The Moravian Church in Britain has continued to be a liturgical church while at the same time allowing free worship as the occasion demands.
The building was retained to allow worship to continue uninterrupted during the building of its much larger successor.
In 1990, the new constitution of Cambodia allowed free worship again.
The Algerian government allows non-Muslim religious worship only in structures exclusively intended and approved for that purpose.
Within two months, a tin tabernacle had been erected on the site to allow worship to continue while a new church was designed and built.
Prisoners are allowed regular family visits and private worship.
In the 1980s, re-ordering of the church took place including adding a free-standing altar to allow more intimate congregational worship.
The Mahayana allowed worship of the Buddha and recognized other holy figures as well.
The church is now classed as a secular museum and there is a refusal to allow Christian worship there.
A temporary wooden cathedral has been built on top of Victoria Street to allow worship to take place.