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Basis of Union (Presbyterian Church of Australia) : ウィキペディア英語版
Basis of Union (Presbyterian Church of Australia)

The Basis of Union of the Presbyterian Church of Australia is the document under which the constituent state churches agreed to unite at its first General Assembly on 24 July 1901, and is still a foundational text for the Uniting Church. The Basis of Union appears in Acts of Parliament concerning the Presbyterian Church of Australia.〔For example, the (Presbyterian Church of Australia Act 1900 ) in Victoria (and similarly other states), and the (Presbyterian Church of Australia Act 1971 ) in Queensland (and similarly other states).〕
==Background==
At the turn of the twentieth century, every Australian state had its own Presbyterian church, formed from unions in the nineteenth century. According to Ian Breward, in 1879, "leading Presbyterians in the eastern colonies began exploring the possibilities of meeting in federal assemblies."〔Ian Breward, “The Presbyterian Churches and Federation,” ''Proceedings of the Uniting Church Historical Society'' 8 (2001), 63.〕 The Federal Assembly of the Presbyterian Churches of Australia and Tasmania was formed in 1886, as a means of drawing the constituent churches closer together.〔Rowland S. Ward, ''The Bush Still Burns'' (Wantirna: R. S. Ward, 1989), 270.〕 The involvement of New Zealand, seemed a possibility for a time, but then fell through.〔Allan and Mairi Harman, ''Australian Presbyterian History with its Scottish and Irish Background'' (Melbourne: PTC, 2003), 126.〕
The union of 1901 was nationwide and federal. The 19th century presbyterian unions in the Australian states had all constituted an organic union of denominations from separate traditions, even though they shared a common doctrinal standard. This union, however, involved churches of the same denomination in different locations. Alexander Yule could say on the eve of the Union that it was "not the healing of a schism, nor the removal of an inherited division, like the recent Presbyterian Union in Scotland."〔Rev. Alexander Yule, Discourse to the Final Session of the Federal Assembly, 1901.〕
The individual state churches also kept their individual identities and retained many of their rights and privileges. F. Maxwell Bradshaw has argued that the loss of the continued identity of the state churches, "would lead to immense and far reaching legal difficulties."〔F. Maxwell Bradshaw, ''Basic Documents on Presbyterian Polity'' (Location unknown: Christian Education Committee of the Presbyterian Church of Australia, 1984), 101.〕
R. Gordon Balfour notes that the purpose of union was to give greater uniformity to ecclesiastical procedure and worship, a united effort in missionary work, and "common action on great public questions."〔R. Gordon Balfour, ''Presbyterianism in the Colonies'' (Edinburgh: MacNiven and Wallace, 1900), 106.〕
The declaratory statement in the Basis of Union is modelled on the 1879 Declaratory Act of the United Presbyterian Church in Scotland, as well as the 1882 Declaratory Act of the Presbyterian Church of Victoria.〔F. Maxwell Bradshaw, ''Basic Documents on Presbyterian Polity'' (Location unknown: Christian Education Committee of the Presbyterian Church of Australia, 1984), 93.〕〔David Burke and Philip J. Hughes, ''The Presbyterians in Australia'', Australian Government Publishing Service, 1996, ISBN 0-644-35805-X, p. 10.〕 However, while the Declaratory Act of 1882 mentions examples of possible points of doctrine on which liberty of opinion is allowed - such as the interpretation of the "six days" in the Genesis creation narrative - the declaratory statement in the Basis of Union provides no such example.〔Rowland S. Ward, ''The Bush Still Burns'' (Wantirna: R. S. Ward, 1989), 281.〕

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