The Christian and Missionary Alliance in Canada

Zona de identificação

tipo de entidade

Pessoa coletiva

Forma autorizada do nome

The Christian and Missionary Alliance in Canada

Forma(s) paralela(s) de nome

Forma normalizada do nome de acordo com outras regras

Outra(s) forma(s) de nome

identificadores para entidades coletivas

área de descrição

Datas de existência

29 May 1972

Histórico

The Christian and Missionary Alliance in Canada (CMAC) is an evangelical denomination rooted in the vision of a Canadian Presbyterian minister, A. B. (Albert Benjamin) Simpson (1843-1919). After serving prestigious pastorates in Louisville KY (1874-1879) and New York City (1879-1881) Simpson left the Presbyterian Church to found a ministry in New York City to “the poor and neglected masses.” The fruit of these labors was the Gospel Tabernacle. Out of the Gospel Tabernacle emerged two fraternal organizations for the promotion of evangelism and “the higher Christian life”: The Christian Alliance, for North American initiatives, and the Evangelical Missionary Alliance (later the International Missionary Alliance) for mission work—both of which began in 1887. That same year, John Salmon founded Bethany Chapel, an independent work along the same lines, in Toronto. Shortly thereafter it became affiliated with the Christian Alliance. By 1889 other what became the first Alliance church in Canada, Bethany Tabernacle, in Toronto. By the 1920s the C&MA had taken root in both the United States and Canada. The best-known figure in the C&MA in the post-Simpson era was A. W. (Aiden Wilson) Tozer (1898-1963), whose devotional writings had an influence far beyond the Alliance.
In the 1960’s and 1970’s the Canadian C&MA churches began to advocate for autonomy from the American church. At the same time, The Christian and Missionary Alliance wanted its Canadian churches to have a national identity, so it proposed that they be incorporated as a national body. The Christian and Missionary Alliance in Canada was officially incorporated in Canada on 29 May 1972. It became known as the "Canadian Corporation," and its chief role was to serve as a liaison for Canadian affairs with the Division of North American Ministries of the Christian and Missionary Alliance. The movement for self-government continued to gain momentum, and autonomy was finally achieved on 1 January 1981. The CMAC established its own missionary sending agency in 1998. The presidents of the denomination to date have been, Melvin P. Sylvester (1981-1992), Arnold Cook (1992-2000), Franklin Pyles (2000-2012), and David Hearn (2012-present). The American C&MA and the CMAC continue to maintain a close collaborative relationship.
The CMAC is committed to: the glory of the triune God, the authority of the Bible, Christ-centred living, the Church, evangelization (both at home and abroad) leadership, strategic cooperation, social responsibility, stewardship, and prayer.
From the beginning, the organization has been fervent about ministry and mission work, both overseas and at home. In the early years, saddle-bag preachers visited homesteads in Western Canada, while evangelists conducted large-scale campaigns in the East. By 1926, there were 23 churches in Canada, and by 2013 at least 430 (including many multicultural congregations), with more than 106,000 adherents. These local churches are organized by geographic region: the Canadian Pacific District (CPD), covering British Columbia and the Yukon; the Western Canadian District (WCD), encompassing Alberta and the Northwest Territories; the Canadian Midwest District (CMD), serving Saskatchewan, Manitoba, the portion of Ontario west of the 90th meridian, and Nunavut; the Central Canadian District (CCD) for Western Ontario; the St. Lawrence District (SLD) for Quebec; and the Eastern Canadian District (ECD), covering eastern Ontario and the Atlantic Provinces. The District Superintendent for each region works with a team to provide churches with resources and guidance “in the areas of church growth, leadership, Christian education, missions conferences, multicultural ministries, pastoral care, and church planting. The district office also oversees the licensing, ordination and supervision of its workers.” Canadian ministries highlight the needs of men, women, youth, children, and multicultural congregations. The CMAC is involved in justice and compassion work in Canada and in dozens of countries around the world.
The need for trained workers led to the establishment of the Western Canadian Bible Institute in Regina in 1941. Currently, most CMAC leaders are trained at one of two affiliated institutions: Ambrose University College, The Christian and Missionary Alliance Bible College and Seminary, in Calgary; or or ÉTEQ (École de théologie évangélique du Québec) a Montreal-based Bible college (a joint venture with the Mennonite Brethren) for workers going into French-speaking communities. In 2004, the international ministries were organized into the Four “S” Ventures: Asian Spice; Caribbean Sun (Central and South America); Desert Sand (the arid Muslim countries of North Africa); and Silk Road (from Turkey to Iran and Tajikistan to northwest China). Canadian Alliance churches are actively involved in supporting their missionaries and ministries both financially and in prayer, aiming to empower all members as emissaries of Christ. The head office of the CMAC is in Toronto.

