Pray, sing, learn about god etc. They pray. They sing praise & worship songs. They receive Bible instruction through teaching by the pastor. They tithe. They fellowship with other Christians. They lift up the name of Jesus. In addition to the above: Firstly worship comes first. This involves praising God and thanking him for his love. It involves prayer, confessing what we have done wrong and receiving God's forgiveness. we sing - hymns, worship songs and other songs in praise or in prayer to god. Also, we hear The Bible read each time we meet, and explained, through a sermon or talk. At something called 'Holy Communion' ( a service held on some days) we re-enact Christ's last supper by breaking bread and drinking wine as a seal of his new covenant with us. In the bible jesus said 'do this to remember me' ...and so we do. In addition to worship, we have fun! We meet for social occasions - coffee after each service, for social gatherings like coffee mornings, meals, concerts, talks (on any topic - not just Christian), for trips (like the theatre - block bookings are cheaper!) weekends away as a group of Christians, suppers, games evenings, sports, and so on. Great friendships have been made in Christian social gatherings. We meet for study - for studying the Bible and what it means to be a Christian. We meet for coourses introducing Christianity to others who are searching. We serve a local community (the area served by ourchurch is on a run-down housing estate) through practical help, spiritual guidance and much prayer. We raise funds - not only for our own use as a church like heating, lighting etc (we do not have any income from any other sources except our own giving and by raising funds) but also in order that we can help others. We pledge at least 10% of our Church income for charity - both here and abroad, although we usually give more. As an example one of the 17 charities we helped last year was to help train a nurse in Zambia for just over a year. These are just a few of the activities in my own church.... who said that Christianity is boring?! -JohnWelsh- .
1 syllable. Just "Church".
The possessive form of the singular noun church is church's.example: We took up a collection to repair the church's roof.
2, church-es
A church is a common noun.
The church "militant" refers to the visible Christian Church here on earth, as opposed to the church "triumphant" that refers to the invisible Christian Church in Heaven. The church militant is given that name because it does daily battle with the Prince of Darkness (the devil) and his evil forces here on earth.
As in what you have in a church, it is lectern.As in what you have in a church, it is lectern.As in what you have in a church, it is lectern.As in what you have in a church, it is lectern.As in what you have in a church, it is lectern.As in what you have in a church, it is lectern.As in what you have in a church, it is lectern.As in what you have in a church, it is lectern.As in what you have in a church, it is lectern.As in what you have in a church, it is lectern.As in what you have in a church, it is lectern.
Yes, Bethel Church is a Pentecostal church.
the church that the anglican church was founded was the catholic church.
There is no "Church of Australia". There are several prominent denominations such as: * Anglican Church Of Australia * The Catholic Church in Australia * Presbyterian Church of Australia * Apostolic Church Australia * Lutheran Church of Australia * Baptist Church of Australia
church
If the question refers to the location of, or description of, a church, or its denomination, then the response, 'The church is ... ' is correct. If the questions is about a church as a specific entity, the word 'church' should be capitalized. For example:'Where is the church?': 'The church is two blocks away.''Where is the Catholic church?': 'The Catholic church is in the next street.''What is the church built of?': 'The church is built of stone.''How old is the Christian Church?': 'The Church is over two thousand years old.'A devout believer in a particular religion, asked 'Why does your Church exist?' might respons simply, 'The Church is.'
Church's
Albanian Byzantine Catholic Church Armenian Catholic Church Bulgarian Greek Catholic Church Chaldean Catholic Church Coptic Catholic Church Patriarchate Ethiopian Catholic Church Byzantine Church of Croatia, Serbia and Montenegro Greek Byzantine Catholic Church Hungarian Byzantine Catholic Church Italo-Albanian Byzantine Catholic Church Macedonian Catholic Church Maronite Catholic Church Melkite Greek-Catholic Church Romanian Greek-Catholic Church Ruthenian Byzantine Catholic Church Slovak Byzantine Catholic Church Syriac Catholic Church Patriarchate Syro-Malabar Catholic Church Syro-Malankara Catholic Church Ukrainian Greek-Catholic Church
The Church of England is a Protestant church.
Yes, it's a Church of England church.
There is a Lutheran Church and a Catholic Church but no Lutheran Catholic Church.
The church is just the church. Ecclesia was mistranslated as "church" but it (Ecclesia) means assembly.