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New Bethel is the mother church of Soul Winners Chapel and Bertha King Memorial Presbyterian Church (Rocky Springs). [5] The Rev. Dr. Maynard Pittendreigh served the church in the 1990s and wrote an extensive history of the congregation, "A People of Faith." New Bethel was among the first churches to have its own web page on the Internet. [6]
Cooper organized Christ Presbyterian as an affiliate of the Presbyterian Church in America, the more theologically conservative of the Presbyterian churches. [1] [2] [3] The current church building was designed to hold 1,500 people, with expansion potential to 2,100 if needed. [2] On its founding date, about 1,000 people gathered to found the ...
Two other churches in the United States with Egyptian architectural themes that have survived are the First Baptist Church of Essex, Connecticut, and the First Presbyterian Church (Sag Harbor), New York, also known as the Whalers' Church. A virtual tour of the current Downtown Presbyterian Church is available on the church's website. [3]
First Presbyterian Church is the parent church of Tusculum College. It is listed as a historic place with the Tennessee Historical Commission (marker 1C-59) and is also listed on the National Register of Historic Places as part of the Greeneville Historic District .
GracePointe Church is a non-denominational church in Nashville, Tennessee, United States. Established in 2003 in Williamson County, the church received attention in 2015 after allowing LGBTQ people to become full members of the church. Following a drop in attendance and revenue, GracePointe moved to a rented venue in Nashville in 2017.
New Bethel Cumberland Presbyterian Church is a historic church building near Greeneville in rural Greene County, Tennessee, United States. The New Bethel congregation formed in 1839 after 38 citizens of Greene County successfully petitioned the Knoxville Presbytery of the Cumberland Presbyterian Church for the organization of a new congregation.
Founded in 1997, Fellowship Bible Church of Brentwood, Tennessee is a non-denominational Christian church with campuses in Brentwood and Franklin, TN. [1] Started as a "church plant" by Fellowship Bible Church of Little Rock, Arkansas, [2] the church is governed by a plurality of elders, emphasizes the authority of the Bible, and employs a team-based approach to ministry. [3]
The church was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1973. [1] The church building and its cemetery are maintained by members of a local chapter of the Sons of Confederate Veterans. [4] In 2011, a pair of local teenagers vandalized the church and its cemetery, breaking windows and defacing gravestones. [8]