- James O'Kelly
James O'Kelly (born 1735; died
October 16 ,1826 ) was an American clergyman during theSecond Great Awakening and an important figure in the early history ofMethodism in America. Affiliated with theMethodist Episcopal Church from its organization at the Christmas Conference in 1784, O'Kelly, who favored the congregationalist system of church polity, came to oppose the church's system of centralized episcopal authority, which he believed infringed on the freedom of preachers. At the 1792 General Conference of the Methodist Church he introduced a resolution that would allow clergy more freedom in determining their assignments. The resolution was defeated. In protest, O'Kelly withdrew from the denomination and with his supporters founded theRepublican Methodist Church , later known simply as the Christian Church, or "Connection", which merged with theCongregational churches in 1931 to form theCongregational Christian Churches . This body, in turn, merged with theGerman-American Evangelical and Reformed Church in 1957 to form the presentUnited Church of Christ .See also
*
Methodist New Connexion in Britain.
*Kilgore, Charles Franklin. "The James O'Kelly Schism in the Methodist Episcopal Church", 1963.
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