enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. The New Church (Swedenborgian) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_New_Church_(Swedenborgian)

    The New Church considers Islam to have been established by divine providence to eliminate idolatry. The New Church considers it a partial (or introductory) revelation; Islam worships one God, teaches one to live well and shun evil and teaches that Jesus was a great prophet and the son of the virgin Mary, but not the son of God (as in Christianity).

  3. Church of Sweden - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Church_of_Sweden

    A former state church, headquartered in Uppsala, with around 5.4 million members at year end 2023, it is the largest Christian denomination in Sweden, the largest Lutheran denomination in Europe and the third-largest in the world, after the Ethiopian Evangelical Church Mekane Yesus and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in Tanzania.

  4. Church of Sweden in New York - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Church_of_Sweden_in_New_York

    The new building was the work of architect Wilfred E. Anthony (1878–1948). [2] [6] Henrietta died in December 1921, aged 79; it is not known whether she got to see the finished building. On March 31, 1978, the Church of Sweden Abroad bought the property from the New York Bible Society for $570,000. [2]

  5. Emanuel Swedenborg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emanuel_Swedenborg

    The New Church in the New World. A study of Swedenborgianism in America (Holt 1932; Octagon reprint 1968) A detailed history of the ideational and social development of the organized churches based on Swedenborg's works. Crompton, S. Emanuel Swedenborg (Chelsea House, 2005) Recent biography of Swedenborg. Johnson, G., ed. Kant on Swedenborg.

  6. Swedenborgian Church of North America - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swedenborgian_Church_of...

    The church also operates an online church called Swedenborgian Community Online which provides weekly resources on its website and social media. [3] In 2003, the Swedenborgian Church of North America had about 1,800 members, almost identical to the membership it had in 1981 but rather less than the 5,440 it had in 1925.

  7. Liturgical struggle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liturgical_struggle

    The Liturgical Struggle (Swedish: Liturgiska striden) was the name for the period from 1574 until 1593 in Sweden, when there was a struggle about the confession of faith and liturgy of the Church of Sweden, brought about by the attempts of King John III of Sweden to make the Swedish church take a mediating position between Catholicism and Protestantism by holding only certain doctrines and ...

  8. Bryn Athyn Cathedral - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bryn_Athyn_Cathedral

    The cathedral was constructed from 1913 to 1919. The cathedral's initial design was by the Boston architecture firm of Ralph Adams Cram.The planning of the cathedral began under the direction of William Fredrick Pendleton, the bishop of the church, and John Pitcairn Jr., president of the Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company (now PPG Industries), who was the major benefactor donating the property and ...

  9. Ulf Ekman - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ulf_Ekman

    In his youth, Ekman was a left-leaning atheist and sympathiser of Swedish Communist party KFML(r) before becoming a Christian before graduating from high school in 1970. He studied ethnography, history and theology at Uppsala University and in January 1979 was ordained in the Church of Sweden, returning to Uppsala University to work as the chaplain for several years.