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Chapter 31: Of Synods and Councils
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#Overview
This chapter maps cleanly to the courts lane and to any future governance wiki pages.
Church assemblies, councils, and the place of ordered deliberation.
#Synods and councils
This chapter teaches how assemblies may settle controversies and preserve common order while still remaining ministerial and subordinate.
#Appeals and common order
It should be read as a doctrinal companion to the courts material on the site.
#Study note
The article should help the reader see that church order has a confessional basis, not just a procedural one.
#Key topics
- Synods
- Councils
- Assemblies
- Church government
These topics mark the doctrinal and navigational center of the page 1.
#Related pages
- Church Assemblies and Their Uses — Why synods and councils exist and what sorts of doctrinal and practical questions they address.
- Authority and Limits — How church assemblies can ministerially determine controversies without becoming lords over conscience.
- Appeals, Advice, and Common Order — How assemblies help settle appeals, preserve common order, and give counsel to the churches.
Use these child pages to move from the overview into narrower study units 1.
#Assemblies in ministerial authority
This chapter teaches how synods and councils may settle controversies and preserve common order without becoming lords over conscience 1.
#Appeals and common order
The child pages keep authority, advice, and appeal together so the courts material has a confessional home.
#Study note
Use this page when moving from doctrine into presbyterial and synodical practice.
#Sources
- [1] RPCNA convictions - Official constitutional landing page.
#Rights note
Summary-first treatment only. 2
Citations and notes
Footnotes
- 1
Source links and supporting references are listed in the Sources section above.
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Summary-first treatment only.
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