Edward Irving Edward Irving, also a minister in the
Church of Scotland, preached in his church at
Regent Square in London on the speedy
return of Jesus Christ and the real substance of his human nature. Irving's relationship to this community was, according to its members, somewhat similar to that of
John the Baptist to the
early Christian Church. He was the forerunner and prophet of the coming
dispensation, not the founder of a new sect; and indeed the only connection which Irving seems to have had with the Catholic Apostolic Church was in fostering spiritual persons who had been driven out of other congregations for the exercise of their
spiritual gifts. Around him, as well as around other congregations of different origins, coalesced persons who had been driven out of other churches, wanting to "exercise their spiritual gifts". Shortly after Irving's trial and deposition (1831), he restarted meetings in a hired hall in London, and much of his original
congregation followed him. Having been expelled from the Church of Scotland, Irving took to preaching in the open air in
Islington, until a new church was built for him and his followers in Duncan Street, Islington, funded by
Duncan Mackenzie of
Barnsbury, a former
elder of Irving's London church. Shortly after Irving's trial and deposition (1831), certain persons were, at some meetings held for prayer, designated as "called to be apostles of the
Lord" by certain others claiming
prophetic gifts.
Naming of the apostles In the year 1835, six months after Irving's death, six other people were similarly designated as called to complete the number of the twelve, who were then formally separated, by the
pastors of the local congregations to which they belonged, to their higher office in the universal church on 14 July 1835. This separation is understood by the community not as "in any sense being a schism or separation from the one Catholic Church, but a separation to a special work of blessing and intercession on behalf of it." The twelve were afterwards guided to ordain others—twelve prophets, twelve evangelists, and twelve pastors, "sharing equally with them the one Catholic Episcopate," and also seven deacons for administering the temporal affairs of the church catholic. The names of those twelve apostles included
John Bate Cardale,
Henry Drummond,
Spencer Perceval,
Thomas Carlyle, and
Duncan Mackenzie. ==Structure and ministries==