Biography:Caribbean Conference of Churches
From HandWiki
The Caribbean Conference of Churches is a regional ecumenical body with 33 member churches in 34 territories across the Dutch, English, French and Spanish speaking territories of the Caribbean.[1] It was founded in 1973 and is based in Port-of-Spain, Trinidad.[2]
The CCC grew out of the work of the Christian Action for Development in the Caribbean (CADEC) and the Action for the Renewal of the Churches (ARC).[3]
Member churches and organizations are made of Christians from the Catholic, Protestant and Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church (Archdiocese of the Caribbean and Latin America) denominations.[4]
Member Churches
- African Methodist Episcopal (AME)
- Assemblea Nacional Presbyteriana de Cuba
- Eglise De Dieu (Ebenezer) - Haiti
- Ejercito de Salvacion - Cuba
- Evangelical Lutheran Church - Caribbean Synod
- Evangelical Lutheran Church in Suriname
- Fraternidad Bautista - Cuba
- Iglesia Cristiana Pentecostal - Cuba
- Iglesia Episcopal de Cuba
- Iglesia Episcopal Dominicana
- Iglesia Evangelica Dominicana
- Iglesia Metodista Unida de Puerto Rico
- Iglesia Metodista de Cuba
- Iglesia Reformada Unida de Cuba
- Maronite Church - Dominica
- Presbytery of Guyana
- Maronite Church - Guyana
- Salvadoran Lutheran Church
- The Antilles Episcopal Conference (Roman Catholic) - Regional
- The Church in the Province of the West Indies (Anglican)
- The Congregational Union of Guyana
- The Ethiopian Orthodox Church - Regional
- The Jamaica Baptist Union
- The Lutheran Church in Guyana
- The Methodist Church in the Caribbean and the Americas
- The Moravian Church - East West Indies Province
- The Moravian Church - Jamaica
- The Moravian Church - Suriname
- The Moravian Church - Guyana
- The Presbyterian Church of Trinidad and Tobago
- The Presbyterian Church of Guyana
- The Presbyterian Church in Grenada
- The Reformed Church - Suriname
- The Salvation Army
- The United Church of Jamaica & Grand Cayman
- The United Protestant Church of Curaçao
References
- ↑ Global Ministries website, Partners section, Caribbean Conference of Churches, retrieved 2023-12-12
- ↑ Brill Online website, International Year Book and Statesmen's Who's Who, retrieved 2023-12-12
- ↑ World Council of Churches website, Caribbean Conference of Churches
- ↑ Union Between Christians website, Caribbean Conference of Churches 2021
External links