Founded
before the Lutheran, Presbyterian, or Methodist churches -- even before the
discovery of America -- Moravians have long focused on faithful living and
Christian unity. Rather than concentrating on divisive doctrines, the
Moravian Church preaches the basics of the faith which all Christians share
in common. Moravians are encouraged to live out their faith through service
to those in need. Our mission work has concentrated on the poor and the
powerless, and groups largely unreached by other denominations.
The Moravian Church, also Unitas Fratrum,
or the American branch of the Renewed Church of the Unity of the Brethren,
is an evangelical Protestant denomination organized in Herrnhut, Saxony (Sachsen),
in 1727 as a reconstitution of the 15th-century Bohemian Brethren; Members
are called Moravian Brethren and Herrnhuters. The Moravian Church is
governed by the conferential system; its ministry is composed of bishops,
elders, and deacons. For administrative purposes, the church is divided into
northern and southern provinces, which have headquarters at Bethlehem,
Pennsylvania, and Winston-Salem, North Carolina, respectively. Provincial
synods exercise legislative authority delegated to them by the component
congregations. The two American provinces, (Northern and Southern) together
with the German and British branches of the Renewed Church of the Unity of
the Brethren, are under the overall jurisdiction of a general synod, which
meets every ten years. The Moravian Church conducts missionary work among
the Native Americans, the Inuit (Eskimo), and in many foreign countries.
Moravian institutions of higher education include Moravian College in
Bethlehem, Pa., and Salem College in Winston-Salem, N.C. The official organs
of the two American provinces are The Moravian and The Wachovia Moravian.
The Moravians have no specific creed, but
their tenets agree in substance with those incorporated in the Apostles'
Creed and the Augsburg Confession. The Bible is the only guide to faith and
conduct. Infant baptism is practiced, but full church membership requires
only a voluntary profession of faith. Congregations follow a liturgical form
of worship; many retain the love feast in imitation of the ancient agape.
Special stress is placed on fellowship and missionary work. Moravian church
music, especially singing, is known worldwide. The Moravian Church in
America is noted for its unity.
The first Moravians in America settled in
Savannah, Georgia, in 1734, but moved to Pennsylvania six years later. About
1740 other Brethren, immigrating in groups, settled Bethlehem, Nazareth, and
other Pennsylvania towns. Another group founded Salem (now part of
Winston-Salem), N.C., in 1766. For a full century, residence in Moravian
communities was closed to outsiders, but this policy was abandoned after
1856.
In the early 1990s the Moravian Church in
America reported about 52,200 members and 162 separate churches. New
Beginnings is a member of the Southern Province.
(Excerpted from Microsoft Encarta '99)
Moravian Church
... During the late 20th cent. the church
experienced increasing growth outside of its well-established communities.
By 2000 church membership was about 50,000 in the United States and 700,000
worldwide, with about half of the worldwide total in Tanzania.
The Moravians emphasize conduct rather than doctrine, and their church is
governed by provincial synods, the bishops having only spiritual and
administrative authority. The music in Moravian churches is famous,
especially the part-singing of the congregations.
(Excerpted from The Columbia Encyclopedia,
Sixth Edition 2006, which references historical studies by E. Langton (1956)
and J. T. Hamilton (1989); E. A. Sawyer, All about the Moravians (1990))