UK Christianity: 80+ Denominations Compared

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  • Опубликовано: 23 июл 2024
  • In this video we're looking at the landscape of UK Christians denominations.
    Chapters:
    00:00 Intro
    00:40 Anglicans
    03:57 Presbyterian/Reformed
    08:30 Congregationalists
    09:54 Methodists & Holiness
    13:52 Lutherans
    15:41 Baptists
    18:02 Pentecostals
    23:01 Charismatics
    26:15 Brethren Assemblies
    27:54 Catholic
    29:44 Eastern Orthodox
    32:47 Oriental Orthodox
    34:01 Others

Комментарии • 194

  • @ReadyToHarvest
    @ReadyToHarvest  2 года назад +86

    I did try to cover a lot of churches, but even this isn't everyone in the UK (E.g. sorry, Reformed Presbyterian Church of Scotland.) There's no easy way to cut things off , but I hope it gives a good and broad overview. This video is also the one that has taken me the longest to make of any video on my channel. (It took months). If you want to see me be able to keep working on projects like this one, please consider supporting my work by signing up for a membership at readytoharvest.com

    • @jeffkardosjr.3825
      @jeffkardosjr.3825 2 года назад +1

      Does the Roman Catholic Church in the UK have the Ordinariate like the US?

    • @ReadyToHarvest
      @ReadyToHarvest  2 года назад +6

      @@jeffkardosjr.3825 Yes it does! www.ordinariate.org.uk/

    • @thursoberwick1948
      @thursoberwick1948 2 года назад +1

      Good overview, but it would be worth pointing out that the Scottish Episcopal Church has independent origins. It is part of the Anglican Communion, but unlike the Church of Ireland and the Church in Wales, it did not break off the Church of England. (It did however take over a couple of Church of England congregations within Scotland, and a lot of (religious) English people who move to Scotland end up attending it, but those are other matters.)

    • @JoeMode213
      @JoeMode213 2 года назад +1

      @@jeffkardosjr.3825 Yes, and there is an ordinariate in Australia as well! Canada comes under the same body as the American Ordinariate iirc.

    • @gussetma1945
      @gussetma1945 2 года назад

      I looked at the comments. Some were happy that their splinter was mentioned and some were disappointed that their fragment was not. Nobody thought this balkanized heretic religious landscape was a scandal.

  • @ProductBasement
    @ProductBasement 2 года назад +32

    "So Joshua, which denomination are we covering this week?"
    "Yes"

  • @TastySandwich100
    @TastySandwich100 2 года назад +98

    I would've mentioned the Presbyterian Church in Ireland (PCI). They are the largest Protestant denomination in Northern Ireland, larger than that of the Free Presbyterian Church which you mentioned.

    • @TastySandwich100
      @TastySandwich100 2 года назад +9

      Forgot to say though, otherwise this is an impressive, in-depth list, nice work!

    • @In-Christ-Alone
      @In-Christ-Alone 2 года назад +10

      True! I live in NI there is always at least one in every settlement

    • @TastySandwich100
      @TastySandwich100 Год назад +5

      @@In-Christ-Alone Nice to see a fellow NI person here! God Bless man

  • @In-Christ-Alone
    @In-Christ-Alone 2 года назад +30

    I love this as a Northern Irish viewer of Presbyterian and Pentecostal background. Keep up the great videos

    • @user-bt3cn4xy8z
      @user-bt3cn4xy8z Год назад +5

      did you go from presbyterian to pentecostal or pentecostal to presbyterian?

    • @ericdanielski4802
      @ericdanielski4802 8 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@user-bt3cn4xy8zNice question.

  • @zelenisok
    @zelenisok 2 года назад +34

    Wow, kudos for making this, can hardly imagine the amount of work that went into it. I kinda got used to the extraordinarily high level of being informative that this channel has in general, but you managed to surpass yourself.

  • @AmazingDuckmeister
    @AmazingDuckmeister 2 года назад +42

    As a British person, this was an excellent overview of the different denominations of Great Britain

  • @christianwalton7080
    @christianwalton7080 2 года назад +19

    You almost have a movie's worth of video right here.
    Thanks for all the work you do man.

  • @andreasmith7910
    @andreasmith7910 2 года назад +14

    Wow, I can imagine how much research it took to make this video! I would love to see a similar video done on denominations of Canada.

  • @AI-hx3fx
    @AI-hx3fx 2 года назад +4

    This was amazing! Great work in covering all this.

  • @CanadianAnglican
    @CanadianAnglican 2 года назад +8

    Loving this video. Keep the great videos coming.

  • @jakeconvery1
    @jakeconvery1 Год назад +5

    It was lovely to see the United Reformed Church mentioned in one of your videos, traiditonally though our merger denominations were the Presbyterian Church of England, English and Welsh Congregationalists (1972), Churches of Christ (1981) and Scottish Congregationalists (2000). Thank you for covering British denominations, Joshua.

