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The Upper Cumberland Presbyterian Church is a small denomination which broke off from the Cumberland Presbyterian church over issues of membership in the National Council of Churches and the use of the Revised Standard Version of the Bible; it has fewer than 1,000 members among twelve congregations in Alabama and Tennessee.
The church was formed after African-American delegates to the Cumberland Presbyterian Church's May 1869 General Assembly asked for assistance in organizing a separate body for African Americans, allowing them to become more independent and self-reliant, develop their own clergy and other leaders, and maintain their own church buildings, all with financial support from the parent denomination.
First Presbyterian Church (Flemingsburg, Kentucky) 1819 built 1977 NRHP-listed W. Main and W. Water Sts. Flemingsburg, Kentucky: Fredonia Cumberland Presbyterian Church: 1892 built 1985 NRHP-listed US 641
Cumberland Presbyterian Church in America - around 6,500 members - Liberal, Presbyterian, Arminian Evangelical Assembly of Presbyterian Churches in America - 73 churches in the USA - formed by churches of Korean and Chinese origin.
Shiloh Cumberland Presbyterian Church ... Falls County, Texas Mooreville Methodist Church 3464: 206 FM 2643 ... 1315 Moody Ave. (21st St.) ...
Studies in Cumberland Presbyterian History (1944) Good News on the Frontier (1962) A People Called Cumberland Presbyterian (1972) A Handbook on New Testament Theology (1973) Arkansas Cumberland Presbyterians (1985) Winds of Doctrine (1989) For the Building Up of the Church (1995) At the time of his death, Dr. Campbell was working on Why I Am a ...
Registered Texas Historic Landmark Image Marker number Physical address Nearest city Year designated Description Camp San Saba Masonic Lodge 678: 10 mi. S of Brady near FM 1955: Brady vicinity 1962 FM 1955, in Camp San Saba community; about 10 miles south of Brady via US 87 East Sweden Presbyterian Church 1367: CR 414 at CR 412
Benjamin Wilburn McDonnold, D.D., LL.D. (March 24, 1827- February 27, 1889) was a Presbyterian minister, writer and educator. He was the third President of Cumberland University, and wrote the History of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church.