Definitions
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun Plural form of
Congregationalist .
Etymologies
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Examples
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The third political event by which the reign of the first Stuart profoundly influenced the modern world is the rise of those whom we call Congregationalists when we think of them as a Church, and
Lectures on Modern history John Emerich Edward Dalberg Acton Acton 1868
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Of all the churches and denominations in Maine, the Congregationalists were the richest and the most politically conservative, but Reverend Chickering, on a trip to England in 1846, “had passed himself off … as a committed antislavery man.”
Hanging Captain Gordon Ron Soodalter 2007
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Of all the churches and denominations in Maine, the Congregationalists were the richest and the most politically conservative, but Reverend Chickering, on a trip to England in 1846, “had passed himself off … as a committed antislavery man.”
Hanging Captain Gordon Ron Soodalter 2007
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Of all the churches and denominations in Maine, the Congregationalists were the richest and the most politically conservative, but Reverend Chickering, on a trip to England in 1846, “had passed himself off … as a committed antislavery man.”
Hanging Captain Gordon Ron Soodalter 2007
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Of all the churches and denominations in Maine, the Congregationalists were the richest and the most politically conservative, but Reverend Chickering, on a trip to England in 1846, “had passed himself off … as a committed antislavery man.”
Hanging Captain Gordon Ron Soodalter 2007
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The Congregationalists are the most numerous of the Protestant denominations, having, according to the religious census taken in
The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 4: Clandestinity-Diocesan Chancery 1840-1916 1913
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The Congregationalists were the first in the field when I came to Berkeley, and I helped most heartily to build them up.
Documenting the American South: The Southern Experience in 19-th Century America 1903
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The denomination known as Congregationalists present another illustration.
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It was, however, in character and spirit, just what Mr. James here declares it to be.] [Footnote F: I have been told since my return, that there are some slaveholding Congregational churches in the south; but they have no connection with our New England churches, and certainly are not generally known as Congregationalists distinct from the Presbyterians.] [Footnote G: This has always been supposed and claimed in the United
Sunny Memories Of Foreign Lands, Volume 1 Harriet Beecher Stowe 1853
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[100: 1] As, for example, with great amplitude by Palfrey; and in more condensed form by Dr. Williston Walker, "Congregationalists" (in
A History of American Christianity Leonard Woolsey Bacon 1868
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