Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A 300-foot-wide representation of the Ten Commandments, Burger Mountain, Fields of the Wood, Cherokee County, North Carolina. Fields of the Wood is a Christian religious park of more than 200 acres (81 ha) in Cherokee County, North Carolina, owned by the Church of God of Prophecy—a Holiness Pentecostal denomination.
Church of God International (United States), based in Tyler, Texas; Church of God Preparing for the Kingdom of God; Church of the Great God, based in Charlotte, North Carolina; Global Church of God, based in the UK, affiliated with the Church of the Eternal God (U.S.) and the Church of God, a Christian Fellowship, (Canada)
In 2003, the church's corporate headquarters were moved from San Diego to Charlotte, North Carolina. [5] The church reported in 2011 that it had 330 congregations in 45 countries, and that over 8,000 members attended its annual eight-day festival of the Feast of Tabernacles and Last Great Day , at 46 sites in 31 countries on every continent ...
Kip A. Box is the Administrative Bishop for Western North Carolina, Church of God (Cleveland, Tennessee). [1] ... At the 2014 Church of God General Assembly, Box was ...
The Church of God is a hierarchical church with an episcopal polity. [22] [13] The Church of God's highest judicial body is the International General Assembly. [23] This body has "full power and authority to designate the teaching, government, principles, and practices" of the Church of God. [24]
In the 1880s, Baptist preacher Richard Spurling was part of the Latter Rain Holiness movement in North Carolina and Tennessee. [5]In 1886, 72-year-old Spurling and his 27-year-old son, Richard G. Spurling Jr, (both licensed Baptist preachers), held a meeting on Thursday, August 19 1886, to see if there was interest in starting a new church.
The Church of God, Mountain Assembly ... But, they are also in Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, Indiana, Montana, West Virginia, Alabama, Michigan, and Kansas. There ...
The church was founded in 1939 as Bible Presbyterian Church at Central High School. [1] The first pastor was the Rev. Edgar Archer Dillard, and one of the founding elders was Billy Graham's father Frank, whose participation was in part a response to Billy's conversion. The first building was completed in 1941 on Fourth Street and held 750.