North Carolina Annual Conference

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Part of a series on
Methodism
John Wesley George Whitefield

Background
Christianity
Protestantism
Pietism
Anglicanism
Arminianism
Wesleyanism
Calvinism

Doctrinal distinctives
Articles of Religion
Prevenient Grace
Governmental Atonement
Imparted righteousness
Christian perfection

People
Richard Allen
Francis Asbury
Thomas Coke
Albert C. Outler
James Varick
Charles Wesley
Bishops
Theologians

Largest groups
World Methodist Council
United Methodist Church
AME Church
AME Zion Church
Church of the Nazarene
British Methodist Church
CME Church
Uniting Church in Australia

Related movements
Moravian Church

Holiness movement
Salvation Army
Personalism
Pentecostalism

Christianity Portal

This box: view  talk  edit

The North Carolina Conference is an Annual Conference (a regional episcopal area, similar to a diocese) of the United Methodist Church. This conference serves the eastern half of the state of North Carolina, with its administrative offices and the office of the bishop located in Raleigh, North Carolina. It is part of the Southeastern Jurisdictional Conference. The bishop is the Reverend Alfred W. Gwinn

The North Carolina Conference provides funding to three institutions of higher learning:

[edit] Districts

The NC Annual Conference is further subdivided into 12 smaller regions, called "districts," which provide further administrative functions for the operation of local churches in cooperation with each other. This structure is vital to Methodism, and is referred to as connectionalism. The Districts that comprise the North Carolina Conference are:

  • Burlington [4]
  • Durham [5]
  • Elizabeth City [6]
  • Fayetteville [7]
  • Goldsboro [8]
  • Greenville
  • New Bern [9]
  • Raleigh [10]
  • Rockingham [11]
  • Rocky Mount [12]
  • Sanford
  • Wilmington [13]

[edit] See also

[edit] External links