  • @krazykris9396
    @krazykris9396 2 года назад +13

    Wow! I had no idea how many denominations the US had with the UK. I would love to see more videos on foreign denominations. Maybe a video comparing all the denominations in other English speaking countries such as Australia, New Zealand, and Canada would be nice.

  • @huwfulcher
    @huwfulcher 2 года назад +32

    As a UK subscriber looking forward to watching this! Will come back and edit this after watching.
    EDIT: What a great summary! I’ve been interested in discovering new denominations/fellowships in the UK and quite a few of these I didn’t know about before!
    What’s particularly interesting about Wales (and similar churches in England) is that due to the congregational polity many churches belong to/interact with more than one fellowship. The church I grew up in is part of AECW, EMW (not listed in this video), FIEC and Evangelical Alliance. Many Evangelical churches in the UK are part of these networks for fellowship and training as opposed to submitting to an authority.

    • @thursoberwick1948
      @thursoberwick1948 2 года назад +1

      Also the language issue. In many Welsh towns there seems to have been a Welsh language and an English language chapel for each group, and the Welsh language congregations of some of them work together.

    • @huwfulcher
      @huwfulcher 2 года назад +2

      @@thursoberwick1948 yes, my home church was built in the 1800’s as an English speaking option for migrants from England who couldn’t speak Welsh

  • @AF-tv6uf
    @AF-tv6uf 2 года назад +2

    Yay, a LONG video! I know what I'll be doing this afternoon!

  • @brandi_w
    @brandi_w 2 года назад +5

    Whoa! This was A LOT...
    I finished after two separate viewings.
    I appreciate the depth. I'm sure this is highly valuable to those in study or research. I particularly enjoyed learning about the Afro ➡️ UK denominations.

  • @intergalactichumanempire9759
    @intergalactichumanempire9759 2 года назад +3

    I think this is one of your longest videos yet. Very good! I'd love to see more videos like this.

  • @robewilliams6657
    @robewilliams6657 2 года назад +6

    Very informative! I would love similar videos like this for other nations, in particular Canada, Australia, and Germany.

    • @heymiki87
      @heymiki87 Год назад +1

      Yes! I second this! US content while extremely interesting, is dominant. I would love to learn about denominations in those listed countries as well.

  • @thetraditionalist
    @thetraditionalist 2 года назад +2

    very good summary, I enjoyed this a lot

  • @jeffking4176
    @jeffking4176 5 дней назад

    Wow. Loads of information ❗️
    Fascinating

  • @EcclesiastesLiker-py5ts
    @EcclesiastesLiker-py5ts 2 года назад +2

    Very helpful, thank you.

  • @jessica3285
    @jessica3285 2 года назад +2

    wooow
    Thanl you so much
    knowledge after watching any vídeo on your channel 📈

  • @joelcardoso3617
    @joelcardoso3617 Год назад

    My head hurts...
    Thanks for the compilation.

  • @toranshaw4029
    @toranshaw4029 2 года назад +4

    A rather informative video, ta, as while I knew of many of the denominations listed, there were a few I didn't. I'm pleased to see the Unitarains and Quakers mentioned, which are the groups I'm affiliated with. I also know that there are many more denominations that weren't listed, like the Liberal Catholic Church and C3.

    • @thursoberwick1948
      @thursoberwick1948 2 года назад +2

      He got the vast majority. African churches are now ten a penny in British cities...and he did delve into that a bit. Many have wild names.
      R(h)ema was one he didn't mention that springs to mind. Also Sedevantists/Catholic Traditionalists. The biggest one he didn't mention was the mainstream Presbyterian church in Ireland.

  • @Mick116
    @Mick116 2 года назад +1

    Would have liked to see a mention of the Liberal, Old and Ecumenical Catholic Churches (i.e. the Independent Sacramental Movement). Glad the British Orthodox Church got a mention.
    Oh well, they're usually really small groups, and you have to draw the line somewhere.
    Excellent video as usual, well done.

  • @angelvenegas483
    @angelvenegas483 Год назад +2

    thank you for this video, I’m looking to move to the UK in a couple of years (I currently live in the US) and not much info is out about UK and christianity

  • @RevMiguelANunez
    @RevMiguelANunez 2 года назад

    Awesome!!

  • @user-vr1mp2ef7d
    @user-vr1mp2ef7d 5 месяцев назад

    From Italy. Thank you for this video. I am currently reconstructing my early life in England, where I was born. I was baptised and later married as a Roman Catholic, but I also had close links with the Church of England in two periods, one of which it was with Anglo-Catholics, and later with a mainline Methodist church. Thanks again!.

  • @jeffkardosjr.3825
    @jeffkardosjr.3825 2 года назад +2

    Thanks for mentioning the Free Church of England and REC.

