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Watchman and Fellowship
In 1928, Watchman Nee settled in Shanghai where he based his own speaking and publication work, the Shanghai Gospel Bookroom, which published books by Nee and others, as well as some Chinese translations of English-speaking authors-most notably the Christian teacher and writer T. Austin-Sparks, with whom Nee had a very close relationship fostered during his significant time at the Honor Oak Christian Fellowship Centre on Honor Oak Road in London, England.
According to the " anti-cult " group Watchman Fellowship " The herb is the key to new understanding of the self, the universe, and God.

Watchman and David
In 1909, he appeared at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, as the Night Watchman in The Mastersingers of Nuremberg ( opposite tenor Walter Hyde as David ), with Hans Richter conducting.
Directed by Ian Marshall Fisher, it starred Betsy Blair as Mrs. Monday, Michael Matus as Charles Snell, Jennifer Higham as Ella Harkins, James Vaughan as Store Doorman / Night Watchman, and Gary Raymond as Roscoe, with Sylvia Seymour, Martin Gaisford, Myra Sands, David O ' Brien and Andrew Beavis in supporting roles.

Watchman and James
The initial screenplay drafts were written by James Ellroy in the late 1990s under the title The Night Watchman.
* James Arnold Taylor-Jeremy Rhodes, Zombie, ShermanTech Scientist, Watchman, Security Guard

Watchman and .
Jones ' first cartoon was The Night Watchman, which featured a cute kitten who would later evolve into Sniffles the mouse.
The Klan is believed to be responsible for burning the Watchman Industrial School in Scituate, which was a school for African American children.
The names " Walkman ", " Pressman ", " Watchman ", " Scoopman ", " Discman ", and " Talkman " are trademarks of Sony, and have been applied to a wide range of portable entertainment devices manufactured by the company.
* November 4 – Watchman Nee, Chinese preacher, local church planter ( d. 1972 )
In October of 2010, Panola County newspaper The Panola Watchman published a photo from a game camera showing an adult mountain lion.
The Panola Watchman newspaper office was first published in 1873 in Carthage by Tom M. Bowers ( 1837-1916 ), a Confederate States of America | Confederate veteran who earlier printed the Carthage Banner.
Speciality publications emerged during these early days, including The Rail-Road Advocate, The Calvinistic Magazine, and The Holston Watchman.
At least five Millerite papers were published in Canada: the Faithful Watchman — published in Sherbrooke from January 1843 ; the influential Voice of Elijah, published in Montreal from June 1843 ; the short-lived Hope of the Church in St. Thomas in 1844 ; Behold, He Cometh in Hamilton, and the Bridegroom ’ s Herald in Toronto, both from mid-1844.
* The Night Watchman in Ribe.
*" Watchman Tell Us Of The Night " ( Bowring, Mason )-J. W. Myers on Berliner
Jones debuted the character in the 1939 short Naughty But Mice ( which is quite similar to Disney's " The Country Cousin " itself ) though he has nearly identical traits to the hero kitten in the 1938 short The Night Watchman.
His other famous portraits of her include Ophelia and Watchman, and, together with her sister Kate, The Sisters.
* March 1-Samuel Taylor Coleridge launches his periodical The Watchman ; it lasts for only ten issues.
His father was a Presbyterian evangelist, and editor of the Charleston Christian Observer from 1826 to 1845, of the Richmond ( VA ) Watchman and Observer from 1845 to 1856, and of The Central Presbyterian from 1856 to 1860.
The local churches ( one-city, one-church ) () is a Christian group based on the teachings of Watchman Nee and Witness Lee and associated with the Living Stream Ministry publishing house.
The group began in China some time after Watchman Nee ( 倪柝聲 ) became a Christian in 1920.
Between 1920 and 1952 Watchman Nee established local churches throughout mainland China.
Watchman Nee was imprisoned by the People's Republic of China in 1952.
It is asserted by the Living Stream Ministry that before his imprisonment, Watchman Nee asked Witness Lee to go to Taiwan in 1948 in the event that the Communists took over so that their work would not be lost inside China.
The term local churches was used by Watchman Nee to describe Christian churches that form based upon his teaching of the " ground of oneness " although that phrase has become more frequently used to refer to any individual Christian congregation in a city in recent years.
Watchman Nee's version of the local church began in Foochow ( 福州 ), China c. 1922 ; and after the communist revolution in China in 1949 was propagated outside of China by Nee's co-worker Witness Lee ( 李常受, 1905 – 1997 ).

