The breakaway was prompted by the acquittal in a
Presbytery trial of Professor
James E. Davey of the Assembly's College on charges brought by Hunter and others of five counts of heresy. Davey's accusers, who had campaigned against him and against what they termed "modernism" through a Presbyterian Bible Standards League, were influenced by the
conservative Reformed theology of the US Presbyterian scholar
John Gresham Machen, who had taught Grier in
Princeton Theological Seminary and visited Ireland in 1927. A month after the Presbyterian General Assembly upheld the trial verdict by 707 votes to 82, the anti-Davey group seceded. In 2013 the EPC had nine congregations, all in Counties Antrim and
Down apart from one in
Richhill, County Armagh and one in
Omagh, County Tyrone. The church's monthly magazine,
The Irish Evangelical, was first issued in June 1928. Grier remained its editor for 50 years. With the change of the church's name in 1964, the magazine became
The Evangelical Presbyterian , and now appears every three months. The Evangelical Presbyterian Church is among a number of small evangelical denominations represented in a
creationist and socially conservative pressure group, the
Caleb Foundation. EPC member Wallace Thompson, who had been the Foundation's treasurer since 1998, The EPC in 2010 opposed a
Bill of Rights for Northern Ireland on the grounds that the
Northern Ireland Human Rights Commission's proposal was "driven by those who are opposed to Biblical Christianity" and "is a further departure from the solid foundation of the Word of God". In 2011–12 the EPC Public Morals Committee supported a campaign by the
Christian Institute, an evangelical pressure group, against funding of the
London Pride festival by
Tesco. ==International links==