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HISTORY In the early 1900's, Fred Woerner came to Christ through the preaching
of A.B.Simpson,
the founder of the Christian and Missionary Alliance, at the New
York Gospel Tabernacle. He later moved his family to Elberta, Alabama.
In 1910 Fred and his wife, Emma, started a Sunday School on their
front porch for their seventeen children and others in the area.
In1912 Dr. R.A. Forrest, who was at the time Superintendent of
the Southeastern District, came to Elberta. He named the group
the Elberta Gospel Tabernacle. This was the first C&MA church
in Alabama. The group grew for the next fourteen years and finally
outgrew the front porch. They rented a one-room schoolhouse and
met there for the next forty years.
Many of the Woerner children and their offspring remained in this
small farming
community and the Elberta Alliance Church became a family church.
From this church
came many missionaries, pastors, pastor's wives and many others
who are today in full-
time Christian service.
The first C&MA church in the state of Tennessee came about
in 1912 when a group of
devout Christian ladies began meeting in one of their homes. It
is rumored that Dr. A.B.
Simpson sent two of these early organizers to Memphis from the
New York Gospel
Tabernacle with the express purpose of starting a work in Memphis.
In any event, they continued to meet in homes. Their first public
service was conducted on Sunday afternoons at the Y. W.C.A. They
also held meetings in a tent on a vacant lot in town.
Dr. Forrest came to Memphis in 1921 for the purpose of organizing
an official C&MA
church. With the help of Dr. Forrest, they adopted a constitution
and established the by-
laws and the official charter was signed in October, 1921 and the
organization was named
the Gospel Tabernacle.
In 1928, Dr. Forrest met with Rev. Glenn V. Tingley in Texas and
asked him to come and
be the pastor of a church in Ensley, Alabama, which he did. In
1934, when the city of Birmingham was recovering from an influenza
epidemic that virtually shut down all church services in the area,
Rev. Tingley, who himself was recovering from a very bad case of
the flu, felt the need to reach out to the city so he went to Birmingham
Broadcasting Company and asked for time to preach. He was given
a thirty minute time spot on Sunday afternoon with the promise
that as long as he paid each week he could stay on the air. This
was the beginning of” Radio Revival" that stayed on
the air until the early 1980's. He also began another 'Radio Revival'
in Chattanooga that stayed on the air for fifty-six years through
the preaching of Rev. T. Perry Brannon.
As a result of the broadcast, in one year's time, a large Tabernacle
had been built, a staff
of outstanding ability assembled, and debts paid. The first anniversary
celebration was
held at the Municipal Auditorium which was packed with 6,000 friends.
At that time Mr. Tingley reported the organization of The Birmingham
Gospel Tabernacle with 234 members.
In 1934 Rev. Tingley spoke at Legion Field to over 10,000 people.
It was reported that
this was the largest religious meeting ever in the city. As a result
of tent meetings held in various places around the outskirts of
Birmingham and other cities, Mr. Tingley started thirteen 'Gospel
Tabernacles'.
For the next ninety-two years God worked throughout the Southern
District through
the prayers, sweat and tears of many wonderfully dedicated Christian
men and women as
Christian and Missionary Alliance churches sprang up from the mountains
of Tennessee to the white sand beaches of Florida; from the cotton
fields of Mississippi to the steel mills and coal mining of north
Alabama to the wire grass areas of south Alabama, and into the
bayou country of Louisiana.
