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White became pregnant the year after converting to Christianity. She and the father, local musician Dean Knight, married in 1985; they divorced in 1989. [12] [83] [84] White met associate pastor Randy White in 1987 while attending Damascus Church of God in Maryland, which was headed by his father. [85]
Divorce (and remarriage): Some Restoration Branches and members believe that a couple's marriage covenant remains literally "until death do they part." They would consider someone who divorced a spouse and remarried as being in adultery and use the term "serial marriage" to describe such situations. The term "serial marriage" has a political ...
They divorced their respective spouses in 1989 and married each other a year later. Shortly after, they moved to Tampa, Florida. [ 27 ] He and Paula White divorced in 2007, [ 30 ] [ 31 ] following a book publisher's lawsuit alleging infidelity, an allegation which Paula White denied.
Founded the Church of God, the Eternal, 1974-1975. As one of the original six students at Ambassador, he was a roommate of Herman L. Hoeh. Unlike many Ambassador students, he grew up in the Church of God (Seventh Day). His break from the WCG in 1974 was largely due to doctrinal changes regarding Pentecost and divorce and remarriage.
Since God's Word strictly forbids remarriage after divorce (Mark 10:2-12); and because of the suffering of the divorcees, the stigma placed upon their children, and the ruination of homes, no divorced and remarried person who continues to live in such a relationship shall be allowed to belong to the Emmanuel Association of Churches or an ...
Crane's divorce from his first wife was not final when he married Turner in 1942, so the marriage was annulled. When Turner discovered she was pregnant to him, she remarried him, but they divorced the following year: Nicole Vaidišová: Czech tennis player: see Radek Štěpánek: Jean-Claude Van Damme: Belgian martial artist, actor: Gladys ...
If American women earned minimum wage for their unpaid labor around the house (for roughly four hours of work a day), they would have made $1.5 trillion, according to a New York Times calculation.
A. Jan Marcussen is a preacher, and marriage counselor. He is most known for views and promotion, through writing and other methods, of eschatology and the seventh-day Sabbath. [1] Marcussen has offered to pay 1 million U.S. dollars to anyone who can find biblical proof of a Sunday Sabbath. [2]