The Tabernacle fellowship dates back to 1650, when the English Parliament banned independent Christian organisations from meeting together. This congregation braved persecution until 1688, when the Baptists were once again allowed to worship in freedom. At this point, the group built their first chapel, in Horsleydown, Southwark, an area of London immediately south of Tower Bridge.[5][6]
In 1720, John Gill became pastor and served for 51 years. In 1771, John Rippon became pastor and served for 63 years. During these times, the church experienced growth and became one of the largest congregations in the country. Afterwards decline set in and by 1850 the congregation was small.[7]
During Spurgeon's ministry, it was decided that the church should move permanently to larger premises. The location chosen was the Elephant and Castle, a prominent location near the River ThamesinSouth London, partly because it was thought to be the site of the burning of the Southwark Martyrs. The building with a 6,000-seat auditorium, designed by William Willmer Pocock, was finished in 1861 and dedicated on 18 March.[8] In 1881, the church had 5,500 members.[9]
Spurgeon also founded a college for preachers (now Spurgeon's College) and church workers and orphanages for girls and boys, and wrote many Christian books which are still in print today.[10]
Interior of the original Metropolitan Tabernacle
In 1887, the church left the Baptist Union because of the widening influence of theological liberalism within the union. Spurgeon was adamant that the church would not "downgrade" the faith as he believed other baptist churches were doing.[11]
At the end of 1891, membership was given as 5,311. Spurgeon served for 38 years and died in 1892.[2]
The original building was burned down in 1898, leaving just the front portico and basement intact, before the rebuilt church was destroyed again in 1941 during the German bombing of London in World War II. Once again, the portico and basement survived and in 1957 the Tabernacle was rebuilt to a new but much smaller design accommodating surviving original features.[5]
The war led to the Tabernacle fellowship being greatly diminished as few members of the old congregation were able to return to heavily blitzed central London. It rejoined the Baptist Union in 1955. By 1970 the congregation had fallen to the point where it occupied only a few pews. It left the Baptist Union again on 22 February 1971, just after Peter Masters became the pastor, over the same issues as under Spurgeon in 1887.[12] Numbers greatly increased and this gave rise to the full church and galleries of today, together with numerous professions of faith. It hosts an annual school of theology, runs a part-time seminary for pastors, has five Sunday schools,[13] and provides free video and audio downloads, along with live-streaming of services.[14] The current assistant pastor at the Tabernacle is Ibrahim Ag Mohamed, originally of Mali.[15] By 2009 The Guardian reported that Metropolitan Tabernacle attracted up to 500 people in its main service.[16]
The Metropolitan Tabernacle is an independent reformed Baptist church. The following seven points show the key biblical policies followed, laid down by forebears, such as C. H. Spurgeon.[2][3][4]
^ abcdDallimore, Arnold (1985). Spurgeon: A New Biography. Edinburgh: Banner of Truth. ISBN978-0-85151451-2.
^ abSheehan, Robert (June 1985), Spurgeon and the Modern Church, Phillipsburg NJ: Presbyterian & Reformed Pub Co, ISBN9780946462056
^ abNettles, Tom (21 July 2013). Living By Revealed Truth The Life and Pastoral Theology of Charles Haddon Spurgeon. Ross-shire: Christian Focus Publishing. p. 700. ISBN9781781911228.
^ ab"Brief History". Metropolitan Tabernacle. Retrieved 24 May 2014.
^ abSpurgeon, Charles; Spurgeon, Susannah (compiler); Harrald, Joseph (compiler) (1962). C. H. Spurgeon Autobiography: The Early Years, 1834–1859. Edinburgh: Banner of Truth. ISBN978-0-85151076-7.
^Stephen J. Hunt, Handbook of Megachurches, Brill, Leiden, 2019, p. 50
^William Cathcart, The Baptist Encyclopedia, Volume 3, The Baptist Standard Bearer, USA, 2001, p. 1095
^"Spurgeon". Books. Tabernacle Bookshop. Retrieved 31 July 2021.
^Poole-Connor, E.J. (1966). Evangelicalism in England. Worthing: Henry E Walter. p. 223. ISBN978-0-85479191-0.