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  2. Box pew - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Box_pew

    In colonial New England, it was common for the colonial meeting house to have box pews. Families would typically sit together in a box pew, and it is theorized that the concept of the box pew resulted from the fact that the early meeting houses were not heated, and the walls of the box pews would minimize drafts, thus keeping the occupants relatively warmer in the winter.

  3. Pew - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pew

    Pews were originally purchased from the church by their owners under this system, and the purchase price of the pews went to the costs of building the church. When the pews were privately owned, their owners sometimes enclosed them in lockable pew boxes, and the ownership of pews was sometimes controversial, as in the case of B. T. Roberts: a ...

  4. File:ICS traditional church pews.jpg - Wikipedia

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  5. About Those Empty Pews - AOL

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  6. Catholic peace traditions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catholic_peace_traditions

    Christian peace involved the monastic or ascetic peace of a pure heart and life devoted to prayer; the episcopal peace, or pax ecclesiae, of a properly functioning free and unified church; and the social or imperial peace of the world. [30] These often overlapped.

  7. 'A step back in time': America's Catholic Church sees an ...

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    The church is a well-kept island of Catholicism tucked into the leafy residential streets of one of America’s most liberal cities. Like so many other parishes, it had been shaped by the ideals ...

  8. King's Chapel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/King's_Chapel

    The stone church was built around the wooden church. When the stone church was complete, the wooden church was disassembled and removed through the windows of the new church. The wood was then shipped to Lunenburg, Nova Scotia, where it was used to construct St. John's Anglican Church. That church was destroyed by fire on Halloween night, 2001.

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