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Westminster Presbyterian Church (Los Angeles) Westminster Presbyterian Church (Sacramento, California) This page was last edited on 23 April 2016, at 19:30 ...
1980 Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument No. 229 2230 West Jefferson Blvd 34°1′31.04″N 118°19′11.27″W / 34.0252889°N 118.3197972°W / 34.0252889; -118.3197972 ( Westminster Presbyterian Church (Los Angeles, California
The church was designed by Los Angeles architect Chauncey Fitch Skilling, in what architectural critic Sam Hall Kaplan described as "a splendid example of the soaring French Gothic Revival style, with an exterior marked by a stained-glass rose window above the entry and an interior of beam trusses, columns and arches, a carved wood pulpit, chandeliers and oak furnishings."
St. Mark Coptic Orthodox Church (Los Angeles) St. Mary Coptic Orthodox Church (Los Angeles) St. Mary of the Angels Church, Hollywood; Second Baptist Church (Los Angeles) Second Church of Christ, Scientist (Los Angeles) Shepherd Church
The First Presbyterian Church of Hollywood is a Presbyterian Church (USA) congregation in the Hollywood neighborhood of Los Angeles, California that has had a significant impact on both the Presbyterian Church and evangelical Christianity around the world. The First Presbyterian Church of Hollywood, 2015. The church was founded in 1903.
Shepherd's Grove is a congregation of the Presbyterian Church (USA) in Irvine, California, United States. The church was founded by Robert H. Schuller in 1955 as the Garden Grove Community Church and renamed to Crystal Cathedral Ministries after its church building, the Crystal Cathedral, in 1981. The congregation is now pastored by Bobby V ...
Office of Evangelical Assembly of Presbyterian Churches in America. Six departments of the EAPCA include the General Assembly Office, Department of Mission and Church Planting, Department of Communications, Department of Finance, Department of Member Care, and Council of Education and Spiritual Development. Rev. Dr.
In the early 1900s a group of eighteen African Americans met on Sunday afternoons at Central Presbyterian Church in Los Angeles. Over time the group appealed to the Los Angeles Presbytery to come under “care and development” and on October 21, 1904, the group was received and organized as a church under the name Westminster Presbyterian Church.