Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
On the first day of the Battle of Gettysburg, July 1, 1863, Confederate forces engaged Union troops to the west of town, near the Lutheran Theological Seminary. Medical personnel of the I Corps selected the College Lutheran Church at #44 Chambersburg Street as a divisional field hospital. (The building is now called Christ Lutheran Church.)
Christ Lutheran's pilot program funds are set to expire at the end of the year, but Herr said city officials recently told the church there might be an opportunity to pursue additional funding ...
Later in 1884, Christ Evangelical Lutheran Church erected a wooden building east of the present church. This structure housed both church and school until 1901 and the school until the early 1970s. The church was designed by architect Frederick Velguth in the German Gothic Revival style and built in 1901. [3]
Christ Lutheran Church may refer to: India. Christ Lutheran Church, Narsapur, Andhra Pradesh; Christ Lutheran Church Kattukadai, Tamil Nadu; United States
After his ordination in 1926, Henry Gerecke remained in St. Louis, where he became the pastor of Christ Lutheran Church, the same church in which he had been ordained. [4] Gerecke remained ministering to his parish as the Great Depression began to bite in the 1930s but by 1935 he felt called to missionary work and left Christ Lutheran Church in ...
LCMC is characterized by the stances it takes on Lutheran polity, biblical authority, and human sexuality. The group describes itself as "centrist" or "mainstream", noting that it stands between the more liberal ELCA and the more conservative Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod (LCMS) and other Lutheran church bodies in North America.
The ALC had been formed in 1960 by the merger of several ethnic Lutheran denominations. The AFLC was originally called the Lutheran Free Church-not merged, but the ALC filed suit against the group for using the name Lutheran Free Church. The name Association of Free Lutheran Congregations was chosen by 1964.
The National Council of the Churches of Christ in the USA, usually identified as the National Council of Churches (NCC), is the largest ecumenical body in the United States. [1] NCC is an ecumenical partnership of 38 Christian faith groups in the United States .