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Charis Alliance
Charis Alliance
from Wikipedia
Charis Alliance
OrientationAnabaptist
TheologyModified Schwarzenau Brethren
Origin2015
Official websitecharisalliance.org

Charis Alliance is a Christian denomination in the Schwarzenau Brethren tradition of Anabaptism. The word charis is Greek in origin, meaning "grace."[1]

The Charis Alliance differs from traditional Schwarzenau Brethren groups in that it does not uphold the doctrine of conditional security as historically taught in Anabaptist theology.[2]

History

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For the early history see Church of the Brethren.

The Great Schism

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The Brethren (at the time called German Baptist Brethren) suffered a three-way division early in the 1880s, and the more progressive group organized the Brethren Church in 1883. Led by charismatic leader Henry Holsinger, they maintained the standard Brethren doctrines, but wanted to adopt new methods, and desired more congregational autonomy and less centralization. These more progressive Brethren moved into the direction of the mainstream of Christian evangelicalism in America. Several events in the late 19th century and early 20th century, including the Bible Conference movement, emphasis on foreign missions, and the rise of fundamentalism, affected the church. The Foreign Missionary Society of the Brethren Church was formed on September 4, 1900, in Winona Lake, Indiana.

Fundamentalism rising

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But, also in the early 1900s, two different viewpoints began to emerge. As Robert Clouse writes about this event "the Progressives showed considerable agreement in what they opposed, but were less united in what they wished to create."[3] The Brethren Church had rejected classical liberal theology in 1921 with "The Message of the Brethren Ministry", written by J. Allen Miller and Alva J. McClain. However the aggressive approach of fundamentalism, led by Louis S. Bauman and McClain, conflicted with the drawn out approach of traditional Brethrenism. The fundamentalists desired strongly worded statements of faith, the traditional Brethren stressed non-creedalism. The classic dispensationalist belief held by the fundamentalists largely disregarded the Sermon on the Mount as a law for an earlier age, while the traditional Brethren statement "the New Testament is our Rule of Faith and Practice" placed a high emphasis on this passage in Matthew 5–7.

Division from the Brethren Church

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This tension finally erupted in 1936–37 with a growing controversy at Ashland College. Although the school was under the control of the Brethren Church, it was transitioning from a Christian denominational school to a secular school with a more regional focus. Because of a push to enlarge non-Brethren representation on the board of trustees and establish a "double standard" of conduct for regular college students and pre-seminary students, Bauman and Charles Ashman, Sr. (1886–1967) resigned from the Ashland College board of trustees on June 1, 1937. The next day, professors Alva J. McClain and Herman Hoyt were fired from Ashland Seminary due to increasing tension between the college group and the seminary group. At a prayer meeting in the home of J.C. Beal that evening Grace Theological Seminary was born, where after prayer Bauman announced "I want to give the first gift to the new school."[4]

In the next two years two groups emerged in the Brethren Church: those sympathetic with Ashland College and those sympathetic with Grace Seminary. Traditional Brethren, in part because of their drawn out approach and in part due to their distaste for fundamentalist theology, sided with Ashland College, while the fundamentalists led by Bauman and McClain, sided with Grace Seminary. In 1939, the Grace Seminary group formed the National Fellowship of Brethren Churches.[5][6][7] The Fellowship incorporated in 1987 as the Fellowship of Grace Brethren Churches.[8]

Departure of the Conservative Grace Brethren

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Charis Fellowship USA logo

Another division occurred in 1992, involving a coalition of fundamentalist pastors who were troubled by the continuing "neo-evangelical" drift that they perceived taking root within the larger body of the FGBC, ultimately resulting in the formation of the Conservative Grace Brethren Churches, International (CGBCI). The immediate issue of dissension concerned the question of open membership in regard to individuals who had not been baptized by trine immersion (the historic Brethren standard, which the Brethren traditionally believe is taught in the language of Matt. 28:19). The Conservative pastors (so called because they desired to "conserve" Biblical truth) ultimately saw the broader issue as one involving Biblical Fundamentalism vs. an unduly pragmatic neo-evangelicalism, and ultimately withdrew from the larger body as a matter of conviction.

