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  2. Church fan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Church_fan

    Church fan depicting two African-American girls praying. A church fan is a term used mainly in the United States for a hand fan used within a Christian church building to cool oneself off. The fan typically has a wooden handle and a fan blade made of hard stock paper (i.e. card-stock, 2-ply), often with a staple adjoining the two materials.

  3. JUCE TV - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JUCE_TV

    JUCE TV was a youth-oriented Christian television network and is a current YouTube channel owned and operated by the Trinity Broadcasting Network.The channel is aimed at teenagers and young adults between the ages of 13 and 30 years, and features a format similar to MTV and MTVU, airing Christian music videos, and original content such as Christian-themed entertainment and lifestyle ...

  4. TBN Inspire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TBN_Inspire

    The network originally launched as The Church Channel, which focused on carrying brokered broadcasts of various Christian church services. In 2016, the network was re-launched as a broadcast feed of Hillsong Channel —a joint venture with the Hillsong Church , which added its services and original programming to the schedule.

  5. Inside the Christian TV show rallying Trump superfans with ...

    www.aol.com/news/inside-christian-tv-show...

    To rally the show’s most loyal fans, known as the FlashPoint Army, the Fort Worth, Texas-based Victory Channel, a Christian network run by the nonprofit Kenneth Copeland Ministries, has hosted ...

  6. Liturgical fan in Eastern Christianity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liturgical_fan_in_Eastern...

    Eastern Christian ripidion, 19th century (Pskov museum). In the Eastern Churches, liturgical fans have been used from the first centuries to the present day. A fan is generally made of metal, round, having the iconographic likeness of a six-winged seraphim and is set on the end of a pole. Fans of carved, gilded, or painted wood are also found.

  7. Flabellum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flabellum

    Flabella were in use in both pagan rituals and in the Christian Church from very early days. [2] The Apostolic Constitutions, a work of the fourth century, state (VIII, 12): "Let two of the deacons, on each side of the altar, hold a fan, made up of thin membranes, or of the feathers of the peacock, or of fine cloth, and let them silently drive away the small animals that fly about, that they ...