God bless you in your move... glad you can
still go to your church home!
The people who embrace that niche will be much happier with the experience and enjoy coming all the more, very much like the hard core of true committed Christians who
still go to Church on a Sunday morning in the UK, they are proudly unfashionable.
I still go to church each Sunday for spiritual grounding; if I don't go I get cranky, so I know it is essential.
«But it has affected the vast majority of people who
still go to church, who visit the monasteries, and they still carry on their lives daily, knowing they are a greater, in the eyes of some, target.»
Sometimes
I still go to church and feel like running, pell - mell, tumble - bumble, into the fresh air.
If
you still go to church, won't the new pastor rub you up the wrong way?
Why do
I still go to church?
I think that's one reason — of many — why
I still go to church.
I still think we should
still go to the church... or maybe a meeting where all the believer can learn from each other, strengthening each other, pray for each other etc, and of course, to worship God together... It is true that sometime I feel that I do not learn many thing from the sermon, but, many times, I learn by going to the church, knowing that I will not learn something from the preacher, humble myself to still listen to God and worship Him,,,, it is such a blessing to hear others testimony about how God works in their life, it is such an encouragement to see people open up their problem, then, we can pray about them..
Today
I still go to my church, but at a greatly reduced level of involvement.
I was raised Catholic,
still go to church semi0regularly but identify as an independent Christian
As i grew older i became more intellectually and scientifically driven and although i do
still go to church when i can its more for me a place when i am having a bad day that is a refuge a place that i just feel at peace in probably because i grew up in a church was there every Sunday and every holy day of obligation with my parents it brings back peacful memories.
I'm agnostic but
I still go to church with my family because it makes them happy.
She made «religions» a personal experience while
we still went to church too.
At the time of her book's release, she did an interview with Canoe which reported «
she still goes to church occasionally, but is no longer a practising Catholic.»
I asked if he was
still going to church.
And now 30 years later,
still going to church daily, praying many hours every day, all sticking to their «story» while raising families.
Sacha Pfeiffer (Rachel McAdams)
still goes to church every Sunday with her devout grandmother.
Not exact matches
I'm
still waiting for someone
to tell me why these people can't use any other facility... including any one of the thousands of
churches in the area, many of whom have large spaces all ready
to go for exactly that sort of thing.
(1)
Churches on base of all religions are funded by the government... yes, your tax dollars are paying for me
to be able
to enjoy whichever religious service of the 10 denominations that my small base has (not Fort Bragg)... and if I want
to be Christian one day, switch
to Muslim another, or Jewish another then your tax dollars are
still going to pay for me
to have freedom of choosing my religion on base.
David's talking about feeling the need
to go to church as habit — a meaningless exercise we
still do because it's ingrained.
The
church = Oldest criminal organization in the world; Accepted because people can not accept their own death;
Still people are
going to be dead when dead; No religion will get you past that fact.
in China the
church is
still forced
to go underground in some places.
The
Church will
still be here long after we are
gone to assist others who have answered the call.
Even with all of the things that I have
going on — school, work,
church, a looming internship and my relationships — I can
still find time in the busyness
to be thankful for my countless blessings.
The religious folks
still have their
churches and homes
to go feel comfortable at.
Sure... I
go to church twice a year and
still believe in God.
If he isn't the
church going type then by all means worship at home but don't publicly
go to church as a reminder
to the American people that your
still a believer.
Speaking as a millennial who
still believes, but no longer
goes to church because of a book written by men thousands of years ago.
And those
churches won't grow, they're
still going to die.
a) Divide the Mosaic law into 3 components: Moral, Civil, and Ceremonial The Civil Laws are
gone because we are not Israelites living in Israel in that time period The Ceremonial Laws are
gone because we have the Lamb slain once for all time (Jesus) As a part of this, the dietary laws are
gone — see Acts 11 The Moral Law (10 Commandments) ARE
STILL applicable
to the New Testament
church today, except the Sabbath Law, the 4th Commandment.
If the
Church had had it's way we'd
still be treating women as second class citizens and all of you Christians would not own a bible but rather would have
to go to the
Church to hear what it had
to say on the matter.
I recall in a
church I
went to how the same poor chap struggled year after year
to make ends meet and
still tried
to tithe.
Christian
churches spend millions on travel
to places that are 95 % Catholic (think Mexico & Costa Rica) because despite the fact that these people have known and prayed
to Jesus their whole lives, they
still aren't
going to heaven because they didn't say the magic «Jesus save me» chant.
I read recently where someone
still feels a tinge of guilt for not
going to church years after leaving it.
This could potentially be a historic step towards allowing the first gay marriages in the CofS but Rev Mike Goss from the Barry Parish
Church told Premier that even if there is a yes vote, there's
still some way
to go before ceremonies are conducted.
If you can dismiss me because I didn't
go to Yale or Fuller, because I'm a non-American woman, because I'm a lady - preacher, because I'm charismatic, because I
still love the local
church, because you don't like my tone or my face or my age or my race, because I'm too much into All That Grace Stuff, then I'm not worthy.
It's
still awkward when people ask me «What
church do u
go to?»
If they
still won't hear you,
go to the
church authorities.
Why can't people
still be friends after they don't
go to the same
church anymore?
There is
still going to be gospel music in the
Church, and there will
still be hymns, but I'm talking about the message's relevance in society.»
The early Americans, before
church became a career (early 1700's) had a
church building
still, but the pastor had a real job and the money collected
went to the poor in the community.
Do we as a family
still go to our home
church?
When I was
still attending
church, I regularly had the feeling that
going to church on Sunday morning was completely dispensable really.
I'm not
going to tell you what that last sentence of Finding
Church is, but it has taken me more than 10 years
to discover this truth (and I'm
still learning it).
I hate
to say it, but most of us would simply
go down the street
to the
church that
still had a building.
I grew up in the
church all my life but I was following God's path, I didn't want
to let God take control of my life but then at one point of my life I was
going through a lot, stuff that a teenager shouldn't be
going through but then I told God that I want him in my life
to take control and
to write out my path not me and right when I said that I felt happiness, I felt love, I felt and I
still feel (what God wants me
to do) that I have a purpose in life.
This just
goes to show that, though conventional wisdom holds that women are finding a voice online, it can
still be a struggle
to have those voices acknowledged and celebrated in the
Church.
People who have left the
church because they've
gone down some sort of slippery ethical slope are not the ones talking about their experiences and sharing with other Christians outside the
church or even making it known that they ARE
still Christians, but there are a great many Christians who don't
go to a formal
church service.
Although some studies suggest that
church -
going couples are more likely
to stay together, divorce among Christians is
still relatively common.