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Established in 1780, this congregation is the oldest in Greeneville and had more than 1,000 members before 1790. [2] [3] Saint James Episcopal Church St. James Episcopal Church, Greeneville, TN: 105 North Church Street 1850 Gothic Revival: It has a slave gallery and an organ which is reported to be the oldest in Tennessee. [2] [3]
Grace Church became a full member of the United Church of Christ, formed in 1957 by the merger of the Evangelical and Reformed Church with the Congregational Christian Church. However, in 2005, due to a conflict over doctrine, Grace pulled out of the United Church of Christ, moving closer to the earlier Reformed tradition. [3]
Francis McCorkle, the pastor of Greeneville's Presbyterian Church, was a leading member of the Manumission Society of Tennessee. 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 ...
First Presbyterian Church (Chattanooga, Tennessee) First Presbyterian Church (Clarksville, Tennessee) First Presbyterian Church (Cleveland, Tennessee) First Presbyterian Church (Cookeville, Tennessee) First Presbyterian Church (Greeneville, Tennessee) First Presbyterian Church (McMinnville, Tennessee) First Presbyterian Church (Memphis, Tennessee)
Grace Reformed Church (Akron, Ohio) Grace Reformed Church (Washington, D.C.) This page was last edited on 27 November 2017, at 23:33 (UTC). Text is available ...
First Presbyterian Church (Cleveland, Tennessee) First Presbyterian Church (Greeneville, Tennessee) First Presbyterian Church (McMinnville, Tennessee) First Presbyterian Church (Murfreesboro, Tennessee) First Presbyterian Church (Nashville, Tennessee) First Presbyterian Church (Shelbyville, Tennessee) First Presbyterian Church (Sweetwater ...
St. James Episcopal Church (Greeneville, Tennessee) South Greene High School; T. Tennessee State Route 93; U. U.S. Route 11E Business (Greeneville, Tennessee)
The German Reformed remained under Dutch Reformed oversight until 1793, when the German Reformed adopted their own constitution. In the 1740s, Count Nicolaus von Zinzendorf, bishop of the Moravian Church, visited Pennsylvania, with the hopes of uniting the German Lutherans and Reformed with the Moravians, which Boehm staunchly resisted. During ...