"Consolidated" is a bit of a vague description to me - does that mean:
- 4 congregations will be dissolved and reformed as 2 congregations, but they keep their halls? If members are "devasted" and "very upset" I'm guessing it's not this one.
- Or is it that all 4 congregations will be dissolved and their halls will be sold off and the members will be sent to other nearby halls and congregations? This sounds more likely from what you're saying.
If it is the first case, then I've seen previous instances where a congregation's numbers sometimes hover for years around the "too small to split, but getting too big for the hall" mark, and there are sometimes many years of splitting and merging.
However in the second case, whole congregations being dissolved entirely because they have become too small (or over some issue) are pretty rare in the UK until now, unless it's perhaps a small non-english language congregation?
But if they are being dissolved because they are too small, then how have they managed to raise £150k and lend it to the society? Someone left them something in their will?
I'd be very interested to know the circumstances around this if it does prove to be true - i.e. if it's a small rural congregation and the numbers involved - because the local congregation here is also very small and rural (and certainly doesn't have £150k) and would be interesting to know why they have "consolidated" the ones you speak of and not the one here.