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TODAY show co-anchor Savannah Guthrie explains how her new book on faith, "Mostly What God Does," came about and what she hopes readers — and her children — take away from it.
Savannah Guthrie announced Nov. 28 on TODAY that she is coming out with a new book, “Mostly What God Does.” “I am so passionate about faith, how it can challenge us and inspire us, and it is ...
In Mostly What God Does: Reflections on Seeking and Finding His Love Everywhere, Savannah uses a collection of personal essays to offer up a "spiritual manual" for readers to help guide them when ...
Boltzius. Johann Martin Boltzius (December 15, 1703 – November 19, 1765) was a German-born American Lutheran minister. He is most known for his association with the Salzburger emigrants, a group of German-speaking Protestant refugees who migrated to the British colony of Georgia in 1734.
George Liele (also spelled Lisle or Leile, c. 1750–1820) was an African American and emancipated slave who became the founding pastor of First Bryan Baptist Church and First African Baptist Church, in Savannah, Georgia . He later would become a missionary to Jamaica. Liele was born into slavery in Virginia in 1752, but was taken to Georgia.
Second African Baptist Church is a church in Savannah, Georgia, United States. Located in the northwestern trust/civic block of Greene Square , at 123 Houston Street , the church was founded on December 26, 1802, [ 2 ] twenty-five years after the city's First African Baptist Church , as the First Colored Church. [ 3 ]
The church is dedicated to John Wesley and Charles Wesley, the founders of Methodism, who came to Savannah in the 1730s. The church's design is based on that of Nieuwe Kerk in Amsterdam, Netherlands. [4] In 1968, a centennial marker noting the 1868 foundation of the church's congregation was placed on an exterior wall of the church. [5]
The present edifices, built in 1873, still exists at 575 W. Bryan St. Savannah, GA. Both the edifice and educational center are testaments of the faithfulness of God. The site, buildings and furnishings are estimated to be approximately one and a half million dollars. This church was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1978. [1]