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The Mallory Avenue Christian Church (also known as Alberta Abbey), located at 126 NE Alberta Street in Portland, Oregon, is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The structure is also being consider for Portland Historic Landmark status.
Ecclesia Gnostica (Latin: The Church of Gnosis) is an open sacramental [citation needed] neo-Gnostic church based in the United States. It has ordained clergy and conducts regular sacramental services, including two weekly Masses (Celebration of the Holy Eucharist), as well as monthly and seasonal services in accordance with the liturgical calendar.
St. James Episcopal Church (Coquille, Oregon) St. James Lutheran Church (Portland, Oregon) St. John the Evangelist Roman Catholic Church (Zigzag, Oregon) St. John's Episcopal Church (Toledo, Oregon) St. John's Episcopal Church (Portland, Oregon) St. Mary's Roman Catholic Church (Mount Angel, Oregon) St. Patrick Catholic Church (Portland, Oregon)
The LDS Church is the second-largest religious denomination [17] in Oregon and many influential Latter-day Saints have lived in or came from Oregon, including former U.S. Senator Gordon H. Smith, basketball player and executive Danny Ainge, and former Oregon Secretary of State Dennis Richardson.
St. James Lutheran Church (Portland, Oregon) St. Patrick Catholic Church (Portland, Oregon) Sixth Church of Christ, Scientist (Portland, Oregon) St. Andrew Catholic Church; St. Sharbel Maronite Catholic Church; Staub Memorial Congregational Church; Sunnyside United Methodist Church
The Sixth Church of Christ, Scientist is a historic Christian Science church located in Downtown Portland, Oregon. Located at 1331 SW Park Ave., it is the largest Christian Science church currently in use in Oregon. [1] [2] A Christian Science Reading Room is attached to the southwest corner of the building.
Celtic Christianity [a] is a form of Christianity that was common, or held to be common, across the Celtic-speaking world during the Early Middle Ages. [1] The term Celtic Church is deprecated by many historians as it implies a unified and identifiable entity entirely separate from that of mainstream Western Christendom. [2]
The Oregon Irish Famine Memorial is a memorial in Portland, Oregon's Mount Calvary Cemetery, in the United States. The 7-ton, 14-foot sculpture was designed by Brendan McGloin [1] and dedicated in 2008. [2] It features a sandstone cross with an Irish limestone base on a concrete foundation. [3]