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Christian church   /krˈɪstʃən tʃərtʃ/   Listen
Christian church

noun
1.
One of the groups of Christians who have their own beliefs and forms of worship.  Synonym: church.
2.
A Protestant church that accepts the Bible as the only source of true Christian faith and practices baptism by immersion.  Synonym: Disciples of Christ.



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"Christian church" Quotes from Famous Books



... homes and business places, which could not be liquidated within twenty-four hours or thereabout.... The hurried expulsions from the capital resulted in numerous conversions to Christianity.... Amusing stories circulated all over town concerning Jews who had decided to join the Christian Church, and had applied for permission to remain in the capital for one or two weeks—the time required by law for a preliminary training in the truths of the new faith—but whose petition was flatly refused because the police believed that a similar training might also ...
— History of the Jews in Russia and Poland. Volume II • S.M. Dubnow

... Shelley believed in perfectibility. In his latest poems—in Hellas, in Adonais—he was perhaps a little inclined to remove the scene of perfectibility to a metaphysical region, as the Christian church soon removed it to the other world. Indeed, an earth really made perfect is hardly distinguishable from a posthumous heaven: so profoundly must everything in it be changed, and so angel-like must every one in it become. Shelley's earthly paradise, ...
— Winds Of Doctrine - Studies in Contemporary Opinion • George Santayana

... efforts made by the Greeks in behalf of freedom, or, as more comprehensively stated by a recent writer, "The constancy with which they clung to the Christian Church during four centuries of misery and political annihilation; their immovable faithfulness to their nationality under intolerable oppression; the intellectual superiority they never failed to exhibit over their tyrants; the love of humane letters which they never, in all their sorrows, ...
— Mosaics of Grecian History • Marcius Willson and Robert Pierpont Willson

... most important, we must recognize that no other institution can take the place of the Christian church as a source of those ideals of life which give religious sanction to loyalty to the common good—to the community—rather than to self or particular interests. The ideals of its Founder who conceived ...
— The Farmer and His Community • Dwight Sanderson

... Bremen. It gives a complete account of the religious notions, doctrines, and usages of the Jews. To theologians it is of high value for the light which it casts upon the formation and institutions of the Christian Church. The author has employed in its composition the writings of every sect, and has condensed in it the result of a thorough study of the entire literature relating to the Old Testament and the rabbinical writings. He writes with the greatest impartiality, and in the interest of no ...
— The International Magazine, Volume 2, No. 3, February, 1851 • Various


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