Using our spiritual gifts, our purpose is to joyfully praise God, bringing others into a relationship with Jesus, growing in love as one body in Christ, equipping disciples to learn and live God’s word, and ministering to our community and the world.
Missions
Our many local mission projects for adults and children enable us to share our faith in tangible and transforming ways. We also support district, regional, national, and international missions through our Disciples agencies and partners, such as The Week of Compassion, Global Ministries, and Church World Service.
Leadership
We celebrate the gift of God’s Spirit to men and women. You will see both men and women in all leadership roles in our church. We do ministry with and for our children and receive ministry from our children.
Denominational History
The Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) grew out of two movements seeking Christian unity that sprang up almost simultaneously in western Pennsylvania and Kentucky—movements that were backlashes against the rigid denominationalism of the early 1800s.
Thomas and Alexander Campbell, a Scottish Presbyterian father and son in Pennsylvania, rebelled against the dogmatic sectarianism that kept members of different denominations from partaking of the Lord’s Supper together. Barton W. Stone in Kentucky, also a Presbyterian minister, objected to the use of creeds as tests of “fellowship” within the church, which were a cause of disunity, especially at the Lord’s Table.
“Christians,” the name adopted by Stone’s movement, represented what he felt to be a shedding of denominational labels in favor of a scriptural and inclusive term. Campbell had similar reasons for settling on “Disciples of Christ” but he felt the term “Disciples” less presumptuous than “Christians.”
The aims and practices of the two groups were similar, and the Campbell and Stone movements united in 1832 after about a quarter of a century of separate development.
The Disciples (as we call ourselves) have a long heritage of openness to other Christian traditions—having come into existence as sort of a 19th-century protest movement against denominational exclusiveness. At the local level and beyond, Disciples are frequently involved in cooperative and ecumenical work.