Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
First Baptist Church (Covington, Virginia) First Baptist Church (Farmville, Virginia) First Baptist Church (Lexington, Virginia) First Baptist Church (Lynchburg, Virginia) First Baptist Church (Newport News, Virginia) First Baptist Church (Norfolk, Virginia) First Baptist Church (Richmond, Virginia) First Baptist Church (Roanoke, Virginia)
Map of Virginia. Buildings, sites, districts, and objects in Virginia listed on the National Register of Historic Places: . As of September 18, 2017, there are 3,027 properties and districts listed on the National Register of Historic Places in all 95 Virginia counties and 37 of the 38 independent cities, including 120 National Historic Landmarks and National Historic Landmark Districts, four ...
The Batesville Historic District is a national historic district located at Batesville, Albemarle County, Virginia. In 1999, when it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places, it included 33 buildings deemed to contribute to the historic character of the area. They include representative examples of the early-19th century Federal ...
The National Association of Free Will Baptists (NAFWB) is a national body of Free Will Baptist churches in the United States and Canada, organized on November 5, 1935 in Nashville, Tennessee. The Association traces its history in the United States through two different lines: one beginning in the South in 1727 (the "Palmer line") and another in ...
The Morris Memorial Building is a historic building in Nashville, Tennessee, United States. It was built in the 1920s for the African-American National Baptist Convention, USA, Inc. and was named for longtime president Elias Camp Morris.
Mainstream Baptists is a network of Baptists in fourteen U.S. states that have organized to uphold historic Baptist principles, particularly separation of church and state, and to oppose Fundamentalism and Theocratic Calvinism within the Southern Baptist Convention. As such, it is not a denomination, but rather an organization that provides ...
In this annual meeting Virginia Baptists have overwhelmingly voted to maintain that historic and strategic relationship." [6] The BGAV contributes more to the Baptist World Alliance (BWA) than does any convention or union in the world. [7] In 2006, the BGAV received some Georgia Baptist churches that had requested affiliation. [8]
The New Salem Association of Old Regular Baptists was established in 1825, this association being an arm of the Burning Springs Association. The New Salem Association has undergone several name changes, from "Baptist" to "Regular United" in 1854, to "Regular Primitive" in 1870, to "Regular Baptist" in 1871, and then in 1892 to "Old Regular".