Charis Alliance

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In 2015, delegates from ministries in all the countries who associate with the Grace Brethren gathered in Bangkok, Thailand and formed the Charis Alliance. The Global Charis alliance adopted the Charis Commitment to Common Identity. [9]

Beliefs

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The denomination has a confession of faith based on evangelical theology and the Believers' Church beliefs.[10]

Statistics

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According to a denomination census released in 2023, it claimed 200 churches in the United States and Canada.[11]

References

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Literature

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  • David R. Plaster: Finding our Focus: A History of the Grace Brethren Church, Winona Lake, IN: BMH Books, 2003.
  • Todd S. Scoles: Restoring the Household: The Quest of the Grace Brethren Church, Winona Lake, IN: BMH Books, 2008.
  • Frank S. Mead, Samuel S. Hill, & Craig D. Atwood: Handbook of Denominations
  • Norman B. Rohrer: A Saint in Glory Stands: The Story of Alva J. McClain, Founder of Grace Theological Seminary, Winona Lake, IN: BMH Books, 1986.
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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The Charis Alliance is an international network of autonomous evangelical churches united by shared Anabaptist roots in the tradition, emphasizing adherence to practices and global mission work. Originating in 1708 when Alexander Mack and a small group of pietist Anabaptists formed a congregation in , committed to , the Lord's Supper with feetwashing, and communal living as modeled in scripture, the movement faced persecution and migrated to in the early . By the 19th and 20th centuries, it expanded through missionary efforts, establishing presence in post-World War II, in the , and now spanning 33 countries across five continents with a focus on , , and compassionate outreach. Core beliefs include the inerrancy of Scripture, by grace through faith in Christ alone, the , and the church's role in embodying Christ's amid human physical, emotional, and spiritual needs. Member churches, while self-governing, cooperate voluntarily for mutual edification, , and kingdom advancement, rejecting hierarchical denominational structures in favor of biblical fellowship. In recent decades, the has prioritized innovative mission strategies, including digital initiatives and partnerships for sustainable ministry, reflecting its historical emphasis on adaptive faithfulness to apostolic patterns.

Historical Origins

Schwarzenau Brethren Foundations

The Schwarzenau Brethren emerged in 1708 in Schwarzenau, a village in the Principality of Wittgenstein, Germany, amid the Radical Pietist movement seeking to revive primitive Christianity. Alexander Mack (1679–1735), a miller influenced by Pietism and Anabaptist principles, led the formation of the group, which rejected infant baptism in favor of believer's baptism by trine immersion. On an August morning, eight individuals—five men and three women—gathered at the Eder River, where one baptized Mack by forward immersion three times in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, after which Mack baptized the others, establishing the practice without precedent in their post-Apostolic context. This covenanting act symbolized a commitment to New Testament discipleship, including nonresistance, simple dress, mutual aid, and ordinances such as the Lord's Supper with feetwashing and the holy kiss. The Brethren viewed the church as a visible, disciplined community separated from worldly alliances, prioritizing scriptural authority over human traditions or creeds. Mack's writings, including Rechte und Ordnung der Gemeinschaft (1713), defended these practices through direct biblical exegesis, emphasizing personal faith and obedience. Facing persecution for and nonconformity, the small congregation dispersed, with members fleeing to regions like and later emigrating to America. In 1719, the first Brethren immigrants arrived in Germantown, , performing the initial American baptisms in the in 1723. Mack himself emigrated in 1729, reinforcing the movement's transatlantic continuity and its emphasis on apostolic restoration, principles that underpin conservative Brethren groups maintaining fidelity to these origins amid later denominational divergences.

Early American Development and Schisms

The began emigrating to America in 1719, led by Peter Becker, fleeing and economic difficulties in . The initial group arrived in and settled in Germantown, , where they established the first American congregation in 1723. This marked the formal organization of Brethren communities on the continent, with the first love feast and baptisms conducted that year, emphasizing their distinctive practices of trine immersion and communal feetwashing. By the mid-18th century, the Brethren had grown through missionary efforts, forming congregations in , , and . Alexander Mack, the movement's founder, arrived in 1729, bolstering leadership and doctrine. Christopher Sower's in Germantown produced the first German-language in America in 1776 and an almanac from 1737, aiding communication and education within isolated rural communities. The pacifist stance during the Revolutionary War (1775–1783) brought hardships, including fines, property seizures, and imprisonment for refusing , yet membership expanded to several hundred by century's end, with settlements pushing into the frontier regions of , , and beyond. The first Annual Meeting convened in 1778 in Germantown to address doctrinal uniformity and practical issues, setting a for decentralized through elder-led consultations. Relative unity prevailed through the 18th century, though minor tensions arose over strict adherence to and . Post-Revolutionary adjustments included gradual abandonment of early ascetic practices like , influenced by American freedoms. Early schisms were limited; a small group emphasizing observance separated in the 1770s, forming the Seventh Day Dunkers, but these did not fracture the core body significantly until 19th-century debates over , , and intensified, culminating in the major 1880s division.

