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Christianity in Houston

Christianity is the most widely practiced religion in the city of Houston, Texas. In 2012, Kate Shellnutt of the Houston Chronicle described Houston as a "heavily Christian city".[1] Multiple Christian denominations originating from various countries are practiced in the city; among its Christian population, the majority are either Catholic, Baptist, or non/inter-denominational.[2]

St. Mary's Cathedral Basilica, see of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston

Lakewood Church in Houston is the largest church in the United States. In 2010, it had 44,800 weekly attendees, while in 2000, it had 11,000 weekly attendees. In September 2010[needs update], Outreach Magazine published a list of the 100 largest Christian churches in the United States, and inside the list were the following Houston-area churches: Lakewood, Second Baptist Church Houston, Woodlands Church, Church Without Walls and First Baptist Church. According to the list, Houston and Dallas were tied as the second most popular city for megachurches.[3]

Catholicism edit

Roman Catholics edit

 
The Sacred Heart Co-Cathedral in Downtown Houston

The city's Roman Catholic diocese is the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston. The chancery of the archdiocese is located in Downtown Houston.[4] The archdiocese's original cathedral church is St. Mary Cathedral Basilica in Galveston with a co-cathedral, the Co-Cathedral of the Sacred Heart, located in Downtown Houston.[5]

The first Catholic church in Houston, St. Vincent's Church, opened in 1839.[6] John Odin, a bishop arrived in 1841 to help establish it, and in the fall of 1842 the building, in the Second Ward, was fully built. This church converted into a parish catering to German Americans in 1871 when the larger Annunciation Church opened.[7]

The city's first black Catholic church was St. Nicholas, located in the Third Ward.[8]

 
Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Church in the Second Ward

In 1910 there were no Mexican Catholic churches in Houston. Some Mexicans were excluded from attending English-speaking Catholic churches. Mexicans who did attend found themselves discriminated against.[9] In 1911 the Roman Catholic Diocese of Galveston brought the Oblates of Mary Immaculate, a series of priests intended to minister to the Mexican population of Houston.[10] In 1912 Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Church, the first Mexican Catholic church, opened.[9] Due to an increase in demand in Catholic services, oblates established missions in various Mexican-American neighborhoods.[11] The Roman Catholic Church established Our Lady of Guadalupe so that white people accustomed to segregation of races would not be offended by the presence of Mexican people in their churches.[12] The second Mexican Catholic church, Immaculate Heart of Mary Catholic Church, opened in the 1920s.[13] It originated as an oblate mission in Magnolia Park, on the second floor of the residence of Emilio Aranda. A permanent two-story building, funded by the community, opened in 1926.[11]

 
Our Mother of Mercy Catholic Church in the Fifth Ward

In the 1920s, a group of Louisiana Creole people attended the Hispanic Our Lady of Guadalupe Church because OLG was the closest church to the Frenchtown area of the Fifth Ward.[8] Because the OLG church treated the Creole people in a discriminatory manner, by forcing them to confess and take communion after people of other races did so and after forcing them to take the back pews,[14] the Creoles opted to build their own church.[15] The Our Mother of Mercy Catholic Church in the Fifth Ward, Houston's second black Catholic church, was officially founded in June 1929.[16]

The number of African-American Catholics in Houston increased after the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 affected rural areas in the Southern United States.[17] Most of them moved to the Fifth Ward.[18] Due to a perception of the Catholic Church being more favorable than Protestant churches to African-Americans, the Catholic Church in Houston increased in popularity with African-Americans in the 1930s.[19] St. Anne de Beaupre in Sunset Heights,[20][21] the third black Catholic church, named after the Basilica of Sainte-Anne-de-Beaupré in Sainte-Anne-de-Beaupré, Quebec, Canada, opened in 1938.[22] By 2012 the church held Swahili masses due to it gaining African immigrant parishioners.[23] In particular St. Nicholas has a group of Cameroonians in the congregation served by the Assumption Cameroonian Catholic Community, so it has services each month tailored to that group.[24]

