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First Baptist Church (Andrews, North Carolina) First Baptist Church (Asheville, North Carolina) First Baptist Church (Burlington, North Carolina) First Baptist Church (Eden, North Carolina) First Baptist Church (Fayetteville, North Carolina) First Baptist Church (High Point, North Carolina) First Baptist Church (Kernersville, North Carolina)
Midwestern Baptist College (Pontiac, Michigan) Mission University (Springfield, Missouri) New England Baptist College (Southington, CT) Pensacola Christian College (Pensacola, Florida) Temple Baptist Seminary (Winston-Salem, North Carolina) Trinity Baptist College (Jacksonville, Florida) West Coast Baptist College (Lancaster, California)
First Baptist Church is a Baptist church located at 400 S. Broad Street in Burlington, Alamance County, North Carolina. It is affiliated with the Southern Baptist Convention . The church was built in 1922–1924, and is a two-story, brick Neoclassical Revival style church building with stone ornamentation.
C. Gwin Morris, "J. Frank Norris and the Baptist General Convention of Texas," Texas Baptist History 1 (1981) J. Frank Norris, Inside History of First Baptist Church, Fort Worth, and Temple Baptist Church, Detroit (Fort Worth, 1938) C. Allyn Russell, "J. Frank Norris: Violent Fundamentalist," Southwestern Historical Quarterly 75 (January 1972)
First Baptist Church is a historic Baptist church affiliated with the Cooperative Baptist Fellowship located at Middle Street and Church Alley in New Bern, Craven County, North Carolina. It was built in 1848, and is a rectangular brick church building in the Gothic Revival style. It features a two-stage, turreted entrance tower.
Akron's plan to level the site of one of the country's first megachurches is moving full speed ahead. The former Akron Baptist Temple campus, most recently known as The Word Church, is just a few ...
Following the 1911 merger, the Tabernacle Pentecostal Church, originally the Brewerton Presbyterian Church, merged with the Pentecostal Holiness Church in 1915. [25] Having Presbyterian roots and located mostly in South Carolina, this group of around 15 congregations was affiliated with Nickles Holmes Bible College in Greenville . [ 26 ]
The Baptist State Convention also recognizes a historical relationship with the historic educational institutions based on its founding of Wake Forest University, in 1834 and Meredith College in 1898. These institutions do not receive funding from the convention, nor are their boards and administration members elected by the convention.