In August of 1886, Elder Richard Spurling (1810-1891), an ordained Baptist minister, rejected views he believed were too creedal and exclusive for New Testament Christianity. With seven members from Holly Springs and Pleasant Hill Missionary Baptist Churches in Monroe County, Tennessee and Cherokee County, North Carolina, he organized the "Christian Union". They attempted to free themselves from man-made creeds and unite on the principles of the New Testament. The Church of God (Charleston) descends from this movement, which experienced remarkable growth in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Around 1895, these believers, under the leadership of Spurling's son, were drawn into the holiness movement. In 1902, Richard Green Spurling and W. F. Bryant founded the Holiness Church at Camp Creek (North Carolina). A. J. Tomlinson, a former Quaker, united with the church at Camp Creek on June 13, 1903, and soon became the acknowledged leader. Other churches were organized and the name Church of God adopted in 1907. Tomlinson professed a baptism of the Holy Ghost experience in 1908, which established the church as part of the pentecostal movement. In 1909 Tomlinson was elected General Overseer, a position he held until his death in 1943.
In 1923 this body was disrupted by division, creating the Church of God (Cleveland, Tennessee) and the Church of God of Prophecy. When the Church of God of Prophecy elected a new General Overseer in 1990 after the retirement of long-time leader M. A. Tomlinson (son of A. J.), the stage was set for another division. One group declared that the church had "departed from theocratic government" and in 1993 called for an assembly. They believed God had called them to "separate from apostasy" and that the Holy Ghost designated Robert J. Pruitt to be the new overseer. This body under the General Overseer-ship of Pruitt is what is now referred to as The Church of God (Charleston, TN). They presently claim membership in over 30 countries.
Beliefs of this body include: