Neutral form, κύριος (kúos), "ruler, lord" of the Chubu English Church, the former English Churchiriċe ("Church"), the initial borrowed word of the ancient Greek κυριακόν (kuriakón), κυριακός (kuriakós, belonging to the Lord) ), From Proto-Indo-European * ḱew H- ("Expansion, Dispersion, Strength, Dominance")
(Counted) Christian chapel; providing building, religious service. [From 9 to c]
He went to the church next Sunday following the news. We need fellowship with other people to stay in the church so that the flames of faith burn brightly
(Counted) A group of locals and ordinary people who follow the same Christian religious beliefs. [From 9 to c]
He went to the church next Sunday following the news. We need fellowship with other people to stay in the church so that the flames of faith burn brightly
If you actively participate in missionary work, the ministry will become energetic and the new believers will be more likely to settle in the church.
The pastor complains that the church does not have enough power and women exercise excessive informal control
"Oh, you have too many churches." You will never get too many churches. I go to church every day.
Knowledgeable women are entitled to lead the church with equal grace, equal insight, and equal gifts.
Some sense of the church is usually used in prepositional phrases as naked nouns without modifiers or articles. It's like a house, not as a house
Church (third person singular gift church, present participle church, simple past and past participle church)
Other Christianity such as England Church, Canadian Joint Church, Christ Joint Church, Presbyterian Church (USA), Canadian Evangelical Lutheran Church, Evangelical Lutheran Church, Swedish Lutheran Church, Denmark Lutheran Church, Norway Lutheran The church, the church, the Iceland Lutheran church, the Protestant church in the Netherlands, the Protestant church in Belgium, France, the United States, the German Lutheran church, the joint church union of the reformed church and the German evangelical church, the old Catholic church, the Canadian saint The Association, the Episcopal Church of America or the Scottish Episcopal Chapel, appoints LGBT clergy and blesses same-sex marriage, not thinking that gay relationship is immoral
The Dutch Protestant Church (PKN) was founded in 2004, it is a merger between three churches, the Kingdom of the Netherlands Evangelical Lutheran Church, the Netherlands Reformed Church and the Dutch Reformed Church. Most members of this church live in the northern part of the country, not in the southern part of the majority Catholic. Like the universal church, PKN has apostles representing their teachings, the monasteries of Nicaea and Athana. They also observed communion and Luther's catechism