1910- Elberta Alliance Church now Genesis-a church of new beginnings
1912- Bartlett Life Center
1920- Amory First Alliance
1928- Birmingham Gospel Tabernacle now Vestavia Alliance Church
whose high
attendance was 1234 in
1932- Eastlake Alliance Church now Brewster Road Alliance Church
1933- Prattville Alliance Church
1934- Bessemer First Alliance now at McCalla
1936- Gadsden Alliance Church now Parkway Community Church
1936- Chattanooga First Alliance
1937- West End Alliance Church, later Westside Alliance, merged
with Vestavia in
1937- Ensley Alliance, Pensacola
1938- Hamilton Alliance
1939- Sandusky Gospel Tabernacle now Forestdale Community Church
1940- Oneonta Alliance now Grace Fellowship
1943 Talladega Alliance now The Community Church of The C&MA
1945- Oak Ridge Alliance Church begun at the time when America
was building
the core for the Atomic bomb in Oak Ridge that was dropped on Hiroshima
that ended WWII
1945- Pensacola First Alliance now the Vietnamese Alliance Church
1948- Lillian Alliance Church now Cornerstone Bible Church
1953- Clay Alliance Church now Clay Christian Fellowship
1956- Mt. Olive Alliance Church
1957- West End Tabernacle affiliated with C&MA 1977
1964- Huntsville First Alliance
1970- Heritage Bible Church affiliated with the C&MA 1982
1978- Franklin Community Church
1979- Johnson City Alliance Church
1984- Elizabethton Alliance Church I
1987- Clarksville Alliance Church now Fairhaven Church
1989- Christ Alliance Church, Marianna, Florida
1989- Jasper Alliance Church
1993- North River Alliance Church, Chattanooga
1993- Fellowship Alliance Church, Fountain, Florida
2000- Historic St. Andrew, Panama City, Florida
As a result of coming to Christ through the preaching of Glenn
Tingley, a drunkard,
Jimmie Hale, was called to help those who were as he was before
he became 'a new
creature in Christ Jesus' and started the Jimmie Hale Mission that
is still to this day
meeting the needs of the addicted and homeless of Birmingham. Mr.
Hale's widow,
Jessie Hale Downs, carried on his work after his death and is still
active at the mission and at Jessie's Place, a place for homeless
women.
In the late 1920's Rev. Vernon Hozey was responsible for the beginning
of the Waterfront
Mission in Pensacola, Florida. It is still serving the homeless
there.
In 1977, Ralph Woerner left full-time ministry to answer the call
of God to begin Gospel
Publishing to send out 'The Messenger' to as many in the Birmingham
area as possible.
He carried on the work there until his retirement at which time
his son-in-law, Rev.
Ronald Mitchell, became president and is still carrying on the
work that God called Ralph
to do. Although he was no longer in a church as minister, Ralph
has still been interim
pastor at several of the district churches, handled many special
speaking engagements and is this year celebrating fifty years of
service in the Christian and Missionary Alliance.
Max Prouty, a member at Westside Alliance Church in Birmingham,
began the Worldwide Tract Ministry which he carried on until his
death. The Tract Ministry is still being used of God today.
Many pastors, pastor's wives, missionaries and others who are
in full-time Christian
service have emerged as a result of the hand of God on the Southern
District. Numerous
lay worker such as Sunday School teachers, Alliance Women, Alliance
men, AWANA
leaders, Youth workers, church janitors, governing boards, kitchen
help, secretaries, etc.
are serving every day with the same love for God as all of the
others who have sacrificed
everything for the call of God on their life.
In 1984 as a result of the burdens given by God to Bill Nabors
and Bob Bozeman, Poplar
Point Camp was started. Many young hearts have been changed by
the ministry of the
camp. The camp is still serving the Alliance youth as well as other
youth from other
churches in the area.
The Alliance Women of the Southern District have accomplished
much for the cause of
Christ.
The Alliance Men give of themselves in many ways.
In 1962 the Southeastern District was divided and the Southern
District was formed. Six
good and Godly men have served as Superintendents. The first was
T. Grady Mangham,
Sr. Then came T. Perry Brannon, I. William Nabors, Garfield Powell,
A. Eugene Hall and the current leader, Fred G. King. Each one was
God's man of the hour with their own
unique way of leading.
The Southern District hosted the C&MA General Council in Birmingham,
Alabama in 1978 and again in Nashville, Tennessee in 2002.
There are eight new church plants in the Southern District: The
Church AT Trussville,
Safe Harbor in Pelham, Hopkinsville Bible Church in Hopkinsville
Kentucky, in Baton
Rouge, in New Orleans, Vietnamese Church in Pensacola, Spanish
in Historic St. Andrew and Spanish in Birmingham.
We are convinced that God still has great things ahead for the
Southern District. As the
National theme says, we are "Living the Call Together." Won't
you partner with us as we follow hard after Christ and his call
to bring the Gospel to all people and all nations?
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