Fundamentalist Responses to Modernism

In the 1920s and 1930s, the encountered the fundamentalist-modernist controversy pervasive in American Protestantism, characterized by challenges to , the historicity of miracles, and orthodox doctrines through higher criticism and liberal . Within the denomination, , its primary training institution in , became a focal point of concern for conservatives who observed shifts toward modernist teachings, including diminished emphasis on scriptural authority and Brethren distinctives like and simple church practices. Leaders such as Alva J. McClain, a biblical scholar and athlete-turned-theologian, and Paul S. Bauman, a pastor advocating stricter doctrinal , criticized these developments as eroding the church's historic commitment to pietistic rooted in the . Responding to these perceived inroads, McClain and allied fundamentalists convened an informal meeting of Brethren leaders on June 30, 1937, in , to establish an alternative seminary dedicated to defending evangelical orthodoxy and Brethren traditions against modernist influences. This resulted in the founding of Grace Theological Seminary that fall in , with McClain as its first president; the institution prioritized training ministers in , dispensational , and separation from , attracting support from pastors wary of Ashland's direction. The seminary's charter emphasized control by conservative Brethren to prevent the doctrinal laxity seen elsewhere, drawing initial faculty and students from those disillusioned with progressive trends. Tensions escalated as the 's general conference debated seminary governance and doctrinal purity, leading to the denomination's division in 1939 after two years of strife. Fundamentalists aligned with Grace Seminary formed the National Fellowship of Brethren Churches (later the Fellowship of Grace Brethren Churches), comprising about 20 congregations initially, while the Ashland-affiliated majority retained the name. This exemplified fundamentalist , prioritizing purity over unity with bodies tolerating , and solidified commitments to confessional statements affirming the Bible's inspiration, the virgin birth, , and bodily resurrection—core "fundamentals" outlined in interdenominational pamphlets of the era. The move preserved a of resistance to cultural accommodation, influencing subsequent conservative Brethren bodies like the Charis Fellowship.

Formation and Evolution

Division from Mainline Brethren Bodies

In the 1930s, the , headquartered in , experienced growing internal divisions over perceived encroachments of modernist theology and higher criticism into its institutions, particularly Ashland Theological Seminary. Faculty and church leaders expressed alarm at departures from traditional fundamentalist principles, including challenges to and orthodox doctrines such as premillennial . These tensions reflected broader evangelical responses to within mainline denominations, prioritizing scriptural authority and separation from compromising influences. The crystallized in 1937 when concerned Brethren leaders convened a on June 2 in , to address the seminary's theological direction. Professors Alva J. McClain and Herman A. Hoyt were dismissed by Ashland authorities on June 4, prompting their resignation and the establishment of Grace Theological Seminary on July 28, 1937, in . This new institution aimed to train ministers committed to evangelical orthodoxy, free from modernist trends observed at Ashland. Supporting congregations, seeking alignment with Grace Seminary's standards, began organizing separately. By 1939, these churches formalized their departure from the Brethren Church, founding the National Fellowship of Brethren Churches at a conference that year. The split, peaking amid debates at the 's General Conference, centered on issues like , resistance to legalism or , and fidelity to pietist-anabaptist roots amid cultural shifts. While not all congregations divided immediately—many retained local —the National Fellowship represented a conservative realignment, eventually comprising over 200 churches by the late 20th century. This division distinguished the group from both the progressive and the Ashland Brethren Church, emphasizing doctrinal purity over ecumenical ties. The Brethren Church retained its mainline identity, while the Grace Brethren trajectory solidified fundamentalist commitments.

