Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Pages in category "Eastern Orthodox churches in Minnesota" The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Download QR code; Print/export ... Eastern Orthodox churches in Minnesota (4 P) ... Orthodox Church in America Diocese of the Midwest
Orthodox [9] Chabad Lubavitch of Minneapolis Minnetonka: Orthodox [10] [11] Chabad of Duluth MN Duluth: Orthodox [12] Chabad Lubavitch of Rochester Rochester: Orthodox [13] Chabad of St. Louis Park] St. Louis Park: Orthodox [14] Congregation Bris Avrohom St. Paul: Darchei Noam St. Louis Park: Orthodox [15] Kenesseth Israel Congregation St ...
St. Mary's Orthodox Cathedral, also known as the Cathedral of the Protection of the Holy Virgin, is a cathedral of the Orthodox Church in America and the Diocese of the Midwest, located in Minneapolis. It is one of only two Orthodox churches in Northeast Minneapolis, [2] and of 16 local Orthodox
St. Nicholas Orthodox Church is a historic Eastern Orthodox church in Caribou, Minnesota, United States. It was built in 1905 by Ukrainian American immigrants. The church features an entrance tower and two onion domes atop its sanctuary and apse; the domes are both topped by crosses. The church was used for services through the 1940s and has ...
Russian Orthodox Church in the USA [1] Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia; Serbian Orthodox Church. Serbian Orthodox Church in the USA and Canada; Romanian Orthodox Church. Romanian Orthodox Archdiocese of America and Canada; Bulgarian Orthodox Church. Bulgarian Eastern Orthodox Diocese of the USA, Canada and Australia; Georgian Orthodox ...
Holy Orthodox Church in North America. Holy Nativity Convent, Brookline, Massachusetts. Abbess Mother Seraphima; Convent of Saint Mary Magdalene, Warrenton, Virginia. Abbess Mother Eirene; Church of the Genuine Orthodox Christians of Greece. Saint Syncletike Monastery, Farmingdale, New York. Metropolitan Demetrios.
The diocese stands out as one of the most historic in the OCA with many parishes dating back to the late 1890s, [1] the diocese was also the epicenter of the mass conversion of Eastern Catholic Americans to orthodoxy between the 1890s-1920s in much part thanks to the labors of the former Eastern Catholic priest St. Alexis Toth who brought more than 20,000 to the church by the end of his life. [2]