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yo vivì 11 años allì...la frase del Pueblo San Pablino, es "Por que en San Pablo se vive el amor..." conocì a los leprosos San Pablinos ...es el reflejo de la historia que viviò...en esos tiempos la lepra era contagiosa..pero ahora no....toda mi infancia vivì allì...Naci en pucallpa 1993, luego mi madre me llevo a San Pablo de Loreto durante dias de viaje...de 1 año y medio de nacido...eso entonces soy parte de San pablo...mi tierra del amor...gracias madre...por hacerme San pablino...nunca voy a olvidar de donde vengo...
Hola gente de El Mochito, mi nombre es Marta Olivares y vivi en la mina en el año 75, junto con mis padres, Mario Olivares, y recuerdo entre otros al maestro Vaugh Hogg ya que estuve un tiempo trabajando en la escuela tambien a Joe Mitchell que me gustaria si alguien sabe de el me pueda dar alguna informacion, fue una epoca muy bonita la que transcurrio alli.
The King of England was also the head of the Church of England and did not tolerate dissenters (a threat to his royal authority): they were arrested and put in prison.
Nevertheless, dissenters in house churches confessed to each other their faith in God and “covenanted to walk together in all God’s ways as he had revealed or should make known to them.” They formed a Congregational Church to manage their own church’s affairs, rather than allow a bishop to do so. The royal authorities arrested many of the Southwark church members and imprisoned them for two years, except the leader of that secret house church, the Rev. John Lothrop, was imprisoned much longer. After his wife died and his children were sent to the poor house, he was freed but required to leave the country in 1634.
The Rev. John Lothrop and 30 of his followers sailed for Boston in 1634, then made their way to Scituate, settled before 1628 by a few men of Kent who had moved north from Plymouth.
The Scituate Congregational Church was gathered and the Rev. John Lothrop installed as minister in December 1634, becoming the fourth church in Plymouth Colony.
The First Meeting House was built in 1636, the year the town was incorporated. Church members at first paid their pastor from what they produced. The early pastors also subsistence farmed, but New England soon adopted the European practice of government church support and paid the pastors through taxes.
For more interesting reading, please follow this link:
The congregation has a long tradition of religious freedom and faith that dates back to the pilgrim landing and beyond.
We trace our origin back to the year 1606 when a group of dissenters from the Church of England banded together in Scrooby.
In 1620 part of the Leyden congregation set sail aboard the Mayflower, seeking the freedom to worship according to the dictates of their own conscience in the New World.
Freedom of belief is foundation to Unitarian Universalism. We affirm the worth of all human beings and the integrity of individual thought and action.
As a liberal religious community, we share the quest for a practical religion based on deed, not creed.
Members of the Plymouth Colony, along with newcomers from England, settled the area we now know as Scituate, on Boston's South Shore, in 1627.
It's name comes from an Indian word for "cold brook," and refers to a brook that runs into the harbor.
The town developed a significant fishing industry by the late eighteenth century, owing to its small but protected harbor, sheltered by Cedar Point to the north and First Cliff to the south.
Entering the harbor was difficult because of shallow water and mud flats.
vpozas's conversations
yo vivì 11 años allì...la frase del Pueblo San Pablino, es "Por que en San Pablo se vive el amor..." conocì a los leprosos San Pablinos ...es el reflejo de la historia que viviò...en esos tiempos la lepra era contagiosa..pero ahora no....toda mi infancia vivì allì...Naci en pucallpa 1993, luego mi madre me llevo a San Pablo de Loreto durante dias de viaje...de 1 año y medio de nacido...eso entonces soy parte de San pablo...mi tierra del amor...gracias madre...por hacerme San pablino...nunca voy a olvidar de donde vengo...
Hola gente de El Mochito, mi nombre es Marta Olivares y vivi en la mina en el año 75, junto con mis padres, Mario Olivares, y recuerdo entre otros al maestro Vaugh Hogg ya que estuve un tiempo trabajando en la escuela tambien a Joe Mitchell que me gustaria si alguien sabe de el me pueda dar alguna informacion, fue una epoca muy bonita la que transcurrio alli.
The history of the First Trinitarian Congregational Church of Scituate began in a secret house church in the Southwark borough, near Kent, of London in the early 1600s.
The King of England was also the head of the Church of England and did not tolerate dissenters (a threat to his royal authority): they were arrested and put in prison.
Nevertheless, dissenters in house churches confessed to each other their faith in God and “covenanted to walk together in all God’s ways as he had revealed or should make known to them.” They formed a Congregational Church to manage their own church’s affairs, rather than allow a bishop to do so. The royal authorities arrested many of the Southwark church members and imprisoned them for two years, except the leader of that secret house church, the Rev. John Lothrop, was imprisoned much longer. After his wife died and his children were sent to the poor house, he was freed but required to leave the country in 1634.
The Rev. John Lothrop and 30 of his followers sailed for Boston in 1634, then made their way to Scituate, settled before 1628 by a few men of Kent who had moved north from Plymouth.
The Scituate Congregational Church was gathered and the Rev. John Lothrop installed as minister in December 1634, becoming the fourth church in Plymouth Colony.
The First Meeting House was built in 1636, the year the town was incorporated. Church members at first paid their pastor from what they produced. The early pastors also subsistence farmed, but New England soon adopted the European practice of government church support and paid the pastors through taxes.
For more interesting reading, please follow this link:
First Trinitarian Congregational Church of Scituate
First Parish Church in Plymouth is the oldest continuous church in New England.
The congregation has a long tradition of religious freedom and faith that dates back to the pilgrim landing and beyond.
We trace our origin back to the year 1606 when a group of dissenters from the Church of England banded together in Scrooby.
In 1620 part of the Leyden congregation set sail aboard the Mayflower, seeking the freedom to worship according to the dictates of their own conscience in the New World.
Freedom of belief is foundation to Unitarian Universalism. We affirm the worth of all human beings and the integrity of individual thought and action.
As a liberal religious community, we share the quest for a practical religion based on deed, not creed.
For more information, please follow this link: First Parish Church in Plymouth
Members of the Plymouth Colony, along with newcomers from England, settled the area we now know as Scituate, on Boston's South Shore, in 1627.
It's name comes from an Indian word for "cold brook," and refers to a brook that runs into the harbor. The town developed a significant fishing industry by the late eighteenth century, owing to its small but protected harbor, sheltered by Cedar Point to the north and First Cliff to the south.
Entering the harbor was difficult because of shallow water and mud flats.
Please read about it's history here: Scituate, Massachusetts
. I was there @2003, great story about this church with the Madonna inside and the miracles that have been asked via the pictures posted.
Can someone explain the story for all to understand.
According to co-workers at the Wacker plant in Burghausen I went to work for one week it is a great pilgrimage center in Bayern.
. I was there @2003, great story about this church with the Madonna inside and the miracles that have been asked via the pictures posted.
Can someone explain the story for all to understand.
According to co-workers at the Wacker plant in Burghausen I went to work for one week it is a great pilgrimage center in Bayern.
. I was there @2003, great story about this church with the Madonna inside and the miracles that have been asked via the pictures posted.
Can someone explain the story for all to understand.
According to co-workers at the Wacker plant in Burghausen I went to work for one week it is a great pilgrimage center in Bayern.
. I was there @2003, great story about this church with the Madonna inside and the miracles that have been asked via the pictures posted.
Can someone explain the story for all to understand.
According to co-workers at the Wacker plant in Burghausen I went to work for one week it is a great pilgrimage center in Bayern.
Super