Fellowship and founder
* 2012 – Charles Colson, Christian apologist and founder of Prison Fellowship ( b. 1931 )
Some of the statement's more notable supporters are Rabbi Marc Angel, co-founder of The Rabbinic Fellowship ; Rabbi Shlomo Riskin, founder of Lincoln Square Synagogue, Efrat, and Ohr Torah Stone Institutions ; and Rabbi Avi Weiss, head of the Hebrew Institute of Riverdale, founder of Yeshivat Chovevei Torah and Yeshivat Maharat, and co-founder of The Rabbinic Fellowship.
* J. William Fulbright, senator and founder of Fulbright Fellowship Program.
He was the founder and President of the World Fellowship of Black Pentecostal Churches and forged COGIC's membership in the Congress of National Black Churches.
* James Brainerd Taylor ( 1801 – 1829 ), maternal cousin of Brainerd ; born Middle Haddam, Connecticut ; buried in Hampden-Sydney College Church cemetery, Virginia ; obelisk in Union Hill Cemetery, Middle Haddam, Connecticut, and Princeton Cemetery of Nassau Presbyterian Church, Princeton, New Jersey ; Lawrenceville School ( N. J ), Princeton University and Yale Divinity School-educated Second Great Awakening evangelist ; primary founder of Princeton University's Philadelphian Society of Nassau Hall ( 1825 – 1930, now called Princeton Evangelical Fellowship ); one of some 20, 000 Americans listed in Appletons ' Cyclopedia of American Biography ( 6 vol., 1887 – 89 ).
* Chuck Colson, founder of Prison Fellowship Ministries
Sushil Kumarji was the honorary president of the World Conference of Religions for Peace, founder of the World Fellowship of Religions ( 1950 ), and a founding member of the Vishva Hindu Parishad ( 1964 ).
In 2005, BeauSoleil founder Michael Doucet was one of 12 artists awarded a National Heritage Fellowship by the National Endowment for the Arts.
Fellowship Foundation traces its roots to its founder, Abraham Vereide, a Methodist clergyman and social innovator, and a month of prayer meetings he convened in 1934 in San Francisco.
The Reverend Rob Schenck, founder of the Washington, D. C. ministry Faith and Action in the Nation ’ s Capital, described the Family's influence as " off the charts " in comparison with other fundamentalist groups, specifically compared to Focus on the Family, Pat Robertson, Gary Bauer, Traditional Values Coalition, and Prison Fellowship.
The opposition of other Pentecostal denominations ultimately led to the withdrawal, under pressure, of Ivan Q. Spencer, founder of the Elim Fellowship, from inter-Pentecostal fellowship.
James Patrick Kinnon ( 5 April 1911-9 July 1985, commonly known as Jimmy Kinnon or " Jimmy K .") was the primary founder of Narcotics Anonymous ( NA ), A Worldwide Fellowship of recovering addicts.
He is also the founder, executive director, and senior pastor of MorningStar Fellowship Church based in Fort Mill, South Carolina.
Rick Joyner is the founder and executive director of MorningStar Ministries and Heritage International Ministries and is the Senior Pastor of MorningStar Fellowship Church.
He was also the founder of two prestigious fellowship programs, The White House Fellowship and The John Gardner Fellowship at Stanford University and U. C.
There he met, briefly, Mahatma Gandhi ( the first of many meetings ), and became friends with Rabindranath Tagore and Amy Carmichael, founder of the Dohnavur Fellowship.
Mütter, a screenplay based on the life of Mütter Museum founder Thomas Dent Mütter, won the 2003 " Set In Philadelphia " Screenwriting Award at the Philadelphia Film Festival and a Sloan Foundation Fellowship at the 2004 Hampton International Film Festival.
The others are St. Blane's ( another Church of Scotland congregation, named after the town's founder ), St. Mary's ( a Scottish Episcopal Church congregation ), the Roman Catholic Church of the Holy Family, the Quaker Meeting House, the ( independent Evangelical ) Dunblane Christian Fellowship, and the Eastern Orthodox Community of St Nicholas.
Rays from the Rose Cross is a Christian esoteric magazine established in June 1913 by Max Heindel, author of The Rosicrucian Cosmo-Conception and founder of The Rosicrucian Fellowship ; its original name was Echoes from Mount Ecclesia.
Wayman Othell Mitchell is the founder of Christian Fellowship Ministries or the Potters House.

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