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Dudley Archives and Local History holds the archives for the town of Dudley in the West Midlands. The archives are held at Tipton Road, Dudley, and run by Dudley Metropolitan Borough Council. [1] The Archives and Local History Service looks after a collection that is housed in the purpose built Archives and Local History Centre in Dudley and ...
Gervase founded a Cluniac priory in Dudley dedicated to St James, [9] [10] fulfilling a wish of his father, Ralph. [11] It is also thought that he founded the Church of St Thomas in Dudley. [12] The church was originally dedicated to Thomas Becket, who was killed in 1170 and canonized in 1173. Gervase attended the coronation of King Richard I ...
The pulpit, given to the church in 1869, is of Caen stone and depicts saints and biblical figures. The font was given to the church in 1869 by the vicar of Dudley, the Rev James Caulfield Browne. The stained-glass east window, of three lights, was given to the church by the widow of John Roberts, a surgeon who died in 1850. [2] [5]
Sidney Rigdon, deliverer of the "salt sermon" The salt sermon was an oration delivered on 17 June 1838 by Sidney Rigdon, then First Counselor in the First Presidency of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, [1] [2] and frequent spokesman for Joseph Smith, the founder of the Latter Day Saint movement, against church dissenters, including Book of Mormon witnesses Oliver Cowdery, David ...
Following the dissolution, the priory was granted to Sir John Dudley, 1st Duke of Northumberland in 1540. Following his execution, the buildings fell into disrepair and became ruinous. [4] In the 18th century, part of the ruins of the church had been used by a tanner, a thread manufacturer, and for grinding glass and polishing steel.
Tapes of Tkach's sermon (dated January 7, 1995) were delivered to local congregations for viewing. In this sermon, he publicly declared that the Worldwide Church of God was a New Covenant church and, therefore, not bound by the terms of the Old Covenant. [29] Christian theology defines the Old Covenant as the Mosaic Law embodied in the Torah.
Richard Ames (1936-2024): Former Registrar of Ambassador University; Co-host of The World Tomorrow, 1986–1994; now resides in Charlotte, NC; he co-hosts Tomorrow's World for the Living Church of God. David Antion: Left the employ of the WCG in 1979 and affiliated with the Church of God, International for a few years. Now founder of Guardian ...
The Church of God, International (CGI) is a Binitarian Christian denomination based in the United States, an offshoot of the Worldwide Church of God (WCG) founded by Herbert W. Armstrong. It is one of many Sabbatarian Churches of God to separate from WCG.