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First Methodist Church (Lewisville, Arkansas) First Methodist Episcopal Church, South (Ozark, Arkansas) First United Methodist Church (Fordyce, Arkansas) First United Methodist Church (Searcy, Arkansas) Frank Tillar Memorial Methodist Episcopal Church, South; Frenchman's Mountain Methodist Episcopal Church-South and Cemetery
First Lutheran Church (Hot Springs, Arkansas) First Methodist Church (Lewisville, Arkansas) First Methodist Church Christian Education Building; First Methodist Episcopal Church, South (Ozark, Arkansas) First Missionary Baptist Church (Little Rock, Arkansas) First Presbyterian Church (Clarksville, Arkansas) First Presbyterian Church (Dardanelle ...
The Old Bethel Methodist Church, also known as the Old Bethel School, Church, & Cemetery, [citation needed] is a historic Methodist church, school and cemetery in rural Greene County, Arkansas. It is located on Highway 358,& Greene 712 Road in Paragould, Arkansas. It is a modest single-story wood-frame structure, built in 1901, and standing ...
Now the Historic Arkansas Museum 11: Asher Avenue Overpass: April 30, 2024 : Asher Avenue between Appian way Street and South Thayer Street: 12: Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church: Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church
Our Watchword and Song: The Centennial History of the Church of the Nazarene. Beacon Hill Press of Kansas City. ISBN 978-0-8341-2444-8. Parker, J. Fred (1988). Mission to the World: A History of Missions in the Church of the Nazarene Through 1985. Kansas City, MO: Nazarene Publishing House. Purkiser, Westlake T. (1983).
The history of the Church of the Nazarene has been divided into seven overlapping periods by the staff of the Nazarene archives in Lenexa, Kansas: (1) Parent Denominations (1887–1907); (2) Consolidation (1896–1915); (3) Search for Solid Foundations (1911–1928); (4) Persistence Amid Adversity (1928–1945); (5) Mid-Century Crusade for Souls (1945–1960); (6) Toward the Post-War ...
The formation of the Bible Missionary Church is a part of the history of Methodism in the United States. [1] Prior to its existence, a multitude of conservative Nazarene Preachers felt that their denomination, the Church of the Nazarene (a denomination whose founder was ordained in the Methodist Episcopal Church), [4] [5] was heading towards modernism; one of them was named Rev. Glenn Griffith ...
The Son's built a home and in 1852, being good community citizens, conveyed about 2 acres of land, for $2, to the Methodist Protestant Church, for a cemetery and church yard. A log chapel, called "Son's Chapel", was built on the north end of the cemetery and was used for both church activities and a community school.