Presbyterian Church in Canada Arcola Presbytery
- SCAA-UCCS-0060
- Entidade coletiva
- ca.1905–1925
Presbyterian Church in Canada Arcola Presbytery
Presbyterian Church in Canada Assiniboia Presbytery
Presbyterian Church in Canada Battleford Presbytery
Presbyterian Church in Canada Kamsack Presbytery
Presbyterian Church in Canada Kindersley Presbytery
Presbyterian Church in Canada Moose Jaw Presbytery
Presbyterian Church in Canada Prince Albert Presbytery
Presbyterian Church in Canada Qu'Appelle Presbytery
Presbyterian Church in Canada Saskatoon Presbytery
Presbyterian Church in Canada Weyburn Presbytery
Methodist Woman’s Missionary Society, Saskatchewan Branch
Presbyterian Woman’s Missionary Society, Synod of Saskatchewan
United Church Woman's Missionary Society (W.M.S.), Saskatchewan Branch
The United Church of Canada was created in 1925, from the union of Presbyterian, Methodist, Congregationalist and Local Union churches. The women’s organizations from the uniting denominations at the time included: the Canada Congregational Woman's Board of Missions (mostly in eastern Canada, since 1886); the Women’s Missionary Society of the Methodist Church (founded 1876); the Woman's Missionary Society of the Presbyterian Church in Canada, Eastern Division (founded 1825) and Western Division (founded 1876); along with their various corresponding regional and local units. Soon after union, these became national, regional and local units of the United Church of Canada Woman’s Missionary Society (W.M.S.).
The new Society had its first annual meeting in 1926. Like the earlier societies, it brought the message of missions before the entire community of the Church, while offering financial support and personnel to its own wide mission programme.
In 1962, United Church W.M.S. and W.A. organizations across the country amalgamated to form the United Church Women (U.C.W.). Presbyterial and local groups developed along similar lines to national bodies, becoming local and presbyterial U.C.W. units in January 1962.
Frank Hoffman was a Presbyterian and later United Church minister and missionary to Hungarians in Saskatchewan. He was born in Hungary, in 1877, the son of a Calvinist pastor. He taught agriculture and assisted the Hungarian Lieutenant-Governor until World War I, when he became an officer in the Hungarian National Guard. After being captured by the Russians, Frank Hoffman escaped to Canada. He studied at Manitoba College and was ordained as a Presbyterian minister in 1922. He served as a home missionary to Hungarians in Saskatchewan from 1925 to 1945, then retired and moved to Vancouver Island. He died in October 1958.
General Council of Local Union Churches of Western Canada
In 1908, the Basis of Union was formulated that would eventually lead to the creation of the United Church of Canada in 1925. Coinciding with this spirit of unity, the first Union church (Presbyterian and Methodist) was set up in Melville, Saskatchewan in 1908, followed a short time later by the church in Frobisher. In 1912, a committee of Union Churches approached the national church courts of the Presbyterian, Methodist, and Congregational denominations in order to seek affiliation with the parent churches. This committee formed the nucleus of what would become the General Council of Union Churches of Western Canada. An Advisory Council, with representatives of the Union Churches and the parent churches, was established in 1914 as a means of creating the sought after link between the Union Churches and the parent churches.