Displaying 1 - 10 of 10.
Since the Second World War churches have made tremendous efforts to strive towards more unity. At the same time, we see national and church politics often getting in the way. In this example about church division from Egypt, it is not about dogmatic differences but about the long-term effects of (...
Members of the Episcopal Church of Egypt were called to come to the All Saints Cathedral for an extra-ordinary church meeting that was carefully designed to result in a call for a letter to President Abdelfattah al-Sisi [ʿAbd al-Fattāḥ al-Sīsī] to recognize the Anglican Diocese of Egypt as an...
This text was presented to all members of the extraordinary church council meeting or synod on October 24, 2020. It was not a new text. The bishop earlier presented a similar text in 2019 to the parish council of St. John the Baptist Church when relations were discussed with the Maadi Community...
This text was presented to all members of the extraordinary church council meeting or synod of the Anglican Diocese of Egypt on October 24, 2020. The bishop provides some historical background to the Protestant Churches in Egypt Council, explains the Anglican legal structure and argues why the...
Rev. Andrea Zaki, President of the Evangelical Community in Egypt, on Friday, celebrated the centenary of the Presbyterian Evangelical Church in Fajjalah, in the presence of a number of leaders of the Evangelical community in Egypt.
The Evangelical Synod of the Nile held a plenary meeting as part of session 129 at the headquarters of the Evangelical Presbyterian Church in al-Azbakiyya.
  The coming Thursday (March 27) Nawāl Halīm will be the second female appointed head of the church council (council of shaykhs) of the Evangelical Presbyterian Church in Assuit. Samuel Bākī, the head of the church, stated that the church consists of shaykhs (presbyters) and pastors and that the...
The story of the Presbyterian congregation in Ma’ādī’s 60 year attempt to have their own church constructed.
One of AWR’s interns investigated the long-winded church building story of the "Coptic Evangelical" [Presbyterian] Church in Ma’ādī.
The author continues his series about Protestant churches. He starts the story of John Calvin after finishing that of Martin Luther.
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