「Methodists」の共起表現(2語左で並び替え) - Weblio英語共起表現検索


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Weblio 辞書 > 英和辞典・和英辞典 > Methodistsの意味・解説 > Methodistsに関連した共起表現

「Methodists」の共起表現一覧(2語左で並び替え)

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"In 1813 a group of African American Methodists led by Peter Spencer formed an independent d
ute and became the college in 1887 after the Methodists acquired it.
the Presbyterians in the community after the Methodists on September 21, 1859, had opened the Valpar
It was built in 1889, although the Methodists originally shared a church building with the
Whatcoat became influential among the Methodists in America, known as an effective preacher.
century, being widely sung among Anglicans, Methodists and dissenters, and Lightwood noted in 1935
aces of worship for Baptists and Calvinistic Methodists.
ilding in the United States built by and for Methodists.
of the Methodist Episcopal Church, and local Methodists began to meet for worship at the Danford far
name was changed to Wesley College, and the Methodists continued to operate the institution in Terr
ev. Henry Carter in 1933 to inform and unite Methodists who covenanted together "to renounce war and
nd St. Anne's is the Catholic church and the Methodists have two churches, one on the junction of Go
re was great conflict between Wesley and the Methodists and British Calvinists (although, much of th
nglicans, Catholics, Presbyterians and later Methodists.
n Orthodox Christians, Anglicans, Lutherans, Methodists, and others make the Sign of the Cross while
ful attention to the means of grace are, for Methodists, important in the process of sanctification
differ on its extent, whereas Arminians and Methodists generally accept an alternate theory of the
alled to Carlisle, Pennsylvania, just as the Methodists were revitalizing Dickinson College.
rn California football team was known as the Methodists or Wesleyens.
However it was shattered by Feild, as the Methodists disliked him as much as they did the Roman C
As the Methodists had moved south of the River Min and the ABC
eglwys because of his close association with Methodists, especially his friend Thomas Charles.
orship in the city are Southern Baptists and Methodists.
l project made up of Anglicans, Baptists and Methodists.
ed by Freewill Baptists, Congregationalists, Methodists, and Adventists.
d by Presbyterians, Lutherans, Baptists, and Methodists.
So many people had become Primitive Methodists that the Church of England set up a new pari
church requested the Governor Bigger appoint Methodists to the board of Indiana University, which wa
ted Brethren, a group of breakaway Primitive Methodists led by Thomas Knighton.
The building was erected by Wesleyan Methodists led by Richard Mercer.
gational chapel, was taken over by Primitive Methodists.
Peter Williams is excommunicated by the Methodists for publishing Sabellian heresy.
g pioneer times, the area was settled by the Methodists for the Bethel Church.
eplacing a former building used by Primitive Methodists, constructed in 1835.
In the 1830's the area was settled by Welsh Methodists and the Price Morris cottage became the cent
It was sold by the Methodists in 1960 to the Criterion Players, a local ch
08 season; USC's teams were still called the Methodists before becoming known as the Trojans in 1912
that the Presbyterians, Roman Catholics and Methodists of Bytown were able to lay claim to small bu
Aldersgate Day is a holiday celebrated by Methodists on 24 May to commemorate the day in 1738 whe
rom Ireland in 1923, the congregation became Methodists.
building in 1820, the Congregationalists and Methodists shared the church building until 1832.
Croesengan: Calvinistic Methodists: 60
Her parents were devout Calvinistic Methodists, and she herself professed the Christian fai
who made no bones about his differences with Methodists and Roman Catholics, and trying hard to rid
The 1844 dispute led Methodists in the south to break off and form a separat
er part of the historical religious dress of Methodists, since the movement rose out of the Church o
Many of the early Free Methodists were active in the operation of the Undergro
: Church, Home, and Society Among Early Free Methodists, Doctoral dissertation at Drew University
lingwood Technical School and East Brunswick Methodists, where he was coached by former Fitzroy play
d by Lutherans, Anglicans, Evangelicals, and Methodists.
ting congregations which eventually included Methodists, Baptists, Presbyterian, Seventh Day Adventi
here is also a place of worship for Wesleyan Methodists.