  • @Quisl
    @Quisl Год назад +1

    Interesting! Germany next? :)

  • @Maclabhruinn
    @Maclabhruinn Год назад +4

    The most significant characteristic of the Church of England is that it is the Established Church in England - effectively, it is part of the UK Government. Anglican bishops sit in the House of Lords and can vote on legislation, whether or not that legislation has anythin to do with church matters. The Queen is the Supreme Governor of the Church. Church of England 'Measures' - how the church is run - are defined by law, and changes must be approved by Parliament. The Church of Scotland is the established Church of Scotland, but it doesn't have the same legislative powers.

  • @livrowland171
    @livrowland171 2 года назад +2

    Good grief, exhausting! I lived in the UK for 35 years and didn't know most of these

  • @JoeMode213
    @JoeMode213 2 года назад +1

    Did you notice any trends based upon region in your research? I'd be interested in knowing whether a particular denomination's success is dependent on region or culture.

    • @Mic1904
      @Mic1904 2 года назад +4

      I can't answer for Ready To Harvest - but statistically and historically, Presbyterianism has dominated in Scotland, Anglicanism has dominated in England (with Methodism popular in Northern England), Wales has had a strong Non-Conformist and Methodist tradition amongst the working class (though Anglicanism remained the national church until the 20th Century), and Northern Ireland has a thesis-worth of notable things to say about the religion, culture and politics of the region - but, in short, an approximately equal 41% identify as Protestant (largest groups: Presbyterian, Anglican and Methodist) and 41% as Catholic.
      Interesting what you suggest about culture. I must say that the sometimes 'severe', 'stern' and 'austere' image that Scottish Calvinism (particularly in the Highlands) has perfectly matches our sometimes stark, bleak, hard-to-live-in landscape and weather and the 'dour' stereotype of the people. But then again, which came first? Did Calvinism give us a bleak stereotype, or were we naturally bleak to begin with and gave our flavour of Calvinism a bleak name 😜

  • @Tax_Buster
    @Tax_Buster Год назад

    Isn’t there an Every Nation church in the UK? I noticed that it was not included.

  • @MM-np4md
    @MM-np4md 2 года назад

    Has he done a video on or heard of a movement called "the local churches" (witness lee/watchman new)?

  • @wlinden
    @wlinden 2 года назад +1

    Some years ago the Kirk of Scotland was discussing online rites. A newspaper claiming to cover the story asked the moderator of the Free Presbyterian Church (derisively known as "Wee Frees" for comment. This was something like asking the Westboro Baptist Church to explain actions by the SBC.

    • @news_internationale2035
      @news_internationale2035 2 года назад

      There's a lawyer running ads on Facebook claiming abuse in the SBC.
      The lawyer doesn't seem to know or is counting on other people's ignorance that the SBC is basically a confederation.

    • @bogsacheann240
      @bogsacheann240 2 года назад +1

      The Free Presbyterians are known as the ‘Wee Wee Frees’

    • @peterreynolds6235
      @peterreynolds6235 2 года назад

      @@bogsacheann240 By newspapers, perhaps?

  • @JosephusAurelius
    @JosephusAurelius 2 года назад +5

    I’m agnostic and brought up in Newfrontiers but there is something incredibly distasteful in my eyes of the corporate-like logos

  • @TexasSausage
    @TexasSausage Год назад +2

    Saying we (EO) pray to saints is a little misleading. We ask the saints to pray for us. I saw your previous video about orthodoxy earlier and you covered it very well, just a suggestion for this video

  • @tomgreer9330
    @tomgreer9330 2 года назад +2

    Sorry that you missed the Presbyterian Church in Ireland - the largest Protestant denomination in Northern Ireland.

  • @jeremyryannoel
    @jeremyryannoel 2 года назад +1

    For what it’s worth, COGOP and NTCOG have “shook hands” since the 2000s. I attended the bi-annual General Assembly when they made the announcement.

  • @haggismcbaggis9485
    @haggismcbaggis9485 2 года назад

    So, basically denominations are mix and match of various doctrines?

  • @matthewadamlamberty2419
    @matthewadamlamberty2419 Год назад

    You should do this video but for the Republic of irealand

  • @kamgrant
    @kamgrant Год назад

    Love to see NTCG on here. Which I’m a member of

  • @DarrenRoy
    @DarrenRoy 7 месяцев назад

    Churches in Communites (CiC International) is oneof the fastest growing UK denominations/networks. 300+ ministers/churches in 2023.

  • @whiteheatherclub
    @whiteheatherclub 2 года назад

    I think you would find it very hard to find many 5-point Calvinists among Church of Scotland ministers today. The Church of Scotland no longer recognises the Westminster Confession as a subordinate standard of faith and they removed it from the Church website. Not surprising that the General Assembly gave approval for ministers to perform marriage services with two people of the same sex.

    • @JojoWasa57
      @JojoWasa57 Год назад

      The Westminster Confession may not be on the Church of Scotland's website anymore but these are: "Statements of the Church's faith": "Our standards of belief are to be found in the Old and New Testament and in the Church's historic Westminster Confession of Faith." and in "Report of the Theological Forum May 2021": "It is still the principal subordinate standard of belief in the Church of Scotland, and ministers and elders still subscribe to it when ordained and, for ministers, when inducted to a charge."

