'Denominationalism' is the division of a religion into separate
religious denominations. The term is particularly used in reference to the various
Protestant schools of thought. Some such denominations are:
★ The
Adventists
★ The
Anabaptists
★ The
Baptists
★ The
Congregationalists
★ The
Lutherans
★ The
Methodists
★ The
Pentecostals
★ The
Presbyterians
★ The
Reformed
Some denomination-like groups do not view themselves as such, as they consider themselves more a "
communion" than a denomination. Examples include:
★ The
Anglican Communion
★ The
Church of Christ
★ The
Eastern Orthodox churches
★ The
Roman Catholic Church
Many Christians view denominationalism as a regrettable fact. The current trend as of
2005 is that the divisions are becoming less sharp, and there is an increasing cooperation between denominations. (See
denomination for a distinction between ''denomination'' and ''association'' in religious governance.)
For an
American example, despite historically deep differences in their respective theologies, few lay members of the
United Methodist Church and the
United Presbyterian Church could give an account of what those differences are. It is likely that laypeople from one denomination who attended a worship service of the other would find themselves in a mostly familiar environment. A far deeper divide, one that encompasses theological, cultural, and language differences, divides the
neo-evangelical members of the
Confessing Church movement in either denomination from the adherents of
liberal Christianity. This division, though, exists in both denominations; and it is likely that members on either side of the inter-denominational line would have more in common with their counterparts in the other than they do with those on the other side of that line within the same denomination.
Theological 'denominationalism' ultimately denies reality to any apparent doctrinal differences among the "denominations", reducing all differences to mere matters ''de nomina''--"of names".
A denomination in this sense is created when part of a church no longer feel they can accept the leadership of that church as a spiritual leadership due to a different view of doctrine or what they see as immoral behaviour, but the schism does not in any way reflect either group leaving the Church as a theoretical whole.
This particular doctrine is, of course, unacceptable to those
Christian groups that see themselves as being the "
One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church" as a whole. This includes the
Eastern Orthodox, the
Roman Catholics, the
Oriental Orthodox Communion, and the
Anglican Communion each of which claims to be the exclusive "Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church". In these denominations, it is not possible to have a separation over doctrinal or leadership issues, and any such attempts automatically are a type of
schism.