- Nazarene (sect) - Wikipedia
The English term Nazarene is commonly used to translate two related Greek words that appear in the New Testament: Nazōraios (Ναζωραῖος, Ναζαραῖος) ("Nazorean") and Nazarēnos (Ναζαρηνός) ("Nazarene")
- Church of the Nazarene - Christian Holiness Denomination
As a global community of faith, we are commissioned to take the Good News of life in Jesus Christ to people everywhere and to spread the message of scriptural holiness across the lands The Church of the Nazarene is the largest denomination in the classical Wesleyan-Holiness tradition
- Nazarene | Nazarene Sect, Jesus, Judaism | Britannica
Nazarene, in the New Testament, a title applied to Jesus and, later, to those who followed his teachings (Acts 24:5) In the Greek text there appear two forms of the word: the simple form, Nazarēnos, meaning “of Nazareth,” and the peculiar form, Nazōraios
- Church of the Nazarene - Wikipedia
It is the largest denomination in the world aligned with the Wesleyan-Holiness movement, with just under 3 million members worldwide The Church of the Nazarene was a member denomination of the World Methodist Council until 2025
- Church of the Nazarene Beliefs and Worship Practices
Two Nazarene beliefs set this Christian denomination apart from other evangelicals: the belief that a person can experience entire sanctification, or personal holiness, in this life, and the belief that a saved person can lose their salvation through sin
- What We Believe - Church of the Nazarene
What We Believe Nazarene Essentials Explains why the Church of the Nazarene exists as a worldwide Holiness and Great Commission movement in the Wesleyan-Arminian tradition
- Nazarene - Wikipedia
Nazarene (title), used to describe people from Nazareth in the New Testament, and a title applied to Jesus Nazareno (Spanish confraternity), groups of people who perform elaborate Holy Week processions in Spain
- Church of the Nazarene | Description, History, Beliefs, Facts . . .
Church of the Nazarene, American Protestant denomination, the product of several mergers stemming from the 19th-century Holiness movement In worship there is emphasis on simplicity and revivalistic evangelism, and in doctrine the church stands in the tradition of Arminian Methodism
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