Philippines Central Conference (United Methodist Church)

Part of a series on
Methodism
John Wesley
  Methodism portal

The Philippines Central Conference of The United Methodist Church (or Kumperensya Sentral ng Pilipinas ng Nagkaisang Iglesya Metodista in Filipino) is a collections of Annual Conferences of The United Methodist Church located in the islands of the  Philippines are organized into central conference, much like Jurisdictional Conferences in the United States. The Philippines Central Conference is considered as member church in World Methodist Council, independent from The United Methodist Church in the United States just like all UMC's in each countries around the world). It is also member church of the Christian Conference of Asia and National Council of Churches in the Philippines as "The United Methodist Church in the Philippines", representing the denomination as its Philippine counterpart.

The Philippines Central Conference is further subdivided into twenty-two (22) regions, called Annual Conference, under the authorities of three Episcopal Areas. These Annual conference is subdivided into "Districts," which provide further administrative functions for the operation of local churches in cooperation with each other, under the supervision of the District Superintendent. This structure is vital to Methodism, and is referred to as "connectionalism".

The Philippines Central Conference has an professing membership of about 200,540, but it serves a much larger community of close to 1 million. From six annual conferences in 1968, The United Methodist Church in the Philippines has grown to 19 annual conferences located in three episcopal areas.[1] And now, with 24 Annual conferences.

Contents

History

The first Methodist presence on the islands was that of Rev. Maj. George C. Stull, a minister from the Montana Annual Conference, which was a part of the Methodist Episcopal Church. He originally went to the Philippines as the chaplain of the First Montana Regiment, and established the first ME church. In the Stull letter—a correspondence sent from Stull to his home conference for the annual conference—Stull enumerates several of his accomplishments since coming to the islands. Among them is the fact that he commissioned the first Filipino to preach using his "elder's privilege in an emergency."[2]

In 1908, the General Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church authorized the organization of the Philippine Islands Mission into the Philippine Islands Annual Conference, under the jurisdiction of the Southern Asia Central Conference.

The work in the Philippines grew quickly and in 1936, the General Conference enabled the organization of the Philippines Central Conference during the following quadrennium. This act was ratified at the 1939 Uniting Conference which created The Methodist Church. The first session of the Philippines Central Conference was held at the Central Methodist Church in Manila, beginning February 29, 1940.

Following years of growth, the 1960 General Conference approved a second episcopal area in the Philippines Central Conference: the Baguio Area (composed of the Northwest Philippines Annual Conference, the Northern Philippines Annual Conference, and the Mindanao Provisional Annual Conference) which joined the Manila Area (composed of the Philippines Annual Conference, Southwest Philippines Provisional Annual Conference, and the Middle Philippines Annual Conference). The 1984 General Conference mandated the addition of a third episcopal area, the Davao Area.

List of Episcopal Areas

The Philippines Episcopal Area

The Philippines Central Conference has three Episcopal Areas.

Baguio Episcopal Area [1] Bishop: to be supplied

114,583 Professing and Baptized Members, 639 Organized Churches, 38 Preaching Places, 310 Ordained Elders, 380 Local Pastors. The geographical areas covers 447,229 square kilometers.

Davao Episcopal Area Bishop: to be supplied

25,396 Professing and Baptized Members, 127 Ordained Clergy, 143 local Pastors, 201 Organized Churches, and 40 Preaching places. This Episcopal area covers an area of 3000,000 square Kilometers.

Manila Episcopal Area [2] Bishop Lito Cabacungan Tangonan

143,329 Professing and Baptized Members, 534 Organized churches, 208 Preaching places, 392 Ordained Elders, 360 local pastors. The geographical area covers around 300,000 square kilometers.

List of Annual Conferences

Baguio Episcopal Area

  1. Central Luzon Philippines Annual Conference
  2. North Central Philippines Annual Conference
  3. Northeast Philippines Annual Conference
  4. Northern Philippines Annual Conference
  5. Northwest Philippines Annual Conference
  6. Pangasinan Philippines Annual Conference
  7. Tarlac Philippines Annual Conference
  8. Northeast Luzon Philippines Annual Conference

Davao Episcopal Area

  1. East Mindanao Philippines Annual Conference
  2. Mindanao Philippines Annual Conference
  3. Northwest Mindanao Philippines Annual Conference
  4. Palawan Philippines Annual Conference
  5. Visayas Philippines Annual Conference

Manila Episcopal Area

  1. Bicol Philippines Provisional Annual Conference
  2. Bulacan Philippines Annual Conference[3]
  3. Middle Philippines Annual Conference
  4. Philippines Annual Conference
  5. Philippines Annual Conference East
  6. Pampanga Philippines Annual Conference
  7. West Middle Philippines Annual Conference
  8. Southwest Philippines Annual Conference
  9. Cavite Philippines Annual Conference
  10. Quezon City Philippines Annual Conference East
  11. Southern Tagalog Philippines Provisional Annual Conference East

Ministry Fellowships

In National level, it is known United Methodist Youth Fellowship in the Philippines (UMYFP) .[4]

In National level, United Methodist Young Adult Fellowship in the Philippines (UMYAFP)[5]

Other special group fellowships

See also

References

  1. ^ Mission + message = Filipino United Methodists
  2. ^ Minutes of the ... session of the Montana Annual Conference ...

External links