LIST OF DENOMINATIONS
NameNotes
Page 3 of 5, (16 rows per page; 78 rows available)
First Previous

Next Last
MormonChurch of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.
Mormon is the name of the prophet in The Book of Mormon after whom the book is named. According to the book's title page and the account of Joseph Smith, Jr. (who claimed to be the book's translator), Mormon was the prophet-historian who engraved the book on Golden Plates. Most Latter Day Saints believe that Mormon was an actual Nephite prophet who lived in the Americas circa 400 AD. Non-Mormon scholars, as well as some churches that follow the Latter Day Saint movement, particularly within the Community of Christ, consider Mormon to be a fictional character.
The Book of Mormon reports that Mormon was instructed by the prophet Ammaron where to find the records that had been passed down from their ancestors. It also claims that Mormon later abridged the near-millennium-long history of his ancestors, a more ancient people, and additional revelations into the Book of Mormon. The divisions of Mormon attributed to the prophet are the Words of Mormon and the first seven chapters of the larger book. Mormon eventually passed all of the records on to his son Moroni.
Magnifying glass image
MoravianMagnifying glass image
Miners' MissionIncorporates Glynn Vivian Miners' MissionMagnifying glass image
MethodistIncludes Primitive Methodist, Wesleyan MethodistMagnifying glass image
Mana Christian ChurchMagnifying glass image
LutheranMagnifying glass image
JewishMagnifying glass image
JerusalemiteMagnifying glass image
Jehovah's WitnessesJehovah's Witnesses are members of an international Christian new religious movement, whose adherents believe it to be the restoration of first-century Christianity. The religion was developed in response “to what they saw as compromise and corruption in mainstream Christianity.” hey dispute doctrines such as the Trinity, hellfire, immortality of the soul, and clergy-laity divisions as illegitimate additions to the original Christian teachings.Magnifying glass image
JainismAncient Indian religion.Magnifying glass image
IndependentMagnifying glass image
HolinessThe Holiness movement originated in the first half of the 19th century in the United States as a renewal movement within American Methodism but soon became trans-denominational, and by the third quarter of the century was also international. It sought to recover the emphasis of John Wesley on the perfection of love in the lives of believers.Magnifying glass image
HinduMagnifying glass image
Harvester Reformational ChurchBased in Cape Town.Magnifying glass image
Greek OrthodoxMagnifying glass image
Free Church of ScotlandMagnifying glass image

The advertisements below are served by Google; the very small revenue generated when people click on them sometimes covers the cost of hosting the Sussex OPC website.