Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Leaving a non-denominational, reformed, Baptist-ish church. Have not decided on a new one. The thread has only been open like two days! I think it will be a process to find a new church home.
For someone wondering why it is a grieving process:
1) Leaving community you felt connected to and cared for is a significant loss in someone's life
Thanks for everyone with recs so far.
2) I can also grieve that I have participated in supporting beliefs that have harmed people
Baptistish? There is no such thing, especially non-denominational. Baptists are not vague people.
Haha I mean not technically affiliated with a Baptist denomination but some Baptist beliefs, like believers baptism
That doesn’t make sense. Baptists are Baptists.
Believer's baptism is one of several distinctive doctrines associated closely with Anabaptist (literally, rebaptizer) denominations, inclusive of Mennonites, Amish, Hutterites, Bruderhof, Schwarzenau Brethren, River Brethren, and Apostolic Christians.
Believer's baptism is also practiced by many Pentecostals.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Leaving a non-denominational, reformed, Baptist-ish church. Have not decided on a new one. The thread has only been open like two days! I think it will be a process to find a new church home.
For someone wondering why it is a grieving process:
1) Leaving community you felt connected to and cared for is a significant loss in someone's life
Thanks for everyone with recs so far.
2) I can also grieve that I have participated in supporting beliefs that have harmed people
Baptistish? There is no such thing, especially non-denominational. Baptists are not vague people.
Haha I mean not technically affiliated with a Baptist denomination but some Baptist beliefs, like believers baptism
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Leaving a non-denominational, reformed, Baptist-ish church. Have not decided on a new one. The thread has only been open like two days! I think it will be a process to find a new church home.
For someone wondering why it is a grieving process:
1) Leaving community you felt connected to and cared for is a significant loss in someone's life
Thanks for everyone with recs so far.
2) I can also grieve that I have participated in supporting beliefs that have harmed people
Baptistish? There is no such thing, especially non-denominational. Baptists are not vague people.
Anonymous wrote:Leaving a non-denominational, reformed, Baptist-ish church. Have not decided on a new one. The thread has only been open like two days! I think it will be a process to find a new church home.
For someone wondering why it is a grieving process:
1) Leaving community you felt connected to and cared for is a significant loss in someone's life
Thanks for everyone with recs so far.
2) I can also grieve that I have participated in supporting beliefs that have harmed people
Anonymous wrote:Leaving a non-denominational, reformed, Baptist-ish church. Have not decided on a new one. The thread has only been open like two days! I think it will be a process to find a new church home.
For someone wondering why it is a grieving process:
1) Leaving community you felt connected to and cared for is a significant loss in someone's life
Thanks for everyone with recs so far.
2) I can also grieve that I have participated in supporting beliefs that have harmed people
Anonymous wrote:For those curious about why we are making this choice or who is involved in it, that's not what this thread is about. I was just asking for recs. Not to go into my whole spiritual journey.
It is truly a lot to grieve and process and I don't want to do that here.
Anonymous wrote:For those curious about why we are making this choice or who is involved in it, that's not what this thread is about. I was just asking for recs. Not to go into my whole spiritual journey.
It is truly a lot to grieve and process and I don't want to do that here.
Anonymous wrote:For those curious about why we are making this choice or who is involved in it, that's not what this thread is about. I was just asking for recs. Not to go into my whole spiritual journey.
It is truly a lot to grieve and process and I don't want to do that here.
Anonymous wrote:Good luck, OP. My family chose an affirming church with "old" liturgical traditions, because it was nearby and because it turns out we found some solace in the rhythm of the liturgy.
I know what you are looking for, though, and have seen that at UCC churches for sure.