Locais

Canada

Estado Legal

funções, ocupações e atividades

The Christian and Missionary Alliance in Canada is an evangelical Christian denomination. It has close fraternal relations with the Christian and Missionary Alliance and is a member of the Alliance World fellowship.

Mandatos/Fontes de autoridade

Estruturas internas/genealogia

Contexto geral

Área de relacionamento

Entidade relacionada

Henry, Robert (1933- ) (28 June 1933-)

Identificador de entidade relacionada

Categoria da relação

hierárquica

Tipo de relação

Henry, Robert (1933- )

is the employee of

The Christian and Missionary Alliance in Canada

Datas da relação

1978 - 1985

Descrição da relação

Entidade relacionada

Canadian Theological Seminary (June 1982-1 May 2007)

Identificador de entidade relacionada

Categoria da relação

hierárquica

Tipo de relação

Canadian Theological Seminary

was a school of

The Christian and Missionary Alliance in Canada

Datas da relação

1982-06-01 - 2007-04-30

Descrição da relação

Entidade relacionada

Canadian Bible College (10 April 1957-September 2006)

Identificador de entidade relacionada

Categoria da relação

hierárquica

Tipo de relação

Canadian Bible College

was a school of

The Christian and Missionary Alliance in Canada

Datas da relação

1981-01-01 - 2006-09-01

Descrição da relação

Entidade relacionada

Canadian Theological College (September 1970-June 1982)

Identificador de entidade relacionada

Categoria da relação

hierárquica

Tipo de relação

Canadian Theological College

was a school of

The Christian and Missionary Alliance in Canada

Datas da relação

1981-01-01 - 1982-07-01

Descrição da relação

Entidade relacionada

The Christian and Missionary Alliance in Canada-Eastern and Central Canadian District (1 January 1981-1995)

Identificador de entidade relacionada

Categoria da relação

hierárquica

Tipo de relação

The Christian and Missionary Alliance in Canada-Eastern and Central Canadian District

é controlado por

The Christian and Missionary Alliance in Canada

Datas da relação

1981-01-01 - 1995

Descrição da relação

Entidade relacionada

The Christian and Missionary Alliance (1 April 1897-)

Identificador de entidade relacionada

Categoria da relação

hierárquica

Tipo de relação

The Christian and Missionary Alliance

controla

The Christian and Missionary Alliance in Canada

Datas da relação

1972-05-29 - 1981-01-01

Descrição da relação

Entidade relacionada

The Christian and Missionary Alliance in Canada--Canadian Midwest District (1 January 1981-)

Identificador de entidade relacionada

Categoria da relação

hierárquica

Tipo de relação

The Christian and Missionary Alliance in Canada--Canadian Midwest District

é controlado por

The Christian and Missionary Alliance in Canada

Datas da relação

Descrição da relação

Entidade relacionada

The Christian and Missionary Alliance in Canada--Western Canadian District (1 January 1981-)

Identificador de entidade relacionada

Categoria da relação

hierárquica

Tipo de relação

The Christian and Missionary Alliance in Canada--Western Canadian District

é controlado por

The Christian and Missionary Alliance in Canada

Datas da relação

Descrição da relação

Entidade relacionada

Frost, James (1931- ) (1931-)

Identificador de entidade relacionada

Categoria da relação

hierárquica

Tipo de relação

Frost, James (1931- )

é o subordinado de

The Christian and Missionary Alliance in Canada

Datas da relação

1957 - 1995

Descrição da relação

Entidade relacionada

The Christian and Missionary Alliance in Canada-Canadian Pacific District (1 January 1981-)

Identificador de entidade relacionada

Categoria da relação

hierárquica

Tipo de relação

The Christian and Missionary Alliance in Canada-Canadian Pacific District

é controlado por

The Christian and Missionary Alliance in Canada

Datas da relação

Descrição da relação

Área de pontos de acesso

Pontos de acesso - Assuntos

Pontos de acesso - Locais

Ocupações

Zona do controlo

Identificador de autoridade arquivística de documentos

Identificador da instituição

Ambrose Archives

Regras ou convenções utilizadas

Estatuto

Nível de detalhe

Datas de criação, revisão ou eliminação

Línguas e escritas

Script(s)

Fontes

Notas de manutenção

  • Área de transferência

  • Exportar

  • EAC

Assuntos relacionados

Locais relacionados