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Scholars Hosea Ballou (Ancient History of Universalism, 1828), John Wesley Hanson (Universalism: The Prevailing Doctrine of the Christian Church During Its First Five Hundred Years, 1899), George T. Knight (The New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge, 1911), and Pierre Batiffol (Catholic Encyclopedia, 1914) catalogued some early ...
List of Christian universalists; U. List of Unitarians, Universalists, and Unitarian Universalists This page was last edited on 21 June 2024, at 02:28 (UTC). Text ...
T. Berry Brazelton (1918–2018) – pediatrician, author, TV show host. [22] Alice Williams Brotherton (1848–1930), poet and magazine writer; Olympia Brown (1835–1926) – suffragist, Universalist minister of the Unitarian Universalist Church of Kent Ohio [13] Percival Brundage (1892–1979) – technocrat [23]
It is one of the oldest surviving congregations in the United States. It was originally Episcopalian but unitarian Christian after the Revolution, in practice today an open but strongly Christian ecumenical church, traditional in its worship and using the latest (1985) revision of its Common Prayer Book. First Parish Unitarian Universalist
List of Nontrinitarians List of Christian Scientists (religious denomination) List of Christian Universalists; List of Unitarians, Universalists, and Unitarian Universalists; List of Latter Day Saints
WGNM (channel 45) is a religious television station in Macon, Georgia, United States, owned and operated by the Christian Television Network (CTN). The station's studios are located on Steven Drive in northwestern Macon, and its transmitter is located on GA 87/US 23/US 129 ALT (Golden Isles Highway), along the Twiggs–Bibb county line.
On 26 February 2016 Georgia Today Group announced the release of another version of GT - Georgia Today Education. The paper is issued monthly and is mostly focused on education, technology, innovative business, international events and language learning. The main target audience of Georgia Today Education are teenagers and university students. [8]
Also in 1880, his Atlanta church was listed in the inventory of Georgia's Universalist churches showing a membership of 11 families. [6] Rev. D.B. Clayton, a South Carolina itinerant Universalist minister, moved to Atlanta in 1890 to assist Bowman and publish the newly founded Atlanta Universalist newspaper.