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Denominational Distinctives of Reformed Denom's

rapturefish

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I have some idea, having once gone to a Presbyterian church. However, other denominations that identify themselves as reformed, eg Congregationalists, Lutherans, Methodists, etc. - how are they unique and different from each other?

And someone correct me if some of the above are not reformed in nature.
 

Jon_

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Well, I don't consider Lutherans, Congregationalists, or Methodists to be Reformed, but that's me. Actually, I'm not aware that any of them truly consider themselves to be Reformed, versus simply Protestant. Reformed connotes a number of doctrinal points that these churches pretty much reject, especially five-point Calvinism. Of course, you also have Reformed Baptist churches, which I have never understood, seeing that the method of baptism in both institutions couldn't be more contrasted.

Methodists are a resultant denomination of John Wesley, who was Arminian through and through. Now, there are Whitefield Methodists (sound off Clement!) that are Calvinists. These are a part of George Whitefield's Methodism. Another Wesleyan parish is the Nazarene church, which is a really conservative Methodism. They also preach an aberration known as "entire sanctification," which is the doctrine that man can become sinless on earth. Yeah, they departed from Methodism pretty radically here, especially considering that it's quite the extra-biblical doctrine. My whole family on my mom's side is Nazarene, including a couple of "entirely sanctified" preachers.

Lutherans retain a lot of the Roman traditionalism with a Protestant approach to doctrine. Originally, the primary departure of Lutherans and Reformers was the treatment of the sacraments, but the schism has widened over the centuries and now there are a lot of doctrinal differences between the congregations, too many to really address off-hand.

Congregationalism is much harder to encompass because of the very nature of it. Like Baptists, they believe in congregational autonomy. I am a fan of this viewpoint, but at the same time, you get some with really weird doctrines. American Universalism largely grew out of congregationalist churches, from what I understand. Nevertheless, I remain ambivalent about Congregationalism. For one, Jonathan Edwards was a congregationalist. With the Great Awakening, congregations started springing up all over the frontier and the harvest was substantial. God did great things through this system that probably would not have happened within a more strict system. On the other hand, with ever church forming its own doctrine, you had all kinds of different theological systems, each varying depending on the congregation that you attended.

In any case, if you're looking for a Reformed church in America, you should probably limit it to a church that has "Reformed" or "Presbyterian" as a part of their name or statement of faith.

Soli Deo Gloria

Jon
 
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rnmomof7

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There are Calvinist methodists in England I believe .

Rapture, there was a time when most of us did not understand the doctrinal distinctive.

One think to keep in mind is that ALL PROTESTANTS are Calvinists.

The word PROTESTants comes from the protest with Rome.

We tend to use the word generically these days , but the non Calvinist churches were actually protesting the protesters so they are "non Catholic" but they were never a part of the protest against Rome .

That would be Methodists ( and the churches that grew out of that system) , Baptists, Pentecostals, and generally any church that is Arminian in doctrine .
 
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cygnusx1

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rnmomof7 said:
There are Calvinist methodists in England I believe .
If there are I haven't met any , they are very liberal in England , perhaps there are some Welsh calvinistic Methodists left , they used to number thousands.
 
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