It opened as a cemetery for black Methodists in 1877.
For English Methodists, Methodist Union refers to the joining toget
Organized Training Event for United Methodists Attending the 9th Assembly of the World Coun
823 and served as a house of worship for the Methodists and was used for town government meetings.
There is a place of worship for Calvinistic Methodists; a Sunday school for gratuitous instruction
re are two places of worship for Calvinistic Methodists, two for Independents, and one for Baptists;
irmingham and played football for Springhill Methodists before joining Small Heath in 1890.
In 1805, his support for the Methodists led to his being deprived of his parish posi
gious services and bring in converts for the Methodists, which Pease did for several months, however
zarene, Wesleyans, Evangelical Friends, Free Methodists, and Evangelical United Methodists.
d and the Rev. Negail Riley Award from Black Methodists for Social Renewal.
a group of Methodists, normally about 12, under a Class Leader.
ist Church was founded in 1875 by a group of Methodists to be a retreat.
He then became attached to a group of Methodists known as the Bible Christians, and became a
st Church took place in 1810 when a group of Methodists in the North Staffordshire area held a serie
Wilbur Fisk at odds with many of his fellow Methodists.
In 1789, Methodists in Kentucky (then the western part of the st
d against (11-63 at St. Paul's) joining with Methodists and congregationalists to form the United Ch
lar with The 'Enthusiastics', later known as Methodists.
e of Juliane von Kriidener and later British Methodists and members of Free Church of Scotland who c
inations including the Lutherans, Catholics, Methodists, Presbyterians, Baptists and the Orthodox.
lso a routine lay preacher who met prominent Methodists such as Leslie Weatherhead and Donald Soper.
al leadership to more than 11 million United Methodists in a broad range of settings on four contine
nfluences can be seen in the modern American Methodists and members of the Holiness movement.
minology, in 1811, taking the name Primitive Methodists in 1812.
Herald, a weekly newspaper for New England's Methodists.
the town does contain substantial numbers of Methodists, Presbyterians, Lutherans, and Episcopalians
Earlier, John Wesley, founder of the Methodists adapted the Thirty-Nine Articles for use by
born in Yorkshire, into a family of Wesleyan Methodists.
In 1820, the Brighton Circuit of Wesleyan Methodists extended its reach to Worthing: meetings wer
The Taskforce of United Methodists on Abortion and Sexuality is pro-life organi
e time of Indian independence, of Anglicans, Methodists, Congregationalists, Presbyterians and Refor
ews, he disliked the tendencies alike of the Methodists and other revivalists and of the rationalizi
The Association of Independent Methodists is a Methodist Christian denomination founde
d touched upon some of the principles of the Methodists, in consequence of Dr. Adams having lent his
In the 1830s a group of Manchester Methodists became concerned that by encouraging working
lished as a school for the sons of Primitive Methodists, beginning its life in 1876 in the redundant
, including the circuit-riding system of the Methodists, the Baptist farmer preachers, the campus re
ass., according to a history of Provincetown Methodists done in 1995 by the 200th Anniversary Commit
o raise one million guineas from one million Methodists.
Not to be outdone, the Methodists also had their own smaller Chapel which stoo
His painting Primitive Methodists at Prayer, was displayed at the Dudley Museu
Both his parents were Methodists.
olutionary forebearers, and his parents were Methodists.
ry common practice amongst the people called Methodists, but chiefly those of the Calvinistic persua
ome of them there was a heavy persecution of Methodists.
me that provided the first meeting place for Methodists.
e largest (if not the largest) population of Methodists in the world.
t societies in both places, and preaching to Methodists throughout South Wales.
nal forms of Protestantism (Congregationals, Methodists, Baptista, Lutherans, Reformed), but over th
nts in Europe, including Quakers, Moravians, Methodists, Lutherans, Schwenkfelders, Schwarzenau Bret
Most seasons the Methodists played without a head coach and most coaches
ordination in 1764, along with several other Methodists, by a certain Erasmus, said to be a Greek Or
by 20 feet, that was shared with some local Methodists.
n and Missionary Alliance, Southern Baptist, Methodists, Presbyterians, Word for the World and other
religious dissenters, specifically Baptists, Methodists, Unitarians, and Universalists.