  • @timamor915
    @timamor915 2 года назад +6

    With regard to the Quakers, British Yearly Meeting is the umbrella body for English, Scottish, Welsh, Manx and Channel Island Meetings; Northern Ireland is part of Ireland Yearly Meeting. Our meetings don't just start in silence but are mostly silent with a few moments of vocal ministry. It is not unusual for there to be no spoken ministry. I know of no Meetings which have water baptism or communion. I doubt that there are any, although some Friends may have dual membership with a religious group that does. You didn't mention Equal Marriage, which is a shame as we were, probably, the first majorish British denomination to push for our right to hold same sex weddings.

    • @timamor915
      @timamor915 2 года назад

      "Britain Yearly Meeting" not "British Yearly Meeting".

    • @britishsubject8722
      @britishsubject8722 Год назад

      Yes, these videos are a creditable piece of work but they are whistle stop, and very much from the outside.

  • @bloodboughtbigphilr8266
    @bloodboughtbigphilr8266 2 года назад +3

    Amongst U K. historic pentecostal churches, the Arminian Wesleyan influence is much less pronounced than the U.S. A good number of independent fellowships and most of the Elim churches affirm eternal security, especially in Northern Ireland. Some would even be Calvinistic to varying degrees in their view of election.

  • @jdeatley5939
    @jdeatley5939 2 года назад +1

    You missed Community of Christ. It would be nice to see this faith movement included in the list of denominations.

    • @thursoberwick1948
      @thursoberwick1948 2 года назад +2

      They only have a handful of congregations in the UK. None here in Scotland. I'm afraid they probably come behind some other groups

  • @GreatKhanMatt
    @GreatKhanMatt 2 года назад +1

    Where is the PResbyterian Church of Ireland? One of the biggest denominations in the british Isles.

  • @jdmbraceyourself695
    @jdmbraceyourself695 7 месяцев назад

    Are there any Baptist Bride believers in UK

  • @mitchmclean5435
    @mitchmclean5435 2 года назад +1

    Awesome. Now Australia, thanks :)

  • @peterreynolds6235
    @peterreynolds6235 2 года назад +2

    Suspect that Calvinistic Methodists originated in the 18th century revival and that all revival movements at the time were referred to as Methodist (originally a pejorative term given by opponents, possibly starting in their less-than-evangelical beginnings in the "Holy Club" in Oxford?). Therefore they were not a breakaway from John Wesley's "Methodists" which were the Arminian branch of the movement.

    • @nendwr
      @nendwr 2 года назад

      There's definitely a link between the Holy Club and the Welsh Presbyterians, although it's George Whitefield more than John Wesley (although the Wesleys too visited Marmaduke Gwynne at Garth at some point).

    • @peterreynolds6235
      @peterreynolds6235 2 года назад

      @@nendwr I'm talking about the fact that some of the men in the Holy Club were living by their own self-imposed rules ("method") and that this was before they had a personal experience of the grace of God. But I have not looked at any books to see if my surmise is founded on a correct memory of what I have read, or not.

  • @peterreynolds6235
    @peterreynolds6235 2 года назад +1

    I think that the New Testament Church of God and Church of God of Prophecy are primarily Afro-Caribbean denominations which I believe came to UK from the West Indies rather than being UK missions from the mother denominations in Cleveland. The Church of God (Cleveland) has several mission congregations in Scotland which are not under NTCG or CGoP.

    • @thursoberwick1948
      @thursoberwick1948 2 года назад

      African churches are ten a penny in UK cities now. Some of them have amazing sounding names! "Christ Embassy" is one that springs to mind. Others have about ten words in their name.

    • @peterreynolds6235
      @peterreynolds6235 2 года назад

      @@thursoberwick1948 This is different, these denominations were around in my childhood 40+ years ago, and belonged to immigrants from the Caribbean. The influx from Africa and particularly (in the case of Christian denominations) from Nigeria is much more recent and brings new and hopefully in some ways beneficial dimensions to the black community (e.g. one might imagine, in terms of levels of qualification and work achievement, and in a stronger view of marriage). If I remember aright, according to Trevor Phillips, former head of the Commission for Racial Equality here in UK (in this fascinating discussion: ruclips.net/video/m7A-YbEm2Fk/видео.html ), around half of Caribbean-heritage children now have a white-British parent, and around half of black people in Britain are now of heritage direct from Africa and therefore without the heritage of slavery (or, I presume, indentured servitude, in some Caribbean countries).

    • @thursoberwick1948
      @thursoberwick1948 2 года назад

      @@peterreynolds6235 Correct, but that is not reflected in the government "handling" or whatever you want to call it. Scotland, for example, has never had a major Caribbean population but now has a significant African population. Very different dynamic.