 
St. Andrew Kim Catholic Church (Korean: 휴스턴한인천주교회) in Spring Branch

In 1972 the Catholic church leaders and lay Hispanics in Houston participated in the Encuentro Hispano de Pastoral ("Pastoral Congress for the Spanish-speaking"). Robert R. Treviño, author of The Church in the Barrio: Mexican American Ethno-Catholicism in Houston, said that the event "stands as a watershed in the religious history of Mexican American Catholics in Houston".[10] Treviño also said that Mexican-American Catholics "competed for cultural space not only with the Anglo majority, which included various groups of white Catholics, but also with a large black population and a Mexican protestant presence as well."[25] St. Faustina Catholic Church, popular with Greater Katy's Venezuelan population, is in proximity to Cinco Ranch. It previously held its services at Joe Hubenak Elementary School, but in 2017 it moved into its own 1,600-seat building. It has worship services in Spanish.[26]

The first wave of Vietnamese immigrants to Houston, occurring after the end of the Vietnam War, was mostly Catholic.[27] In 1999 the Houston area had about 40,000 Filipino Catholics, about 30,000 ethnic Vietnamese Catholics, 350 Chinese Catholic families, over 1,000 Korean Catholics, and about 500 Indian Catholics.[28] Vietnamese Catholic churches in the Houston area as of 2008 include Christ Incarnate Word Parish (Vietnamese: Giáo Xứ Đức Kito Ngôi Lời Nhập Thể), Holy Rosary Parish, Our Lady of Lavang (Giáo Xứ Đức Mẹ Lavang), Our Lady of Lourdes, and Vietnamese Martyrs (Giáo Xứ Các Thánh Tử Đạo Việt Nam).[29] In 1999 there were four Vietnamese Catholic churches and five other churches with large numbers of Vietnamese people. In 1988 the Chinese Catholic church, Ascension Chinese Mission (美華天主堂), opened. The Korean Catholic church, St. Andrew Kim Catholic Church (Korean: 휴스턴한인천주교회), named after Andrew Kim Taegon, is in Spring Branch. There were no particular Filipino and Indian Catholic churches.[28] On August 8, 2008, a bus with Vietnamese Catholics from the Houston area was traveling to a Missouri festival to honor the Virgin Mary and crashed near Sherman in North Texas. 17 people died.[29]

The city has a Polish American church, Our Lady of Czestochowa Roman Catholic Parish in Spring Branch, established in the 1980s. At the time Polish immigrants who resisted Communist rule in that country arrived in Houston.[30]

Maronite Catholics edit

As of 2008 Our Lady of the Cedars Maronite Catholic Church has been Houston's only Maronite Church. That year, Christine Dow, a spokesperson for the church, stated that there were about 500 families who were members, and that the community, since the 1990s, had increased.[31] Richard Vara of the Houston Chronicle wrote that in 1991 there had "only a handful of registered families" in the Houston Maronite church.[32]

Protestantism edit

Anglicans and Episcopalians edit

 
Christ Church Cathedral, see of the Episcopal Diocese of Texas

The Anglican-Episcopalian tradition is served by a multitude of communities affiliated with the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America, and the Anglican Church in North America. Among them, the Episcopal Diocese of Texas within the Episcopal Church is the oldest Anglican or Episcopalian jurisdiction for the area. Within the Anglican Church in North America, several parish churches of Greater Houston are part of the Anglican Diocese of the Western Gulf Coast.[33]

Anglicans within The Anglican Diocese of the Western Gulf Coast of the Anglican Church in North America includes a number of parishes in metropolitan Houston.

