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Southeast Conference, United Church of Christ - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Southeast Conference, United Church of Christ

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Southeast Conference of the United Church of Christ is the regional body of the United Church of Christ within the states of Alabama, northwestern Florida (except the area around Pensacola), Georgia, Mississippi, South Carolina, and Tennessee (except the city of Memphis). Headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia, the Conference's executive (Conference Minister) is the Rev. Dr. Timothy C. Downs.

This conference bears the strong heritages of several missionary efforts, dating back to the postbellum period of the late 19th-century, although one church was founded as early as 1681. About 55 percent of the membership of the Conference's churches is African-American, reflecting the mission work of the American Missionary Association, as well as more recent church planting targeting that constituency. Although historically a mission territory and the smallest conference in the denomination, the Southeast Conference is beginning to see signs of growth, encouraged by an aggressive campaign to instigate new congregations and an increasing emphasis on peace and justice witness programs.

In addition to the Conference Minister, several associate conference ministers implement programming to provide educational, youth, and evangelistic ministries for the churches. The Conference holds its annual meeting every June, and is governed by a Board of Directors between those meetings. The Board consists of officers and representatives elected by delegates to the annual meeting, themselves in turn elected or appointed by the local congregations. For the 2006-2008 term, the Rev. Dr. Dorothy Gager of Nashville, Tennessee is moderator.

Contents

[edit] Heritage and predecessors

Although the Southeast Conference as a legal entity dates back only to 1966, it had several predecessors whose separate histories had to be reconciled in the new body. This work coincided almost precisely with the social ferment and upheavals of the Civil Rights Movement, which several clergy and churches fervently supported and/or played an active role in.

The different heritages were these:

  • As mentioned above, the American Missionary Association planted numerous academies and colleges for those African-Americans freed from slavery by virtue of the South's defeat in the American Civil War. In some cases, former Union officers returned to territories they had conquered to aid the emancipated new citizens. Among those institutions still existing today are Fisk University (Tennessee), Atlanta University (now Clark Atlanta University, Georgia), Talladega College (Alabama), and Tougaloo College (Mississippi).

    Alongside their activities in educating, many of the teachers, who were often Congregational pastors, founded churches for the freed people. A large number of them were founded in the beginning, but only about 20 still remain in the Conference today. AMA congregations in the southeast and south-central states joined with "Afro-Christian" churches in North Carolina and Virginia to form the Convention of the South in 1950; that body was dismantled to distribute the congregations into their proper UCC geographical jurisdictions, ending segregation.

    In the early 2000s, the Conference undertook a program to commemorate the legacy of those congregations and the AMA, titled "Rekindle the Gift." The Rev. Joyce Hollyday, then Associate Conference Minister and a former associate editor of Sojourners magazine, wrote a book in 2005 examining the AMA's past and the existing congregations' recollections and hopes, titled "On the Heels of Freedom: The American Missionary Association's Bold Campaign to Educate Minds, Open Hearts, and Heal the Soul of a Divided Nation", released by Crossroad Publishing.

    The AMA also undertook educational and social work in the mountains of Tennessee and Kentucky during that period, operating several schools for Euro-American Appalachian youngsters, with some churches alongside them as well.

  • An evangelist from the "Christian Connection" came from North Carolina to the Chattahoochee River valley of western Georgia and eastern Alabama in the mid-19th century and conducted revivals that began a number of congregations espousing the "five points" of Christian unity. This group later founded Southern Union College in Wadley, Ala., now a part of the Alabama state junior/community college system. Most of their congregations were located in the open country and reflected the population's general preferences for Wesleyan theology and revivalism, typical of the rural South generally. Two institutions related to the Christian tradition, Elon College (now University) and Elon Homes for Children, both located in North Carolina, received considerable financial support over the years from these churches.

    Although a number of the churches in this group initially supported the UCC and the Conference in the 1960s and 1970s, most later reconsidered those commitments, in large measure due to increasing theological and political disagreements (instigated in part by pastors who came to those churches from other traditions) with those congregations in the metropolitan areas, especially over the issue of homosexuality. As of October 2006, only three congregations from this tradition are known to remain affiliated with the UCC, but remnant members of some of the defecting congregations recently formed a new one in Chambers County, Ala.