    • @hezekiahthomas837
      @hezekiahthomas837 Год назад

      While this true the mother church sent missioners to the Caribbean to begin with

  • @frederickanderson1860
    @frederickanderson1860 Год назад

    So whats the solution

  • @james5332
    @james5332 Год назад

    *watches just to see what random denominations aren't included so he can mention them* 😂 if you haven't done a video yet on the subject you could do one on the protestant denominations in the Irish Republic 🙂

  • @PrezidentHughes
    @PrezidentHughes Год назад

    How do JW know for sure who is in the 144k Special group?

  • @taylorbirch-nm2dg
    @taylorbirch-nm2dg 11 месяцев назад +1

    I think its worth mentioning the church of england mini splits: the society of Catholic priests ( priest who see the 7 sacraments and are liturgical very Catholic but affirming female ordination and would suport same sex marriage if the c of e would let them), Forward in faith or the society ( a group with in the church of england who have the only bishops called provincial episcopal visitors or flying bishops, they belive in male only priesthood, are very latin cathloic with the majority being anglo-papulists being they belive the pope not the Archbishop of Canterbury is the head bishop of the church), the evangelical alliance (also practice male only priesthood and have flying bishops - diffrent ones though - and are of a more baptist end of the spectrum), holy trinity Brompton ( a group of church of england mega churches with a modern student based central style - well khown for creating alpha - ) and finaly the open table network who a group 30 active , 15 developing churches of all donations who run lgbt congratulations

  • @peterreynolds6235
    @peterreynolds6235 2 года назад +3

    "One-time salvation experience not taught" in the Church of England. I am sure this must be an exaggeration. It may be true in most parishes, but surely a proportion of the considerable number of churches which claim to be evangelical would teach that being born again happens at a specific time in a believer's life. I've never heard of Evangelical Anglicans being theologically isolated from other Evangelicals. Of course the whole "confirmation" thing may blur that with relation to those who were baptized as infants, but that can happen in many Reformed churches too (should I say "other Reformed churches" given that in most aspects the underlying teaching of the 39 Articles is Reformed?).
    The other question I have is in regard to the multiple sacraments. This is plainly being tolerated, but does it have any official status? I don't know. I've never heard that the Church of England has any doctrinal basis supplementing the 39 Articles which say "There are two Sacraments ordained of Christ our Lord in the Gospel, that is to say, Baptism, and the Supper of the Lord.
    Those five commonly called Sacraments, that is to say, Confirmation, Penance, Orders, Matrimony, and Extreme Unction, are not to be counted for Sacraments of the Gospel, being such as have grown partly of the corrupt following of the Apostles, partly are states of life allowed in the Scriptures, but yet have not like nature of Sacraments with Baptism, and the Lord's Supper, for that they have not any visible sign or ceremony ordained of God."

    • @thursoberwick1948
      @thursoberwick1948 2 года назад +1

      Correct. The CofE has many flavours in it but some are like that.

    • @nendwr
      @nendwr 2 года назад

      That's all part of a long-running failure to uphold the 39 Articles as a meaningful doctrinal standard, mainly because the Public Worship Regulation Act 1874 was a predictably dismal failure, but its failure led to its de facto being replaced by toleration of views outside the historic Protestant mainstream. We've just had two years of the bishops failing to uphold the 30th article in particular (Communion in both kinds), with us being actively prevented from using individual cups like all other mainline Protestant denominations on the pretext of not wanting to offend the sensibilities of those whose belief and practice diverges from the 28th (that the Lord's Supper is taken only after a heavenly and spiritual manner). As this is manifestly contrary to God's word written (Mt 26.27 "ye all"), it should be deemed unlawful under the 20th; and the bishops who condoned this abuse condemned with the Bishop of Rome under the 19th, and ascribe to them the same jurisdiction in this Realm as the Bishop of Rome under the 37th. Maybe Cromwell was right about the episcopacy after all...

    • @charleshappold4637
      @charleshappold4637 Год назад

      Regarding 7 sacraments: Are Anglo-Catholics a sizable percentage of the Church of England?

    • @thursoberwick1948
      @thursoberwick1948 Год назад +1

      @@charleshappold4637 Depends how you define sizable. There are certainly many high ones but they don't quite count. And a lot of ACs become RCs so a self-defeating movement.

    • @charleshappold4637
      @charleshappold4637 Год назад

      @@thursoberwick1948 Would some Anglicans agree with Lutherans that private confession [Holy Absolution} is the 3rd sacrament?

  • @peterreynolds6235
    @peterreynolds6235 2 года назад +1

    International Presbyterian Church - name for visual should be "Schaeffer"

  • @petera7745
    @petera7745 Год назад

    Free Presbyterian church of Scotland font is 🔥 looks like Lord of the Rings!

  • @semperadiuvans
    @semperadiuvans 2 года назад +8

    Glad to see the Free Church of England included!

    • @jeffkardosjr.3825
      @jeffkardosjr.3825 2 года назад +2

      I'm in the REC and I was hoping they would be mentioned.