Baptists edit

 
Antioch Missionary Baptist Church

Baptists are spread throughout numerous denominations for Greater Houston. Numbering 926,554 adherents as of 2020,[2] the largest Baptist denominations operating in the city and metropolitan area are the Southern Baptist Convention through its Southern Baptists of Texas Convention and Baptist General Convention of Texas; the American Baptist Association, American Baptist Churches USA, Full Gospel Baptist Church Fellowship; National Baptist Convention USA and National Baptist Convention of America; and the National Missionary Baptist Convention.

The oldest predominantly African American Baptist church in Houston is the Antioch Missionary Baptist Church, historically a part of the Fourth Ward and now in Downtown Houston.[34] Jack Yates once served as the pastor of this church.[35] Good Hope Missionary Baptist Church, a black church, was originally established in the Fourth Ward in 1872 but moved to the Third Ward in 1981. In 2002 it had 1,500 members. Lonnie Smith was a leader in the congregation and filed the Smith v. Allwright case along with the church's pastor, A.A. Lucas, in the 1940s.[36]

As of 2012 Second Baptist Church Houston, led by Homer Edwin "Ed" Young, is the largest Baptist church in the U.S.[37]

Lutherans edit

The Texas-Louisiana Gulf Coast Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America serves Houston. Houston is also within the Texas District of the Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod. In 2001 Reverend Gerald B. Kieschnick, a native of Houston, began his role as the leader of the Missouri Synod Lutherans in the United States. In 2010 he lost his reelection bid. The 2010 election took place in Downtown Houston, at the triennial convention.[38]

Methodists edit

 
Texas Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church

Houston lies within the Texas Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church, which covers east and southeast Texas,[39] although the African Methodist Episcopal Church and other Methodist denominations also maintain a significant presence within the area.[2]

As of 2001 Windsor Village United Methodist Church is the largest Methodist church in the U.S.[40]

Non/inter-denominationals edit

 
Lakewood Church

Non/inter-denominational Christians are served by hundreds of churches, some formerly affiliated with denominational synods and conventions. Lakewood Church began Baptist, but now identifies as non denominational. Woodlands Church is also non-denominational.

As of 2008 the oldest ethnic Korean church is the Korean Christian Church of Houston. In September 2007 Chul Chung, the senior pastor, returned to South Korea after he resigned. In 2008 there was discord among factions in the church and around 100 people were expelled from the church. The members who were suspended or expelled instead attended services at the Korean Senior Center.[41]

Presbyterians edit

The Synod of the Sun of the Presbyterian Church USA serves Houston. The denomination's flagship First Presbyterian Church is a conservative congregation that disaffiliated from the larger body in 2016 and affiliated with ECO. The Presbyterian Church in America also has their own Houston Metro Presbytery, including the congregation of Christ the King Presbyterian Church in east Spring Branch. Other Presbyterian denominations in Houston include the EPC, OPC, and, more recently, ECO.

Houston's three largest Presbyterian churches, Grace Presbyterian, Memorial Drive Presbyterian, and First Presbyterian Church are now members of ECO.

On December 25, 2001, the Korean Community Church in The Woodlands, with Presbyterian Korean-language services and non-denominational English services, opened. It opened to serve ethnic Koreans in The Woodlands, Conroe, Huntsville, Kingwood, and Spring.[42]

The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints edit

 
LDS church in northwest Houston

By 1918 members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (also known as The Church of Jesus Christ), then commonly known as "Mormons", arrived in Houston. In 1921, the first formal congregation was established, and in 1933 the first meetinghouse was dedicated.[43] The first meetinghouse built in Houston by the Church of Jesus Christ was built on Calumet Street at San Jacinto in Midtown Houston in 1941.[44] It is no longer owned by the Church. The Houston area was originally part of the Texas-Louisiana Mission of the Church.

