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Badley family
Família

The Badley family have a long history of missionary service in the Methodist Epsicopal Church and the Methodist Church. There are three individuals who exemplify this commitment. They are Brenton Hamline Badley, Brenton Thoburn Badley, and Theodore Charles Badley.

Brenton Hamline Badley (1849-1891), Missionary, was born in Monmouth, Indiana on April 27, 1849. He was the son of the Reverend Arthur Badley who served in the Des Moines Annual Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church. Brenton married Mary Margaret Anna Scott on August 8, 1872, and joined the Des Moines Annual Conference in September of that same year. Badley was transferred to the North India Annual Conference and arrived in India in December of 1872, where he was appointed to the city of Lucknow. Within six months he preached his first venacular sermon, and went on to spend the next four years in rural evangelism. He then returned to Lucknow where he served the remainder of his life. The development of the Centennial Boys School into Reid Christian College, now Lucknow Christian College, was his greatest accomplishment. Mr. Badley went on to write numerous books and articles on Indian Missions for a variety of American publications, and prepared the Indian Missionary Directory in 1876. Brenton Hamline Badley died in 1891.

Brenton Thoburn Badley (1876-1949), Bishop and Missionary, was born in United Provinces, India on May 29, 1876, the son of Brenton Hamline Badley. In 1900, after completing his course studies, he traveled as a Methodist missionary to India, where he worked as a professor at Lucknow for ten years. Badley then served as Secretary of the Epworth League for India and Burma, as well as Associate Secretary of the Board of Foreign Missions of the Methodist Episcopal Church from 1917-1919. The Central Conference of Southern Asia elected him editor of its weekly publication "The Indian Witness" in January of 1924. Before serving in that capacity he went to the General Conference in Springfield, Massachusetts, where in May of 1924 he was elected bishop. He supervised the Bombay, Gujarat, Hyderabad, and South India Annual Conferences as his first assignment. Later, he was moved to Delhi, and spent four years supervising the Delhi, North India and Indus River Conferences, the latter of which was eventually put into the Bombay Annual Conference. He authored many articles in America and India, and wrote twelve books before his death at Mirzapore, India, on February 1, 1949.

Theodore Charles Badley (1879-1965), Missionary and Christian Educator, was born in Lucknow, India in 1879, the son of Brenton Hamline Badley, and the brother of Brenton Thoburn Badley. He was married to Clara Nelson in 1904. After the two arrived in Lucknow, Badley became a teacher at Lucknow Christian College. Later, he became Secretary of the Council of Christian Education, where he endeavored to upgrade Methodist educational institutions throughout India. Badley became the Delhi superintendent before retiring to Claremont, California, where he died on June 21, 1965.

Church of the United Brethren in Christ (New constitution)
Pessoa coletiva

The Church of the United Brethren in Christ began with the preaching of Philip William Otterbein and Martin Boehm in the 1760's. At a 1789 conference at the parsonage of Philip William Otterbein, in Baltimore, Maryland, Otterbein and his lay ministers gave simple organization to the fellowship which had been holding sporadic conferences since 1774. On September 25, 1800 at a meeting of William Philip Otterbein, Martin Boehm, and other lay ministers at the home of Peter Kemp in Maryland, the church was formally organized. At this meeting Martin Boehm and William Philip Otterbein were elected bishops and the name, "Church of the United Brethren in Christ" was chosen. In 1815, the first General Conference was held near Mount Pleasant, Pennsylvania. At this Conference a Discipline, a Confession of Faith, and a form of church government were approved. A second General Conference was held June 2, 1817, at Mount Pleasant, Pennsylvania. This conference improved the Discipline, elected two Bishops, formed a third Annual Conference, and arranged for quadrennial sessions of the General Conference.

In 1841 a Constitution was adopted. When the General Conference of 1889 attempted to change the Constitution a small minority led by Bishop Milton Wright walked out of the Conference and formed their own General Conference. They claimed to represent the Church holding to the original intent of the Discipline of 1841, especially in reference to its opposition to secret societies. The issue was brought to court. The court ruled against the splinter group and ordered them to take a new name. They called themselves the Church of the United Brethren in Christ (Old Constitution). The original group became known as the Church of the United Brethren in Christ (New Constitution).

In 1946, the Church of the United Brethren in Christ merged with the Evangelical Church to form the Evangelical United Brethren Church. In 1968, the Evangelical United Brethren Church merged with the Methodist Church to become the United Methodist Church.