Also called DISSENTER, or FREE CHURCHMAN, any English
Protestant who does not conform to the doctrines or practices of the established
Church of England. The word Nonconformist was first used in the penal acts
following the Restoration of the monarchy (1660) and the Act of Uniformity
(1662) to describe the conventiclers (places of worship) of the congregations
that had separated from the Church of England (Separatists). Nonconformists
are also called dissenters (a word first used of the five Dissenting Brethren
at the Westminster Assembly of Divines in 1643-47). Because of the movement
begun in the late 19th century by which Nonconformists of different denominations
joined together in the Free Church Federal Council, they are also called
Free Churchmen.
The term Nonconformist is generally applied in
England and Wales to all Protestants who have dissented from Anglicanism--Baptists,
Congregationalists, Presbyterians, Methodists, and Unitarians--and also
to independent groups such as the Quakers, Plymouth Brethren, English Moravians,
Churches of Christ, and the Salvation Army. In Scotland, where the established
church is Presbyterian, members of other churches, including Anglicans,
are considered Nonconformists.
Copyright 1994-1998 Encyclopaedia Britannica
Academic
Year 00-01
07/02/2001
©a.r.e.a.
Dr. Vicente Forés López
©Ana
Aroa Alba Cuesta
Universitat
de València Press