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Page "Christianity" ¶ 59
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Some and churches
Some churches require more.
Some churches have six or more training sessions of two hours each, generally held on Sunday night or during the week.
Some of these churches are known as Anglican, such as the Anglican Church of Canada, due to their historical link to England ( Ecclesia Anglicana means " English Church ").
Some, for example the Church of Ireland, the Scottish and American Episcopal churches, and some other associated churches have a separate name.
Some Eastern Orthodox Churches have issued statements to the effect that Anglican orders could be accepted, yet have still reordained former Anglican clergy ; other Orthodox churches have rejected Anglican orders altogether.
Some churches founded outside the Anglican Communion in the late 20th and early 21st centuries, largely in opposition to the ordination of openly homosexual bishops and other clergy are usually referred to as belonging to the Anglican realignment movement, or else as " orthodox " Anglicans.
Some Protestants feel that such claims of apostolic succession are proven false by the differences in traditions and doctrines between these churches: Roman Catholics and Eastern Orthodox consider both the Church of the East and the Oriental Orthodox churches to be heretical, having been anathematized in the early ecumenical councils of Ephesus ( 431 ) and Chalcedon ( 451 ) respectively.
Some Protestant charismatic and British New Church Movement churches include " apostles " among the offices that should be evident into modern times in a true church, though they never trace an historical line of succession.
Some of their works are considered precursors of archaeoastronomy ; antiquarians interpreted the astronomical orientation of the ruins that dotted the English countryside as William Stukeley did of Stonehenge in 1740, while John Aubrey in 1678 and Henry Chauncy in 1700 sought similar astronomical principles underlying the orientation of churches.
Some Protestant churches including the Lutheran and Methodist churches have bishops serving similar functions as well, though not always understood to be within apostolic succession in the same way.
Some Anglican churches consider themselves both Protestant and Catholic.
Some Protestant churches avoid using the term completely, to the extent among many Lutherans of reciting the Creed with the word " Christian " in place of " catholic ".
Some minorities within congregations that joined the PKN decided to leave the church and associated themselves individually with one of the other Reformed churches.
( Some distinguished Protestant churches in the US had this practice in the 19th century, besides the Church of England and the Presbyterian Church of Scotland ).
Some Baptist churches are closed-Communionists ( even requiring full membership in the church before partaking ), with others being partially or fully open-Communionists.
Some churches use bread without any raising agent ( whether leaven or yeast ), in view of the use of unleavened bread at Jewish Passover meals, while others use any bread available.
Some Protestant communities including most Lutheran churches practice closed communion and require catechetical instruction for all people before receiving the Eucharist.
Some churches founded independently of these lineages also employ this form of church governance.
Some Lutheran churches practice congregational polity or a form of presbyterian polity.
Some scholars have suggested that this refers to the canonical Epistle to the Ephesians, contending that it was a circular letter ( an encyclical ) to be read to many churches in the Laodicean area.
Some Christian denominations are organized on federalist principles ; in these churches this is known as ecclesiastic or theological federalism.

Some and originating
Some legal classifications of gin are defined only as originating from specific geographical areas ( e. g. Plymouth gin, Ostfriesischer Korngenever, Slovenská borovička, Kraški Brinjevec, etc.
Some terminology originating in professional wrestling has found its way into the common vernacular.
Some of the better known modern experiments include the Findhorn Foundation in Scotland, Dancing Rabbit Ecovillage, Twin Oaks and Los Horcones ( inspired by B. F. Skinner's Walden Two ) and The Farm in the US, ZEGG in Germany, Camphill Communities ( all over, but originating in Europe ), and Auroville in India.
Some authors claim that the argument relating to Seleucus handing over more of what is now southern Afghanistan is an exaggeration originating in a statement by Pliny the Elder referring not specifically to the lands received by Chandragupta, but rather to the various opinions of geographers regarding the definition of the word " India ":
Some songs, especially English ones originating in the United States, are at times impossible to place in clave.
Some of the notable athletes originating from Hunedoara include Mihai Leu, former WBO boxing world champion and national rally champion, Michael Klein ( footballer ), as well as Maria Cioncan, Olympic bronze-medal winner.
Some of these scholars identified the apocalyptic imagery in the gospels as originating with John the Baptist, and not authentic to Jesus.
He is best known for playing the hapless Frank Spencer in the popular 1970s British sitcom, Some Mothers Do ' Ave ' Em ( which made him a household name ), as well as for originating the title role in The Phantom of the Opera.
Some thinkers, such as Werner Sombart and Max Weber, locate the concept of capital as originating in double-entry bookkeeping, which is thus a foundational innovation in capitalism, Sombart writing in " Medieval and Modern Commercial Enterprise " that:
Some of the domestic animals that were planned for the agricultural area during the first mission include four pygmy goats and one billy goat from the plateau region of Nigeria, 35 hens and three roosters ( a mix of Indian jungle fowl ( Gallus gallus ), Japanese silky bantam, and a hybrid of these ), two sows and one boar pig ( feral ), as well as tilapia fish grown in a rice and azolla pond system originating millennia ago in China.
Some of the key early members of the club were Jack Dennis and Peter Samson, who compiled the 1959 Dictionary of the TMRC Language and who are credited with originating the concept " Information wants to be free ".
Some of the most common Punjabi dhol rhythms are bhangra ( originating with the old, community bhangra dance ), dhamaal ( associated with many cultural functions, including worship at Sufi shrines ), and kaharva, a dance and song rhythm.
Some of the observed features were identified as telluric lines originating from absorption in oxygen molecules in the Earth's atmosphere.
Some scholars believe that he was influenced by Hegel and Friedrich Schiller ; in fact, in a speech given in the school he founded on the centenary of the birth of the latter, he claimed that the universalistic principles of Western culture embodied in Schiller's writings are Jewish values originating in the Torah.
Some power flossers use vibration which transfers through the floss, originating from the ends.
In April 1949, he appeared in Rodgers and Hammerstein's South Pacific, originating the role of French Planter Emil de Becque, and his operatic-style, highly expressive performance of the hit song " Some Enchanted Evening " made him a matinée idol and a national celebrity.
Some researchers have proposed that air pollution in the form of nitrogen and sulfur compounds originating from power plants has been a source of stress to the Fraser firs, resulting in an increased susceptibility to the balsam woolly adelgid, but this relationship has not been confirmed.
Some trains originating at Gare Saint-Lazare continue onto Gisors.
Some years later, a large-scale reality warp originating on Earth-616 resulted in the recreation of the exterminated Earth-616 Jaspers and Fury as a single combined being.
Some researchers say the origin of the Tanka is multifaceted, with a portion of them having native Yueh ancestors and others originating from other sources.
Some laws were even humane in the modern sense, possibly originating in his Christianity: a prisoner was no longer to be kept in total darkness but must be given the outdoors and daylight ; a condemned man was allowed to die in the arena, but he could not be branded on his " heavenly beautified " face, since God was supposed to have made man in his image, but only on the feet.
Some vessels originating from the Levant were also found.

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