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NGE >> Religion >> Faiths and Denominations >> Christianity >> Methodist >> Church of the Nazarene |
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Church of the Nazarene The
Georgia Nazarenes are part of a worldwide denomination based in Lenexa, Kansas.
The history of Nazarenes in Georgia dates back to an evangelical revival in eighteenth-century England led by John and Charles Wesley.
The earliest major Nazarene work in Georgia took place in Donalsonville, in the southwest corner of the state, where a strong congregation was supported mostly by the T. J. Shingler family. This congregation had been a part of the Georgia Holiness Association that merged in 1907 with the Holiness Church of Christ, one of the founding groups of the Church of the Nazarene. In 1910 the Shingler family donated forty acres of land to the new Nazarene denomination to establish a Bible college in the town.
The church's beliefs share the backgrounds of Methodism and the nineteenth-century American Holiness Movement. The doctrines center on justification by faith, the total inspiration of the scriptures, and the atonement of Christ for all humankind. The most distinctive belief is called entire sanctification, which is based on the Wesleyan emphasis that Christians are called to a holy life marked by an act of God subsequent to salvation. Entire sanctification cleanses the believer of "original sin" (self-centeredness) and fills him or her with a love for God and humankind. Suggested Reading Georgia District Eighty-Sixth Annual Assembly Journal (Kansas City, Mo.: Nazarene Publishing, 2000), 3-6. William M. Greathouse, What Is the Church of the Nazarene? (Kansas City, Mo.: Nazarene Publishing, 1984). Thomas J. Oord, Generation Xers Talk About the Church of the Nazarene (Kansas City, Mo.: Nazarene Publishing, 1999). Wesley Tracy and Stan Ingersol, Here We Stand: Where Nazarenes Fit in the Religious Marketplace (Kansas City, Mo.: Beacon Hill Press, 1999). David S. Williams, From Mounds to Megachurches: Georgia's Religious Heritage (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 2008). Brad E. Kelle, Emory University Updated 3/25/2011 |
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