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William Cathcart (1881). "The Baptists of North Carolina". The Baptist Encyclopedia. Baptist History Series. Vol. 2 (reprinted by The Baptist Standard Bearer, Inc. 2001 ed.). Philadelphia: Louis H. Everts. p. 854. ISBN 978-1-57978-910-7. Livingston Johnson (1908). History of the North Carolina Baptist State Convention. Raleigh, NC: Edwards ...
The church grew to a membership of over 150 by 1965 and as its numbers increased the congregation built a new church building in the 1980s able to seat 600 people. Although it briefly exceeded capacity, there was little growth in the 1990s and attendance eventually declined to a steady 400 members.
The Original Free Will Baptist Convention is a North Carolina–based body of Free Will Baptists that split from the National Association of Free Will Baptists in 1961. The Original Free Will Baptist State Convention was established in 1913. In 1935 the State Convention became a charter member of the National Association.
In 2023, at the 1st General Assembly, the Confessional Baptist Association conditionally agreed to financially support Redeemer Reformed Baptist Church in Belton, Texas which is an existing church plant of Emmanuel Reformed Baptist Church in Georgetown, Texas. This funding was provided to temporarily assist the pastoral efforts of the Emmanuel ...
Started in 1954 by Rev. Jack Hudson, the church grew from "29 members in a tar-paper building on Old Concord Road" [2] to 4800 members, the first church that large in the city, [3] and at its peak, 6400 members. The current building is a domed facility that includes a 3400-seat sanctuary.
The new Consolidated American Baptist Convention began with supporting black Baptists in the South in the remains of the Confederacy. [7] After emancipation and with support from the Consolidated Convention, black Baptists formed their own state conventions, originally including Alabama, North Carolina, Virginia, Arkansas, and Kentucky. [8]
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Three associations, mostly in North Carolina, are in correspondence — Little River, Little Valley and Mountain Union (708 members in 15 churches in 1999). Two others are in isolated areas and not connected to the first three — East Washington in Arkansas (1560 members in 10 churches in 1999) and Enterprise in Ohio , Kentucky and bordering ...