Establishment of Conservative Grace Brethren

In 1992, a group of churches separated from the Fellowship of Grace Brethren Churches to form the Conservative Grace Brethren Churches, International (CGBCI), driven by disagreements over doctrinal standards and practices. The centered on the requirement of trine as a prerequisite for , with conservatives advocating strict adherence to this historic Brethren ordinance, viewing deviations as a dilution of biblical fidelity. Fundamentalist pastors within the Fellowship expressed concerns about a perceived "neo-evangelical" shift, including tolerance for broader membership policies and less rigorous enforcement of traditional separations from worldly influences. The establishing churches emphasized a return to core Anabaptist-Pietist principles inherited from the tradition, prioritizing , autonomous congregational governance, and uncompromised biblical authority without accommodation to contemporary theological trends. This formation reflected broader tensions in evangelical circles during the late , where conservative factions sought to preserve amid cultural and denominational pressures toward inclusivity. The CGBCI adopted a of "the , the whole , and nothing but the ," underscoring their commitment to scriptural sufficiency over evolving interpretive frameworks. Initial membership included a of congregations primarily from the , with the group organizing as an international fellowship to facilitate in missions and mutual while maintaining local church . Doctrinal statements formalized positions on ordinances like , footwashing, and the Lord's Supper, insisting on their regenerative and symbolic significance tied to believer's commitment. The split did not involve legal disputes over property but rather a voluntary realignment, resulting in the CGBCI operating as a distinct entity focused on and discipleship aligned with fundamentalist convictions.

Rebranding to Charis Fellowship and Global Alliance

In 2015, representatives from Grace Brethren-associated ministries across multiple countries convened in , , to establish the as an international cooperative network aimed at fostering shared resources, partnerships, and ministry efforts among evangelical Brethren groups worldwide. This formation built on prior international gatherings dating back to 1994, emphasizing collaboration in , , and global missions while maintaining doctrinal alignment with principles. The encompasses over 20 non-North American evangelical entities, serving as a platform for cross-cultural engagement without imposing a centralized . Subsequently, on November 7, 2017, the Fellowship of Grace Brethren Churches (FGBC), the primary North American body, announced its rebranding to Charis Fellowship as a "doing as" designation, with the legal corporate name unchanged. The shift, unveiled via live stream from Grace Church in , was motivated by a desire to highlight the Greek term charis—meaning grace—as central to the movement's identity, while underscoring commitments to biblical truth, relational fellowship, and outward-focused mission. Proponents argued the new name better reflected evolving affiliations with global partners under the Charis Alliance banner and appealed to contemporary audiences without diluting historical Brethren distinctives. The rebranding process involved consultation with member churches and leadership, culminating in formal adoption to unify branding across domestic and international outreaches. By , the Charis Fellowship had integrated the name into official communications, websites, and events, signaling a strategic pivot toward broader evangelical cooperation while preserving progressive elements within the Grace Brethren tradition, such as emphasis on personal faith and over rigid . This dual development—Alliance formation and Fellowship rebrand—facilitated enhanced global coordination, including joint missions in regions like , , and , where affiliated churches numbered in the hundreds by the early 2020s.

Doctrinal Foundations

Core Beliefs and Biblical Interpretation

The Charis Alliance affirms core evangelical doctrines centered on the Triune , the person and work of Jesus Christ, human sinfulness and redemption, the mission of the church, and the transformative Christian life. It declares Jesus Christ, the incarnate Word of as revealed in the , the written Word of , to be the only Savior and , emphasizing his eternal deity, virgin birth, sinless life, , bodily , ascension, and personal return. is by grace alone through faith alone in Christ alone, resulting in justification, regeneration by the , and for true believers, apart from human merit or works. The church comprises all true believers as the , called to , discipleship, , and service, with local congregations practicing mutual accountability and interdependence. Regarding the , the Alliance holds that the 66 books of the Old and New Testaments constitute the complete written Word of , fully inspired by the , authoritative, true in all it affirms, and without error in the original manuscripts. sovereignly preserves his Word, rendering it powerful for and sufficient for and practice across cultures and eras. This high view aligns with historic and evangelical commitments, rejecting subordination of Scripture to human traditions, creeds, or . Biblical interpretation within the Charis Alliance employs grammatical-historical-contextual principles to discern the intent of the original writers as guided by the Holy Spirit, prioritizing the text's plain meaning while allowing for literary genres and progressive revelation. The process is Christ-centered, grace-oriented, and illumined by the indwelling Holy Spirit, enabling believers to apply unchanging truths to contemporary contexts without altering doctrinal essentials. This approach upholds Scripture's absolute supremacy, subjecting all interpretations and applications to ongoing communal study and correction by the text itself, as articulated in the Commitment to Common Identity, which remains open to refinement through deeper biblical understanding but anchored in evangelical fundamentals.

