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The
Cumberland Presbyterian Church is a Presbyterian body formed during the
Great Revival of 1800.
The revival caused disagreement within the Presbyterian Church (USA)
both over the mechanics of the revival and over allowances the
pro-revival faction was willing to make in order to secure ministers
for its rapidly expanding following.
In two presbyteries, Springfield and Cumberland, the pro-revival
faction dominated. These presbyteries, Cumberland in particular,
believed that that the revival to be an extraordinary circumstance which
allowed for exceptions to both educational requirements for ordination
and the required subscription to the Westminster Confession of Faith.
Both Springfield
and Cumberland Presbyteries were members of
Kentucky Synod of the Presbyterian
Church (USA). In Kentucky Synod the faction opposed to the revival
dominated. This anti-revival faction took steps to curtail the
activities of the revival oriented presbyteries. Frustrated,
Springfield Presbytery withdrew from the Presbyterian Church in 1803.
In 1804, in order to discipline her ministers, Kentucky Synod dissolved
Cumberland Presbytery.
On February 4, 1810, at the home of Rev. Samuel
McAdow near present day Dickson, Tennessee, McAdow, Rev. Finis Ewing,
and Rev. Samuel
King reorganized Cumberland Presbytery, previously
dissolved by Kentucky Synod of the Presbyterian Church (USA).
These disaffected Presbyterian ministers did not intend to found an
independent Presbyterian body. They felt that they would have greater
success resolving their differences with Kentucky Synod as an organized
body than as individuals. They also felt that the organization of a
presbytery would better enable them to serve their congregations.
Growing rapidly,
Cumberland Presbytery became Cumberland Synod in 1813 and, in
1829, when a General Assembly was established, the
Cumberland Presbyterian denomination.
Individual Cumberland Presbyterian congregations are governed by
elected elders who make up a "session." Presbyteries are made up of
ordained clergy and elder delegates from each congregation within
their bounds.
Presbyteries, in turn, send delegates to synods. Finally, the entire
structure is governed by the General Assembly. The Assembly charges
various boards and agencies with the day-to-day operation of the
denomination.
Cumberland Presbyterian congregations are located
throughout the United States as well as in several other countries
(Japan, Hong Kong, Colombia, etc.) but are primarily located in the
American South, with strong concentrations in Tennessee, Kentucky,
Alabama, Missouri, southern Illinois, Arkansas, and Texas.
The Cumberland
Presbyterian denomination
has a socially progressive tradition. Cumberland Presbyterians were
among the first denominations to admit women to their educational
institutions and to accept them in leadership roles including the
ordained clergy.
- The
first woman ordained in the Presbyterian and Reformed tradition (in
1889) was Louisa
Woosley, a Cumberland Presbyterian.
- Cumberland
Presbyterians were early to ordain African Americans to the
ministry (circa 1830).
- The
1984 revision of the Cumberland Presbyterian Confession of Faith
was one of the
first inclusive confessional documents in the Reformed tradition.
*Adapted from the tract Who Are Cumberland Presbyterians?
by T. V. Warnick and Morris Pepper.
Click here for more information about
our
theology.
Click here for more
information about our polity.
Click here for our
history.
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