A middle judicatory is an administrative structure or organization found in religious denominations between the local congregation and the widest or highest national or international level.[1] While the term originated in Presbyterianism—with its layers of church courts rising from local session to presbytery to general assembly[2]—the term has been widely adopted by other Christian communions, including Anglicanism,[3] Lutheranism,[4] Methodism,[5] Roman Catholicism[6] and even some congregationalist churches,[7] among others.
Depending on the tradition, a judicatory may be called a classis, conference, diocese, district, eparchy, ordinariate, presbytery, synod or another term.[1] Middle judicatories may also be layered, with dioceses being grouped into provinces, districts being grouped into annual conferences or presbyteries being grouped into synods.[8] The typical funding model for middle judicatories is by apportionments or tithes paid from individual member congregations that have achieved a minimal level of financial stability.[9] Despite being organized into conventions and associations, in the Baptist tradition the local congregation is the primary church unit, so not all Baptist conventions are considered middle judicatories.[10]
Such campaigns disclose yet a third internal system, congregations and regional or middle judicatories. The latter, variously termed association, presbytery, conference, diocese, region, or synod, functions administratively between congregations and the national or international structures and authority. At this level, church officials decide to ordain, hire, and dismiss clergy; conduct problem solving; mount educational, training, and outreach programs; and negotiate denominational style, ethos, and identity. Bishops, presidents, clerks, district superintendents, and their staffs interact with pastors and congregations in quite complex ways, behaving in effect like congregations' regional service centers. This level deals with charges of clerical misconduct either through denominational judicial procedures or through civil or criminal proceedings, or through both. Findings can sometimes be appealed to other levels, but much denominational judicial, disciplinary, and personnel activity focuses on the regional judicatory.