Sentences with phrase «building national churches»

As Professor Greene has warned, «Minority religions shouldn't favor building national churches, because inevitably it won't be their gospel being preached.»
Minority religions shouldn't favor building national churches because inevitably it won't be their gospel being preached.

Not exact matches

It is a privately built church that gladly hosts state functions such as presidential funerals and national memorial services.
Adds the former president of a national environmental organization, who has looked in vain for support from religious groups in efforts to protect wilderness and wildlife: «The Unitarians occasionally let us meet in their buildings; that's been our primary contact with churches on this issue.»
They regularly attack national church activities and continue to build their coffers and secure recruits and staff.
In such a situation local groups ready to move together quickly for the sake of mission could do so; already - developed structures and organs (such as the National Council of Churches» Commission on Regional and Local Ecumenism) could be utilized and built upon; those no longer useful could be let go.
In 2010 property developers in Shandong province were given formal approval to knock down a 19th - century church built by Anglican missionaries — despite it being part of The Three - Self Patriotic Movement and designated as a protected national historical landmark.
The people who built liberal Protestant institutions such as national mission agencies, local churches, colleges, universities, social reform agencies and public libraries in the rural heartland were people secure in their social position who assumed a leadership role in society and whose sense of social responsibility was born of religious conviction.
Clearly, the negative reality over which the Nicene ecclesiology sets the confession of the church's «catholicity» is the tendency of all human communities, including religious as well as national, racial, sexual and other communities, to build protective walls against «the outsider,» and so to become parochial, provincial, chauvinistic, narrow.
And thus the gathering at Riverside Church in New York City this past May, «National Conference on Building the Earth Community.»
As Professor of Mission at Union Theological Seminary in New York he was, of course, only a block away from the «God box» - the square building of the National Council of Churches.
The national headquarters, however, could deploy functional specialists for various mission projects, such as building new churches, or organizing a local «war of the churches against poverty.»
The building of the Church as a community with complex organizational structure, with manifold functions and leaders, with various responsibilities to the society around it, can easily degenerate into the building of religious clubs, of sororities and fraternities and of national associations for the promotion of good causes, if the understanding of the Church's purpose, of its responsibility to God, of the nature and action of God, of man and his history, of the meaning of the Church's work in all the complex of human activity and of the interrelation of the various aspects of its work are lost to view.
So, the events of the past few years — among them the violence of white supremacists in Charlottesville, the church shootings in Charleston, the national debate over Confederate flags and memorials — certainly shaped the book, especially as they emphasize the extent to which the history of our country is built around the armature of slavery and the Civil War, and how far we still are from putting those issues behind us.
These include Anglo - Boer War graves, Blue Mine, It was Springbok's original copper mine and the first commercial mine in South Africa, Dutch Reformed Church (or Klipkerk) which is a national monument, built in 1921.
Cooper - Hewitt National Design Museum Frick Collection World Trade Center Site and National September 11 Memorial and Museum Empire State Building Trinity Church
Built between 1974 and 1976, the new basilica was designed by Pedro Ramirez Vasquez (who also designed the National Museum of Anthropology), constructed on the site of a 16th Century church, the «old basilica.»
Nearby guest can find the characteristic Waterwheel, called the Bakkiespomp, and the Dutch Reformed Mission Church, built in 1889, and now a National Monument and tourist info office.
Its long and colourful history has bestowed a wealth of historic buildings upon Locarno and today the city boasts nine individual Swiss Heritage Sites of National Significance, including the twelfth century Castello Visconteo, and the Church of Saint Francesco which dates from 1538.
The front rooms on Filellinon street overlook the Russian Church of Sotira Lykodimou, the largest medieval building in Athens, and the exquisite National Gardens.
