Fellowship of Christian Assemblies
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The Fellowship of Christian Assemblies (FCA) is a pentecostal Christian association with roots in a revival during the 1890's among the Scandinavia Baptist and Pietist communities in the United States.
In 1907 most of those congregations that experienced revival (many named Guds forsamling - Assembly of God in Norsk) learned about the Pentecostal movement through William H. Durham Mission in Chicago. One of his assistant elders, F. A. Sandgren, published the Folke-Vennena a periodical for Scandinavians, and consequently many Midwest churches joined the Pentecostal movement.
The early Scandinavian Pentecostalism was marked by a congregationalist church government, which led to an isolation from the other Pentecostal groups in North America, and the formation of loose networks, such the Fellowship of Christian Assemblies and the Independent Assemblies of God, International.
Though sharing some common background in the Pentecostal movement, the Fellowship of Christian Assemblies should be distinguished as a separate body from the Assemblies of God.
[edit] References
- Handbook of Denominations in the United States, by Frank S. Mead, Samuel S. Hill, and Craig D. Atwood