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Through the ecumenical movement, which arose in Canada in the twentieth century, The Canadian Council of Churches seeks unity for the divided church and seeks to remind Christians that they share Christ's mission for reconciliation, peace, dignity, and justice for the whole community.
This category refers to Church buildings rather than religious denominations Wikimedia Commons has media related to Churches in Canada . For United Church of Canada churches see Category:United Church of Canada
The Mennonite Brethren Church blends aspects of evangelicalism with its historic Anabaptist understanding of Christianity. Mennonite Brethren recognize the teachings and authority of the Bible, emphasize personal salvation, baptize confessed believers in Jesus Christ, and encourage community, discipleship, diversity, peacemaking, and reaching out.
Sacred Heart Kerala Roman Catholic Community-Latin Rite Malayalam Church; Ste-Anne Catholic Church (Ottawa) St. Clement Catholic Church (Cambridge) St. Francis de Sales Roman Catholic Church (Ajax, Ontario) St. Francis of Assisi, Toronto; St. Joseph (Ottawa) St. Leo's Roman Catholic Church, Mimico; St. Mary's Church, Toronto; St. Patrick's ...
The Community Catholic Church of Canada (CCCC), is an Old Catholic denomination with its episcopal see based in Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario. The church was established in 1960 as the Old Catholic Church of Canada. [1]
Example of a United Church in a small community (West Montrose, Ontario; built c. 1907)In the early 20th century, the main Evangelical Protestant denominations in Canada were the Presbyterian, Methodist and Congregational churches.
Cathedral Church of St. Michael and All Angels in Kelowna; St. Saviour's Pro-Cathedral in Nelson. St. Saviour's was the Cathedral for the Diocese of Kootenay until 1987, when St. Michael and All Angels' was consecrated by the Rt. Rev'd R.E.F. Berry as the new Cathedral for the Diocese.
The Canadian Baptists of Atlantic Canada was formed in 1905-1906 as the United Baptist Convention of the Maritimes by a union of Free, or Free Will Baptists and Calvinistic or Regular Baptists. [2] The Regular Baptist and Free Will Baptist congregations wrote a statement of faith and polity called the "Basis of Union" with which both groups ...