  • @Upinblue2
    @Upinblue2 2 года назад +1

    Forgot the Evangelical Presbyterian Church of Northern Ireland :)

  • @JojoWasa57
    @JojoWasa57 Год назад +1

    True Jesus Church wasn't mentioned. Has 8 churches in England, 3 in .Scotland and 1 in Northern Ireland.

    • @ReadyToHarvest
      @ReadyToHarvest  Год назад +2

      I have a video on TJC coming up in probably January or February.

  • @pjosip
    @pjosip 2 года назад

    More denominations than followers... I don't think Jesus really meant a MLB franchize system when he mentioned his CHURCH.

  • @intergalactichumanempire9759
    @intergalactichumanempire9759 2 года назад

    I find it very difficult to conceptualize a Scottish Mormon, or even an Ulster Mormon.

    • @thursoberwick1948
      @thursoberwick1948 2 года назад +1

      Why? I've met plenty. In rural Scotland, the Mormons tend to be English incomers though rather than Scottish. In Northern Ireland, they fall into an odd space, since they are associated with Protestants but rejected by them, and manage to annoy both Loyalists and Republicans in both parts of Ireland by various means, often because Americans run them.
      You forgot Wales though. Welsh Mormons helped set up the famous Tabernacle Choir.

    • @intergalactichumanempire9759
      @intergalactichumanempire9759 2 года назад

      @@thursoberwick1948
      I didn’t know any of this. Mormonism has always struck me as a very American religion, something that has little presence outside the US, or their mission areas.

    • @thursoberwick1948
      @thursoberwick1948 2 года назад +3

      @@intergalactichumanempire9759 Mormonism is probably strongest in some of the Pacific Island nations, like Samoa and Tonga. There are also significant numbers in Chile, Brazil and Argentina.
      The LDS in the UK probably peaked about twenty or thirty years ago. The Osmonds were a big recruiting tool. Many early UK converts went to the USA, which meant that a Mormon community was not really built up anywhere until the sixties/seventies. Active attending membership is very low - under 10%.
      In Scotland and Ireland, the LDS is a very urban church. It hasn't established itself well outside the major towns and cities. Rural presence is very low.

    • @thursoberwick1948
      @thursoberwick1948 2 года назад

      @@intergalactichumanempire9759 Also Northern Ireland has about as many members as the Republic of Ireland. Most of the members in the Republic are in and around Dublin and east coast. Protestants are much more likely to convert than RCs - hence the Ulster/Dublin spresd.

    • @mgy401
      @mgy401 2 года назад +3

      @@thursoberwick1948 LDS missionaries were very active in Great Britain from the late 1830s onwards and saw (relatively) enormous church growth there for several decades; but the bulk of the converts ended up emigrating to Utah.

  • @daleliptrot
    @daleliptrot Год назад +1

    Bet you're all glad you're in the correct Denomination.

  • @RobertGrif
    @RobertGrif 2 года назад

    The Independent Methodist Church has 69 congregations. Nice.

  • @danoctavian8184
    @danoctavian8184 Год назад

    16:57 in just one second they contradicted themselves

  • @alex21mu
    @alex21mu Год назад +1

    Church of God Seventh Day us there as well

  • @ANDROLOMA
    @ANDROLOMA Год назад

    "An individual who should survive his physical death is also beyond my comprehension; such notions are for the fears or absurd egoism of feeble souls. I cannot conceive of a god who rewards and punishes his creatures."
    -Albert Einstein

    • @darrylviljoen6227
      @darrylviljoen6227 Год назад +1

      It might be interesting to you to know that the gospel of Mark, which is believed to be the first of the gospels to be written, does not mention any of the events after the resurrection. Think what you want of that.

    • @ANDROLOMA
      @ANDROLOMA Год назад

      @@darrylviljoen6227 Yes, such indications are interesting.

    • @Thindorama
      @Thindorama 5 дней назад

      @@darrylviljoen6227Though Paul’s writings were before that to be fair.

    • @darrylviljoen6227
      @darrylviljoen6227 4 дня назад

      @@Thindorama True, but the Commonly accepted letters have limited information. Basically that he was resurrected and was seen by a number of people.
      No real details though so that could mean anything.

  • @scented-leafpelargonium3366
    @scented-leafpelargonium3366 Год назад

    Very few keep the Sabbath of the LORD or the Passover of the LORD as Yeshua did.

  • @gcd313
    @gcd313 6 месяцев назад

    Reformed is capitalized.

