Constitution The Constitution of PC(USA) is composed of two portions: Part I, the
Book of Confessions and Part II, the
Book of Order. The
Book of Confessions outlines the beliefs of the PC(USA) by declaring the creeds by which the Church's leaders are instructed and led. Complementing that is the
Book of Order which gives the rationale and description for the organization and function of the Church at all levels. The
Book of Order is currently divided into four sections – 1) The Foundations of Presbyterian Polity 2) The Form of Government, 3) The Directory For Worship, and 4) The Rules of Discipline.
Councils The Presbyterian Church (USA) has a representative form of government, known as
presbyterian polity, with four levels of government and administration, as outlined in the
Book of Order. The councils (governing bodies) are as follows: • Session (of a Congregation) • Presbytery • Synod • General Assembly
Session At the congregational level, the governing body is called the
session, from the Latin word
sessio, meaning "a sitting". The session is made up of the pastors of the church and all
elders elected and installed to active service. Following a pattern set in the first congregation of Christians in Jerusalem described in the
Book of Acts in the
New Testament, the church is governed by
presbyters (a term and category that includes elders and Ministers of Word and Sacrament, historically also referred to as "ruling or canon elders" because they
measure the spiritual life and work of a congregation and ministers as "teaching elders"). The elders are nominated by a nominating committee of the congregation; in addition, nominations from the floor are permissible. Elders are then elected by the congregation. All elders elected to serve on the congregation's session of elders are required to undergo a period of study and preparation for this order of ministry, after which the session examines the elders-elect as to their personal faith; knowledge of doctrine, government, and discipline contained in the Constitution of the church, and the duties of the office of elder. If the examination is approved, the session appoints a day for the service of ordination and installation. Session meetings are normally moderated by a called and installed pastor and minutes are recorded by a clerk, who is also an ordained presbyter. If the congregation does not have an installed pastor, the Presbytery appoints a minister member or elected member of the presbytery as moderator with the concurrence of the local church session. The moderator presides over the session as
first among equals and also serves as a "liturgical" bishop over the ordination and installation of elders and deacons within a particular congregation. The session guides and directs the ministry of the local church, including almost all spiritual and fiduciary leadership. The congregation as a whole has only the responsibility to vote on: 1) the call of the pastor (subject to presbytery approval) and the terms of call (the church's provision for compensating and caring for the pastor); 2) the election of its own officers (elders and deacons); 3) buying, mortgaging, or selling real property. All other church matters such as the budget, personnel matters, and all programs for spiritual life and mission, are the responsibility of the session. In addition, the session serves as an ecclesiastical court to consider disciplinary charges brought against church officers or members. The session also oversees the work of the
deacons, a second body of leaders also tracing its origins to the Book of Acts. The deacons are a congregational-level group whose duty is "to minister to those who are in need, to the sick, to the friendless, and to any who may be in distress both within and beyond the community of faith." In some churches, the responsibilities of the deacons are taken care of by the session, so there is no board of deacons in that church. In some states, churches are legally incorporated and members or elders of the church serve as trustees of the corporation. However, "the power and duties of such trustees shall not infringe upon the powers and duties of the Session or of the board of deacons." The deacons are a ministry board but not a governing body.
Presbytery A
presbytery is formed by all the congregations and the Ministers of Word and Sacrament in a geographic area together with elders selected (proportional to congregation size) from each of the congregations. Four special presbyteries are "non-geographical" in that they overlay other English-speaking presbyteries, though they are geographically limited to the boundaries of a particular synod (see
