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church and is
The church truly is not a rest home for saints, but a hospital for sinners.
There were two liquor saloons not very far from the church, one white, that is conducted for white people with a side entrance for Negroes ; ;
He could no longer build anything, whether a private residence in his Pennsylvania county or a church in Brazil, without it being obvious that he had done it, and while here and there he was taken to task for again developing the same airy technique, they were such fanciful and sometimes even playful buildings that the public felt assured by its sense of recognition after a time, a quality of authentic uniqueness about them, which, once established by an artist as his private vision, is no longer disputable as to its other values.
The service is over, and a number of people come from the church with their spokesman Mityukh in the lead.
The truth, however, is that the ecumenical church is just the local church in its own true character as an integral unit of the whole People of God throughout the world.
The other misconception is that our ecumenical problems will be solved if only the knowledge of the church in its world-wide extension and its interdenominational connections, now comprehended by many national leaders, can be communicated to all congregations.
However needed this may be, the fundamental problem is not information but active commitment to the total mission of the church of Christ in the world.
The basic unit in the church, of whatever denominational polity, is always the congregation.
There is a vast difference between the community of reconciliation which the New Testament describes and the community of congeniality found in the average church building.
He often spoke of them as his `` ecumenical '' glasses and used them as a symbol of the kind of vision that is required in the church.
On the one hand, there are ecumenists who are so stirred by the crises of the church in its encounter with the world at large that they have no eyes for what the church is doing in their own town.
But what is this church doing to help its members understand their roles as Christians in the world??
To put it bluntly, many a local church is giving its members only what they consciously want.
There must first be a deeper sense that the church belongs not to us but to Christ, and that it is His purpose, not our own interests and preferences, that determines what it is to be and do.
Yet the truth, according to the New Testament, is that every local church has its existence only by being the embodiment of the whole church in that particular place.
As you approach the church on the Via D. Baullari you are passing within yards of the remains of the Roman Theatre of Pompey, near which is believed to have been the place where Julius Caesar was assassinated.
The dome of the church is, outside of St. Peter's, one of the largest in Rome.
Rare, indeed, is the Harlem citizen, from the most circumspect church member to the most shiftless adolescent, who does not have a long tale to tell of police incompetence, injustice, or brutality.
If we add to these contacts with friendly members the `` contacts with an organization of the church '' ( 11.2 per cent of the cases ), then a substantial two thirds of all recruitment is through friendly contact.

church and termed
In political terms, secularism is a movement towards the separation of religion and government ( often termed the separation of church and state ).
" Paisley's website describes a number of doctrinal areas in which he believes that the " Roman church " ( which he termed Popery ) has deviated from the Bible and thus from true Christianity.
Priesthood members presiding over multiple congregations or various church councils are often termed " president ".
The intention was for it to be used in church as what would today be termed a pulpit Bible.
Among adherents of the Confessing Church these church bodies were termed intact churches (), as opposed to the German Christian-ruled bodies called destroyed churches ().
Some, mostly in later splinter groups, have suggested that the financial issues were used as an attempt to move the church to a more democratic footing, with the office of General Overseer becoming an elective and termed office, instead of, as then existed, an office where Tomlinson served by general acclaim of the church-at-large.
A new monastery was later constructed directly over a nearby cave, after funds were collected by the Carmelite order for restoration of the monastery ; the cave, which now forms the crypt of the monastic church, is termed Elijah's grotto by the monks.
In Protestant and Catholic theology, parachurch organizations are termed sodality, as distinct from modality, which is the structure and organization of the local or universal church.
Father Sullivan termed these methods " church piracy " and insisted that those methods not be used.
He nevertheless repeatedly expressed his opposition to any sort of violent revolution and advocated instead the gradual reformation ( often termed " regeneration " in his writings ) of society from the bottom up, beginning with the individual and family and from there gradually reforming other spheres of authority including the church and the state.
The expanding legend of this St. George, which, according to the Church historian Duchesne is not earlier than the eleventh century, then makes that saint one of the Seventy Apostles of the Gospel of Luke, and tells how he founded the church of the que dicitur Vetula in pago Vellavorum — as Ruessium began to be called during the fourth century: the city " called Vetula in the pays of the Vellavi " a document of 1004 termed it.
The same impetus to establish endowed prayer also led to many new collegiate foundations in this later period ; under which the rectory of an existing parish church would be appropriated to the new chantry college ; and a new organisational structure was developed for these bodies, by which endowment income was held collectively, and each canon received a fixed stipend conditional on being personally resident, such canons being termed fellows, led by a warden.
The people of Gaza were so hostile to the Christians that the Christian church had been built outside the walls, at a safe distance, and the Christian bishops of the 4th century were specifically termed " bishops of the churches about Gaza ".
An unusual occurrence was the vandalism of this church in 1864 by a person from Birr on a ' pleasure party ' to the Seven Churches, as Clonmacnoise was often termed.
argues that such " borrowing ", which he terms " voice merging ", follows in a long tradition of folk preaching, particularly in the African-American church, and should not necessarily be termed plagiarism.

