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History
The original Presbytery of Ohio was organized in Cincinnati, Ohio, on September
14, 1936. Dr. J. Gresham Machen was present and addressed the group on the
subject "Evangelism—False and True." About twenty people were present, and four
ministers were enrolled in the new presbytery: Carl A. Ahlfeldt of Indianapolis,
Everett C. DeVelde of Cincinnati, Thomas H. Mitchell of Youngstown, and J. Lyle
Shaw of Cleveland. At that organizing meeting the following Presbyterian
congregations affiliated with the new presbytery: First Church of Cincinnati,
Ohio, and its Trinity Chapel of Newport, Kentucky; Covenant Church of
Indianapolis, Indiana; Providence Church of Youngstown, Ohio; Covenant Church of
Marion, Ohio; and Grace Church of Buechel, Kentucky. The name Ohio was natural
for the new presbytery since that state was the center of activity.
The first congregations of the OPC in western Pennsylvania were included in the
Presbytery of Philadelphia. These works included Branchton, Harrisville,
Pittsburgh, and Grove City churches. On June 8, 1951, the Presbytery of Ohio was
reorganized, and the western Pennsylvania churches were grafted in. Over the
years a number of the Ohio churches were closed, and the Pennsylvania churches
came to predominate.
Each of our churches has begun with a small core group of believers committed to
the Bible as the inerrant Word of God and to the Westminster Standards. Facing
hostility from liberal churches and misunderstanding from fundamentalists, they
have survived to be living monuments to God’s sovereign grace. Today the
Presbytery of Ohio consists of 18 particular churches and 2 mission churches within the bounds of Indiana,
Kentucky, Ohio, West Virginia and Western Pennsylvania.
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