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The United Church of Canada/L'Église Unie du CanadaThe United Church was inaugurated on June 10, 1925 in Toronto when the Methodist Church, Canada, the Congregational Union of Canada, and 70 percent of The Presbyterian Church in Canada entered into a union.
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| 1829 | Methodist Book and Publishing House is founded in Toronto. |
| 1874 | Quebec Diocese of the Church of England appoints a committee to promote church union. |
| 1875 | Union of four sections of Presbyterianism into The Presbyterian Church in Canada. |
| 1884 | Union of four sections of Methodism into The Methodist Church (Canada). |
| 1885 | A proposal for discussion on church union in Canada originates from the Church of England (Anglican), with a conference on the subject held in 1886. |
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| 1902 | Formal union discussions begin among Congregational, Methodist, and Presbyterian churches. |
| 1904-08 | Representatives of uniting churches work on Basis of Union. |
| 1906 | Several Congregational Churches form the Congregational Union of Canada. |
| 1912 | Joint theological education begins among Anglicans, Presbyterians, Methodists, and Congregationalists in Montreal. |
| 1914 | World War I begins and church union efforts subside. |
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| 1921 | Canadian School of Missions begins (later the Ecumenical Forum) with the purpose to train people for overseas missions (Anglican, Methodist, Presbyterian, and later, Baptist). |
| 1925 | On June 10, in the Mutual St. Arena in Toronto, The United Church of Canada is formed by a union of Presbyterian, Methodist, Congregational, and the General Council of the Local Union Churches. |
| 1925-26 | 1st General Council, Toronto, Ontario, Moderator: The Right Rev. George C. Pidgeon. |
| 1926-28 | 2nd General Council, Montreal, Quebec, Moderator: The Right Rev. James Endicott. |
| 1925-29 | Congregations, colleges, and offices of the uniting churches merge. |
| 1928-30 | 3rd General Council, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Moderator: The Right Rev. William T. Gunn. |
| 1929 | The Depression begins. |
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| 1930s | Youth work develops with many different programs: Canadian Girls in Training, which had begun in 1915; Trail Rangers for boys 12 to 14; Tuxis Boys for 15 and up; and Older Boys Parliament. |
| 1930-32 | 4th General Council, London, Ontario, Moderator: The Right Rev. Edmund H. Oliver. |
| 1930 | Union with the Synod of The Wesleyan Methodist Church of Bermuda made it a presbytery of Maritime Conference. |
| 1932-34 | 5th General Council, Hamilton, Ontario, Moderator: The Right Rev. T. Albert Moore. |
| 1934 | Fellowship for a Christian Social Order (FCSO) is founded in Kingston, Ontario, as a "an association of Christians whose religious convictions led them to the belief that the capitalist economic system is fundamentally at variance with Christian principles; and who regard the creation of a new social order to be essential to the realization of the Kingdom of God." |
| 1935 | "On this its Tenth Anniversary, The United Church of Canada reaffirms before the world its faith in the ideals and principles which brought it into being. In the light of ten years' experience it has found these ideals to be eminently practicable in their out-working, and in the quest of them its members have found an enriched and deepened fellowship, human and divine. In a renewed conviction of the worth of inclusive Christian fellowship, The United Church of Canada enters its second decade, prepared, as the opportunity may offer and as God may direct, to seek with other Christian communions further development of its ideals, whether by increased co-operation, organic union, or otherwise, and so fulfill its purpose of being not merely a united, but a uniting church." |
| 1934-36 | 6th General Council, Kingston, Ontario, Moderator: The Right Rev. Richard Roberts. |
| 1936-38 | 7th General Council, Ottawa, Ontario, Moderator: The Right Rev. Peter Bryce. |
| 1936 |
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| 1937 | Baptists appoint a representative to United Church Publishing House to consult on Christian education materials. |
| 1938-40 |
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| 1939 |
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| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| 1940-42 | 9th General Council, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Moderator: The Right Rev. Aubrey S. Tuttle. |
| 1940 |
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| 1942-44 | 10th General Council, Belleville, Ontario, Moderator: The Right Rev. John R.P. Sclater. |
| 1942 | United Church resists pressure to support conscription. |
| 1943 | Anglicans in Canada mark their jubilee by inviting other denominations to union conversations. The United Church responds with willingness. |
| 1944-46 |
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| 1944 |
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| 1946-48 | 12th General Council, Montreal, Quebec, Moderator: The Right Rev. Thomas W. Jones. A commission is appointed on Canadian Culture. |
| 1946 | A joint proposal from United and Anglican churches on mutual ministry is issued. |
| 1948-50 | 13th General Council, Vancouver, British Columbia, Moderator: The Right Rev. Willard E. Brewing. |
| 1948 |
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| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| 1950-52 | 14th General Council, Toronto, Ontario, Moderator: The Right Rev. Clarence M. Nicholson. |