  • Among Euro-American residents of Alabama and Georgia in the late 19th-century, some members of the Methodist faith began opposing the rise in power of the superintendents who began calling themselves "bishops." They desired local control, particularly the ability to call their own pastors, rather than have them appointed, without their consent. When some of these individuals and churches left the main Methodist body, a few of them joined the Congregational fellowship in the 1890s, recruited by agents of the American Home Missionary Society seeking a presence for Congregationalism in the South. Pockets of strength for this movement included northwestern, central, and southeastern Alabama, and west central, south central, and northeastern Georgia.

    According to the book "Southern Congregational Churches," self-published by UCC pastor and amateur historian Richard Taylor in 1994, the Congregational Methodist-heritage churches usually espoused extremely individualistic views, frequently opposing missionary societies and Sunday schools, very much akin to the Primitive Baptists and the Churches of Christ, two other groups that developed in the rural South during that same time. Therefore, they never developed close relations with Congregationalists in other parts of the U.S., since these stances were almost entirely opposite those honored in Congregational churches in most other regions, where education and mission work were held in very high regard.

    Those churches not participating in this affiliation move (including some who recanted their earlier decisions to join the Congregationalists) constituted the Congregational Methodist Church, a small evangelical denomination headquartered in Mississippi. As with the Christians, nearly all of the Congregational Methodist-derived congregations eventually left the UCC over a period from the 1960s until the early 1990s, largely over the same theological and cultural disputes with denominational and Conference leadership. Only two of them remain in the UCC as of 2006, one each in Alabama and in Georgia.

  • Probably the most active of the several groups that formed the Southeast Conference were those Congregational churches founded, mostly in the early 20th century, as theologically liberal, socially tolerant alternatives to the dominant expressions of Southern Protestantism, namely the Baptists, Methodists, and Presbyterians. Migration of Northern Congregationalists to the South helped start several churches, often in close proximity to Euro-American colleges and universities (e.g., Vanderbilt University, Piedmont College). In a few cases, however, parts of established congregations withdrew to form Congregational churches in protest over doctrinal rigidity and/or lifestyle restrictions. These churches were located in cities such as Atlanta and Nashville; subsequent UCC new church starts in the Conference (e.g., Huntsville, Ala. and suburban Atlanta) have generally modeled themselves after this group, which has provided the dominant ethos to the UCC nationally ever since its inception.

    By the mid-20th century, these became among the first Euro-American churches in the region to protest racial segregation and deeply involve themselves with advocating on African-Americans' behalf. And, since the 1990s especially, several of these have become ardent supporters of gay rights and have endorsed a stance to refrain from denying membership to those professing alternative sexual orientations, a move against the dominant social attitudes in the region.

    Generally speaking, congregations in this group are the most aware of, and loyal to, the larger UCC, and are usually the most generous givers to Conference and national work. One reason for this is a high number of them have a significant percentage of members who previously belonged to UCC congregations elsewhere in the U.S., members who tend to be not only more aware of the denomination's heritage and program, but translate that knowledge into active support.

  • After the Civil War, a group of settlers from Germany came, via Cincinnati, Ohio and Louisville, Ky., to northern Alabama and founded the town of Cullman, starting a church of the unionist Evangelical tradition; some members later moved to Birmingham and established one there also. Meanwhile, some farmers from Switzerland, facing grave land shortages, responded to an advertisement in the 1870s offering farmland in Tennessee. Despite the fact that it amounted to a scheme to populate mountainous, infertile areas, the farmers (many of them dairymen) persevered, and some established Reformed parishes along the lines of the Swiss Protestant faith, several (only one survives) in southern middle Tennessee, and one in Nashville. As of today, only the Tennessee congregations remain affiliated with the UCC; the Alabama churches withdrew, led out in both cases by fundamentalist pastors in the same manner as some Christian- and Congregational Methodist-heritage congregations have been.

