The church has its origins in the formal organization of the
Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) in 1804, in
Bourbon County,
Kentucky under the leadership of
Barton Warren Stone (1772–1844). The Evangelical Christian Church, also known as "Christian Disciples" became the
Stone-Campbell Movement, also called the
Restoration Movement which arose on the frontiers of early 19th-century America. Like minded Methodists, Baptists, and Presbyterians abandoned denominational labels in order to be "Christians only" from the Stone group, and "Disciples" from the Campbell group. They called followers from both groups to join in Christian unity and restore the ideals of the primitive New Testament church, holding only the Bible as authoritative. The Evangelical Christian Church (Christian Disciples), founded in 1804, joined with other Canadian branches in 1832, and the first work of the Christian Disciples of Evangelical Christian Church to form was in 1810 in
Stratford,
PEI, in the
Maritime provinces Canada. The oldest Christian Disciples Church in Canada was founded in 1810 by John R. Stewart, an immigrant from
Perthshire,
Scotland. The first Meeting House (Cross Roads Christian Church) was a log cabin built in 1813. The church was designed by members of the congregation, which were then Christian Disciples whose faith was influenced by Baptist theology. From 1907 to 1947, the church was operated as a Baptist charge in conjunction with
Scottish Baptists churches in
Alexandra and
Hazelbrook, when it apparently again became an Evangelical Christian Church. The following year, the church was visited by the noted evangelist, Alexander Crawford, who was then also working in Yarmouth, Nova Scotia. Crawford would remain with the Cross Roads congregation for almost two years before moving to Tryon,
Prince Edward Island. It was after the
Second World War that a collaboration between an All-Canadian and North-American (Evangelical Christian Churches) Movement began as a way to coordinate and unite the various churches and ministries within Canada. with the preaching of the gospel of the Kingdom of Heaven. The Evangelical Christian Church (Christian Disciples) as a separate group within the Restoration tradition was reorganized in 2001. The leaders believed in the essential unity of the body of
Christ, they could not accept the sectarianism that was all around them. Several church bodies identifying with the Stone-Campbell movement today are very creedal and range from ultra-conservative to ultra-liberal as can be seen in the
United Church of Christ which is an attempt to unite all Christian denominations into one national Church body as well as the
National Association of Congregational Christian Churches which merged English Christians with American-Canadian Christians in 1931. ==Organization and structure==