Moravian Church
The Moravian Church, officially the Unitas Fratrum (Unity of the Brethren), is the oldest surviving Protestant denomination, with episcopal roots in the 15th-century Bohemian Reformation led by followers of Jan Hus (c. 1369–1415), a Czech priest executed for heresy after criticizing Catholic practices such as indulgences and simony, and renewed in the 18th century through the Herrnhut community under Count Nikolaus Ludwig von Zinzendorf (1700–1760).[1][2]Emerging from the Hussite movement, the church organized as the Unity of the Brethren in 1457 in Kunvald, Moravia, emphasizing scriptural authority, communal living, and rejection of papal supremacy amid persecution that scattered its members across Europe.[1][2]
In 1722, Protestant exiles from Moravia resettled on Zinzendorf's estate in Herrnhut, Saxony, fostering a spiritual awakening in 1727 that propelled the church's global expansion; by 1760, it had dispatched over 200 missionaries to regions including the Danish West Indies, Greenland, Africa, and North America, pioneering Protestant overseas evangelism through self-sustaining settlements and emphasis on personal conversion over colonial exploitation.[1][3]
Doctrinally, Moravians affirm the Trinity, the necessity of the new birth for salvation, and Christ's lordship, practicing baptism by sprinkling and open communion while prioritizing piety, evangelism, good works, and communal practices like lovefeasts and daily covenant renewals rooted in heartfelt devotion rather than rigid confessionalism.[4][2]
The church's influence extended to shaping Pietism and Methodism, notably through John Wesley's encounters with Moravian missionaries during his voyage to Georgia in 1735–1736, and it maintains a worldwide presence today with congregations emphasizing unity in essentials, liberty in non-essentials, and active mission amid historical resilience against suppression.[1][3]