Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Glencairn Museum in Bryn Athyn, Pennsylvania has a replica of the biblical tabernacle dating from 1922. [26] The Mennonite Information Center in Lancaster, Pennsylvania had a replica dating from the 1940s. [27] [28] The Mishkan Shiloh synagogue in Shilo, Mateh Binyamin is designed as a replica of the Tabernacle. [29]
The city of Lancaster is the location of 57 of these properties and districts; they are listed separately, while the 153 properties and districts in the other parts of the county are listed here. One property straddles the Lancaster city limits and appears on both lists. Another three sites are further designated as National Historic Landmarks ...
The German Evangelical Zion Lutheran Church, which became the Tabernacle Baptist Church in 1967, [2] is an historic Lutheran church that is located at Capital and Herr Streets in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1975. [1]
Lancaster City is celebrating its Restaurant Week's 10th anniversary with specials offered by over 40 restaurants, bakeries, pubs, bars, and cafes.
The Union Methodist Episcopal Church, also known as the Jones Tabernacle AME Church and Parish House, is an historic, American Methodist Episcopal church and parish house that is located in the North Central neighborhood of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1980. [1]
The tabernacle at St Raphael's Cathedral in Dubuque, Iowa, placed on the old high altar of the cathedral (cf. General Instruction of the Roman Missal, 315, a). A tabernacle or a sacrament house is a fixed, locked box in which the Eucharist (consecrated communion hosts) is stored as part of the "reserved sacrament" rite.
The church has ties to several historic religious communities in Lancaster, notably St. James Episcopal Church (also in the Historic District) and the Lancaster Theological Seminary, but the Unitarian Universalist building is newer and represents the last era of generally acknowledged architectural distinction in the city. [3]
The parish was founded in 1869 as part of the Anglo-Catholic Oxford Movement revival in the Anglican Church, [3] and was admitted to the Diocese of Pennsylvania in 1871. Its original church building, demolished in 1901, [4] was on the north side of Lancaster Avenue, just east of the present football stadium of Villanova University.