Strategies of Non-Intention: John Cage & artists he collected / Gering / 14 E 63 (new location) / thru 8/31 Lyonel Feininger / Moeller / 35 E 64 / thru 6/27 (extended) Billy Al Bengston / Franklin Parrasch / 53 E 64 (new location) / thru 6/28 Mark Grotjahn / Blum & Poe / 19 E 66 (new in NYC) / thru 6/21 Lynda Barry / Baumgold / 60 E 66 / thru 7/11 Kan Yasuda / Eykyn - Maclean / 23 E 67 / thru 6/27 Horacio Zabala; Eduardo Kac / Faria / 35 E 67 / thru 6/21 Anna Maria Maiolino / Hauser & Wirth / 32 E 69 / thru 6/21 Copied / Roth / 160A E 70 / thru 6/20 Nalini Malani / Asia Society / 725 Park @ 70 / thru 8/3 Distilled: The Small Painting Show / Jacobson / 17 E 71 / thru 7/31 Pierre Soulages / Levy / 909 Madison @ 73 / thru 6/27 Pierre Soulages / Perrotin / 909 Madison @ 73 / thru 6/27 Helen Frankenthaler and David Smith / Starr / 5 E 73 / thru 8/8 Frank Stella / Van Doren Waxter / 23 E 73 / thru 6/27 Carved, Cast, Chrushed, Constructed / Freedman / 25 E 73 / thru 8/22 (extended) Peter Sis curated by Charlotta Kotik / Czech Center / 321 E 73 / thru 9/1 Harmony Korine / Gagosian / 821 Park @ 75 (new, additional location) / thru 7/11 (extended) Jeff Koons / Whitney Museum / Madison @ 75 / thru 10/19 Opening 6/27 Kathleen Kucka / Geranmayeh / 956 Madision @ 76 — floor 3 / thru 6/28 Jasper Johns; Roy Lichtenstein / Castellli / 18 E 77 / thru 6/27 The Shaped Canvas, Revisited / Luxembourg & Dayan / 64 E 77 / thru 7/3 Ed Rusha thru 7/11; Marcel Duchamp thru 8/8 Opening 6/26 / Gagosian / 980 Madison @ 77th Barbara Crane / Higher Pictures / 980 Madison @ 77 / thru 6/21 Journal / Venus Over Manhattan / 980 Madison @ 77 / thru 7/26 Lynn Chadwick / Blain - DiDonna / 981 Madison @ 77 / thru 7/25 James Lee Byars / Werner / 4 E 77 / thru 8/30 Peter Davies / Roitfeld / 5a E 78 / thru 8/10 Eddie Martinez / Half / 43 East 78 / thru 7/15 Nancy Graves / Mitchell - Innes & Nash / 1018 Madison @ 78 / thru 6/27 Jean Dubuffet; Miquel Barcelo / Acquavella / 18 E 79 / thru 9/19 Opening 6/30 Lucien Smith / Skarstedt / 20 E 79 / thru 6/27 Luke Diiorio / Blumenthal / 1045 Madison @ 80 / thru 7/2 Lucas Samaras thru 9/1; Dan Graham with Gunther Vogt thru 11/2; Goya thru 8/3; Etc. / Met Museum / 5th Avenue @ 82nd Italian Futurism thru 9/1, Etc. / Guggenheim / 1071 Fifth Avenue @ 89 The Annual: Redifining Tradition / National Academy / 1083 Fifth Avenue @ 89 / thru 9/14 Sophie Calle / Cooper + Perrotin @ The Episcopal Church of the Heavenly Rest / 2 E 90 / thru 6/25 Mel Bochner thru 9/21; Other Primary Structures thru 8/3; Etc. / Jewish Museum / 1109 5th Avenue @ 92 Museum Starter Kit: Open with Care, Etc. / El Museo del Barrio / 1230 Fifth @ 104 / thru 9/6 Glenn Kaino; When the Stars Begin to Fall; Carrie Mae Weems; Etc. / Studio Museum / 144 W 125 / thru 6/29 If You Build It / No Longer Empty / 115 & St. Nicholas Ave. / thru 8/10 Opening 6/25 (7 - 9 PM) BROOKLYN Parallel Shift / NARS Foundation / 201 46th Street — floor 4, Sunset Park / thru 6/20 Itness: MaDora Frey; Nicola Ginzel; Heide Hatry; Fawn Krieger; Seren Morey / Trestle / 168 7th, Gowanus / thru 7/2 Myles Bennett, Jay Gaskill, Cat Glennon, Enrico Gomez, Eliot Markell, Esther Ruiz and Jeanne Tremel / Ground Floor / 343 5th / thru 6 /?
The church building, which is listed on the National Register of Historical Places, was designed by William Beardsley, Jr. in 1905 with opalescent stained glass windows designed by John LaFarge.
Exhibition: Select Solo Exhibitions 1960 Great Jones Gallery, New York, NY 1963 Preston Gallery, New York, NY 1975 Gallery Without Walls, Saranac Lake, NY 1976 WIA Foundation, New York, NY 1979 St. Peter's Church, Citicorp Building, New York, NY 1979 Studio Exhibition, New York, NY 1998 Snyder Fine Art, New York, NY 2009 Gary Snyder Project Space, NY Select Group Exhibitions 1959 National Academy of Design 1962 Balin Traube Gallery 1963 Preston Gallery 1970 Esther Bear Gallery, Santa Barbara, CA 1971 Bertha Schaeffer Gallery, New York, NY 1975 Works on Paper, Brooklyn Museum, NY 1976 Manhattan College, NY 1976 Chatham College, Pittsburgh, PA SUNY Binghampton 1978 Cork Gallery, New York, NY 1979 Marymount College, New York, NY Connecticut College, New London, CT 1980 Artists Equity, New York, NY 2008 Gary Snyder Project Space, NY 2009 McCormick Gallery, IL 2009 Gary Snyder Project Space, NY
The St George's Church building is now used by the National Records of Scotland.
The county does include four properties found on the National Register of Historic Places, which are the Cape San Blas Lighthouse, Centennial Building, St. Joseph Catholic Mission Church and the Port Theatre.
It publishes local, national and international news and information that will foster deeper conversion and faith formation in the members of the Archdiocese, building up their communion with each other and with the rest of the Church worldwide.
Future Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, Bethesda, MD; Brook Park MCRC Brook Park, OH; Westover Air Force Reserve Base, Chicopee, MA; Handsboro Methodist Church, Gulfport, MS; Terra Haute Federal Courthouse / Post Office, Terra Haute, IN; Blue Sky Casino, French Lick, IN; Manchester, NH; NSA Building, St. Louis, MO; Crane Naval Warfare Center, Odon, IN; St. Charles Senior Development, MO; St. Louis County Housing, MO; Micro Tel Hotel, MO; Budget Hotel, MO; Jewish Hospital, Louisville, KY; Actors Theatre, Louisville, KY; Capital Holding Building, Louisville, KY; Kentucky Housing Authority, KY; Saline County Housing Authority, IL
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