Encyclopedia > Christian Unity Baptist Association
The Christian Unity Baptist Association was organized September 27-28, 1935 at Zion Hill Church in Ashe County, North Carolina, by six Baptist congregations. Some of these churches were remnants of the Macedonia Baptist Association, which existed for a short time in the first quarter of the 20th century. These churches had a mixed Missionary Baptist and Primitive Baptist background. Leaders in this new organization included Frank Sturgill, F. Carl Sturgill, and Nancy Owens.
Though the Christian Unity Association shared much in common with fellow mountain Baptists, they differed from the majority of them in three important points: (1) falling from grace; (2) open communion; and (3) women preachers. Two women preached at the organizational meeting.
The Christian Unity Baptist Association is defunct. This body divided in 1969, and the majority chose to affiliate with the General Association of Separate Baptists. The minority represented continuity with the original constitution and articles of faith. The two surviving churches from that fellowship (Zion Hill & Hooks Branch in Va.), with a combined membership of about 50, no longer hold an associational structure.
External links
Christian Unity Baptist Association (http://www.ls.net/~newriver/nrv/cuba.htm)
Christian Unity Assn Obituaries (http://www.ls.net/~newriver/obit/cubobit1.htm)
Christian Unity Separate Baptist Association (http://www.separatebaptist.org/Associations.htm)
In 1801 in Kentucky, two disparate groups of Baptists, the Regular Baptists and the Separate Baptists, adjusted their differences and merged to be called United Baptists.
A division of the ChristianUnityBaptistAssociation (org.
Separate Baptists also differ from the main body of Baptists by being more Arminian in persuasion, believing "that he who endures to the end, the same shall be saved" rather than the more common view of eternal security.
The ChristianUnityBaptistAssociation was organized September 27-28, 1935 at Zion Hill Church in Ashe County, North Carolina, by six Baptist congregations.
Some of these churches were remnants of the Macedonia BaptistAssociation, which existed for a short time in the first quarter of the 20th century.
Though the ChristianUnityAssociation shared much in common with fellow mountain Baptists, they differed from the majority of them in three important points: (1) falling from grace; (2) open communion; and (3) women preachers.