[edit] History, 1966-present

In large measure, the Southeast Conference was the product of the determination of national and regional leaders to comply with the mandate from the denomination's General Synod to align inter-church relationships according to geography instead of racial and ethnic groupings inherited from the past. Because of differences among the churches and pastors in the Euro-American Southeast Congregational Christian Convention regarding the denomination's involvement in the Civil Rights movement, the Southeast was one of the last regions in the country where all UCC congregations within its boundaries came together into one judicatory. Much of the immediate controversy was precipitated by a resolution from the Fourth General Synod, meeting in Denver, Colo. in July 1963, that called for the termination of financial support for churches and institutions that practiced racial segregation and encouraged other UCC entities to do likewise. Only the adjoining Southern Conference, consisting of churches in North Carolina and southeastern Virginia, experienced difficulty organizing because of this, other than the Southeast.

After a failed attempt in 1964, the Southeast Convention, by a vote of only 54 percent, agreed to receive churches from the Congregational Christian (UCC) Convention of the South (African-American) and the southernmost congregations of the South Indiana Evangelical and Reformed Synod (the main portion of which became the Indiana-Kentucky Conference, UCC). This occurred at the Convention's annual meeting on April 24, 1965 at Central Congregational Church, Atlanta, Ga. The agreement brought the Conference officially into being on January 1, 1966. On April 23 of that year, meeting at First United Church (Evangelical and Reformed), Nashville, Tenn., annual meeting delegates adopted a constitution, consummating the process. The first officers of the new Conference were the Rev. Frederick A. Meyer, pastor, Central Church, Atlanta, moderator; Mr. J. Hubert Richter, member, St. John's (Evangelical Protestant) UCC, Cullman, Ala., vice-moderator; Miss Ellen Hull, member, Langdale Congregational Christian Church, Valley, Ala., recording secretary; Mr. Leslie Beall, member, Central Church, Atlanta, treasurer. The board of directors consisted of association representatives and chairpeople of commissions elected at large; initially, the Conference consisted of nine associations, but that number dropped to six by the early 1970s due to several of them merging.

Meanwhile, Conference staff and leaders, espousing the predominantly liberal outlook of the denomination, made extraordinary efforts to encourage churches to pursue aims such as advocating for peace in Vietnam, improved racial relations, and formulating a more articulate and relevant faith for the needs of the younger generation. This was particularly remarkable because Conference ministers, and associates, undertook these aims in addition to the daunting task of servicing the needs of churches spread over a seven-state region, which entailed much time and expense in travel and meetings distant from the Atlanta headquarters. Some churches were quite enthusiastic about all of these programs, engaging in experimental ministries and worship; others, mostly those outside the major metropolitan areas, resisted what they saw as an intrusion upon their traditions and autonomy, and these gradually began keeping to themselves, often only supporting their associations or customary benevolences. By the 1990s, many congregations simply decided to withdraw and form their own groupings or, just as often, become totally independent, a trait increasingly noticeable also among recently-established churches of fundamentalist or charismatic persuasion in the region. Those moves reduced the six associations down to the present three.

As with most UCC conferences, most of the Southeast Conference's current congregations antedate the 1957 union that formed the denomination. Until about the late 1990s, the Conference was either financially unable to support significant church expansion or experienced great frustration and lack of success on those projects it did enter into. Most of these have been centered in the metropolitan Atlanta area, where demographic experts have perceived the greatest patterns of growth. Even more problematic was the overweening fact that the Conference was dependent for many years on national subsidies simply to operate on a "maintenance" mode, let alone venture into expensive church building programs. Of course, the denomination was hindered by its lack of name recognition in the South (or, worse even, its confusion with the Churches of Christ, an entirely different evangelical Protestant tradition).

But, after years of decline and loss of disgruntled churches (which were mostly located in rural Alabama and Georgia), the Conference began to turn a corner in the 1990s, as it made an intentional effort to market its peculiar blend of evangelism and social service to both its existing congregations (through renewal programs) and especially individuals and churches disaffected from their historic traditions (e.g., Baptists, Methodists, Presbyterians, and non-denominational predominantly-gay groups). The Conference, and some of its churches, has recently made particularly effective use of the UCC "God Is Still Speaking," branding campaign. In 2006, the Conference launched a major church-planting campaign called the "Nehemiah Initiative," led by two associate conference ministers, with a stated goal of establishing at least 10 new starts in the Southeast by 2010; already, at least six congregations have been started since 2004.

