Foreign Aid Society
Encyclopedia
The Foreign Aid Society for the Diffusion of the Gospel on the Continent was formed in 1840 by the amalgamation of the Anglican Central Committee (founded in 1832) and the Continental society
Continental society
The Continental Society for the Diffusion of Religious Knowledge over the Continent of Europe was an evangelical Christian missionary society founded in London in 1819 for the propagation of the evangelical faith on the continent of Europe and existing as a separate entity until 1840 .The...

 (founded in 1819, renamed the European Missionary Society circa 1836). The key figure instrumental in bringing about the merger was Edward Bickersteth (1786–1850), a member of both former organisations.

The aim of the societies was the promotion of the cause of the gospel on the continent of Europe.

While the Continental Society appointed and funded its own workers, the Central Committee worked through local agencies, providing moral and financial support, but leaving the selection of workers and other such matters in the hands of locals.

The object of the amalgamated society was stated as follows:


To collect funds in aid of the Evangelical Societies of France and
Geneva, and such other institutions as may be formed on similar
principles, within the limits of the French Protestant Churches, and
generally to promote the religious principles of the Reformation be-
yond those limits, on the Continent and the islands of Europe.


The Central Committee also worked within a Church of England (Anglican) framework, unlike the interdenominational Continental Society
Continental society
The Continental Society for the Diffusion of Religious Knowledge over the Continent of Europe was an evangelical Christian missionary society founded in London in 1819 for the propagation of the evangelical faith on the continent of Europe and existing as a separate entity until 1840 .The...

, which had become imbroiled in controversies over eschatology and church practice.

The Foreign Aid Society continued its work until the eve of the First World War. Its annual reports and its magazines, The Gospel on the Continent and the Watchfire, are available in the British and Bodleian libraries.

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