Evangelical Wesleyan Church | |
---|---|
Classification | Methodism |
Orientation | Holiness movement |
Polity | Connexionalism |
Founder | John Wesley |
Origin | 1963 |
Separated from | Free Methodist Church (1963) |
Merger of | Evangelical Wesleyan Church of North America and the Midwest Holiness Association |
Separations | Wesleyan Church (1968) |
Congregations | 27 |
The Evangelical Wesleyan Church, formerly known as the Evangelical Wesleyan Church of North America, is a Methodist denomination in the conservative holiness movement.[1]
The formation of the Evangelical Wesleyan Church is a part of the history of Methodism in the United States; its creation was the result of a schism with the Free Methodist Church in 1963.[2] In 1969, it merged with the Midwest Holiness Association, which had also left the Free Methodist Church.[2][3]
The Evangelical Wesleyan Church was founded with a commitment to uphold the doctrine and standards of traditional Methodism.[4][5] It has twenty-seven congregations.[3]
The Church publishes a periodical known as The Earnest Christian and its seminary is the Evangelical Wesleyan Bible Institute (EWBI) in Cooperstown, Pennsylvania.[3] The denomination additionally operated the John Fletcher Christian College, though this closed in 1995.[6] Much of the denomination's literature is printed by LWD Publishing.[4]
It holds a denomination-wide camp meeting at Summit Campground in Cooperstown, Pennsylvania and the Western Annual Conference meets at Camp Nysted in Nysted, Nebraska.[7][8] An annual camp meeting also occurs at Fox Hill Campground in Northville, Fulton County, New York.[9][10]
The Hunters conferenced, served and pastored many years with the Evangelical Wesleyan Church, a Methodist denomination in the conservative holiness movement.
Once a part of the Danish organization, the complex currently belongs to the Evangelical Wesleyan Methodist Camp organization, which conducts summer camps at the location.