Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In the year 1921, a Latin American Mission project initiated in Costa Rica. In general, the life expectancy was forty-years old and there were diseases such as tuberculosis and malaria. The San Juan de Dios Hospital was the only one that existed and could only care for part of those ill. The main concern for the Strachan´s was children's ...
Seminario Atkinson - Seminario Biblico de Mexico, Igelesia de Dios (Sonora, Mexico) Instituto João Calvino [113] (Recife, Pernambuco, Brazil) Instituto Teológico Batista Reformado Sola Scriptura (Balneário Camboriú, Santa Catarina, Brasil) Seminario Bíblico de Puebla [114] (Puebla, Puebla, México) Seminário Bíblico do Nordeste [115 ...
Instituto Costarricense de Electricidad (English: Costa Rican Institute of Electricity) (ICE) is the Costa Rican government-run electricity and telecommunications services provider. Together with the Radiographic Costarricense SA (RACSA) and Compañía Nacional de Fuerza y Luz (CNFL), they form the ICE Group.
The Episcopal Conference of Costa Rica (Spanish: Conferencia Episcopal de Costa Rica), consisting of the Bishops of Costa Rica, is a permanent institution, with the approval of the Holy See, to signify the collegial spirit and live, study and solve problems together ecclesial interest collaboration, and promote the greater good which the Church seeks to humanity, through the various means and ...
Its head, the city of Pital, is located 28.6 km (50 minutes) NE of Quesada (Costa Rica) and 91.9 km (2 hours 30 minutes) to NW of San José the capital of the nation. It is located at an elevation of 100 meters above sea level. It is located at low altitude, because much of the district is located in the plains of San Carlos.
The Costa Rican Tourism Board (Spanish: Instituto Costarricense de Turismo) is the government agency responsible for promoting sustainable tourism in Costa Rica.Originally the agency was created by decree in 1931 as the National Tourism Board, and by a law approved on 9 August 1955, the agency became the Instituto Costarricense de Turismo (ICT).
On July 8, 1946, Costa Rica became part of the LDS Church's Mexican Mission. The first two missionaries , Robert B. Miller and David D. Lingard, arrived in Costa Rica on September 6, 1946. They presented Costa Rican president Teodoro Picado Michalski a copy of the Book of Mormon and began preaching in the country.
The Costa Rican Lutheran Church (Iglesia Luterana Costarricense) is a Lutheran denomination in Costa Rica with about 500 members. It is a member of the Lutheran World Federation, which it joined in 2002. It is also a member of the Communion of Lutheran Churches in Central America and the Ecumenical Council of Churches of Costa Rica. [1]