The Christian Reformed Church (CRC) split from the
Reformed Church in America (then known as the
Dutch Reformed Church) in an 1857 secession. This was rooted in part as a result of a theological dispute that originated in the Netherlands in which
Hendrik De Cock was deposed for his Calvinist convictions, leading there to the
Secession of 1834–35. For the CRC founders in America, the RCA then appeared to contain problems similar to those that they had seen in the State Church in the old country.
Gijsbert Haan was the leader in the 1857 Secession of Dutch-Americans from the Reformed Church in America and the creator of the Christian Reformed Church in the United States and Canada. In 1857, four churches with about 130 families (about 10 percent of the Dutch immigrant church members in West Michigan at the time) seceded. In March, the Noordeloos church of the Classis of
Holland, Michigan, left the Reformed Church in America. On March 19, some members of Second Reformed Church,
Grand Rapids, Michigan, organized a church that became First CRC, Grand Rapids, Michigan. On April 8, churches in Graafschap and Polkton also left the Classis of Holland. Two ministers, Koene van den Bosch and Hendrik Klijn, joined the separatists, although Klijn returned to the Reformed Church six months later. The new denomination that formed from this secession was led by elders and ministers from the churches in the northern Netherlands, especially from the province of
Groningen, that had organized after the
1834 secession in the Netherlands, although members of the new denomination came from all parts of the Netherlands. The reasons given for leaving the Reformed Church were the use of
hymns (versus
Exclusive psalmody) during worship, allowing free access to communion, lax interpretation of
grace, permitting membership in
Freemasonry, and failure to provide catechetical instruction to young people. For the two years, the denomination had no corporate name. In 1859, Holland Reformed Church (
Hollandsche Gereformeerde Kerk) was adopted, which was changed to Free Dutch Reformed Church (no record of a Dutch translation) in 1861. Two years later, True Dutch Reformed Church (
Ware Hollandsche Gereformeerde Kerk) was approved, which was changed to Holland Christian Reformed Church (
Hollandsche Christelijke Gereformeerde Kerk) in 1880. In 1894 congregations also could use Christian Reformed Church (
Christelijke Gereformeerde Kerk) as well. The full adoption of Christian Reformed Church came in 1904, which became Christian Reformed Church in North America in 1974. In 1875, the denomination opened a theological school in Grand Rapids, Michigan. The Preparatory Department of the school became
Calvin College, while the Theological Department became
Calvin Theological Seminary. By 1880 the denomination had grown to 42 congregations. Ten years later the number had grown to 100 located in 11 states. During the 1890s congregations from the True Protestant Dutch Reformed Church (located in New York and New Jersey) joined the CRC. During the 20th century a number of congregations from the disbanding
German Reformed Churches also joined the CRC. By 1920, the denomination had grown to 350 congregations. At that time an estimated 350,000 Dutch immigrants had come to the United States, some of whom were in the Dutch Reformed tradition that since the 1880s was influenced by
Abraham Kuyper, a Dutch Neo-Calvinist theologian, journalist, and statesman (he served as Prime Minister of the Netherlands, 1901-1905). He founded the
Gereformeerde Kerken, a newspaper, the
Free University of Amsterdam, and the Anti-Revolutionary Political Party. During the early 1920s, the CRC adopted three doctrinal points regarding common grace. Three ministers,
Herman Hoeksema, George Ophoff, and Henry Danhof were deposed for rejecting three points as being contrary to the Reformed confessions.
The dispute led to the three ministers and their followers leaving the CRC and forming what is now the
Protestant Reformed Churches in America. After the Second World War, a new wave of Dutch Calvinist immigration occurred to Canada, most of which were Kuyperian. By 1960, half of the denomination's new congregations (138 of 288) were in Canada. In the early 1950s, a division within the Protestant Reformed Churches in America led to about three fifths of its members forming the
Orthodox Protestant Reformed Church, which joined the CRC in 1961. ==Ecumenical partnerships==