Ordinances, Sacraments, and Practices

Charis Fellowship churches recognize two primary ordinances instituted by Jesus Christ: believer's baptism and a threefold communion service, observed as acts of obedience that symbolize key aspects of Christian faith and discipleship. These practices distinguish them within broader evangelical traditions, drawing from Schwarzenau Brethren heritage while emphasizing biblical mandates over sacramental efficacy. Believer's baptism by triune immersion—three successive immersions in water, each in the name of the Father, Son, and —serves as a public testimony to personal and identification with the Triune , practiced only for those who profess in Christ. This mode, rooted in :19 and early Brethren custom from 1708, underscores and new life in Christ, rejecting as unbiblical. Congregations encourage this ordinance as a foundational rite, often performed in local settings like rivers or baptisteries, with resources promoting its historical and theological rationale. The threefold communion, observed periodically (often semi-annually), comprises feet washing, a shared fellowship (love feast), and the bread-and-cup Lord's Supper, testifying to justification, ongoing sanctification, and future glorification in Christ. Feet washing enacts humility and mutual service per John 13:1-17; the love feast fosters community as in Jude 12 and 1 Corinthians 11:20-22; and the bread and cup commemorate Christ's atoning death per 1 Corinthians 11:23-26. This integrated service, a hallmark of Brethren practice, promotes and unity among participants, with churches adapting details while upholding the full sequence. Additional practices, such as the sick with oil accompanied by (James 5:14-15), occur in some congregations as biblically guided responses to illness, though not formally enumerated as ordinances in core documents. These elements reflect a commitment to patterns, with local autonomy allowing variation in frequency and form while prioritizing scriptural fidelity.

Distinctives from Broader Brethren Traditions

The Charis Fellowship upholds the historic Schwarzenau Brethren ordinances of trine —dipping candidates forward, backward, and sideways in the name of the Father, Son, and —and the threefold love feast, comprising the meal, bread and cup, and feetwashing, as symbolic acts of obedience to patterns. These practices, rooted in the 1708 founding covenant, distinguish the Fellowship from non-Brethren evangelical groups but align with other conservative Brethren bodies like the , while differing from broader traditions that have relaxed or reinterpreted them amid modernist influences. Theologically, Charis churches emphasize , affirming Scripture as verbally inspired, infallible, and the sole rule for faith and practice, a stance formalized in response to higher and liberal theology that permeated seminaries of the (Ashland) in the early 20th century. This fundamentalist commitment, including explicit endorsement of the virgin birth, , bodily resurrection, and miracles, led to the 1937-1939 formation of the National Fellowship of Brethren Churches (precursor to Charis) as a separation from progressive elements within the Brethren Church, prioritizing undiluted scriptural authority over evolving denominational interpretations. Eschatologically, the Fellowship adheres to , anticipating Christ's personal, visible, imminent return to the church pretribulationally and establish a literal millennial kingdom, reflecting dispensational influences absorbed during American fundamentalist movements that diverged from the amillennial or postmillennial views retained in mainline Brethren circles. Soteriologically, is viewed as eternal and secure through grace alone via personal in Christ's atoning work, underscoring conversion and assurance more assertively than the communal, obedience-focused Anabaptist emphases in groups like the . Unlike the , which has ordained women to ministry since 1958 and integrated progressive social stances, Charis maintains complementarian polity, credentialing women for supportive roles but reserving eldership and senior pastoral authority for qualified men, grounded in interpretations of passages like 1 Timothy 2:12. The Fellowship also eschews mandatory , absent from its confessional documents despite Anabaptist heritage, permitting member participation in or where conscience allows, in contrast to the non-resistance creed central to traditionalist Brethren factions. This ecclesial flexibility supports a missions-oriented , with over 200 self-governing congregations cooperating through annual conferences for global outreach rather than centralized oversight.

