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Church of the Redeemer (Cannon Falls, Minnesota) Church of the Redeemer (Longport, New Jersey) Church of the Redeemer (Addison, New York) Church of the Redeemer (Asheville, North Carolina) Church of the Redeemer (Orangeburg, South Carolina) Church of the Redeemer (Houston, Texas) Greater Union Baptist Church, originally built as Church of the ...
Gaithersburg: La Promesa Foundation: Catholic religious ... Hope Christian Church of Marlton, Inc. Religious WSBY-FM: ... Redeemer Broadcasting, Inc. Christian WXSU-LP:
The Reverend W. Graham Pulkingham (September 14, 1926 – April 16, 1993) [1] was the rector at the Church of the Redeemer in Houston, Texas, U.S.A., from 1963 until 1975. [2] [3] He and his wife Betty began the developments that led to the founding of the Community of Celebration and the worship band The Fisherfolk.
The mainline Episcopal church was founded in 1920 in the East End of Houston. Church membership declined during the 1950s and early 1960s. It increased during the 1960s and 1970s but then experienced sustained decline into the 21st century. As the building fell into disrepair, the dwindling community was unable to afford to repair the building ...
French L. Arrington – Church of God (Cleveland) Estrelda Alexander – Church of God (Cleveland) Harold D. Hunter – International Pentecostal Holiness Church; John Harris – Church of God/Church of the Redeemer; James A. Forbes – United Holy Church of America/American Baptist Churches, USA; Donald Gee; Nimi Wariboko – Redeemed ...
The first Anglican church in Orangeburg Township was established in 1749 by the Rev. John Giessendanner, [1] and a chapel at Orangeburg was later provided by the Act of 1768, which created St. Matthew's Parish in Ft. Motte, South Carolina. Following a long dormant period, the Church of the Redeemer was organized.
The archaeology and history of the Church of the Redeemer and the Muristan in Jerusalem. A collection of essays from a workshop on the Church of the Redeemer and its vicinity held on 8th/9th September 2014 in Jerusalem. Archaeopress, Oxford 2016, ISBN 978-1-78491-419-6 (englisch). mit Jutta Häser (Hrsg.): Tall Zirāʿa.
The Trees Community [1] was an Episcopal Church-affiliated Christian community and a music group. They were also known simply as The Trees, and originally as "The Symphony of Souls." They were at first a disparate set of unlikely young acquaintances that bonded in a sense of common brokenness and that resulted in a wide-ranging search for truth.