  • @k.augustinetanner-ihm4232
    @k.augustinetanner-ihm4232 6 месяцев назад

    Why is same sex marriage such a point that needs to be said

    • @user-gd2rg8xg2y
      @user-gd2rg8xg2y 6 месяцев назад +1

      because its a good indicator of whether a church is truly Christian or not

  • @mauricerose3082
    @mauricerose3082 2 года назад

    "Semites was a term for an ethnic, cultural, or racial group. The terminology is now largely obsolete outside the grouping "Semitic languages" in linguistics.
    First used in the 1770s by members of the Göttingen School of History, this Biblical terminology for race was derived from Shem (Hebrew: שֵׁם), one of the three sons of Noah in the Book of Genesis, together with the parallel terms Hamites, and Japhetites.
    Other members of the Göttingen School of History coined the separate term Caucasian in the 1780s. These terms were used, and developed by numerous other Scholars over the next Century. In the early 20th Century,
    In Archaeology, the term is sometimes used informally as "a kind of shorthand" for ancient Semitic-Speaking Peoples."
    "In the early 20th Century, the Racialist Classifications of Carleton S. Coon included the Semitic Peoples in the Caucasian Race, as similar in appearance to the Indo-European, Northwest Caucasian, and Kartvelian-speaking peoples. Due to the interweaving of Language Studies and Cultural Studies, the term also came to be applied to the Religions (Ancient Semitic and Abrahamic) and Ethnicities of various Cultures associated by Geographic and Linguistic distribution."
    "The terms "Anti-Semite" or "Antisemitism" came by a circuitous route to refer more narrowly to anyone who was hostile or discriminatory towards Jews in particular."

  • @CassKovaxx
    @CassKovaxx Месяц назад

    You left out Morovians!

    • @adlad75
      @adlad75 2 дня назад

      @CassKovaxx ; No they are mentioned at 41:53 😇 you're welcome!

  • @jhoughjr1
    @jhoughjr1 2 года назад

    all of em milk toast! lol jk

  • @imalive4u169
    @imalive4u169 2 года назад +1

    Not that this matters but salvation isn't guaranteed even though there are Protestants that believe once saved always saved.
    The Gospel as St. Peter would call it the words of life itself leads people to the Sacraments of the Church which saves them. Though the Sacraments of the Church one receives Sanctifying Grace from the Holy Spirit the giver of life and Sanctifying Grace itself is life the Son Himself in which the invisible is made visible through the Sacraments of the Church like our Lord. When our Lord said whoever eats the flesh and drinks the blood of the Son of Man has life within them the prefiguring of what would later be the Holy Eucharist.
    So as a Christian we are saved by our Baptism, and like what St. Paul said we work out our salvation with fear and trembling, and as our Lord said only those who endure until the end are saved. Basically salvation can be lost because of unrepentant mortal sin. Think of the time a person is given in this world what they had done or failed to do determins their final destination. Really how you spend that time whether a person is a Baptized Christian under God's Grace or an Unbaptized Non-Christian under God's Law ultimately it's the Holy Spirit Who decides who is saved and who is condemned.

    • @Mic1904
      @Mic1904 2 года назад

      No confessional, reformed, conservative Protestant with the most basic grasp of their own religion denies the mean of grace in the Sacraments, the working out of our salvation 'with fear and trembling' (indeed, to a fault - I've rarely found a more fearful, doubtful, questioning, lacking-any-assurance-of-salvation lot than those Protestants on the more Reformed end of things), the notion of 'enduring to the end', or frankly believes anything crudely called 'once saved always saved'. That some groups of evangelicals may or may not have persuaded themselves of this does not make this the position of either the Protestant Reformation, or the view of most religious, professing Protestants today or through history.
      Though, the fact that it clumsily and lazily ends up being ascribed by non-Protestants who really ought to know better as 'the Protestant position', when they probably wouldn't recognize historical confessional Protestantism if it hit them in the face with some German Bratwurst, is sadly not that surprising.

  • @thetraditionalist
    @thetraditionalist 2 года назад

    666 views

  • @fomcgirl
    @fomcgirl Год назад

    It is interesting that King Charles has decided he is no longer the defender of the faith but rather the defender of all faiths. This seems like more than just semantics or a bending to the diversity, equity and inclusion agenda but instead a signalling of the diluting of unique values of Protestant Christianity that the Church of England is officially characterized. One could make the case that these values once served to provide a moral framework for Western societies which are now noticeably crumbling.

  • @jojanv
    @jojanv 2 года назад

    For LCiGB, same-gender marriages are decided per pastor and per congregation

  • @SeanWinters
    @SeanWinters Год назад

    303 churches is enough to be the third largest church in Scotland? I'm so disappointed in these islands, including Ireland. Y'all have been blessed by God, so much, what happened to you?!?

  • @jerrymartin3965
    @jerrymartin3965 4 дня назад

    It's good to talk about the different denominations in the UK, but never forget that England itself is now an Islamic Republic.

  • @pimagema2620
    @pimagema2620 2 года назад +3

    When will Protestants return to the faith of their ancestors, to the Roman Catholic Church, the Church founded by Christ and protected by the promises of Christ?

    • @jamiehayn
      @jamiehayn 2 года назад +3

      latin schismatic

    • @pimagema2620
      @pimagema2620 2 года назад +1

      @Jamiehayn
      The Church instituted by Christ cannot be schismatic.
      Churches created by men are schismatic.

