In the Beginning…

It is not always easy to know exactly when things began. Many churches, such as the one I attend, started with a small group of people gathering together in a house on a date now unknown. So the date of origin for the church is often given as the time when a building was erected or when some kind of organising body was established and records began to be kept.
Some people make elaborate ‘guesses’ at dates of origin. In the 17th century, Bishop Ussher worked out that the creation of the world was ‘at the beginning of the night which preceded Sunday, 23rd October, 4004 BC’, and Sir James Lightfoot revised that to be precisely 9am on 3rd October, 4004BC.
However, there is no problem with dating the beginning of the Christian Endeavour movement. It began on the evening of 2nd February, 1881, which is why the day is remembered as ‘Endeavour Day’ by Christian Endeavourers. On the evening of that day, Rev.F.E.Clark, pastor of the Williston Congregational Church in Portland, Maine, USA, invited some of the young people in his church to form a Society of Christian Endeavour which had as its objects ‘the promotion of an earnest Christian life amongst its members’ and ‘to make them more useful in the service of God’. They willingly responded and so Christian Endeavour began.
The first Society in England was formed in August 1887 at Hightown Congregational Church in Crewe after a former member of the church, who had emigrated to America, wrote to the minister, Rev.A.W.Potts, about the Society at Williston Church.
Christian Endeavour societies all over the world have been continuing to fulfil the objects of the movement within Church-based groups ever since, providing opportunities for young people and new Christians to develop a strong Bible-based faith and find the talents they have for the service of Christ and the Church.