church and Dom
In fact notable gemologist George Frederick Kunz discussed the confusion between emeralds and peridots in many church treasures, notably the " Three Magi " treasure in the Dom of Cologne, Germany.
The Dom Tower of Utrecht | Dom tower, with to the left behind it the remaining section of the Cathedral of Saint Martin, Utrecht | Dom church.
The Dom Tower ( Cathedral Tower, Dutch: Domtoren ) of Utrecht is the tallest church tower in the Netherlands, at 112. 5 metres ( 368 feet ) in height, and the Gothic-style tower is the symbol of the city.
The Dom Tower was one of the largest towers constructed in Europe during the fourteenth century, and it was planned to show the power of the church of Utrecht.
church: de Lierse Dom
* Cathedral ( Dom ), a steepleless building, was originally a church within a Dominican monastery ( 1271 ), converted into a cathedral by cardinal Albert of Hohenzollern.
Dom Pérignon is buried in the church of Hautvillers, région Champagne
A major proponent of the misconceptions surrounding Dom Pérignon came from one of his successors at the Abbey of Hautvillers, Dom Groussard, who in 1821 gave an account of Dom Pérignon " inventing " Champagne among other exaggerated tales about the Abbey in order to garner historical importance and prestige for the church.
It replaced the original church of Infante Dom Henrique of 1459.
Dom Mackey was succeeded in 1918 by Dom Ambrose Agius, who acquired a disused printing works, formerly a barn and converted it into the present church in Westfield, which opened in 1929.
Up to this day, a number of university events take place in Greifswald's largest church, Dom St. Nikolai.
Depending on the title of the church, several languages use specific titles, e. g., in German Domherr or Domkapitular in a Dom ( i. e., cathedral ), Stiftsherr in a prelature that has the status of a Stift ( notably under a prince of the Church ).
< span id =" legend-d-fuas "></ span > The first church in O Sítio, was built over the grotto to commemorate a miraculous intervention ( 1182 ) by the Virgin Mary in saving the life of the 12th century Portuguese knight Dom Fuas Roupinho, possibly a templar, while he was hunting deer one foggy early morning.
Today's building of the former collegiate, meanwhile Lutheran church (, with Dom being used in German language-pars pro toto-as a synecdoche for collegiate churches and cathedrals alike ) was erected between 1389 and 1485.
Construction work on the church began in 1594 and the church was consecrated in May 1605 by the archbishop, Dom Fr.
It can thus be called the mother church ( Matriz ) of the whole of South Goa and was named: Igreja da Nossa Senhora de Neves ; It was the first Archbishop of Goa, Dom Gaspar Jorge de Leão Pereira who personally visited Margão and surrounding areas to choose the location.
His hilarious satires of avaricious fathers, précieuses, social parvenues, doctors and pompous literary types were extremely successful, but his comedies on religious hypocrisy ( Tartuffe ) and libertinage ( Dom Juan ) brought him criticism from the church ; Tartuffe was only performed because of the king's intercession.

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