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Services then included a weekly communion, held in the early morning or at midday.
The church is still in use, with a regular weekly communion on Wednesdays.
The church offers an informal feel with a band alongside a traditional liturgy and weekly communion.
The practice of weekly communion is increasingly the norm again in most Lutheran parishes throughout the world.
Some evangelical churches offer confession and weekly communion.
Stone Mountain Church starts having weekly communion.
It has always been used by the Lutheran churches of Scandinavia, which also practice weekly Communion.
He began, however, to adopt Glassite or Sandemanian usages, including a weekly communion.
Churches planted by the Haldanes practiced baptism by immersion, weekly communion, and congregational polity (autonomous government).
As well as ministering to the gathered congregation, St Stephens serves two Nursing Homes in the parish and weekly communion is taken to the residents.
Garnier belonged to the so-called 'evangelical school,' but his freedom from its narrowness is evidenced by his establishing daily service and weekly communions in his church.
Sunday school is at 9:45 a.m. Adult education is at 9 a.m. Weekly communion and healing services Wednesdays at noon in the parish hall.
I was raised to love the Kennedys just as I was raised to receive weekly Communion and view Yeats as the world's greatest poet.
A distinctive practice of the Brethren is a separate weekly Communion meeting, referred to as the "Breaking of Bread" or "The Lord's Supper".
As well as shouldering the burden of being PCC Secretary, she is one of the leaders of a weekly communion service at Meadbank Nursing Home.
There is no standard frequency; John Calvin desired weekly communion, but the city council only approved monthly, and monthly celebration has become the most common practice in Reformed churches today.
The Church embraces aspects of other Christian denominations, including the baptism by immersion of the Baptists and the weekly Communion of the Roman Catholic Church.
Argues that though weekly communion is most probably the Scriptural frequency of celebrating the Lord's Supper, pastoral care and a Godly sensitivity is in order as to this matter.
The congregations emphasized a reliance on Scriptures to find church doctrine, weekly communion, biblical church names such as "Church of Christ," the oversight of elders and congregational autonomy.
Nearby, the Rev. John Fanestil, a United Methodist minister, offered his weekly communion through the fence, passing the wafer through a hole to a small gathering on the Mexican side.
Reviving communion Weekly communion -- where worshipers share bread and wine, or juice, in remembrance of Jesus Christ -- has long taken a back seat in evangelical churches, but is undergoing a revival.
At Solomon's Porch across town, a crowd of about 300 takes weekly communion "house party"-style, chatting with plastic cups of wine and pieces of pastry before one announces, "Take and eat the body of Christ."
Calvin (1509-64) apparently wanted to have a weekly communion service on the Lord's Day, but the elders of the church in Geneva felt the service was too awesome for that and it should only celebrated four times a year after careful preparation.
Stone broke with his Presbyterian background to form the new sect that rejected Calvinism, required weekly communion and the baptism of adults, accepted the Bible as the source of truth, and sought to restore the values of primitive Christianity.
But here it must be said that John Calvin wanted a weekly communion and the only reason that Knox didn't follow suit in Scotland was the difficulty of organising such events in the rural parishes with a paucity of reformed clergy available to celebrate the sacrament.