below); it may be more accurate to refer to them as "trans-geographical". Three PC(USA) synods have a non-geographical presbytery for Korean language Presbyterian congregations, and one synod has a non-geographical presbytery for Native American congregations, the Dakota Presbytery. There are currently 164 presbyteries (after 2 mergers in 2025) for the 8,432 congregations in the PC(USA). Only the presbytery (not a congregation, session, synod, or General Assembly) has the responsibility and authority to ordain church members to the ordered ministry of Word and Sacrament, also referred to as a Teaching Elder, to install ministers to (or remove them from) congregations as pastors, and to remove a minister from the ministry. A Presbyterian minister is a member of a presbytery. The General Assembly cannot ordain or remove a Teaching Elder, but the Office of the General Assembly does maintain and publish a national directory with the help of each presbytery's stated clerk. This directory is also published bi-annually with the minutes of the General Assembly. A pastor cannot be a member of the congregation he or she serves as a pastor because his or her primary ecclesiastical accountability lies with the presbytery. Members of the congregation generally choose their own pastor with the assistance and support of the presbytery. The presbytery must approve the choice and officially install the pastor at the congregation, or approve the covenant for a temporary pastoral relationship. Additionally, the presbytery must approve if either the congregation or the pastor wishes to dissolve that pastoral relationship. The presbytery has authority over many affairs of its local congregations. Only the presbytery can approve the establishment, dissolution, or merger of congregations. The presbytery also maintains a Permanent Judicial Commission, which acts as a court of appeal from sessions, and which exercises original jurisdiction in disciplinary cases against minister members of the presbytery. A presbytery has two elected officers: a moderator and a stated clerk. The Moderator of the presbytery is elected annually and is either a minister member or an elder commissioner from one of the presbytery's congregations. The Moderator presides at all presbytery assemblies and is the chief overseer at the ordination and installation of ministers in that presbytery. The stated clerk is the chief ecclesial officer and serves as the presbytery's executive secretary and parliamentarian in accordance with the church Constitution and Robert's Rules of Order. While the moderator of a presbytery normally serves one year, the stated clerk normally serves a designated number of years and may be re-elected indefinitely by the presbytery. Additionally, an Executive
Presbyter (sometimes designated as General Presbyter, Pastor to Presbytery, Transitional Presbyter) is often elected as a staff person to care for the administrative duties of the presbytery, often with the additional role of a pastor to the pastors. Presbyteries may be creative in the designation and assignment of duties for their staff. A presbytery is required to elect a Moderator and a Clerk, but the practice of hiring staff is optional. Presbyteries must meet at least twice a year, but they have the discretion to meet more often and most do.
See "Map of Presbyteries and Synods".
Synod Presbyteries are organized within a geographical region to form a
synod. Each synod contains at least three presbyteries, and its elected voting membership is to include both elders and Ministers of Word and Sacrament in equal numbers. Synods have various duties depending on the needs of the presbyteries they serve. In general, their responsibilities (G-12.0102) might be summarized as: developing and implementing the mission of the church throughout the region, facilitating communication between presbyteries and the General Assembly, and mediating conflicts between the churches and presbyteries. Every synod elects a Permanent Judicial Commission, which has original jurisdiction in remedial cases brought against its constituent presbyteries, and which also serves as an ecclesiastical court of appeal for decisions rendered by its presbyteries' Permanent Judicial Commissions. Synods are required to meet at least biennially. Meetings are moderated by an elected synod Moderator with support of the synod's Stated Clerk. There are currently 16 synods in the PC(USA) and they vary widely in the scope and nature of their work. An ongoing current debate in the denomination is over the purpose, function, and need for synods. in
Phoenix, Arizona Synods of the Presbyterian Church (USA) •
Synod of Alaska-Northwest •
Synod of Boriquen (Puerto Rico) •
Synod of the Covenant •
Synod of Lakes and Prairies •
Synod of Lincoln Trails •
Synod of Living Waters •
Synod of Mid-America •
Synod of Mid-Atlantic •
Synod of the Northeast •
Synod of the Pacific •
Synod of the Rocky Mountains •
Synod of South Atlantic •
Synod of Southern California and Hawaii •
Synod of the Southwest •
Synod of the Sun •
Synod of the Trinity See also the
List of Presbyterian Church (USA) synods and presbyteries.
General Assembly The
General Assembly is the highest governing body of the PC(USA). Until the 216th assembly met in
Richmond, Virginia in 2004, the General Assembly met annually; since 2004, the General Assembly has met biennially in even-numbered years. It consists of commissioners elected by presbyteries (not synods), and its voting membership is proportioned with parity between elders and Ministers of Word and Sacrament. There are many important responsibilities of the General Assembly. Among them,
The Book of Order lists these four: • to set priorities for the work of the church in keeping with the church's mission under Christ • to develop overall objectives for mission and a comprehensive strategy to guide the church at every level of its life • to provide the essential program functions that are appropriate for overall balance and diversity within the mission of the church, and • to establish and administer national and worldwide ministries of witness, service, growth, and development.