Organizational Structure

Governance and Polity

The Charis Fellowship, comprising churches in the United States and , maintains a emphasizing local church while fostering interdependence among member congregations. Each local church operates as a distinct, self-governing entity, responsible for selecting its own pastors, elders, and leaders, and establishing its membership requirements independently. This congregational model aligns with broader Brethren traditions, prioritizing over centralized control, with no hierarchical oversight imposed by the Fellowship on internal church affairs. At the Fellowship level, governance occurs through an annual conference attended by delegates from member churches—typically a minimum of two per church, up to 35 based on attendance averages—where decisions on matters like amendments to position statements require a two-thirds vote. A Fellowship Council, consisting of 16 members (15 elected regionally for five-year terms and one ), serves as the , handling administrative duties such as budget approval, membership review, and conference planning, with decisions made by majority vote. Officers including the (who chairs the council), , and are elected for defined terms to facilitate operations. Procedures follow , with committees like the Nominating, Membership, and Social Concerns committees supporting elections, credentialing, and resolutions on ethical issues. Membership in the Fellowship requires churches to affirm the Charis Commitment to Common Identity—outlining shared biblical convictions, practices, and mutual commitments—and adhere to position statements on doctrinal or cultural matters, ensuring alignment without compromising local sovereignty. The Fellowship functions as a voluntary network for resource-sharing, , leader training, and missions, rather than an authoritative body, with provisions for associate status, full membership, or termination by mutual agreement or vote. and cooperating ministries provide regional coordination, but ultimate authority resides with local congregations and the annual delegates. Globally, the Charis Alliance coordinates national fellowships (including the North American Charis Fellowship) through periodic gatherings of delegates to discuss shared identity and mission, guided by a steering committee, but maintains a decentralized structure where each national entity retains operational independence. This relational model, rooted in the Alliance's charter adoption, emphasizes spiritual and across over 20 countries without imposing uniform variations.

Regional and Global Networks

The Charis Fellowship maintains a regional in comprising geographical districts that facilitate local coordination, pastoral oversight, and ministry support among its more than 230 autonomous churches and campuses across 32 states and provinces in the United States and . These districts, such as those encompassing areas like the Mid-Atlantic or regions, enable functions including district examining boards for credentialing pastors and regional councils for representation on the national level. District-level activities also include sponsoring camps and retreat centers to support church training and fellowship. On a global scale, the Charis Fellowship participates in the Charis , an international association formed in 2015 by delegates from Grace Brethren-related ministries gathered in , , uniting independent churches and outreaches committed to shared biblical convictions and mission priorities. The Alliance operates across five continents and in 33 countries, with approximately 300 associated churches in and the alongside 50 "Points of Light" outreaches elsewhere. Member entities adhere to mutual commitments outlined in documents like the Commitment to Common Mission, emphasizing , leader training, and , while Charis Associations handle mobilization at local and regional levels within participating nations. Examples include longstanding work in since the 1980s, evolving from small groups to broader church networks, and partnerships facilitated through organizations like Encompass World Partners for missions and member care.

Demographics and Impact

Membership Statistics and Growth

The Charis Fellowship, the North American arm of the Charis Alliance, comprises more than 230 interdependent churches, campuses, and ministries across the and as of 2024. Historical data for its predecessor, the Fellowship of Grace Brethren Churches, indicate stable adherence of approximately 40,000 individuals from the early 1980s through the , accompanied by growth in the number of congregations from 475 in 1981 to 653 by 1989. These figures reflect a period of consolidation following earlier schisms within the broader Brethren tradition, with adherents concentrated primarily in the Midwest and Northeast. Recent growth has emphasized and revitalization, with the Assist Church Expansion ministry facilitating 5 new partner churches, 3 revitalizations, and 2 relaunches between July 2023 and July 2024. In 2024, one additional congregation, La Iglesia El Refugio in , joined as a full-member church. Such efforts align with the Fellowship's model, where autonomous local churches contribute to shared expansion goals, though overall adherence numbers remain comparable to historical levels amid broader evangelical trends of modest domestic growth. Globally, the Charis Alliance partners with over 3,000 churches in more than 25 countries, stemming from deployments that have established thousands of affiliated congregations since the late . This international footprint, spanning 33 countries as of recent reports, underscores expansion through cross-cultural partnerships rather than centralized membership tracking, with and the accounting for about 300 associated churches.