[edit] Host of 25th General Synod

From July 1-5, 2005, the Conference played host to the historic 25th General Synod of the UCC, which was held in Atlanta's Georgia World Congress Center. A resolution passed by Synod delegates affirming the right of gay and lesbian persons to marry instantly drew national media attention, as this made the UCC the first traditional Protestant denomination in the U.S. to publicly espouse such a stand.

Aside from the generated publicity, two Conference members played noteworthy roles at that Synod: Dr. Annie Wynn Neal, an administrator at Meharry Medical College in Nashville (member, Howard Congregational Church) acted as one of two vice-moderators of Synod; and Milton Hurst, former Synod moderator, longtime Conference leader and pastor of First Congregational Church, Talladega, Ala., gave a stirring speech recalling his grandfather, born into slavery in rural Alabama, telling stories about the racial discrimination and violence he witnessed and suffered. Mr. Hurst did this to recognize the culmination of the Conference's "Rekindle the Gift" project, on which he worked as a consultant. Sadly, one month after Synod, Mr. Hurst died at his Birmingham residence from injuries sustained in a fall.

Atlanta is only the third city in the Southern U.S. that has ever hosted Synod; Norfolk, Va. and Fort Worth, Tex. are the others.

[edit] Conference ministers

The Rev. Dr. Jesse H. Dollar (interim), 1966
The Rev. Dr. William J. Andes, 1966-1980
The Rev. Dr. Emmett O. Floyd, 1980-1987
The Rev. Horace S. Sills (interim), 1988
The Rev. Roger D. Knight, 1988-1995
The Rev. Edwin Melhaff (interim), 1995-1996
The Rev. Dr. Timothy C. Downs, 1996-present

[edit] Associations

As with most conferences in the UCC, the Southeast Conference is composed of several associations.

The Alabama-Tennessee Association was established over a period from 1965 through 1969 from the following bodies:

  • The Alabama-Mississippi Association, consisting of the AMA-heritage churches in both states.
  • The Alabama-Tennessee Region of the Evangelical and Reformed Church, founded in 1952 as a division of the South Indiana E&R Synod. The four churches in this body briefly affiliated with the Indiana-Kentucky Conference of the UCC from 1963 through 1965.
  • The Kentucky-Tennessee Association, which included Euro-American congregations in both states (the Kentucky churches were located in the mountainous southeastern corner of that state) from 1915 through 1965.
  • Three congregations of the North Alabama Association, which consisted of Euro-American congregations in Alabama from Birmingham northward. Most churches in this group did not approve of this arrangement and remained in the earlier body, until they withdrew from the UCC in a group action in 1990 or so.
  • The Tennessee-Kentucky Association, the African-American (mostly AMA) counterpart of the K-T Association, along with Trinity Church in Athens, Ala. This association once included congregations in Little Rock, Ark., Lexington, Ky., Louisville, Ky., and Memphis, Tenn., all of which had joined other UCC judicatories by the early 1960s.

Mrs. Virginia "Ginny" Nixon, Pleasant Hill, Tenn., is the current moderator.

The East Alabama-West Georgia Association derived from the former Alabama Christian Conference (pre-1930s) and consists of churches in east central Alabama and west central Georgia. Most of these churches were found in rural locations and originated from the "Christian Connection" movement. However, two neighboring associations, the Central Alabama and South Alabama-Northwest Florida, suffered an exodus of nearly all their constituent congregations in the 1990s and 2000s, and the remaining churches eventually joined EA-WG; those churches derived from the Congregational Methodist heritage described above.
Mr. Don Harmon, Lanett, Ala., is the current moderator.

