Progress towards unity
At the beginning of the 20th century, the need for unity was felt by different churches, and eventually led to the foundation of the Fédération protestante de France in 1905.
First steps towards ecumenism
Various Reformation movements lasted until the beginning of the
20th century. After the Concordat had been abrogated, the unofficial Reims synod in May 1905 decided to call up a general Assembly of the Reformed Churches, which never took place. To avoid a definite schism between the two main groups which seemed unavoidable at the Montpellier synod in 1906, a few pastors, including Wilfred Monod, called for an Assembly to define unifying strategies. The meeting took place at Jarnac in October 1906, and the outcome was a declaration prepared with the help of Charles Wagner and Wilfred Monod. However the Jarnac meeting failed because the outcome was yet another national Union of the Reformed Churches, the third one -generally called the « Union de Jarnac- and was formalised the following year at the Paris Synod.
Thus was French Protestantism constituted of 3 Church Unions :
- The Union of reformed Evangelical Churches : the most numerous, comprising 440 churches and 410 pastors.
- The Union of united Reformed Churches (former liberal churches), comprising 100 churches and 120 pastors.
- The National Union of Reformed Churches (called the Jarnac Union) comprising 80 churches and 100 pastors.
There were also about fifty so-called autonomous churches. The Jarnac and liberal trends merged in 1912 under the name Union of Reformed Churches.
The Fédération Protestante de France (FPF)
But the need to be united to confront the public authorities, the evolution of the doctrine, the influence of both pastors Wilfred Monod and Elie Gounelle among others, led to the creation of the Fédération Protestante de France comprising the Reformed (evangelical, liberal, independent), the Lutherans, the Methodists, at Nîmes in October 1905, to be joined by the Baptists in 1919.
Progress in the tour
Bibliography
- Books
- MONOD Wilfred, Pour l’Unité protestante, Paris, 1932
Associated tours
-
Protestantism in the XXth century
The law of 9th December 1905 separating the Churches from the State guaranteed the freedom of public worship for the Reformed Church and a legal framework. Hardly surprisingly, most Protestants...
Associated notes
-
Methodism
-
The French Concordat
The Concordat with the Organic Articles, ruled the organisation of Protestant as well as Catholic churches. It did not comprise any restrictive measures, and pastors were to be paid by... -
Separation of Church and State
The separation of Church and State (on the 9th of December 1905) was easy to accept for the Protestants. At last worship unions were authorised. -
French Lutheranism
At the beginning of the 19th century Lutheran churches were organised according to the Organic Articles of 1802. Many Lutherans came and settled in France, especially after the 1870 war... -
Times of disagreement
During the second republic, the planned restitution of the synodal system was never accomplished. In 1852 Napoleon III reinstated local churches, but the lack of a central authority led to...