The Great Commission church movement is a broad term used to describe the entities associated with an evangelical Christian movement formalized in the USA in 1970. The largest of these organizations today is Great Commission Churches (GCC). Other associated organizations include Great Commission Ministries, Great Commission Latin America, and Great Commission Europe . The movement has grown in size and scope through its focus on church planting in the United States and abroad. Between 1978 and 1994, the movement attracted criticism for alleged authoritarian practices and a high degree of control over members . GCC formally acknowledged these criticisms in 1991 . GCC is a member of the National Association of Evangelicals, and one or more organization within the movement has continuously been a part of the Evangelical Council for Financial Accountability since 1992.
| Property | Value |
| dbpedia-owl:foundationperson
| |
| dbpedia-owl:keyPerson
| |
| dbpedia-owl:keyPersonPosition
| - Herschel Martindale
John Hopler Rick Whitney Dave Bovenmeyer Tom Short Mark Darling Brent Knox Chris Martin Dennis Clark
|
| dbpedia-owl:location
| |
| p:abstract
| - The Great Commission church movement is a broad term used to describe the entities associated with an evangelical Christian movement formalized in the USA in 1970. The largest of these organizations today is Great Commission Churches (GCC). Other associated organizations include Great Commission Ministries, Great Commission Latin America, and Great Commission Europe . The movement has grown in size and scope through its focus on church planting in the United States and abroad. Between 1978 and 1994, the movement attracted criticism for alleged authoritarian practices and a high degree of control over members . GCC formally acknowledged these criticisms in 1991 . GCC is a member of the National Association of Evangelicals, and one or more organization within the movement has continuously been a part of the Evangelical Council for Financial Accountability since 1992. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; refs with no name must have contentCite error: Invalid <ref> tag; refs with no name must have content (en)
|
| p:areaServed
| |
| p:focus
| |
| p:foundedDate
| - 1965 with no official name
1970 as The Blitz Movement
1983 as Great Commission International
1989 as Great Commission Association of Churches
2005 as Great Commission Churches (en)
|
| p:founder
| |
| p:hasPhotoCollection
| |
| p:homepage
| |
| p:keyPeople
| |
| p:language
| |
| p:location
| |
| p:nonProfitName
| - Great Commission Churches (en)
|
| p:nonProfitSlogan
| - New Testament Christianity In Action Today (en)
|
| p:nonProfitType
| |
| p:numMembers
| |
| p:origins
| |
| p:wikiPageUsesTemplate
| |
| rdf:type
| |
| rdfs:comment
| - The Great Commission church movement is a broad term used to describe the entities associated with an evangelical Christian movement formalized in the USA in 1970. The largest of these organizations today is Great Commission Churches (GCC). Other associated organizations include Great Commission Ministries, Great Commission Latin America, and Great Commission Europe . The movement has grown in size and scope through its focus on church planting in the United States and abroad. Between 1978 and 1994, the movement attracted criticism for alleged authoritarian practices and a high degree of control over members . GCC formally acknowledged these criticisms in 1991 . GCC is a member of the National Association of Evangelicals, and one or more organization within the movement has continuously been a part of the Evangelical Council for Financial Accountability since 1992. (en)
|
| rdfs:label
| - Great Commission church movement (en)
|
| owl:sameAs
| |
| skos:subject
| |
| foaf:homepage
| |
| foaf:page
| |
| is p:redirect
of | |
| is owl:sameAs
of | |