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Word: churchless (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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Tolstoy tried to resolve the first through a homegrown faith that amounted to a churchless Christianity. He shunned organized religion and city life for rustic self-sufficiency among the muzhiks (peasants) at his estate, Yasnaya Polyana (Bright Glade). He preached against the evils of meat, alcohol, tobacco and fornication. He believed a Christian should make his own shoes and empty his own chamber...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: A Billy-Goat Pining for Purity TOLSTOY | 8/15/1988 | See Source »

...there are 5 million Protestants in the more than 50,000 "house churches" that kept functioning during the Cultural Revolution and became the mainstream of Chinese Christianity. Protestants, accustomed to lay leadership, began worshiping in such homes, often at night, and sharing memorized Bible stories as well as hymns. Churchless Catholics sometimes joined these clandestine meetings...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Let a Hundred Churches Bloom | 5/4/1981 | See Source »

...days to a handful of cowpokes and ranch families. Onetime Texas Cattle Dealer Joe Evans, now 80, remembers hearing Bloys preach. Evans, a Baptist layman, worked with the forerunner of the United Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A. in setting up a regular circuit of campfire meetings in 1940 for churchless southwestern areas. He still travels the circuit himself each summer, telling Bible stories and frontier yarns...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: Chuck-Wagon Christianity | 8/3/1962 | See Source »

...Salvation. The result, says Winter, is that low-income groups still living in the "inner city" have been left churchless (in Boston, for instance, five inner-city Methodist churches have folded up in ten years), while the new suburbanites are as poor in what constitutes real Christian community as they are rich in community centers...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Religion: The Organization Church | 4/7/1961 | See Source »

...sort of rapport with the time's intellectual torments, a capacity for drilling and painfully hitting some universal nerve. That, apparently, is the special gift of Simone Weil, a Frenchwoman who died in 1943 at 34 and who has since been informally canonized as a "saint of the churchless," a "patron of the undecided...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Saint of the Undecided | 12/3/1956 | See Source »

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