subscribesubscriber servicescontact usabout ussite mapBuy a Classified
Sat, Oct 11 2008 

Published July 24, 2008 05:47 pm - Two hundred years and five traditions united into one. That’s the focus of Sunday’s celebration by the Shenango Presbytery, which will mark its bicentennial.

Marking 200 years
Shenango Presbytery to hold service at college

By Sam Luptak Jr.
New Castle News

MERCER, LAWRENCE COUNTIES

Two hundred years and five traditions united into one.

That’s the focus of Sunday’s celebration by the Shenango Presbytery, which will mark its bicentennial with a 7 p.m. service in Westminster College’s Anderson Amphitheatre. Communion will be part of the service.

Covering Lawrence and Mercer counties, the Shenango Presbytery was organized in 1808 with 20 churches. Today, there are nearly 70 churches, some of which are a decade or more older than their umbrella organization.

“This is not exactly a bicentennial,” said the Rev. Dr. David Dawson, executive director of the presbytery. “There are several churches that predate the presbytery itself by years (most of which belonged originally to the Presbytery of Hartford, Ohio).

“The Scotch-Irish arrived here (in America) around the time of the American Revolution and began starting Presbyterian churches. These would join together, forming presbyteries. The Shenango Presbytery has eight or 10 churches that predate this presbytery.”

Those would include Mahoning Presbyterian in Mahoning Township and Bethel Presbyterian in Enon Valley, both in Lawrence County, the oldest churches in the presbytery, founded in 1798.

Representatives of these congregations will be joined at the celebration service by members of the presbytery’s 67 other churches, including its newest one, Word Centered Fellowship in Masury. The multi-ethnic, multi-racial church has been a presbytery member for five years.

The history

The Shenango Presbytery represents a blending of five separate Presbyterian traditions. According to Rev. Bob Dayton, pastor of Mahoning Presbyterian, these traditions demonstrate Presbyterianism’s diversity and represent its various passions through the years. Each will be represented at the celebration with the singing of a hymn that came out of it.

Of the five traditions, Rev. Dayton said, the Presbyterian Church (USA) — to which the Shenango Presbytery belongs — is the largest Presbyterian body in the country.

The others include:

ä The Free Presbyterian Church, which existed from 1847 through 1865. It was founded over members’ opposition to slavery. Most members, Rev. Dayton said, were involved in the Underground Railroad as well as other efforts to assist runaway slaves. The body joined others once the Civil War ended.

ä The Hungarian Reformed Church, one of the largest reformed traditions in Hungary and all of eastern Europe. As the immigrants from that region arrived, they brought with them their own traditions.

ä The United Presbyterian Church, which existed from 1858 to 1958. It was born from the Succedist and Coventer movements in Presbyterianism, followers of which would bow to no man or law but God’s alone. “We have no king but Jesus!” was their long-standing rally cry.

ä The Cumberland Presbyterian Tradition, a frontier church movement. Its rules were looser, and worship was much less formal. Because churches often were located in frontier areas, they did not require their ordained ministers to be able to read Greek, Latin and Hebrew, concentrating instead on knowledge of the Bible and the willingness to serve.



print this story    email this story    comment on this story   

Click to discuss this story with other readers on our forums.




monster
wheels
Premier Guide
Find a business

Walking Fingers
Maps, Menus, Store hours, Coupons, and more...
Premier Guide

Have a question for The Herald?
You are only one click away

Premier Guide
Premium Jobs

See all ads

Premium Autos

See all ads

Premium Homes

See all ads

Premium Extras

See all ads


   

 

Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.CNHI Classified Advertising NetworkCNHI News Service
Associated Press content © 2008. All rights reserved. AP content may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Our site is powered by Zope and our Internet Yellow Pages site is powered by PremierGuide.
Some parts of our site may require you to download the Flash Player Plugin.
View our Privacy Policy
Advertiser index