「Methodists」の共起表現一覧(1語右で並び替え)

Methodists

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該当件数:139件

  • There is a place of worship for Calvinistic Methodists; a Sunday school for gratuitous instruction
  • ute and became the college in 1887 after the Methodists acquired it.
  • Earlier, John Wesley, founder of the Methodists adapted the Thirty-Nine Articles for use by
  • The Primitive Methodists also had a chapel here, rebuilt in 1873.
  • Not to be outdone, the Methodists also had their own smaller Chapel which stoo
  • Methodists and Education: from roots to fulfilment.
  • zarene, Wesleyans, Evangelical Friends, Free Methodists, and Evangelical United Methodists.
  • In 1743 he joined the Calvinistic Methodists, and in 1745 joined the Moravian Brethren.
  • ed by Freewill Baptists, Congregationalists, Methodists, and Adventists.
  • groups in Britain, the Wesleyans, Primitive Methodists and United Methodists came together to form
  • Many of the Yorkshire pioneers were Wesleyan Methodists and were responsible for establishing the ea
  • nfluences can be seen in the modern American Methodists and members of the Holiness movement.
  • Her parents were devout Calvinistic Methodists, and she herself professed the Christian fai
  • ph-Macon was founded in 1830 by the Virginia Methodists, and is the oldest Methodist-run college in
  • In the 1830's the area was settled by Welsh Methodists and the Price Morris cottage became the cent
  • 823 and served as a house of worship for the Methodists and was used for town government meetings.
  • las and Ann (Wyeth) Milburn, who were devout Methodists and often hosted well-known Methodist preach
  • ews, he disliked the tendencies alike of the Methodists and other revivalists and of the rationalizi
  • d against (11-63 at St. Paul's) joining with Methodists and congregationalists to form the United Ch
  • e of Juliane von Kriidener and later British Methodists and members of Free Church of Scotland who c
  • n Orthodox Christians, Anglicans, Lutherans, Methodists, and others make the Sign of the Cross while
  • th of May.:169, 171 After meeting with local Methodists and establishing the Kentucky Conference, As
  • re was great conflict between Wesley and the Methodists and British Calvinists (although, much of th
  • century, being widely sung among Anglicans, Methodists and dissenters, and Lightwood noted in 1935
  • who made no bones about his differences with Methodists and Roman Catholics, and trying hard to rid
  • of stone and a grant of land" to those early Methodists as a site for their first meeting house.
  • His painting Primitive Methodists at Prayer, was displayed at the Dudley Museu
  • Organized Training Event for United Methodists Attending the 9th Assembly of the World Coun
  • nal forms of Protestantism (Congregationals, Methodists, Baptista, Lutherans, Reformed), but over th
  • Presbyterians, Methodists, Baptists, Congregationalists and Disciples
  • ting congregations which eventually included Methodists, Baptists, Presbyterian, Seventh Day Adventi
  • In the 1830s a group of Manchester Methodists became concerned that by encouraging working
  • irmingham and played football for Springhill Methodists before joining Small Heath in 1890.
  • 08 season; USC's teams were still called the Methodists before becoming known as the Trojans in 1912
  • Beginning in 1840, the Methodists began to move from Mission Bottom.
  • of the Methodist Episcopal Church, and local Methodists began to meet for worship at the Danford far
  • lished as a school for the sons of Primitive Methodists, beginning its life in 1876 in the redundant
  • nd others as 'wretches' who 'call themselves Methodists' being really antinomian.
  • Primitive Methodist Chapel: The primitive Methodists built their chapel at the top of Slant Gate
  • Illinois, he first connected himself to the Methodists, but later joined the Baptists and was ordai
  • ry common practice amongst the people called Methodists, but chiefly those of the Calvinistic persua
  • ordination in 1764, along with several other Methodists, by a certain Erasmus, said to be a Greek Or
  • ermon was established in 1903, when the Free Methodists church group obtained the isolated valley fr
  • The Methodists closed Rock River Seminary in 1878 and subse
  • e time of Indian independence, of Anglicans, Methodists, Congregationalists, Presbyterians and Refor
  • eplacing a former building used by Primitive Methodists, constructed in 1835.
  • name was changed to Wesley College, and the Methodists continued to operate the institution in Terr
  • However it was shattered by Feild, as the Methodists disliked him as much as they did the Roman C
  • : Church, Home, and Society Among Early Free Methodists, Doctoral dissertation at Drew University
  • ass., according to a history of Provincetown Methodists done in 1995 by the 200th Anniversary Commit
  • eglwys because of his close association with Methodists, especially his friend Thomas Charles.
  • The Episcopal Methodists established Albert College at Belleville, On
  • st edition of their Discipline, the Wesleyan Methodists expressly required for the Lord's Supper tha
  • In 1820, the Brighton Circuit of Wesleyan Methodists extended its reach to Worthing: meetings wer
  • n in 1811, the year in which the Calvinistic methodists first assumed the power to ordain their own
  • 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.
  • Rochester, a class-leader among the Wesleyan Methodists for twenty-one years, and a steward of the R
  • d and the Rev. Negail Riley Award from Black Methodists for Social Renewal.
  • The Methodists formed a new church in the early 18th centur
  • differentiate it from the Welsh Calvinistic Methodists, founded by George Whitefield who like Wesle
  • differ on its extent, whereas Arminians and Methodists generally accept an alternate theory of the
  • As the Methodists had moved south of the River Min and the ABC
  • nd St. Anne's is the Catholic church and the Methodists have two churches, one on the junction of Go
  • ful attention to the means of grace are, for Methodists, important in the process of sanctification
  • It opened as a cemetery for black Methodists in 1877.
  • Whatcoat became influential among the Methodists in America, known as an effective preacher.
