killing bondage free."
| 1943: The 'Serenity
Prayer' |
Evangelical and
Reformed theologian Reinhold Niebuhr preaches a sermon
that introduces the world to the now famous Serenity
Prayer: "God, give us grace to accept with serenity the
things that cannot be changed, courage to change the
things that should be changed, and the wisdom to
distinguish the one from the other."
| 1952: 'The Courage to
Be' |
Evangelical and
Reformed theologian Paul Tillich publishes "The Courage
to Be"—later named by the New York Public Library as one
of the "Books of the Century." "Life demands again and
again," he writes, "the courage to surrender some or
even all security for the sake of full
self-affirmation."
| 1957: Spiritual and ethnic
traditions
unite |
The United Church of Christ is born
when the Evangelical and Reformed Church unites with the
Congregational Christian Churches. The new community
embraces a rich variety of spiritual traditions and
embraces believers of African, Asian, Pacific, Latin
American, Native American and European descent.
| 1959: Historic ruling that
airwaves are public
property |
Southern television stations impose
a news blackout on the growing civil rights movement,
and Martin Luther King Jr. asks the UCC to intervene.
Everett Parker of the UCC's Office of Communication
organizes churches and wins in Federal court a ruling
that the airwaves are public, not private property. The
decision leads to a proliferation of people of color in
television studios and newsrooms.
| 1972: Ordination of first
openly gay
minister |
The UCC's Golden Gate Association
ordains the first openly gay person as a minister in a
mainline Protestant denomination: the Rev. William R.
Johnson. In the following three decades, General Synod
urges equal rights for homosexual citizens and calls on
congregations to welcome gay, lesbian and bisexual
members.
| 1973: Civil rights activists
freed |
The Wilmington Ten—ten civil rights
activists—are charged with the arson of a white-owned
grocery store in Wilmington, N.C. One of them is
Benjamin Chavis, a social justice worker sent by the UCC
to Wilmington to help the African American community
overcome racial intolerance and intimidation. Convinced
that the charges are false, the UCC's General Synod and
raises more than $1 million to pay for bail. Chavis
spends four and a half years in prison but is freed when
his conviction is overturned. The UCC recovers its
bail—with interest.
| 1976: First African American
leader of an integrated
denomination |
General Synod elects the Rev. Joseph
H. Evans president of the United Church of Christ. He
becomes the first African American leader of a racially
integrated mainline church in the United States.
The United Church of Christ
publishes The New Century Hymnal—the only hymnal
released by a Christian church that honors in equal
measure both male and female images of God. Although its
poetry is contemporary, its theology is traditional. "We
acknowledge the limitations of our words while we
confess that in Jesus Christ the Word of God became
flesh and lived within history," writes Thomas Dipko, a
UCC executive who played a key role in shaping the new
hymnal.
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