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The Fellowship for Intentional Community [4] became publisher of the magazine in 1989, and in 1990 released the first self-contained book-format edition of the directory (also distributed to magazine subscribers, counted as double issue #77/78). The Communities Directory is now in its 7th edition. [5]
International Fellowship of Christian Assemblies: 7,200 Pentecostal: International Pentecostal Church of Christ: 4,961 Pentecostal: International Pentecostal Holiness Church: 2,600,000 Pentecostal: National Hispanic Christian Leadership Conference Charismatic: Open Bible Churches: 150,000 Pentecostal: Open Bible Faith Fellowship Charismatic
Bible Fellowship Church is a conservative pietistic Christian denomination with Mennonite roots centered in the Mid-Atlantic region of the United States. Its denominational leader Donald T. Kirkwood [ 1 ] described the denomination as " reformed in theology, Presbyterian in polity , creedal immersionists."
Here's the church. Here's its steeple. They replaced it with a crane for its faithful people.
Southern Baptist Convention, Baptist Bible Fellowship International Triumph Church [58] Detroit: MI Solomon W. Kinloch, Jr 14,000 [3] Non-denominational: Yes (4) 12Stone Church Lawrenceville: GA Kevin Myers 17,200 [citation needed] Wesleyan Church: Yes (8) and 1 online Valley Bible Fellowship Bakersfield: CA Ron Vietti 10,300 [citation needed ...
The Fellowship of Independent Reformed Evangelicals (FIRE) is a Reformed Baptist network of churches founded in 2000. There are congregations in the United States and abroad. It provides a platform for fellowship, cooperation, and mission sending. All ministry, cooperation, missions, and meetings are at the initiative of member churches. [1]
There is the World Baptist Fellowship founded in 1933 at Fort Worth, Texas by J. Frank Norris. [5] Doctrinal differences in the latter led to the founding of the Baptist Bible Fellowship International in 1950 and the Independent Baptist Fellowship International in 1984. [6] Various independent Baptist Bible colleges were also founded. [7]
In the 1980s and 1990s these numbers began to drop dramatically, with many churches leaving the association to fellowship with convention churches or independent Baptists. Many other rural churches closed their doors as both population and interest in church declined in the scattered areas where these rural churches existed.