CHURCH CONGRESS, originally an annual meeting of members of the Church of England, lay and clerical, to discuss matters religious, moral or social, in which the church is interested. It has no legislative authority, and there is no voting on the questions discussed. The first congress was held in 1861 in the hall of King's College, Cambridge, and was the outcome of the revival of convocation in 1852. The term is now used to designate similar meetings of laymen and ministers of any religious de nomination. See ENGLAND, CHURCH OF.