The Georgia-South Carolina Association represented a 1969 merger of the two previously racially-defined bodies bearing that name; self-evidently, it contains churches in both states (except for Georgia churches in the East Alabama-West Georgia territory). Like the nearby EA-WG Association, the Euro-American GSC group had a predominantly rural, evangelical-oriented constituency, which often found itself at odds with Central Congregational Church in Atlanta. However, with several new missions in metropolitan Atlanta bearing Central's influence, support for liberal causes grew among the better part of the churches, and disaffected conservative congregations began leaving.
Meanwhile, the African-American grouping, who used the same name as the Euro-American body, began moving closer to the Euro-American GSC by ecumenical contacts initiated by several strong pastors, notably the Rev. Homer C. McEwen of First Congregational in Atlanta and the Rev. John Enwright of Plymouth Congregational in Charleston, S.C. By 1967, the two associations were meeting jointly and working together, enabling a smooth merger two years later.
This association is located in one of the fastest-growing parts of the U.S., and has received several new congregations into its ranks since 2000, most notably the 5,000-plus-member Victory Church, an African-American congregation in Stone Mountain, Ga., an Atlanta suburb.
The Rev. Kimberleigh Buchanan, pastor, Pilgrimage UCC, Marietta, Ga., serves currently as moderator.

[edit] Currently affiliated churches

As of March 20, 2007, 49 congregations, two new church start projects and one fellowship hold or seek membership in one of the Southeast Conference's three associations. They are as follows:

LEGEND:
(AT)--Alabama-Tennessee Association
(EW)--East Alabama-West Georgia Association
(GS)--Georgia-South Carolina Association
*--indicates congregation endorses the "Open and Affirming" program of the UCC Coalition for Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender Concerns, a recognized affinity group.
#--indicates congregation derived from AMA heritage.
$--indicates congregation in process of applying for membership to the association.
,,,--indicates fellowship in conversation with the Conference under the "Comma Connections" church development program.

ALABAMA
King's Chapel, Alpine (AT)#
Trinity Congregational, Athens (AT)#
Beloved Community, Birmingham (AT)
First Congregational Christian, Birmingham (AT)#
Pilgrim Congregational, Birmingham (AT)*
Liberty Congregational Christian, Brantley (EW)
United, Huntsville (AT)
Sandy Creek, Lafayette (EW)
Congregational Christian, Lanett (EW)
First Congregational, Marion (AT)#
Community Congregational, Montgomery (AT)
First Congregational Christian, Montgomery (AT)#
Unity Worship Center, Montgomery (AT)
First Congregational, Talladega (AT)#

GEORGIA
Central Congregational, Atlanta (GS)*
Emory University Fellowship, Atlanta (GS),,,
First Congregational, Atlanta (GS)#
Kirkwood, Atlanta (GS)$
Open Community, Atlanta (GS)--predominantly Korean-American membership
Rush Memorial Congregational, Atlanta (GS)#
Sankofa, Atlanta (GS)
Virginia-Highland (UCC/Alliance of Baptists federated), Atlanta (GS)*
Evergreen Congregational, Beachton (GS)#
United Congregational Christian, Columbus (EW)
Covenant Congregational, Demorest (GS)$
Methodist-Congregational Federated (UCC/United Methodist/NACCC), Demorest (GS)
Pilgrimage, Marietta (GS)*
Congregational, Midway (GS)#
Oak Grove Congregational Christian, Pine Mountain (EW)
Church of the Savior, Roswell (GS)*
Salim, Roswell (GS)--predominantly Korean-American membership
First Congregational, Savannah (GS)#
Victory, Stone Mountain (GS)
Bethany Congregational, Thomasville (GS)#
Jones Chapel Congregational Christian, Woodbury (EW)

MISSISSIPPI--all churches are members of the Alabama-Tennessee (AT) Association.
Union, Tougaloo College#

SOUTH CAROLINA--all churches are members of the Georgia-South Carolina (GS) Association.
Circular Congregational, Charleston*--Conference's oldest church, founded in 1681
Plymouth Congregational, Charleston#
Garden of Grace United, Columbia*

TENNESSEE--all churches are members of the Alabama-Tennessee (AT) Association.
First United (Evangelical and Reformed), Belvidere
Pilgrim Congregational, Chattanooga*
United, Cookeville*
Grace, Crossville*
Congregational, Deer Lodge
Community (UCC/Presbyterian Church (USA) federated), Fairfield Glade
Church of the Savior, Knoxville*
Brookmeade Congregational, Nashville*
First United (Evangelical and Reformed), Nashville
Holy Trinity Community, Nashville*
Howard Congregational, Nashville#
Community, Pleasant Hill*
First, Sweetwater

Several other existing congregations from other traditions and new church starts have been forecast by Conference officials as prospective members in the near future, both through traditional avenues and the newly-inaugurated "Comma Connections" program, which is designed as a non-institutional alternative for constituencies interested in relating to the UCC.