These were the Wesleyan Methodists, the Primitive Methodists, and the United Me
The Primitive Methodists loved to preach, pray, sing and shout.
In 1743 he joined the Calvinistic Methodists, and in 1745 joined the Moravian Brethren.
He was a coal-miner who joined the Wesleyan Methodists in 1761, during his early twenties.
The Primitive Methodists also had a chapel here, rebuilt in 1873.
Chief among the Primitive Methodists' praying men was John Oxtoby, affectionately
The Episcopal Methodists established Albert College at Belleville, On
ed Church of Canada, into which the Canadian Methodists merged in 1925.
ph-Macon was founded in 1830 by the Virginia Methodists, and is the oldest Methodist-run college in
The first Chapel was built for the Primitive Methodists in 1858 and a new one was built in 1907.
Primitive Methodist Chapel: The primitive Methodists built their chapel at the top of Slant Gate
Rochester, a class-leader among the Wesleyan Methodists for twenty-one years, and a steward of the R
Welsh denominations that of the Calvinistic Methodists.
John of Jerusalem Cemetery served the German Methodists, who moved to Jerusalem from New York City a
st edition of their Discipline, the Wesleyan Methodists expressly required for the Lord's Supper tha
ermon was established in 1903, when the Free Methodists church group obtained the isolated valley fr
Just like the early Methodists in the 1990's North Shore Community Church b
living in Ixonia she joined the Calvinistic Methodists.
r of the General Assembly of the Calvinistic Methodists (1921-22).
on to some extent on that of the Calvinistic Methodists.
The Primitive Methodists were the second largest of these, having ari
stian denomination (including the Republican Methodists) were valid and authorized by scriptures, an
n in 1811, the year in which the Calvinistic methodists first assumed the power to ordain their own
had in 1836 largely absorbed the Protestant Methodists of 1828) and the Wesleyan Reformers (dating
rmists Particularly to Those of the Wesleyan Methodists: With Practical Directions for the Erection
oliness Church that merged with the Wesleyan Methodists in 1968 to form the Wesleyan Church.
of stone and a grant of land" to those early Methodists as a site for their first meeting house.
The building became home to the Methodists when they joined the United Church of Canada
In 1791, Boehm donated land to the Methodists to build some type of religious buildings.
Illinois, he first connected himself to the Methodists, but later joined the Baptists and was ordai
It was among the first structures used by Methodists in colonial America.
ly an Anglican chapel, but was later used by Methodists.
all times since, the church has been used by Methodists.
ning of the 19th century there were very few Methodists in the town but by 1827 the movement was suf
8) to make it clear that Wesley was advising Methodists not to leave the Church.
ssed into the hands of the Welsh Calvinistic Methodists.
differentiate it from the Welsh Calvinistic Methodists, founded by George Whitefield who like Wesle
His maternal grandparents were also Methodists.
Many of the Yorkshire pioneers were Wesleyan Methodists and were responsible for establishing the ea
las and Ann (Wyeth) Milburn, who were devout Methodists and often hosted well-known Methodist preach
groups in Britain, the Wesleyans, Primitive Methodists and United Methodists came together to form
The Birchenoughs, who were Methodists, were a prominent business family in Maccles
ales to be associated in such a way with the Methodists.
clergyman in Wales to be associated with the Methodists.
mund's Taverham, partner churches with local methodists in the Trinity LEP (Local Ecumenical Partner
th of May.:169, 171 After meeting with local Methodists and establishing the Kentucky Conference, As
of population), Jehovah's Witnesses (0.28%), Methodists (0.12%), other (1.44%).
                                                                                                    


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