Appendix I: United and Uniting Churches--an overview (26).
Best, Thomas F.
United Churches are those which have been formed through the fusion
of two or more separate churches, of different or the same confession.
They have arisen over the past two centuries as churches have sought to
make the unity given them in Christ fully visible. In union, churches
move beyond cooperation and partnership to a degree of mutual
accountability which can adequately be expressed only by life within a
single ecclesial structure. There are some 50 united churches today,
found in all regions of the world. Many of these incorporate churches
which were themselves formed from earlier unions, so that the total
number of "uniting actions" may be as many as 150.
Uniting Churches are those presently engaged in a formal process
towards union. At present a total of at least 35 churches are involved
in at least 12 such processes worldwide. In some cases churches on the
way to union already express the unity which is given to them in Christ
in partial and provisional ways, for example through partnership
agreements, or joint mission or other programmes. It should be noted
that some already United Churches describe themselves as
"Uniting" to stress their commitment to further union (the
Uniting Church in Australia, 1977). United Churches have taken
Christ's prayer that Christians may be one (John 17:21) as an
imperative for concrete action towards unity. They have adoped a
"kenotic ecclesiology" whereby divided churches from different
confessions are prepared to "die" to their former identities
in order to "rise" together into a new, united church. They
are the most complete (though not the only possible) form of
"organic union" (the second Faith and Order world conference,
Edinburgh 1937), and the clearest expression of the "local churches
truly united" foreseen in the statement on conciliar fellowship
from the WCC Nairobi Assembly (1975).The United Churches form probably
the most diverse family of churches worldwide. Five distinct types are
often identified: the first is the earliest unions bringing together
Reformed and Lutheran churches in Germany, Austria and Czechoslovakia in
the 19th and early 20th centuries (the Old Prussian Union of 1817, later
the Evangelical Church of the Union, in Germany). The second type is the
series of unions through the 20th century, bringing together various
combinations of Presbyterians, Congregationalists, Methodists, Disciples
of Christ, and other "free" churches in the United Kingdom,
Australia, Canada and the United States (beginning with the United
Church of Canada, 1925).
The third type is unions among the confessions named above in the
southern hemisphere and the Caribbean (the Church of Christ in Thailand,
1934; the United Church of Zambia, 1965; the United Church in Jamaica
and the Cayman Islands, 1992); the fourth type are the unions including
Anglican churches and thus episcopal structures of governance (beginning
with the Church of South India, 1947, and including the most
comprehensive union, the Church of North India, 1970, composed from
Anglican, Baptist, Congregational, Disciples, Methodist, Brethren and
Presbyterian churches). Up to now these unions are limited to the Indian
sub-continent.
The fifth type is the unions among churches within the same
confessional family (the Presbyterian Church (USA), 1983). While such
unions do not require overcoming major theological differences,
historical, cultural and social sources of division often make the union
process at least as difficult as among churches from different
confessions.
These churches, then, are linked not so much by a uniform structure
or ecclesiology as by their commitment to visible--that is, structural
as well as spiritual--unity and by the actual experience of union. Their
ecclesiological life is shaped by their experience of integrating the
diverse (indeed, sometimes apparently opposed) understandings and
practices brought into the union (for example, the United Reformed
Church in the United Kingdom (1972/1983) has incorporated both
"infant" and "adult" baptism into its theological
and liturgical life).
Church unions often make an important theological and social
witness. For example, the unions in the southern hemisphere have been an
important vehicle for the indigenization of the church as several
mission-founded churches, funded largely from abroad, have yielded to a
single, autonomous locally led and funded church. A different witness
was made by the Uniting Presbyterian Church in Southern Africa (1999) as
it brought together a predominantly white church and a black church in
the context of immediate post-apartheid South Africa.
Up to now the United and Uniting Churches have not formed their own
Christian World Communion, not wanting to become "another
denomination" and perhaps fearing that such a move would lessen
their zeal for further union. The WCC's Faith and Order Commission
has, at their request, served as the united and uniting churches'
common reference point, organizing a series of international
consultations of united and uniting churches and publishing a Survey of
Church Union Negotiations at regular intervals.
Many United Churches have maintained contacts to the world
confessional bodies of their constituent churches. Of the world
communions, the Disciples Ecumenical Consultative Council and the World
Alliance of Reformed Churches have encouraged their member churches to
enter into new unions. They (and the Anglican Consultative Council) have
maintained continuing contacts with united churches incorporating
respectively Disciples, Reformed and Congregational, or Anglican
elements.
Issues facing the United and Uniting Churches today, as explored at
their most recent international consultation, include (1) the nature of
union (how much agreement in theology and practice is essential for
union? what form of organization will best serve the new united
church?), the imperative for mission (how to insure that the union
serves the church's mission to the world, rather than simply
insuring the church's survival?), and the question of identity
(what is the distinctive identity of these churches? how can they relate
most effectively to one another, to their "parent" churches
and their world communions, to other churches and to the ecumenical
movement?). In addition, several current union processes (in South
Africa, Wales, the United States) include Anglican or Episcopalian
churches and thus face the question of episcopal governance. In the
United States, issues of racism are crucial in the 9-member Churches
Uniting in Christ (from 2002, the successor to the Council on Christian
Unity).
With their commitment to making unity fully visible, and their
practical experience of union, the united and uniting churches continue
to make a distinctive and important contribution to the ecumenical
movement.
(26) Taken with some changes from Thomas K Best, "United and
Uniting Churches", in A Handbook of Churches and Councils: Profiles
of Ecumenical Relationships, compiled by Huibert van Beck, Geneva, World
Council of Churches, 2006, pp.76-78.