There are currently at least five main divisions of this church in America. In the early 1900s a disagreement arose over the practice of some European customs (namely, the wearing of a mustache) and the church split into two bodies (from 1901 to 1911). In 1932 a second schism originated from a letter sent by elders in Europe asking for greater adherence to traditional teachings and practices. Those adhering to the request of the letter separated themselves from the Apostolic Christian Church of America and became known as the Christian Apostolic Church (later the German Apostolic Christian Church). The Apostolic Christian Church of America did not retain German language preaching. It is a common misconception that German language preaching was a primary issue in the division. • The
Apostolic Christian Church of America has about 93 congregations in 22 states, including 1 church in Canada, 5 in Mexico, and 2 in Japan. The total number of members is approximately 11,500, with around 19,000 attendees. This church has a national missionary committee/humanitarian aid program called HarvestCall, eleven retirement communities/nursing homes for the elderly, a home for people with developmental disabilities (Apostolic Christian Timber Ridge) in
Morton, Illinois, Apostolic Christian Counseling & Family Services in Morton, IL, and a children's home in
Leo,
Indiana. • The
Apostolic Christian Church (Nazarean) has 32 congregations in the United States, with 1850 members and 2900 attendees, 11 congregations in Canada with about 800 members and 1000 attendees, 6 congregations in Australia with roughly 200 members, 16 congregations in Argentina with about 1200 members, one congregation the Republic of Hungary with roughly 1,000–2,000 members as well as congregations in Brazil and Mexico. They have mission work in
New Guinea, Argentina, Zambia, and Paraguay. Though the minority of the split, this body remained in fellowship with the European churches. There is also a small congregation of Nazareans in Israel. • The Nazarene Christian Congregation is the result of a split during World War II which had to do with disagreements in caving to
Communist demands in
Yugoslavia. This church also split into two sides during the early 2000s. The NCC has churches in former Yugoslavia, Australia, United States, and Canada, with more members in Yugoslavia than anywhere else. In North America and Australia the church has shrunk considerably. • The German Apostolic Christian Church has several congregations in the United States and Europe. , there are about 135 members in the United States, primarily in Illinois and Oregon, and this is down from 150 in 2017. This German Apostolic Christian Church is the result of a relatively small group splitting away from the Apostolic Christian Church in 1932 and 1933 with currently four congregations: Cissna Park, IL; Fairbury, IL; Peoria, IL; and Silverton, OR. Formerly it had also a congregation in Sabetha, KS, this became one of the Christian Apostolic Churches after 1955. Until 1955 this church was known as Christian Apostolic Church, afterwards it named itself German Apostolic Christian Church. The German language was up to 2020 still used in the forenoon Sunday worship service, but not anymore as the internal group's language or mother language. After the death of their last chief elder, Robert Hari, in 2019 they switched to English totally in avt. 2020 and relaxed some rules in regard of visitations and fellowship with non-member families. German school in the evening once per week also stopped since. • The
Christian Apostolic Church (formed in 1955 from a split with the German Apostolic Christian) has five churches in Bluffton, IN; Creston, OH; Forrest, IL; Salem, OR; and Sabetha, KS with approximately 100 members. A unification on the weekend of 4 July 2021 resulted in the addition of the Bluffton, IN and Creston, OH churches.. Quite a number of other Christian Apostolic groups existed for a while beside this bigger group, some still do today as home gatherings. This new group retained its old church name in opposition to its mother group. Members have retained traditional teachings on divorce and remarriage, sins unto death, baptism, the head covering, voting, birth control, and higher education, whereas the Apostolic Christian Church of America and Apostolic Christian Church (Nazarean) have departed somewhat from earlier practice in these areas. In the 1990s there was a large migration from the Christian Apostolic Church to the ACCA. In 2020/25 there was a small migration from the ACCA and ACF to the Christian Apostolic Church. Prior to this migration, the Christian Apostolic Church had slowly been moving closer to the ACCA on most stances. However, due to this migration, there has been a revival of its more traditional stance on issues. • in 1966, Christian Apostolic Church of Fairbury, broke off of the Christian Apostolic Church. This is a single congregation, and has an aging membership. • The
Apostolic Christian Faith Church (formed in 2012 from a split with the Apostolic Christian Church of America) has two churches in Canada, and about 25 churches in the United States with approximately 1,100 members. Members have retained what they believe are the church's traditional teachings and doctrine. Their manner of worship and fellowship is currently very similar to the church they withdrew from. However, they reject the New Evangelical thinking that they believe has influenced a portion of the Apostolic Christian Church of America. • Project Amazon, Currently know as
PAZ International, is a Mission outreach started by members of the ACCA, with support from the ACCN. They currently have over 800 churches in Brazil, Italy, Japan, Portugal, and the United States.
Other divisions and smaller groups The European German language bodies (Neutäufer) have also faced divisions. Although once united throughout Germany, Austria and Switzerland, there are now four sides. The following two (one could say also three) sides belong to the beard (moustache)-accepting side: • During the 1980s members and leaders were pushing for more liberties, which resulted in a vast majority of churches changing their doctrine and rules to more evangelical/free church standards. Reasons were also, that the church leaders saw no future in keeping the old ways. They formed their own branch (
Bund Evangelischer Täufergemeinden) and adopted the name
Evangelische Täufergemeinde for most congregations. They currently have churches in Germany, Switzerland, Austria and France (Alsace) and quote to have about 2500 members. • The small fraction that did not join and emphasized more traditional/conservative standards call themselves
Gemeinde Evangelisch Taufgesinnter (Nazarener) with churches in Germany and Austria and formerly about 400 members. • Some of these German Nazarener congregations do not fellowship with each other, so one could speak of two sides: moderate/liberal minded Nazarener congregations and conservative/traditional minded ones. Both sides are partly in a process to dissolve. The conservative Nazarener congregations maintain strong ties with the rest of the Nazarene congregations, especially to the Balkan states and are led by the Breidenbach congregation. • There are some congregations of German Apostolic Christians in Germany and in Switzerland since the beginnings of 20th century: • Three in Germany which call themselves
Gemeinschaft evangelisch Taufgesinnter-Altmennoniten plus one close to Basel, Switzerland, which is a dependence of the Swiss Basel congregation. • Ten (or eleven if one takes Kandergrund-Steffisburg as two congregations) in Switzerland, one thereof is in the Emmental at Bärau/Langnau. The Swiss German Apostolics have over 200–250 members, the German ones under 100. There have been official affiliations with the American side up to 2011. These congregations are the remnants of the beard-refusing-side in Europe. Formerly they had been the majority of all Neutäufer congregations in Switzerland and Germany, but their membership shrank immensely during the last decades. The remainder of Europe is made up of independent congregations in communion: •
Nazarenes – in Sweden, Hungary, Serbia, Croatia, Romania, Ukraine and Slovakia • In Hungary their official name is '''' (Congregation of Nazarenes Believing in Christ) Australia has several churches that are in fellowship with the NCC, and many Apostolic Christian(Nazarean) churches that are loosely in fellowship, but not under the same elder body as the US Churches. South America has several Nazarean groups such as the Igreja Evangélica Nazareno, and Igreja Nazareno Pentecostal in Brazil, and several Apostolic Christian Church (Nazarean) churches in Argentina, and Paraguay. ==Conversion==