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Congregational and were
But Theodore Parker, commencing his mission to the world-at-large, disguised as the minister of a `` twenty-eighth Congregational Church '' which bore no resemblance to the Congregational polities descended from the founders ( among which were still the Unitarian churches ), made explicit from the beginning that the conflict between him and the Hunkerish society was not something which could be evaporated into a genteel difference about clerical decorum.
Her parents, Samuel Elijah Eastman and Annis Bertha Ford, were both Congregational Church clergy, and together served as pastors at the church of Thomas K. Beecher near Elmira, New York.
A modified version of this proposal was accepted by Cromwell and the Council of Officers and less than a month after the dissolution of the Rump, during May 1653, letters in the name of the Lord-General and the Army Council were sent to Congregational churches in every county in England to nominate those they considered fit to take part in the new government.
#* The Adamses were originally members of Congregational churches in New England.
The new branch that formed was the Congregational Unitarians, which Morse as pastor thought were anti-Federalists, as they had a different belief related to religious salvation.
Prayers were said by the Congregational Christian Church of Samoa for an accident-free changeover and Samoa's Red Cross carried out a blood donation campaign in case of a surge of accidents.
In the United States, the Unitarian movement began primarily in the Congregational parish churches of New England, which were part of the state church of Massachusetts.
Brown withdrew his membership from the Congregational church in the 1840s and never officially joined another church, but both he and his father Owen were fairly conventional evangelicals for the period with its focus on the pursuit of personal righteousness.
The Asquiths were a middle-class family and members of the Congregational church.
Her father, William Smith ( 1707 – 1783 ), a liberal Congregationalist, and other forebears were Congregational ministers, and leaders in a society that held its clergy in high esteem.
The original 40 families of the parish began their own Congregational church and were allowed by Norwalk to hire a minister ( Robert Sturgeon, who also became the town's first schoolmaster ), open schools and build roads.
Ebenezer Gay, a renowned Congregational minister ; U. S. Postmaster General Gideon Granger ; real estate speculator Oliver Phelps, once the largest landowner in America ; composer Timothy Swan ; architect Henry A. Sykes ; sculptor Olin Levi Warner ; Seth Pease, surveyor of the Western Reserve lands in Ohio, most of which were controlled by Suffield financiers and speculators ; and Thaddeus Leavitt, inventor of an early cotton gin, merchant and patentee of the Western Reserve lands.
During this period, the Congregational Church received a makeover, commercial enterprises were eliminated for aesthetic purposes, and restrained but elegant summer homes — many of them designed by Rossiter himself — were constructed.
First Congregational Church, located near Town HallThere were 1, 575 households out of which 38. 9 % had children under the age of 18 living with them, 72. 6 % were married couples living together, 6. 5 % had a female householder with no husband present, and 17. 8 % were non-families.
As it was completely useless, arrangements were made to house the High School in the Congregational Church and the grades in the West Side school, St. Patrick's auditorium, the Nazarene Church, and the basement ' of the Carnegie Library.
Both Catholic and Lutheran religious services were held here, and a Congregational Church was built.
A Congregational church was organized about October 30, 1771, and small appropriations for preaching were made annually.
The first religious services were held in Adams County in Ritzville in April 1882 at the McKay Home and the First Congregational Church was soon organized, a church would be built in 1885.
In 1868 formal ties with Presbyterian and Congregational churches were cut, but Ripon remained somewhat religious for much of its history.
Congregational churches were widely established in the Massachusetts Bay Colony, later New England.
Under the Act of Parliament that dealt with the financial and property issues arising from the merger between what had become by then the Congregational Church of England and Wales and the Presbyterian Church of England, certain assets were divided between the various parties.

Congregational and Congregation
The village's houses of worship include Congregation Sons of Israel ( CSI ), Briarcliff Congregational Church, Scarborough Presbyterian, All Saints Episcopal, St. Theresa's Catholic Church, Holy Innocents Anglican, Faith Lutheran Brethren Church, and St Mary's Episcopal Church.
Br Philip Pinto is the current Congregation Leader of the Christian Brothers, and head of its Congregational Leadership Team that is based in Rome.

Congregational and founded
* October 5 – The United Reformed Church is founded out of the Congregational and Presbyterian Churches.
The Congregational Church was founded the following year.
The Congregational Church stands on the eastern edge of the old town green on Pomfret Hill, across from the Pomfret School, founded in 1894.
The first church was the Congregational, which was organized in May 1868, and the Presbyterian church was founded in July of the same year.
With the influx of new residents came a number of new churches, founded for Catholic, Episcopalian, Lutheran, and Methodist parishioners, as well as a second Congregational church.
The oldest of these churches is First Congregational Church, founded in 1860.
The West Bloomfield Congregational Church was founded in 1799.
* Ketchum – A location in the western part of the town on County Route 49, formerly site of a Congregational church founded by Rev.
David Thomas founded the Presbyterian Church of Catasauqua, in which residents still worship today, and his wife Elizabeth donated money and land to found the Welsh Congregational Church, which no longer exists.
Carleton College ( then Northfield College ) was founded in 1866 on the northern edge of town by the Minnesota Conference of Congregational Churches.
* Exeter Congregational Church, founded 1638
The school was founded on May 3, 1866, by the Minnesota Conference of Congregational Churches as Northfield College.
The Congregational Union of Ireland was founded in the early 19th century and currently has 29 member churches.
It was the first major fellowship to organize outside of the mainstream Congregational body since 1825, when the Unitarians formally founded their own body.
The United Church was founded in 1925 as a merger of four Protestant denominations: the Methodist Church of Canada, the Congregational Union of Ontario and Quebec, two-thirds of the congregations of the Presbyterian Church in Canada, and the Association of Local Union Churches.
Their first organization of the town was that of the Congregational Church of Sherburne, founded on July 6, 1794.
The Congregational church was founded January 25, 1808.
The Congregational church was founded January 25, 1808.
Its precursor ( 公理會潞河書院 ) was founded by the Congregational church.
Unitarian, Wesleyan ( later Methodist ) and Congregational chapels ; the Unitarian chapel was founded in the 17th century by Presbyterians and the Wesleyan and Congregational ones in 1837 and 1846 respectively.
Finally, there is a Dissenters ' Cemetery with Chapel at Vallis Road, which was founded in 1851 by Frome's ' Free Churches ', mainly Baptist, Congregational and Methodist and has been the site of over 6, 000 burials.
The most well established is the United Reformed Church in Cores End, which was founded as a Congregational Chapel in 1773 ( as a non-conformist alternative to St. Paul's in Wooburn ).

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