- Sisterhoods
- See Religious Orders.
American Church Dictionary and Cyclopedia. — New York, Thomas Whittaker. William James Miller, M.A., B.D.. 1901.
American Church Dictionary and Cyclopedia. — New York, Thomas Whittaker. William James Miller, M.A., B.D.. 1901.
Sisterhoods (Modern Anglican) — Modern Anglican Sisterhoods are Orders of Nuns within the Anglican Church. Contents 1 Dissolution 2 Views 3 Restoration 4 Activity … Wikipedia
sisterhoods — sis·ter·hood || sɪstÉ™rhÊŠd n. relationship shared by sisters; sense of solidarity between women; religious society of women, group of women bound by religious vows … English contemporary dictionary
NATIONAL FEDERATION OF TEMPLE SISTERHOODS — (Women of Reform Judaism), national organization of synagogue women s organizations dedicated to promoting Reform Judaism, founded in 1913. This organization, renamed the Women of Reform Judaism in 1993, counted 75,000 members in 500 local… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
WOMAN — This article is arranged according to the following outline: the historical perspective biblical period marriage and children women in household life economic roles educational and managerial roles religious roles women outside the household… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
SIMON, CARRIE OBENDORFER — (1872–1961), founding president of the national federation of temple sisterhoods . Born in Uniontown, Alabama, Obendorfer moved with her family to Cincinnati, Ohio, where her mother began a chapter of the national council of jewish women (NCJW)… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
Anglican religious community — ▪ religion any of various religious communities for men and for women that first began developing within the Anglican Communion in the 19th century. Although monastic communities were numerous in the pre Reformation English Church, they… … Universalium
PHILANTHROPY — Introduction At the close of the 18th century the communal system of fund raising for charity with authority vested in the charity overseers (Gabba ei Ẓedakah) – to tax members of the community in order to ensure appropriate giving – was on the… … Encyclopedia of Judaism
Deaconess — For the honorific accorded a deacon s wife, see Diakonissa. Elizabeth Catherine Ferard, first deaconess of the Church of England … Wikipedia
monasticism — /meuh nas teuh siz euhm/, n. the monastic system, condition, or mode of life. [1785 95; MONASTIC + ISM] * * * Institutionalized religious movement whose members are bound by vows to an ascetic life of prayer, meditation, or good works. Members of … Universalium
Northwest Coast Indian — Any member of the North American Indian peoples inhabiting a narrow but rich belt of coastland and offshore islands from southeast Alaska to northwestern California. A signal feature of Northwest Coast society was the emphasis on each individual… … Universalium