    • @jamiehayn
      @jamiehayn 2 года назад +1

      @@pimagema2620 just as well that the Church instituted by Christ is the Orthodox Church

    • @pimagema2620
      @pimagema2620 2 года назад

      @Jamiehayn
      This is impossible, because there are several so-called Orthodox Churches, divided among them.
      For these Churches are too nationalistic, not Catholic (for all nations).
      They are therefore not faithful to the demands of Christ, the unity of disciples and disciples of all nations.

    • @k-v-d1795
      @k-v-d1795 2 года назад +1

      The church of the British Isles is the Orthodox Church. Churches and monasteries were brutalised and forced into the Latin rite after the Schism. You're not better than the protestants.

  • @shamrock1961
    @shamrock1961 2 года назад +26

    Calvin was a heretic!

    • @thursoberwick1948
      @thursoberwick1948 2 года назад +15

      Thanks for that wonderful "insight".

    • @fredroberts8275
      @fredroberts8275 5 месяцев назад +3

      Still coping.

    • @matthewsoules7193
      @matthewsoules7193 3 месяца назад +7

      You know Luther and Zwingli (and virtually all early reformers) had practically the same view on predestination as Calvin, right?
      “Calvinism” historically referred to Calvin’s view on the sacraments, a middle way of sorts between Zwingli and Luther.
      At least I’m assuming that’s why you’re calling him a heretic. The other reasons are usually that one is a Catholic or a Unitarian, neither of which are by and large Christian (definitely not, in the case of Unitarians).

    • @notyourtypicalcomment2399
      @notyourtypicalcomment2399 Месяц назад

      @@matthewsoules7193Catholics aren’t christians?

    • @samaldridge5283
      @samaldridge5283 Месяц назад +2

      Not the time. Not the place.

  • @romualdkowalewski4373
    @romualdkowalewski4373 Год назад

    All that heretics will burn in hell!

    • @darrylviljoen6227
      @darrylviljoen6227 Год назад

      Considering how many are right and everyone is wrong. Looks like everyone is going to hell.

  • @wardashimon-australia33
    @wardashimon-australia33 2 года назад

    The Gospel:
    Plain and
    Simple
    “But I fear, lest by any means, as the serpent
    beguiled Eve through his subtilty, so your
    minds should be corrupted from the simplicity
    that is in Christ.” - 2 Corithians 11:3
    Ask someone today if they are saved and
    you will most likely hear responses like these:
    “I have accepted Jesus into my heart.” Or “I
    have made him Lord of my life.” “I’ve been
    baptized.” “I said a prayer.” Sounds all good
    and churchy don’t it; but it is difficult to de-termine whether or not a person actually
    knows the gospel that saves them. These use￾less phrases don’t describe a thing about what
    the gospel is and has left a devastating effect
    of people not knowing what it is that they are
    saved from nor how they are saved; which
    leaves a more serious effect of people ques￾tioning their salvation.
    Let’s not muddy the simplicity of salva￾tion that is in Christ with vague church
    sounding phrases that do not communicate
    anything. But rather present God’s word with
    clarity and assuredness. So here is the gospel:
    plain and simple.
    Sin was passed upon all men by one man
    Adam, and death is a consequence of this sin
    (Rom 5:12). Mankind has an eternal destiny of
    condemnation and wrath - Hell - because of
    this sin (Rom 6:23). No matter what good
    works one might do we are still found sinners
    in the sight of our Creator God. And all un￾righteousness and those who follow get in￾dignation and wrath. We cannot be found
    righteous for by God’s law we are found sin￾ners (Rom 3:19-20). If we have broken even
    one law we are found guilty.
    It is for this reason of not being able to
    create our own righteousness and being born
    in a sinful flesh that we need a savior (Titus
    3:5). Christ is that Savior, God manifested in
    the flesh, sinless, died in our place on a cross
    2000 years ago. Taking upon him the wrath
    and judgement that was intended for us sin￾ners. And it is through his bloodshed, burial,
    and resurrection on our behalf that we are
    able to have peace with God and forgiveness
    of our sins (1 Cor 15:1-4, Col 3:14). This good
    news is unto all but only those that believe in
    it are made righteous in Christ (Romans
    3:22).
    It is then after we have heard this good
    news of Christ’s righteousness available to us freely, that we are sealed with the Holy Spirit
    and we are now part of Christ’s body the
    church (Eph 1:13)
    There is nothing that we need to do, no
    good works that are required, and no bad
    works that can separate us from our new po￾sition in Christ (Romans 8:35-39).
    Faith and belief in this information from
    God’s word is the gospel.
    The gospel is not accepting Jesus into your
    heart. The gospel is not making him lord of
    your life, it is not saying a prayer and it is not
    being baptized with water.
    So next time someone asks you if you are
    saved. Give them the clear assured answer
    “Yes! And let me tell you why!”
    Find more free resources at:
    www.graceambassadors.com

  • @francismcquade4620
    @francismcquade4620 Месяц назад

    Persecutors of the Irish people.