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St. Luke's United Church of Christ

125 North Main Street
215-699-9342

About Us:

The United Church of Christ (UCC) is a progressive Protestant tradition with roots in colonial America. The founders of St. Luke’s first gathered in 1776 in what became the borough of North Wales. We have worshipped in our present location since 1865.

The UCC came into being in 1957 with the union of two Protestant denominations: the Evangelical and Reformed Church and the Congregational Christian Churches. Each of these was, in turn, the result of a union of two earlier denominations.

The Congregational Churches were organized when the Pilgrims of Plymouth Plantation (1620) and the Puritans of Massachusetts Bay Colony (1629) acknowledged their unity. The Christian Churches sprang up in the late 1700s and early 1800s in reaction to the organizational rigidity of the Methodist, Presbyterian and Baptist churches of the time.

The Reformed Church in the United States, formally organized in 1725, grew from congregations among German settlers in Pennsylvania. The Evangelical Synod of North American traced its beginning to an association of German Evangelical pastors in Missouri founded in 1840.

St. Luke’s United Church of Christ is a small congregation that strives to know God’s will for us in a complicated world. We know each other and care about each other. And we care about those beyond our church family—our next door neighbors and our neighbors around the world—who face challenges in their lives.

We come from a variety of religious traditions—and no religious background at all. Whether younger or older, we recognize that spiritual nurture is important to our life journeys. As we share and respond to each other’s spiritual needs, each of us grows in our own way as well. For oldsters, youngsters and in-between-sters, St. Luke’s is a safe place to explore how God is meaningful in each of our lives.

We encourage people to use their talents in ways that are meaningful to them. When people are interested in launching an activity or ministry, we help them ‘go for it.’ These range from creating personal hygiene kits for disaster victims around the world to providing creative activities for children’s spiritual nurture to exploring ideas in a study group to . . .

At St. Luke’s we meet God through worship, prayer, study, fellowship and service. All these lead us to practice Jesus’ commandment, “Love God with all your heart, soul, mind, and strength; and your neighbor as yourself.”


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