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First Congregational Church

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Congregationalism can trace its roots back to England in the sixteen century, during the time of the Great Reformation. Many groups broke away from the Catholic Church, including the Church of England, founded by Henry VIII. As the Church of England evolved, several groups splintered off, each for various reasons. One group, the Separatists, wanted to leave the church and worship as they saw fit, thinking that the Church of England was beyond reform. These Separatists, having tried living in the Netherlands, finally decided to go the the New World and try their hand at living in the colonies. Having a charter for living in the recently established colony of Virginia, they set sail in 1620. Slightly off course, they landed in Massachusetts. Deciding to stay, they established the Plymouth Colony. Being on a religious pilgrimage, they became known as Pilgrims. They were eventually joined by the Puritans, who became Separatists themselves when their efforts at "purifying" the Church of England failed.

Congregationalists were known for their democratic methods of running both the church and the community. The congregation was to be the highest authority in governance, although it was hardly apparent during the rule of some of the early church fathers. This is the church that brought the Salem witch trials. Also, however, it brought us Thanksgiving. Eventually, it led to more democratically run churches and communities. The town meeting, the foundation of our early experience with democratic government, sprang from the congregational form of rule in the early church.

Eventually, mergers would come to construct what we know today as the United Church of Christ. The Congregational and Christian Churches united, as did the Evangelical and Reformed Churches. In 1957, in a meeting in Cleveland, Ohio, the Congregational and Christian Churches merged with the Evangelical and Reformed, to form the United Church of Christ. Still, the hallmark of the UCC is the old Congregational spirit of total autonomy of each congregation. Each church is in a covenantal relationship with the others and with the state and local associations, but each is a governmental unit unto itself.

As time passes, we find that the UCC and several other churches have held meetings to discuss the continuing growth of the United Church. For decades, in Michigan, the Christian church, Disciples of Christ, has worked closely in union with the UCC in many areas, sharing not only annual meetings on a biannual basis, but also staff at the state level.

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