Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
John Von Casper "Jack" Wyrtzen (April 22, 1913 – April 17, 1996) was an American youth evangelist and founder of Word of Life ministries, which operates Christian camps, conference centers and Bible institutes. Wyrtzen produced the Word of Life radio program, heard by a nationwide audience. He led the organization for fifty years until his ...
In 1940, Word of Life Fellowship Bible Conference was founded by Jack Wyrtzen. [1] In 1941, he founded the Word of Life Camp Ministry, and in 1946 he purchased an island on Schroon Lake, New York, and opened Word of Life Camp in 1947. [2]
Word of Life Christian Church, in New Hartford, New York; Kale Heywet Word of Life Church, church in Ethiopia; Livets Ord (Swedish for "Word of Life"), a church founded by Ulf Ekman; Born Again Movement (From the subtitle of Yalin Xin's book) Large Asian House-Church Network/Fellowship; Word of Life Bible Church, headquartered in Warri, Nigeria
Bruce Leonard, the father of the victim in the Word of Life Church case, was released from prison on parole on Thursday after just over seven years at Marcy Correctional Facility.. Leonard, 73 ...
Word of Life (Swedish: Livets Ord) is a megachurch in Uppsala and an international association of churches, within the Swedish Word of Faith movement. Livets Ord is the foremost example of the Neo-charismatic movement in Sweden, closely related to Word of Faith, and it may be viewed as a Swedish expression of similar Pentecostal elements in American Christianity.
Han’s performance can be found in a YouTube video posted by the association. Han was in Wichita attending the U.S. Figure Skating's National Development Camp, according to the club.
The three-day, adult women-only camp, which started at $600 per person, offered a schedule similar to traditional sleepaway camps. Its attendees could try archery, rock climbing, yoga, and kayaking.
Word of Faith Fellowship began in 1979, when Jane Whaley, then a math teacher, and her husband Sam Whaley converted a former steakhouse into a chapel. Jane Whaley, the daughter of a plumber and a homemaker in rural North Carolina, led the group as it grew to a membership of 750.