| 1950 | Reaffirmation of the 10th Anniversary Declaration on the 25th anniversary of church union. |
| 1952-54 |
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| 1954-56 | 16th General Council, Sackville, New Brunswick, Moderator: The Right Rev. George Dorey. |
| 1955-65 | Development of New Curriculum by the board of Christian Education (David Forsyth, Alvin Cooper, Frank Fidler) and the Board of Publication (Peter Gordon White, Wilbur K. Howard). |
| 1956-58 | 17th General Council, Windsor, Ontario, Moderator: The Right Rev. James S. Thomson. |
| 1958-60 |
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| 1959 | General Council Executive approves the New Curriculum theological and educational presuppositions in November. |
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| 1960-62 |
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| 1962-64 |
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| 1962 | Woman's Association and Woman's Missionary Society join to form United Church Women. |
| 1964 | A plan of union is proposed jointly by London Conference and the Anglican Diocese of Huron. |
| 1964-66 |
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| 1965 |
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| 1966-68 | 22nd General Council, Waterloo, Ontario, Moderator: The Right Rev. Wilfred C. Lockhart. |
| 1966 |
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| 1968 | The Rev. Ray Hord, secretary of Evangelism and Social Service, offers emergency aid to American Vietnam draft dodgers; General Council Executive disassociates itself from the decision but within two years it becomes church policy. |
| 1968-71 | 23rd General Council, Kingston, Ontario, Moderator: Dr. Robert B. McClure. |
| 1968 | January 1: Union with the Evangelical United Brethren is formalized. |
| 1969 | The Service Book is published. |
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| 1971-72 | 24th General Council. Niagara Falls, Ontario, Moderator: Right Reverend Arthur B.B. Moore. |
| 1971 |
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| 1972-74 | 25th General Council, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Moderator: The Right Rev. N. Bruce McLeod. |
| 1974-77 |
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| 1975 |
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| 1977-80 |
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| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| 1980-82 |
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| 1982-84 | 29th General Council, Montreal, Quebec, Moderator: The Right Rev. W. Clarke MacDonald. |
| 1982 | In Lima, Peru, theologians associated with the World Council of Churches issue a joint document of considerable faith consensus, Baptism, Eucharist and Ministry, and find agreement to celebrate Lord's Supper together (the Lima Liturgy). |
| 1984-86 | 30th General Council, Morden, Manitoba, Moderator: The Right Rev. Robert F. Smith. |
| 1985 | Union talks between United Church and Disciples of Christ end. |
| 1986-88 |
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| 1988-90 |
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| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| 1990-92 | 33rd General Council, London Ontario, marks 65 years of the United Church. Moderator: The Right Rev. Walter H. Farquharson. |
| 1992-94 | 34th General Council, Fredericton, New Brunswick elects The Right Rev. Stan McKay, a Native Canadian, as Moderator. |
| 1994-97 |
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| 1997-2000 |
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| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| 2000 | The United Church of Canada celebrates its 75th Anniversary. |
| 2000-03 |
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| 2001 | The General Council Executive authorizes a restructuring of the General Council Office. The work of the five Divisions and the Ethnic Ministries Council is subsequently re-apportioned to 11 "working units." |
| 2002 | The position of General Council Minister, Racial Justice, is created to assist the church to live out its commitment to becoming an anti-racist church and walking a new path toward reconciliation with Aboriginal peoples. |
| 2003 |
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| 2004 | The United Church's two-year education, advocacy, and fundraising initiative, the Beads of Hope Campaign, draws to a close. This highly successful campaign was launched in December 2002 as an emergency response to the global HIV-AIDS pandemic. In addition to raising awareness and advocating for changes to public policy, over $2.3 million dollars, more than twice the original goal set for the campaign, was raised. |
| 2005 |
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| 2006 |
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| 2007 | The United Church of Canada launches its United for Peace Campaign. The two-year campaign, which will focus on education, advocacy, and fundraising, set a financial goal of $2 million. Half of the monies raised will be designated to peacebuilding initiatives in Israel and Palestine, and the remainder will be used to support peace projects that are proposed by the United Church's partners in Canada and around the world. |
| 2008 |
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| 2009 |
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| 2010 |
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| 2011 |
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| 2012 |
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