Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q681375> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 100 of
100
with 100 triples per page.
- Q681375 subject Q11705790.
- Q681375 subject Q14623605.
- Q681375 subject Q6988059.
- Q681375 subject Q7007360.
- Q681375 subject Q7061998.
- Q681375 abstract "House church or home church is a label used to describe a group of Christians who regularly gather for worship in private homes. The group may be part of a larger Christian body, such as a parish, but some have been independent groups that see the house church as the primary form of Christian community.The House Church movement was pioneered by people like the Revd Ernest Southcott in the 1950s, when he was vicar of St Wilfred's Church in Halton, Leeds in England. Southcott believed that if people would not come to church, the church must go to the people, and his book The parish comes alive spread these ideas widely among Anglicans.Sometimes these groups meet because the membership is small, and a home is the most appropriate place to assemble, as in the beginning phase of the British New Church Movement. Sometimes this meeting style is advantageous because the group is a member of an underground Christian movement which is otherwise banned from meeting as is the case in China.Some recent Christian writers have supported the view that the Christian Church should meet in houses, and have based the operation of their communities around multiple small home meetings. Other Christian groups choose to meet in houses when they are in the early phases of church growth because a house is the most affordable option for the small group to meet until the number of people attending the group is sufficient to warrant moving to a commercial location such as a church building.House church organizations claim that this approach is preferable to public meetings in dedicated buildings because it is a more effective way of building community and personal relationships, and it helps the group to engage in outreach more naturally. Some believe small churches were a deliberate apostolic pattern in the first century, and they were intended by Christ.The satisfaction level of those attending house churches tends to be higher than their counterparts who attend traditional churches. Surveys have shown that satisfaction levels are elevated in regard to church leadership, faith commitment of members, level of community within the church and spiritual depth of the church setting. Research has shown that older members are drawn to house churches because they are devout Christians who desire deeper, more intense relationships with God and other church members. Younger members who are drawn to house churches are those who are interested in faith and spirituality but not traditional forms of church.Cell churches are usually associated with larger churches: they also meet in homes and share some characteristics of house churches, but they are not normally considered to be house churches, as they are not self-governing.Some within the house church movement (associated with Wolfgang Simson, Frank Viola and others) consider the term "house church" to be a misnomer, asserting that the main issue for Christians who practice their faith in this manner is not the house but the small group type of meeting that takes place. Other titles which may be used to describe this movement are "simple church," "relational church," "primitive church," "body life," "organic church" or "biblical church."House churches can adopt an organic church philosophy which is not necessarily a particular method, technique or movement but rather a particular church expression that the group takes on when the organization is functioning according to the pattern of a living organism. The church represented in the New Testament is based on this principle, and traditional, contemporary Christianity has reversed this order.".
- Q681375 thumbnail DuraEuropos-Church.jpg?width=300.
- Q681375 wikiPageExternalLink cfinder.net.
- Q681375 wikiPageExternalLink housechurchresource.org.
- Q681375 wikiPageExternalLink www.OpenGateMinistries.org.
- Q681375 wikiPageExternalLink www.dawnministries.org.
- Q681375 wikiPageExternalLink 39787679.
- Q681375 wikiPageExternalLink www.ntrf.org.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q104444.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q110223.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q11241519.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q1155908.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q11705790.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q1189959.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q12562.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q1318624.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q1351880.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q142034.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q1423891.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q14623605.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q1473691.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q148.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q14949522.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q15.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q152002.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q155.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q159318.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q165580.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q16970.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q170208.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q180764.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q1817647.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q18813.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q188883.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q195144.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q201620.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q205194.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q210077.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q214164.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q241.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q258344.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q264965.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q30.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q318972.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q324640.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q33203.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q3356065.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q34651.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q36091.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q37302.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q373069.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q379806.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q43199.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q46.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q464266.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q4820471.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q485176.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q49.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q49258.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q4970553.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q49773.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q5017113.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q5043.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q5058176.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q5110596.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q5118089.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q51644.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q5499767.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q5643625.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q6044472.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q60797.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q639356.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q642420.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q668.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q685812.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q6875856.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q6878857.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q6988059.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q7007360.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q704498.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q7061998.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q7257247.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q75.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q7859368.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q855941.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q858.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q873206.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q879146.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q881.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q928.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q943602.
- Q681375 wikiPageWikiLink Q94776.
- Q681375 comment "House church or home church is a label used to describe a group of Christians who regularly gather for worship in private homes. The group may be part of a larger Christian body, such as a parish, but some have been independent groups that see the house church as the primary form of Christian community.The House Church movement was pioneered by people like the Revd Ernest Southcott in the 1950s, when he was vicar of St Wilfred's Church in Halton, Leeds in England.".
- Q681375 label "House church".
- Q681375 depiction DuraEuropos-Church.jpg.