Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This is a list of notable spiritualist organizations This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources .
St. Theodosius Cathedral (Russian: Собор Святого Феодосия) is an Eastern Orthodox church located on Starkweather Avenue in the West Side neighborhood of Tremont in Cleveland, Ohio. Considered one of the finest examples of Russian church architecture in the United States, [2] it is listed on the National Register of Historic ...
Transfiguration Church (Cleveland, Ohio) W. Wesley Chapel (Cincinnati) West Side Spiritualist Church This page was last edited on 4 August 2016, at 05:04 (UTC). Text ...
A spiritualist church is a church affiliated with the informal spiritualist movement which began in the United States in the 1840s. Spiritualist churches exist around the world, but are most common in English-speaking countries, while in Latin America, Central America, Caribbean and Sub-Saharan Africa, where a form of spiritualism called spiritism is more popular, meetings are held in ...
The National Spiritualist Association of Churches (NSAC) is one of the oldest and largest of the national Spiritualist church organizations in the United States. The NSAC was formed as the National Spiritualist Association of the United States of America (NSA) in September 1893, during a three-day convention in Chicago, Illinois.
Shiloh Baptist Church (Cleveland, Ohio) T. Third Church of Christ, Scientist (Cleveland) W. Wade Memorial Chapel; Z. Zion Lutheran Church (Cleveland, Ohio)
Arthur Ford (January 8, 1896 – January 4, 1971) was an American psychic, spiritualist medium, clairaudient, and founder of the Spiritual Frontiers Fellowship (c. 1955).). He gained national attention when he claimed to have contacted the dead son of Bishop James Pike in 1967 on network
The former Third Church of Christ, Scientist built in 1906 is an historic Christian Science church building located at 3648 West 25th Street (now 3648 Pearl Road) in Cleveland, Ohio, It was designed in the Classical Revival style by noted Cleveland architect Frederick N. Striebinger.