This page is a listing of the authors that I have detected that are Congregationalists.
Direct Downloads of Congregationalist Authors
- abbott-abbott-illustrated-new-testament.cmt.twm (1031 downloads )
- abbott-child-at-home-v2.gbk.twm (1457 downloads )
- abbott-christian-mother.gbk.twm (347 downloads )
- abbott-cyrus-the-great-v1_1.gbk.twm (1305 downloads )
- abbott-darius-the-great-v2.gbk.twm (1299 downloads )
- abbott-ephesians-colossians-iccnt.cmt.twm (1062 downloads )
- abbott-family-at-home-v1_1.gbk.twm (1275 downloads )
- abbott-gentle-child-training-v2.gbk.twm (1306 downloads )
- abbott-the-christian-ministry-v3_1.gbk.twm (1308 downloads )
- abbott-the-christian-mother-v1.gbk.twm (1354 downloads )
- abbott-xerxes.gbk.twm (1340 downloads )
- adeney-a-biblical-introduction.gbk.twm (333 downloads )
- adeney-ezra-nehemiah-and-esther.gbk.twm (1086 downloads )
- adeney-how-to-read-the-bible-v1_2.gbk.twm (1706 downloads )
- adeney-men-of-the-bible-v1_2.gbk.twm (1511 downloads )
- adeney-women-of-new-testament-v2_1.gbk.twm (1749 downloads )
Wikipedia.org on Congregationalists
A Reformed (Calvinist) tradition of Protestant Christianity in which churches practice congregational government. Each congregation independently and autonomously runs its own affairs.
The Congregationalist Churches are a continuity of the theological tradition upheld by the Puritans.[4]
Congregationalism is a Reformed (Calvinist) tradition of Protestant Christianity that enjoins a church polity in which congregations are self-governing (cf. congregational polity).[2] Through the years, Congregationalists have adopted various confessional statements, including the Savoy Declaration, the Cambridge Platform and the Kansas City Statement of Faith.[8]
Unlike Presbyterians, Congregationalists practise congregational polity (from which they derive their name), which holds that the members of a local church have the right to decide their church’s forms of worship and confessional statements, choose their own officers and administer their own affairs without any outside interference.[9] Congregationalist polity is rooted in a foundational tenet of Congregationalism: the priesthood of all believers.