Christian Methodist Episcopal Church

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Christian_Methodist_Episcopal_Church an entity of type: Thing

Die Christian Methodist Episcopal Church (CME) ist eine christliche Kirche in methodistischer Tradition mit hauptsächlich afroamerikanischen Mitgliedern. rdf:langString
The Christian Methodist Episcopal (C.M.E.) Church is a historically black denomination within the broader context of Wesleyan Methodism founded and organized by John Wesley in England in 1744 and established in America as the Methodist Episcopal Church in 1784. It is considered to be a mainline denomination. The CME Church was organized on December 16, 1870 in Jackson, Tennessee by 41 former slave members with the full support of their white sponsors in their former Methodist Episcopal Church, South who met to form an organization that would allow them to establish and maintain their own polity. They ordained their own bishops and ministers without their being officially endorsed or appointed by the white-dominated body. They called this fellowship the Colored Methodist Episcopal Church in rdf:langString
rdf:langString Christian Methodist Episcopal Church
rdf:langString Christian Methodist Episcopal Church
rdf:langString Christian Methodist Episcopal Church
xsd:integer 646311
xsd:integer 1102246779
rdf:langString Die Christian Methodist Episcopal Church (CME) ist eine christliche Kirche in methodistischer Tradition mit hauptsächlich afroamerikanischen Mitgliedern.
rdf:langString The Christian Methodist Episcopal (C.M.E.) Church is a historically black denomination within the broader context of Wesleyan Methodism founded and organized by John Wesley in England in 1744 and established in America as the Methodist Episcopal Church in 1784. It is considered to be a mainline denomination. The CME Church was organized on December 16, 1870 in Jackson, Tennessee by 41 former slave members with the full support of their white sponsors in their former Methodist Episcopal Church, South who met to form an organization that would allow them to establish and maintain their own polity. They ordained their own bishops and ministers without their being officially endorsed or appointed by the white-dominated body. They called this fellowship the Colored Methodist Episcopal Church in America, which it remained until their successors adopted the current name in 1954. The Christian Methodist Episcopal today has a church membership of people from all racial backgrounds. It adheres to Wesleyan-Arminian theology.
rdf:langString Jackson, Tennessee
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 12038

data from the linked data cloud