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CONNECTING WITH THE METHODIST CHURCH IN SINGAPORE

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THE METHODIST CHURCH IN SINGAPORE

Founded in 1885, The Methodist Church in Singapore (MCS) is the largest Protestant denomination in Singapore. With 46 churches, 15 schools, missions and welfare agencies, MCS seeks to share the love of God and serve Him through the reaching out of people in the different stages of their lives, who may speak different languages and have different needs. Since its founding, MCS has contributed significantly to nation building especially in the areas of education and community work.
 

The MCS Vision
Love God by Loving our Neighbour

If you’re part of a local Methodist church, you are automatically a part of The Methodist Church in Singapore. This is connectionalism. We are all connected to each other as Methodists in Singapore. We are together as one, in spirit and purpose.

 

Mission Roots
MCS derives its beginnings from a missionary initiative of the South India Conference led by Dr James Thoburn in 1885. Its early foundations were laid by the Rev William F Oldham, who established the Methodist Mission and its first English language boys’ school in 1886. Together with two girls’ schools begun in 1887 and 1888, the Mission developed ministries in nearly all the local vernaculars, a medical clinic, and school hostels for foreign boys and homeless girls.
 

Thereafter, the Mission rapidly spread to the main towns of the Malayan Peninsula and Sarawak, where churches and the schools that were twinned with them provided a base for missionary outreach in English and the vernacular languages. Like most other missions, the Methodist Mission in Singapore and Malaya expanded and matured – first becoming a Conference, then Conferences spanning South-east Asia, and the establishment of the South-east Asian Central Conference in 1950. The Malaysian and Singapore components became autonomous in 1968, and thus became an Asian church with a Bishop who was elected from amongst its ministers. In 1976, the process was repeated when it was restructured into The Methodist Church in Singapore and The Methodist Church in Malaysia.
 

Church Structure
Reflecting Singapore’s multi-ethnic groups, MCS comprises the Chinese Annual Conference (CAC), Emmanuel Tamil Annual Conference (ETAC) and Trinity Annual Conference (TRAC). It is headed by a Bishop, elected at its General Conference. Each of the Annual Conferences is headed by a President.

 

Methodist churches, numbering 46 local churches with a membership of more than 44,000, represent one of the largest Protestant denominations and cater to all the languages used in the Republic: Chinese dialects such as Hokkien, Foochow, Hakka, Hinghwa, Teochew and Cantonese, as well as Bahasa, Tagalog, Mandarin, Tamil and English. Click here for a chart of MCS’s structure.

 

CAC comprises 17 churches with 15,004 members, ETAC comprises 8 churches with 869 members, and TRAC comprises 21 churches with 28,694 members.


A Minority Faith
As one of the major Protestant denominations in a society where Christians form a minority, MCS mission as a 21st Century Asian church can best be appreciated by noting its programme of outreach within the community and across the seas. It includes the Educational, Social, Missionary and an ongoing Ecumenical commitment.


Education
The Methodist schools represent the major educational thrust of the MCS. There are 14 primary and secondary schools and a junior college, as well as a School of Music serving around 21,000 students. We also have 10 preschools to cater for to a holistic Christian education in early childhood. For more than a century, they have played an important role in the human resource development of Singapore, and their efforts have been acknowledged within and outside the island Republic. Click here for links to the Methodist Schools.


Social and Missionary Outreach
In recent years, the most notable development, after education, has been in social and missionary outreach. This outreach has encompassed the care of the needy, the sick and the suffering not only in Singapore, but also in the region. The Methodist Welfare Services administers 20 service hubs for the elderly, families and children. These include two Nursing Homes (for the chronically ill and frail), a Welfare Home (MWS Christalite Methodist Home for the destitute) and one Girls' Residence.

 

Many social outreach programmes and institutions have also been established by local Methodist churches.

Alongside the social outreach programmes are initiatives in sending missionaries to work locally and internationally – like the Antioch of old. Many churches send missionaries throughout the world. The Methodist Missions Society coordinates missionary efforts in at least seven countries in the region.

 

Ecumenical Commitment
MCS recognises the importance of working with other Christian denominations in as many ways as possible, in strengthening Christian witness in a multi-racial and multi-religious society. It is a member of the National Council of Churches of Singapore. MCS is linked to the World Methodist Council as well as several other international Methodist bodies. An expression of MCS’s continued commitment to this vision is the support it gives to Trinity Theological College – a major theological seminary serving the region since 1948.

 

Beliefs
The Methodist Church holds much in common with other Christians: the primacy of Scripture, the necessity of salvation by grace through faith, and the sovereign care of the Triune God for the created world. Its particular emphases can be understood in reference to John Wesley, an 18th Century priest and reformer in the Church of England who became known as the father of Methodism. He developed a distinctive “method” for personal and social holiness. Click here for links to important doctrinal statements.
 

Source : The Methodist Church in Singapore

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