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Christ Church was the seat of the Anglican Bishop in Jerusalem until the opening of St. George's Cathedral, Jerusalem in 1899. Prior to the outbreak of the First World War , the Christ Church compound was also the site of the British Consulate. [ 7 ]
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Dominus Flevit (Latin, "the Lord wept") is a Roman Catholic church on the Mount of Olives, opposite the walls of the Old City of Jerusalem in Israel.During construction of the sanctuary, archaeologists uncovered artifacts dating back to the Canaanite period, as well as tombs from the Second Temple and Byzantine eras.
Jerusalem was the first center of the church, according to the Book of Acts, and according to the Catholic Encyclopedia the location of "the first Christian church". Jerusalem church may refer to: History of early Christianity#Jerusalem church; Council of Jerusalem; Cenacle; Church of the Holy Sepulchre; Church of Jerusalem (disambiguation)
Holy Resurrection Church (Kodiak, Alaska), a Russian Orthodox church; Episcopal Church of the Resurrection (Pleasant Hill, California) Resurrection of the Lord Catholic Church (Waipahu, Hawaii), a Roman Catholic Church on the island of Oahu; Resurrection Catholic Church, in Dubuque, Iowa; United Methodist Church of the Resurrection, Leawood, Kansas
The fourth-century church fathers Eusebius and Epiphanius of Salamis cite a tradition that before the destruction of Jerusalem in AD 70 the Jerusalem Jewish Christians had been warned to flee to Pella in the region of the Decapolis across the Jordan River. [5] After the destruction of Jerusalem, they came back to the city.
The community of goods of the early church of Jerusalem (also known as the early Christian community of goods) refers to the transfer of all property and sharing the proceeds with those in need, which Luke's Acts of the Apostles (Acts 2:44; 4:32) in the New Testament highlights as a characteristic of this first community of early Christianity in Jerusalem.