  • He was a coal-miner who joined the Wesleyan Methodists in 1761, during his early twenties.
  • It was among the first structures used by Methodists in colonial America.
  • e largest (if not the largest) population of Methodists in the world.
  • The Methodists in all parts of the United States have brave
  • The first Chapel was built for the Primitive Methodists in 1858 and a new one was built in 1907.
  • Just like the early Methodists in the 1990's North Shore Community Church b
  • minology, in 1811, taking the name Primitive Methodists in 1812.
  • It was sold by the Methodists in 1960 to the Criterion Players, a local ch
  • In 1789, Methodists in Kentucky (then the western part of the st
  • The 1844 dispute led Methodists in the south to break off and form a separat
  • mund's Taverham, partner churches with local methodists in the Trinity LEP (Local Ecumenical Partner
  • st Church took place in 1810 when a group of Methodists in the North Staffordshire area held a serie
  • ning of the 19th century there were very few Methodists in the town but by 1827 the movement was suf
  • d touched upon some of the principles of the Methodists, in consequence of Dr. Adams having lent his
  • oliness Church that merged with the Wesleyan Methodists in 1968 to form the Wesleyan Church.
  • al leadership to more than 11 million United Methodists in a broad range of settings on four contine
  • The Association of Independent Methodists is a Methodist Christian denomination founde
  • He then became attached to a group of Methodists known as the Bible Christians, and became a
  • The building was erected by Wesleyan Methodists led by Richard Mercer.
  • ted Brethren, a group of breakaway Primitive Methodists led by Thomas Knighton.
  • "In 1813 a group of African American Methodists led by Peter Spencer formed an independent d
  • 830s, a group of approximately 600 Primitive Methodists led by Thomas Knighton left the Primitive Me
  • In 1805, his support for the Methodists led to his being deprived of his parish posi
  • The Primitive Methodists loved to preach, pray, sing and shout.
  • nts in Europe, including Quakers, Moravians, Methodists, Lutherans, Schwenkfelders, Schwarzenau Bret
  • ed Church of Canada, into which the Canadian Methodists merged in 1925.
  • For English Methodists, Methodist Union refers to the joining toget
  • In 1844 the Methodists moved to a new church, and the wooden buildi
  • a group of Methodists, normally about 12, under a Class Leader.
  • 8) to make it clear that Wesley was advising Methodists not to leave the Church.
  • had in 1836 largely absorbed the Protestant Methodists of 1828) and the Wesleyan Reformers (dating
  • that the Presbyterians, Roman Catholics and Methodists of Bytown were able to lay claim to small bu
  • The Taskforce of United Methodists on Abortion and Sexuality is pro-life organi
  • Aldersgate Day is a holiday celebrated by Methodists on 24 May to commemorate the day in 1738 whe
  • the Presbyterians in the community after the Methodists on September 21, 1859, had opened the Valpar
  • rn California football team was known as the Methodists or Wesleyens.
  • It was built in 1889, although the Methodists originally shared a church building with the
  • Most seasons the Methodists played without a head coach and most coaches
  • Chief among the Primitive Methodists' praying men was John Oxtoby, affectionately
  • inations including the Lutherans, Catholics, Methodists, Presbyterians, Baptists and the Orthodox.
  • the town does contain substantial numbers of Methodists, Presbyterians, Lutherans, and Episcopalians
  • n and Missionary Alliance, Southern Baptist, Methodists, Presbyterians, Word for the World and other
  • The Methodists replaced it in 1869 with a new brick and stu
  • The Methodists' resolution said the 1999 agreement "express
  • building in 1820, the Congregationalists and Methodists shared the church building until 1832.
  • er part of the historical religious dress of Methodists, since the movement rose out of the Church o
  • Methodists started coming to Alberta in 1840, when Robe
  • lso a routine lay preacher who met prominent Methodists such as Leslie Weatherhead and Donald Soper.
  • So many people had become Primitive Methodists that the Church of England set up a new pari
  • These were the Wesleyan Methodists, the Primitive Methodists, and the United Me
  • , including the circuit-riding system of the Methodists, the Baptist farmer preachers, the campus re
  • t societies in both places, and preaching to Methodists throughout South Wales.
  • In 1791, Boehm donated land to the Methodists to build some type of religious buildings.
  • church requested the Governor Bigger appoint Methodists to the board of Indiana University, which wa
  • ist Church was founded in 1875 by a group of Methodists to be a retreat.
  • re are two places of worship for Calvinistic Methodists, two for Independents, and one for Baptists;
  • rigins of this church date back to 1834 when Methodists, under the leadership of Jesse Burch and oth
  • religious dissenters, specifically Baptists, Methodists, Unitarians, and Universalists.
  • alled to Carlisle, Pennsylvania, just as the Methodists were revitalizing Dickinson College.
  • Many of the early Free Methodists were active in the operation of the Undergro
  • The Birchenoughs, who were Methodists, were a prominent business family in Maccles
  • The Primitive Methodists were the second largest of these, having ari
  • stian denomination (including the Republican Methodists) were valid and authorized by scriptures, an
  • The building became home to the Methodists when they joined the United Church of Canada
  • lingwood Technical School and East Brunswick Methodists, where he was coached by former Fitzroy play
  • gious services and bring in converts for the Methodists, which Pease did for several months, however
  • John of Jerusalem Cemetery served the German Methodists, who moved to Jerusalem from New York City a
  • ev. Henry Carter in 1933 to inform and unite Methodists who covenanted together "to renounce war and
  • The Methodists with their camp bawling,
  • rmists Particularly to Those of the Wesleyan Methodists: With Practical Directions for the Erection
  • The Methodists would not begin formal integration of the bl