Methodist
মেথডিস্ট
definition
noun
Other groups were gaining a significant foothold too, including Baptists, Methodists , Mennonites, Christian Reformed, and Episcopalians.
a member of a Christian Protestant denomination originating in the 18th-century evangelistic movement of Charles and John Wesley and George Whitefield.
adjective
a Methodist chapel
of or relating to Methodists or Methodism.
translation of 'methodist'
যথারীতি ধর্মকর্ম অনুষ্ঠানকারী,
চার্লস ও জন ওয়েসলি কর্তৃক স্থাপিত খ্রীষ্টধর্ম সম্প্রদায় বিশেষের লোক
example
He arrived in Whitby at a time when rural 'Methodist' chapels were closing one by one and believers were few and far between.
Villagers are raising funds to replace the ageing structure, once a 'Methodist' chapel in Sutton-on-Derwent.
It meant he travelled around all the different 'Methodist' chapels, constantly meeting and working with people.
There, many miles into the country was a little clapboard 'Methodist' church, built, in part, by the Lamptons, in 1861.
Andrew's parents were 'Methodist' missionaries in India, but although a religious man he declared at the age of 3 that he wanted to be a doctor.
Although it is a Roman Catholic church, the service will be for people from all faiths with Anglican and 'Methodist' ministers also taking part.
Several examples provide illustration about how 'Methodist' women recruited their husbands to the church.
He made frequent diversions to towns and villages along the way, but the three cities became the great centres of 'Methodist' influence.
In other areas of the South, 'Methodist' women heeded the national Church's call for racial reconciliation.
Christianity was brought to the islands in the 1830s primarily by 'Methodist' missionaries.
The Anglican and 'Methodist' churches have signed a covenant intended to heal their 200-year rift and pave the way to reunification.
Such positions were available to 'Methodist' women only if they went abroad, as missionaries.
It was built as a 'Methodist' chapel in 1910, became a convalescence hospital during the First World War, and was later partly used as a billiard hall.
This hymn has traditionally been the first hymn in 'Methodist' hymnals since the time of Wesley.
When faith and discipline are seen as the essential ingredients of 'Methodist' piety, there is no mystery about the twentieth century collapse.
We began with prayer led by Graham Jones, the 'Methodist' chaplain, and the sharing of bread and wine.
The odd pheasant springs hazardously from behind a dry stone wall and the occasional chapel marks this out as 'Methodist' country.
He was baptized in a 'Methodist' church at age 14, but soon drifted into agnosticism.
My mother shuffled us around, as kids, to various Southern Baptist and 'Methodist' churches, with little or no sustained involvement.
The grounds are pocked with small lava pits, which are used to cook poultry and sides of beef donated by 'Methodist' church groups.
Prior was brought up as a Methodist, but while he was a student he came to consider 'Methodistic' theology too unsystematic, and he became a Presbyterian.
The term is applied to the misanthropic farm servant Joseph in ‘Wuthering Heights’ and to Dorothea Brooke in ‘Middlemarch’ by Mrs. Cadwallader when she describes Dorothea as having ‘a great deal of nonsense in her - a flighty sort of 'Methodistical' stuff.’
The 'Methodistic' principles, with which he was slightly tinctured, instead of impelling him to extravagance, assimilated themselves to his orderly habits of thought and action.
A proposal to join with the Scottish Episcopalians, 'Methodists' and the United Reformed Churches was rejected by 384 votes to 99.
To their credit, I saw some 'Methodists' speaking to the young lady after the meeting.
And this discomfort isn't limited to Presbyterians and 'Methodists' and Anglicans.
Baptists were most prominent, followed by Presbyterians and 'Methodists' .
Wesleyan 'Methodists' banned women from preaching to mixed congregations in 1803.
There were three or four others, 'Methodistic' in doctrine and discipline, who were recognized as eligible for the Ecumenical Methodist Conference.
Other groups were gaining a significant foothold too, including Baptists, 'Methodists' , Mennonites, Christian Reformed, and Episcopalians.
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