episcopal

listen to the pronunciation of episcopal
English - Turkish
{s} piskoposlar ile ilgili
{s} piskoposlarca yönetilen
{s} piskoposlara ait
protestant episcopal church
protestan kilisesi
English - English
An adherent of an Anglican church, such as the Scottish Episcopal Church or the Episcopal Church in the United States; properly, an Episcopalian
Of or relating to the affairs of an Anglican church, such as the Scottish Episcopal Church or the Episcopal Church in the United States
Of or relating to the affairs of a bishop in various Christian churches
{a} belonging or relating to bishops, or a church governed by bishops
Episcopal means relating to a branch of the Anglican Church in Scotland and the USA. the Scottish Episcopal Church. the Episcopal bishop of New York. the Protestant Episcopal church
An adjective derived forom the Greek word, episkopos, meaning overseer or bishop Episcopalian is the noun Episcopalians attend the Episcopal Church
{s} pertaining to bishops; pertaining to the Episcopal Church (Christianity)
The name of a form of church organization which means government by an overseer From the Greek word episcopos, meaning overseer See Bishop
Greek for Shepherd We are a church of Bishops, or shepherds
of or pertaining to or characteristic of the Episcopal church; "the Episcopal hierarachy"; "married by an Episcopalian minister"
Episcopal means relating to bishops. episcopal conferences. relating to a bishop (episcopalis, from episcopus )
denoting or governed by or relating to a bishop or bishops
pertaining to a bishop: episcopacy - the government of churches by bishops
One of four major models for church government: Rule by bishops ( CONTRAST: Presbyterian, Congregational, Papist, Patriarchy SEE: Polity )
Belonging to, or vested in, bishops; as, episcopal jurisdiction or authority; the episcopal system
the name of a form of church organization which means government by an overseer
Governed by bishops; as, an episcopal church
in relation to the authority of a bishop
denoting or governed by or relating to a bishop or bishops of or pertaining to or characteristic of the Episcopal church; "the Episcopal hierarachy"; "married by an Episcopalian minister
episcoparian
Episcopal Church
Any Church whose organization is based around bishops; but especially any Church of the Anglican Communion
Episcopal Churches
plural form of Episcopal Church
Episcopal Church
The church in the United States that is in communion with the see of Canterbury. a group of Christians in the US and Scotland
episcopal church
United States church that is in communication with the see of Canterbury an autonomous branch of the Anglican Communion in Scotland
Reformed Episcopal Church
A particular Anglican Church based in the United States
African Methodist Episcopal Church
African American Methodist denomination formally organized in 1816. It originated with a group of black Philadelphians who withdrew in 1787 from St. George's Methodist Episcopal Church (see Methodism) because of racial discrimination and built Bethel African Methodist Church. In 1799 Richard Allen became minister of Bethel, and in 1816 he was consecrated bishop of the newly organized African Methodist Episcopal Church. Limited at first to the Northern states, the church spread rapidly in the South after the Civil War. It founded many colleges and seminaries, notably Wilberforce University (1856) in Ohio. In the late 20th century the church claimed 3,500,000 members and 8,000 congregations. Its headquarters are in Washington, D.C
African Methodist Episcopal Church AME Church
African American Methodist denomination formally organized in 1816. It originated with a group of black Philadelphians who withdrew in 1787 from St. George's Methodist Episcopal Church (see Methodism) because of racial discrimination and built Bethel African Methodist Church. In 1799 Richard Allen became minister of Bethel, and in 1816 he was consecrated bishop of the newly organized African Methodist Episcopal Church. Limited at first to the Northern states, the church spread rapidly in the South after the Civil War. It founded many colleges and seminaries, notably Wilberforce University (1856) in Ohio. In the late 20th century the church claimed 3,500,000 members and 8,000 congregations. Its headquarters are in Washington, D.C
Protestant Episcopal Church
The Episcopal Church. Descendant of the Church of England in the U.S. With the American Revolution, the Church of England was disestablished in the U.S. (1789), and American Anglicans renamed it the Protestant Episcopal Church. The church accepts both the Apostles' and Nicene Creeds and a modified version of the Thirty-nine Articles of the Church of England. The General Convention is the highest ecclesiastical authority, and it is headed by a presiding bishop, which it elects. The Reformed Episcopal Church broke away from the main body in 1873. The church accepted the ordination of women in 1976
episcopally
through bishops
episcopally
By episcopal authority; in an episcopal manner
episcopal

    Hyphenation

    E·pis·co·pal

    Turkish pronunciation

    îpîskıpıl

    Pronunciation

    /əˈpəskəpəl/ /ɪˈpɪskəpəl/

    Etymology

    () From Latin episcopus Ancient Greek ἐπίσκοπος (episkopos, “watching over”)
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