Evangelical Reformed Assemblies of God: Difference between revisions

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| leader_title        = {{wp|Presbyter|Grand Presbyter}}
| leader_title        = {{wp|Presbyter|Grand Presbyter}}
| leader_name        = [[Henrik Grunwald]]
| leader_name        = [[Henrik Grunwald]]
| leader_title1      = {{wp|Moderator of the General Assembly|Modorator of the General Presbytary}}
| leader_title1      = {{wp|Moderator of the General Assembly|Modorator}}
| leader_name1        = [[John Zuylen]]
| leader_name1        = [[John Zuylen]]
| leader_title2      =  
| leader_title2      =  

Revision as of 22:13, 8 April 2023

Evangelical Reformed Assemblies of God
Evangelisk Reformerede Forsamlinger af Gud
Evangelisch Gereformeerde Vergaderingen van God
Assemblées de Dieu Réformées Évangéliques
Ottawa Methodist Episcopal Church.jpg
Oldest standing Reformed Assembly in Egestrøm, Lyngaard
TypeFree Church
OrientationReformed
TheologyConservative
PolityPresbyterian
Grand PresbyterHenrik Grunwald
ModoratorJohn Zuylen
RegionWorldwide, Significant populations in Arcadia, The Libertines, Lyngaard, and Upper Asema
LanguageMultiple
LiturgyLow Church
Members3,177,799
Church buildings5,782
Aid organizationInternational Assemblies of God

Evangelical Reformed Assemblies of God(Also called the Reformed Assemblies, or ERAG.) is an evangelical reformed denomination in Lyngaard, Arcadia, and the Libertines. The denomination was formed in 1813 with the merger of the Episcopal Reformed Church and the Assemblies of God. The Episcopal Reformed Church was a major branch of the reformed movement particularly in Northeast Arcadia while the Assemblies of God formed out of a conservatives branch of the Beaconer church. The two churches formally merged with the Confrence of Gotham in 1814 under the leadership of Paul Keyser and Hugh Abbot.

Initially a small church localized in the southern Lyngaard and Northeast Arcadia, the church saw growth during the Modernist Controversy in in the early 20th Century. The Reformed Assemblies took a staunchly fundementalist approach to said controversy and absorbed many conservative members of Denominations which shifted to a more modernist theology. Today the Reformed Church has over 3 million members globally and has a growth rate of 2.7% yearly according to membership statistics.