Elected officials The General Assembly elects a
moderator at each assembly who moderates the rest of the sessions of that assembly meeting and continues to serve until the next assembly convenes (two years later) to elect a new moderator or co-moderator. Currently, the denomination is served by Co-Moderators Cecelia Armstrong and Anthony Larson, who were elected at the 226th General Assembly (2024). They followed Ruth Santana-Grace and Shavon Starling-Louis, elected in 2022. They followed Elona Street-Stewart and Gregory Bentley, elected in 2020. At the 223rd Assembly in St Louis, MO, Co-Moderators Vilmarie Cintrón-Olivieri and Cindy Kohmann were elected. See a
complete listing of past moderators at another Wikipedia Article. A
Stated Clerk of the General Assembly is elected to one or more four-year terms and is responsible for the Office of the General Assembly which conducts the ecclesiastical work of the church. The Office of the General Assembly carries out most of the ecumenical functions and all of the constitutional functions at the Assembly. The Stated Clerks since reunion are:
James E. Andrews (1984–1996),
Clifton Kirkpatrick (1996–2008),
Gradye Parsons (2008–2016), J. Herbert Nelson (2016–2023), Bronwen Boswell (2023–2024) (interim), and Jihyun Oh (2024–). Bronwen Boswell was appointed Acting Stated Clerk in June 2023 to serve the remaining year of Nelson's term. She was ineligible to apply for the stated clerk position in 2024, and has limited responsibilities focused primarily on completing plans for the 2024 GA and
unification of the OGA and PMA. Her partial characterization of the
attempted assassination of Donald Trump as "two lives lost at a Pennsylvania rally" blurs the distinction between perpetrator and victim, unlike definitions of
mass shootings that often do not include the shooter in the
body count. Bronwen's political perspective on the shooting has been contrasted with purely nonpolitical perspectives from other denominations. Jihyun Oh was installed in July 2024 as the Stated Clerk of the General Assembly, and promoted by the Unification Commission (UC) in October 2024 to lead the interim unified agency. Nelson announced he would not seek re-election to a third term, and stepped down as Stated Clerk in June 2023, a year before his second term ended. Reported tensions that likely influenced the decision to resign include struggling efforts since 2016 to unify the OGA and PMA agencies, and struggling efforts to return to normal following the pandemic. The Stated Clerk is also responsible for the records of the denomination, a function formalized in 1925 when the General Assembly created the "Department of Historical Research and Conservation" as part of the Office of the General Assembly. The current "Department of History" is also known as the
Presbyterian Historical Society.
Structure Five agencies carry out the work of the General Assembly, following the 2024–2025 merger of OGA and PMA. These are the Interim Unified Agency (IUA), the
Presbyterian Publishing Corporation, the Presbyterian Investment and Loan Program, the Board of Pensions, and the Presbyterian Foundation. The PCUSA A Corporation is the corporate entity that employs IUA staff, approximately 232, and also has its own staff, approximately 97, making up the Administrative Services Group (ASG). A Corp. reports total assets of $830 million in 2025, up from $620 million in 2019.
Unification of PMA and OGA The Unification Commission (UC) is overseeing unification of OGA and PMA in a multi-year process intended to achieve financial sustainability and unified missional strategies, that was planned to take effect in summer of 2025, and subsequently slated for the week of November 17, 2025. In July 2025, UC Co-moderator Rev. Dr. Felipe Martínez seemed confident about meeting the hard deadline of February 22, 2026, but in December 2025, he seemed less so, saying unification is not a project with a quick deadline. As of the December 2025 UC meeting, work on unification is said to be continuing. An outside facilitator was engaged to do grief work during an all-staff gathering in January 2026. In March 2024, the former OGA Communications Director was named PCUSA Communications Director and the former PMA Communications Director was named PMA Vision Integration & Constituent Service Manager. No communications staff positions were cut at the time of this pilot reorganization, but four communications positions were cut 8 months later. The 2025 and 2026 budgets (page 18), approved by GA in July 2024, fund the office of the PMA Executive Director at $4,524,347 and $4,613,383, respectively. The Committee on the Office of the General Assembly (COGA) had oversight over the Stated Clerk and OGA, but COGA was dissolved on December 31, 2024, with UC taking over their responsibilities. The Presbyterian Mission Agency Board (PMAB) (formerly General Assembly Mission Council) was also dissolved as of December 31, 2024, by the UC on August 16. The 2025 and 2026 budgets (page 26) anticipated proposing a $5 million reduction over 2 years at the Unification Commission's October 2024 meeting in order to balance. At this meeting, the UC announced informally that the budget had been scrubbed resulting in a planned small
reduction in force. On November 5, 2024, Jihyun Oh announced various program reconfigurations that would balance the 2025 and 2026 budgets, including the planned $5 million reduction. Further details were announced on November 13, including 12 layoffs, and two vacant OGA positions to remain unfilled. The November 5 announcement had also warned of further layoffs anticipated in 2025 related to restructuring. On February 5, 2025, Jihyun Oh announced 35 additional layoffs, where "all World Mission staff positions will be revised, and some will be concluded," reducing staff from 79 to 44 in new roles as Global Ecumenical Liaisons, by the end of March 2025. These layoffs were intended to "help us be more nimble in responding to the ongoing shifts in the world and in the church while continuing to foster deeper and broader relationships with faith communities worldwide," based on "forecasting with the help of actuarial consultants for five years" to prevent "a bigger crisis in the near future". On February 7, the Rev. Mienda Uriarte, director of World Mission, explained that "the redesign aims to harmonize compensation and eliminate perceived inequity, thereby enhancing our organizational coherence and employee morale." She expressed hope that the Funding Model Development Team may recommend new funding modes for world mission in its June 2026 report, but that report simply asks for a 2-year extension. The closure of World Mission does not appear to be in response to any formal action by the UC. PC(USA) faces a backlash over the layoffs from critics who note that the 2024 General Assembly called for retaining mission co-workers and funded their budget at 60. Several related overtures have been submitted in response. The Office of Theology and Worship was also closed during the reorganization, resulting in an overture to reinstate it. A new Unification Management Office (UMO) is managing the
integration of PMA and OGA. The September 2025 UMO status report shows: "Of the 31 highest-priority projects, the UMO has completed two, while 15 are in process and 6 are being initiated. They've not yet begun work on eight others."