[edit] Formerly affiliated churches

Over the past 40 years since the Conference came into being in its present form, most of the original congregations that constituted it have withdrawn their affiliation or closed altogether, as have some congregations started during that period. A list of them may be found here.

[edit] Notable current or former members (since 1966)

U. S. Rep. Robert Aderholt (R-Ala.), son of a former UCC minister in northwestern Alabama.
Julian Bond, chairman, NAACP, and civil rights advocate.
The Hon. Houston Brown, Jefferson County, Alabama Civil Circuit Court judge.
The Rev. Dr. Walter Brueggemann, noted theologian, retired professor of Old Testament at Columbia Theological Seminary, Decatur, Ga.
The Rev. Dr. David Buttrick, retired professor of Homiletics at Vanderbilt University Divinity School, Nashville.
Shirley Duer, former Tennessee state representative (Republican).
John Egerton, noted author and photographer.
The Hon. Hershel Franks, former Tennessee Court of Appeals judge.
The Hon. Eugene H. Gadsden, first African-American justice (now retired) to serve on the Georgia Supreme Court.
Gene Nobles, disc jockey.
Joe Reed, associate executive secretary, Alabama Education Association, and former Montgomery city councilman.
The Hon. Leah Ward Sears, Presiding Justice, Georgia Supreme Court; the first African-American woman to ever serve on that court.
Arthur Shores, first African-American attorney in the state of Alabama and first African-American city councilman in Birmingham history.
Cynthia Tucker, newspaper columnist, editorial page editor, Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
The Rev. Andrew Young, former U.S. Representative (D-Ga.), Ambassador to the United Nations, and mayor of Atlanta.

[edit] External links

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aa - ab - af - ak - als - am - an - ang - ar - arc - as - ast - av - ay - az - ba - bar - bat_smg - bcl - be - be_x_old - bg - bh - bi - bm - bn - bo - bpy - br - bs - bug - bxr - ca - cbk_zam - cdo - ce - ceb - ch - cho - chr - chy - co - cr - crh - cs - csb - cu - cv - cy - da - de - diq - dsb - dv - dz - ee - el - eml - en - eo - es - et - eu - ext - fa - ff - fi - fiu_vro - fj - fo - fr - frp - fur - fy - ga - gan - gd - gl - glk - gn - got - gu - gv - ha - hak - haw - he - hi - hif - ho - hr - hsb - ht - hu - hy - hz - ia - id - ie - ig - ii - ik - ilo - io - is - it - iu - ja - jbo - jv - ka - kaa - kab - kg - ki - kj - kk - kl - km - kn - ko - kr - ks - ksh - ku - kv - kw - ky - la - lad - lb - lbe - lg - li - lij - lmo - ln - lo - lt - lv - map_bms - mdf - mg - mh - mi - mk - ml - mn - mo - mr - mt - mus - my - myv - mzn - na - nah - nap - nds - nds_nl - ne - new - ng - nl - nn - no - nov - nrm - nv - ny - oc - om - or - os - pa - pag - pam - pap - pdc - pi - pih - pl - pms - ps - pt - qu - quality - rm - rmy - rn - ro - roa_rup - roa_tara - ru - rw - sa - sah - sc - scn - sco - sd - se - sg - sh - si - simple - sk - sl - sm - sn - so - sr - srn - ss - st - stq - su - sv - sw - szl - ta - te - tet - tg - th - ti - tk - tl - tlh - tn - to - tpi - tr - ts - tt - tum - tw - ty - udm - ug - uk - ur - uz - ve - vec - vi - vls - vo - wa - war - wo - wuu - xal - xh - yi - yo - za - zea - zh - zh_classical - zh_min_nan - zh_yue - zu