Geographic Distribution and Missions

The Charis Fellowship maintains over 200 autonomous churches primarily in , spanning 32 states and provinces across the and . Concentrations appear in the Midwest and Northeast, reflecting historical roots in states such as , , and , though churches are distributed nationwide with ongoing efforts to expand into underserved regions. As part of the broader Charis Alliance, the movement extends globally across five continents and operates in 33 countries, including , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , and . These international efforts emphasize independent church plants and outreach initiatives adapted to local contexts, with historical mission work dating to 1900 through entities like the Foreign Missionary Society, now known as Encompass World Partners. Missions within the Charis Alliance prioritize , leader development, and to advance , coordinated through partnerships such as Encompass World Partners, which mobilizes multinational teams for and discipleship among unreached groups. Key activities include Bible institutes (e.g., established in in 1960), youth camps, and infrastructure projects like bridge building in , alongside annual global prayer initiatives to support expansion in regions such as the and . Charis Fellowship churches in contribute financially and through personnel to these endeavors, aligning with a shared commitment to the .

Theological Debates and Relations

Interactions with Other Christian Groups

The Charis Alliance traces its origins to separations from the broader in , driven by concerns among fundamentalist members over perceived doctrinal and accommodation to within the parent body. This led to the formation of independent Grace Brethren congregations that prioritized , premillennial eschatology, and separation from progressive influences, culminating in formal incorporation as the Fellowship of Grace Brethren Churches in 1987. Relations with the remain distant, as the latter embraces more progressive stances on issues like and , contrasting with Charis's evangelical . Further internal divisions occurred in , when the Conservative Grace Brethren Churches, International, departed from the Fellowship over allegations of doctrinal drift toward broader evangelical compromises, though the split was described as amicable by representatives from . These schisms underscore a pattern of prioritizing doctrinal purity, limiting formal affiliations with other Anabaptist or Brethren-derived groups that diverge on fundamentals like scriptural authority. In contemporary practice, Charis churches engage selectively with other conservative evangelical entities, viewing their identity as connecting to wider evangelical networks while preserving Brethren distinctives such as trine immersion and the love feast. Partnerships include collaboration with the for legal defense of religious liberties, reflecting shared commitments to gospel proclamation amid cultural pressures. Broader ecumenical involvement is absent, with emphasis instead on interdependence within the Charis network and affinity with like-minded missions, affirming unity in the global only where core biblical truths align.

Criticisms, Controversies, and Defenses

The formation of the Fellowship of Grace Brethren Churches, predecessor to the Charis Alliance, stemmed from a major schism in 1937 with the , triggered by accusations of doctrinal liberalism at Ashland College and Seminary, including perceived compromises on and progressive theological influences. Critics within the labeled the departing Grace Brethren as overly rigid fundamentalists intent on imposing narrow interpretations, exacerbating divisions over issues like the seminary's and openness to modern . This split halved the Brethren Church's membership, with ongoing recriminations portraying the Grace Brethren's emphasis on separation as schismatic rather than preservative. Subsequent tensions arose internally within the Grace Brethren fellowship, culminating in a fracture where a minority formed the Conservative Grace Brethren Churches, citing further "doctrinal drift" in areas such as and practices. Detractors argued that such perpetual divisions reflected an inflexible prioritizing purity over unity, potentially alienating broader evangelical cooperation. More recently, Charis Alliance's adherence to traditional practices like trine for membership has drawn critique from ecumenically minded observers for exclusivity, contrasting with "open membership" policies in other Brethren bodies. In defense, Charis Alliance leaders maintain that separations were biblically mandated responses to erosion of core Anabaptist-Brethren convictions, including regenerate church membership and fidelity to Scripture over institutional loyalty, as evidenced by their 2015 Commitment to Common Identity affirming eternal security and rejection of conditionalism unlike some Schwarzenau Brethren groups. On contemporary issues like gender roles and sexuality, the alliance upholds complementarian views on ministry leadership and traditional marriage, framing these as applications of scriptural authority amid cultural pressures, with pastoral affirmations emphasizing theological rigor over accommodation. Official histories portray the 1937 exodus not as divisiveness but as a necessary realignment to apostolic practices, citing historical precedents like the 1882 Brethren progressive-conservative rift.

References

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