Affiliated seminaries The denomination maintains affiliations with ten seminaries in the United States. These are: •
Austin Presbyterian Theological Seminary in Austin, Texas •
Columbia Theological Seminary in Decatur, Georgia • Johnson C. Smith Theological Seminary in Atlanta, Georgia •
Louisville Presbyterian Theological Seminary in Louisville, Kentucky •
McCormick Theological Seminary in Chicago, Illinois •
Pittsburgh Theological Seminary, in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania •
Princeton Theological Seminary, the first chartered by the General Assembly, in Princeton, New Jersey •
San Francisco Theological Seminary in San Anselmo, California (covenant affiliation treated as institutional affiliation) •
Union Presbyterian Seminary in Richmond, Virginia and Charlotte, North Carolina • University of
Dubuque Theological Seminary in Dubuque, Iowa Two other seminaries are related to the PC(USA) by covenant agreement:
Auburn Theological Seminary in New York, New York, and
Evangelical Seminary of Puerto Rico in San Juan, Puerto Rico. There are numerous colleges and universities throughout the United States affiliated with PC(USA). For a complete list, see the article
Association of Presbyterian Colleges and Universities. For more information, see the article
PC(USA) seminaries. While not affiliated with the PC(USA),
Fuller Theological Seminary has educated many candidates for PC(USA) ministry and its former president,
Mark Labberton, is an ordained minister of the PC(USA).
Demographics Before the United Presbyterian Church in the USA merged with the
Presbyterian Church in the United States there were 2,351,119 + 814,931 = 3,166,050 members in 1982, and 3,131,228 members afterwards in 1983. Statistics show steady decline since then. (The combined membership of the PCUS and United Presbyterian Church peaked in 1965 at 4.25 million communicant members.) According to the PC(USA) data collection, active membership is defined as a member who has been confirmed, or made similar profession of faith, has been baptized, and attends regularly. The reported data on active members do not include "inactive members". In addition to active members, the PC(USA) archives data on members who are baptized, but not confirmed, and who are inactive. For example, in 2005, the PC(USA) reported 2.3 million active members, 318,291 baptized, but not confirmed, members, and 466,889 inactive members; the total number of members in 2005 was 3.1 million. The PC (USA) has had the sharpest decline in their active membership among the Protestant denominations in U.S. The denomination lost more than a million active members between 2005 and 2019. As of 2024, the denomination reports having 1,045,848 active members and about 8,432 local congregations. as were the 2025 and 2026 budgets which projects membership of 998,785 (2025), 953,840 (2026), 910,917 (2027), 869,925 (2028), based on 2024 actuals. The proposed 2025 per-capita revenue of $10,133,710 at $10.20 per member is unusual, being based on projected 2025 membership, rather than the traditional 2-year lag which would apply 2023 membership. The per-capita rate is normally set by the General Assembly based on actual reported membership, but the 2023 actual membership was not reported in time for the 2024 General Assembly meeting due to an extended medical leave. The average local Presbyterian Church has 128 members (the mean in 2023). Summary membership statistics for 2023 are based on only 65% of churches reporting; for non-reporting churches, the last-reported membership figure is used. Reported membership based on gender: 904,780; based on age: 892,107. The gender membership demographics show an anomalous 5% increase in men from 348,231 in 2022 to 365,632 in 2023, despite total membership decreasing by 4%. This supposed increase in men was initially reported as a notable area of growth and a reason for hope, but that claim has since been removed. The church-trends database and the corrected 2023 GA Minutes, show 384,231 male members in 2022, differing by transposing two digits, which is in line with the 4% total membership decrease from 2022 to 2023. Comparative statistics for 2024 show the number of congregations with over 1,600 members decreasing by about 90% in 3 years, from 337 in 2021 to 34 in 2024. These figures conflict with the statistics from 2023. Similarly the 2024 statistics show conflicting figures for congregations with 801–1,600 members. == Beliefs ==