Dodatkowe przykłady dopasowywane są do haseł w zautomatyzowany sposób - nie gwarantujemy ich poprawności.
By this act were laid the foundations of the Scottish Episcopal Church.
Communion tokens were also used in Scottish Episcopal churches.
In the Scottish Episcopal Church tradition continues.
There are Church of Scotland and Scottish Episcopal churches.
Born in Edinburgh on 24 August 1729, his parents were members of the Scottish Episcopal Church.
Though deprived of any formal authority, Rose gained informal influence over the embryonic Scottish Episcopal Church.
The Scottish Episcopal Church and Church of Scotland also have parishes dedicated to him.
After a period of study at the Theological Institute of the Scottish Episcopal Church he was ordained in 1993.
In the adjacent village of Kilmacolm, the local Scottish Episcopal church is also named after St. Fillan.
Idris Jones (born 1943) is a retired Anglican bishop of the Scottish Episcopal Church.
It is now run as a retreat house for the Scottish Episcopal Church by their subsidiary group Island Retreats Ltd.
Until 2004 the Scottish Episcopal Church issued as a quarterly newspaper The Scottish Episcopalian, which included contributions from all seven dioceses.
The Church of St John the Evangelist is a Scottish Episcopal church in the centre of Edinburgh, Scotland.
The Scottish Episcopal Church is St Michael's and All Saints Church in Brougham Street.
The office exists in the Anglican churches, the American and Scottish Episcopal Churches, and the Roman Catholic Church.
He was consecrated a college bishop in the Scottish Episcopal Church on 4 June 1727 at Edinburgh by bishops Freebairn, Cant and Duncan.
But, in the Scottish Episcopal church since the eighteenth century and other Anglican churches since the nineteenth century (following the Tractarian revival), reservation has again become common.
The Scottish Episcopal Church embraces three orders of ministry: deacon, priest (referred to in the 1929 Scottish Prayer Book as presbyter) and bishop.
He was elected at a meeting of an Episcopal Synod which took place on the final day of the Scottish Episcopal Church General Synod.
From that time the chapel was closed to public worship until 1861 when it was opened again as a place of worship according to the rites of the Scottish Episcopal Church.
In 1706 he spoke against the union between England and Scotland; and on the same occasion he strongly, but in vain, advocated in the cause of the Scottish Episcopal church.
He was the son of James Brown, a minister in the Scottish Episcopal Church with Jacobite convictions so strong that in 1788 he defied his church's decision to give allegiance to George III.
He was aware that without a university degree he would not be accepted for the priesthood in England, and therefore he turned his attention to Scotland, where the Scottish Episcopal Church was in need of clergy.
But he shortly afterwards assented to a proposal made Hook, that the bishops of the Scottish episcopal church should consecrate Luscombe to a continental bishopric; and so on 20 March 1825 Luscombe was consecrated at Stirling.
There are differing opinions on opting out in the Scottish Episcopal church, with backing from the local parish and the education board, but a possible objection from Michael Hare-Duke, bishop of Dunblane, Dunkeld and St Andrews.