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Holy Name Church is a Catholic church and diocesan shrine, the seat of Our Lady of Guadalupe, Star of the New Evangelization Parish in Columbus, Ohio. It is part of the Diocese of Columbus and located just north of the campus of the Ohio State University. [1] The parish was erected in 1905, and the current Byzantine-Romanesque church was ...
Sacred Heart Church (Columbus, Ohio) St. Joseph Cathedral (Columbus, Ohio) Saint Leo Oratory (Columbus, Ohio) Saint Mary of the Assumption Catholic Church; Saint Patrick Church (Columbus, Ohio) St. Therese Retreat Center
Holy Family Church: Columbus 584 W Broad St, Columbus, OH 43215 Gothic Revival Served by the Mercedarian Order since 2022. Our Lady of Perpetual Help Church Grove City: 3730 Broadway, Grove City, OH 43123 Saint Agnes Church Columbus 2364 W Mound St, Columbus, OH 43204 Saint Aloysius Church Columbus 2165 W Broad St., Columbus, OH 43223 ...
The Columbus Association for the Performing Arts is moving ahead with a plan, announced a dozen years ago, to convert the former Central Presbyterian Church, 132 S. 3rd St., into a music hall and ...
Second Presbyterian Church (Columbus, Ohio) Shiloh Baptist Church (Columbus, Ohio) T. Trinity Episcopal Church (Columbus, Ohio) Trinity German Evangelical Lutheran ...
The "Macedonian Orthodox Cathedral of the Dormition of the Virgin Mary" (Macedonian: Македонска Православна Kатедрала Успение на Пресвета Богородица), also known as "St. Mary" (Macedonian: Пресвета Богородица), is a Macedonian Orthodox Church located in Reynoldsburg, Ohio (Columbus area).
The Diocese of Columbus (Latin: Dioecesis Columbensis) is a Latin Church ecclesiastical territory, or diocese, of the Catholic Church covering 23 counties in central Ohio in the United States. It is a suffragan diocese in the ecclesiastical province of the metropolitan Archdiocese of Cincinnati.
In 1949, Bishop Michael Ready of Columbus oversaw the addition of murals to the chapel including depictions of the Temptation of Christ, the prophet Elijah in the desert, and Ignatius of Loyola and Charles Borromeo, both patrons of the retreat movement, along with the apse painting of Pentecost as recounted in Acts 2.