Today, there are 22 Stakes of the Church of Jesus Christ that serve the Houston, Texas area. Stakes are geographical groupings of congregations comparable to, but smaller than, Catholic dioceses and typically include 6-12 congregations called "wards" or "branches", which meet in multi-congregational meetinghouses or chapels.[45]

The Church of Jesus Christ in Houston includes congregations that speak English, Spanish, Chinese, Vietnamese, and ASL. There are also congregations designated for single college-age adults (Young Single Adult) and for inmates (Correctional). One Temple, the Houston, Texas Temple, lies outside the Houston area in unincorporated Harris County (with a Spring address), and serves the stakes in the area. It is the second temple built in Texas after the Dallas, Texas Temple, and one of the four currently operating in Texas today. It was dedicated on August 26, 2000, by President Gordon B. Hinckley.[46] There are three missions of the Church of Jesus Christ in the Houston area: the Texas Houston Mission, the Texas Houston East Mission, and the Texas Houston South Mission.[47]

In 2011 Kate Shellnut of the Houston Chronicle stated that the Church of Jesus Christ was increasing in size in the Houston area.[48] On Saturday April 30, 2011 a new meeting house located on a 7-acre (2.8 ha) site in Sienna Plantation, was scheduled to open. The facility was scheduled to serve a 200-member English-speaking ward and a 200-member Spanish-speaking ward. Prior to the church's opening, Sienna Plantation-area church members attended congregations in the Sharpstown area of Houston and in Sugar Land.[48]

As of 2016, according to Church records, there were about 50,000 members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in the Houston area.[43]

In 2018 church member Sam Young, from Sugar Land, advocated against bishops meeting one-on-one with children and asking them questions about sexual activity (the law of chastity). In response, an excommunication hearing for him was set up. Young stated that "Protecting children is more important than my membership in the church. I’m not going to shut up. That would be immoral on my part."[49] He was excommunicated in September 2018.[50]

Orthodoxy edit

 
Annunciation Orthodox Church in Montrose, Houston

As of 2011 Eastern Orthodox churches in Houston are having growing memberships. Immigrants from Eastern Europe, the Middle East, and other countries have added to Houston's Orthodox population. As of 2011 in the entire State of Texas there were 32,000 people who actively attend Orthodox churches.[51] In 2013 Father John Whiteford, the pastor of St. Jonah Orthodox Church near Spring, stated that there were about 6,000-9,000 Eastern Orthodox Christians in Houston.[52]

As of 2013, the largest Orthodox congregations are Annunciation Cathedral Greek and St. George Antiochian. Orthodox parishes hold festivals such as the Greek Festival. Former District Attorney of Harris County Pat Lykos and the members of the Pappas family, operating Pappas Restaurants, are Greek Orthodox.[52]

In 1861 the first Orthodox church in the Houston area, named after Saints Constantine and Helen, was in Galveston. The worshippers were in Galveston and, after 1911, in Houston, with the latter using the Galveston-Houston Inter-Urban Train. The priest, Father Theoclitos Triantafilides, was sent by Tsar Nicholas II of Russia. Nicholas II also sent funds to the church. Whiteford stated that those in Houston took the train to Galveston to attend services. Immigrants founded Orthodox congregations in Southeast Texas from 1908 to the turn of the 20th century. Immigrants came from the Arab world, Greece, Romania, Russia, Syria, and Antakya in Turkey.[52]

Armenians edit

 
St. Kevork Armenian Church

St. Kevork Armenian Church, which was established around 1982, serves as the Armenian Apostolic Church facility in Houston. As of 2007 about 10% of the estimated 4,000-5,000 ethnic Armenians in Houston are active in this church.[53]

Coptics edit

 
St. Mark Coptic Orthodox Church, Bellaire

Houston is within the Coptic Orthodox Diocese of the Southern United States.

As of 2004, there were three Coptic Orthodox churches in Houston: St. Mark Coptic Orthodox Church in Bellaire, the St. Mary and Archangel Michael Church in northwest Harris County, and the Archangel Raphael Coptic Orthodox Church in Clear Lake City. The St. Mary and Archangel Michael church began church services on July 25, 2004, had 200 families in August of that year, and had a cost of $2.5 million.[54] The St. Mary and Archangel Michael church is the largest Copt church in the Houston area.[55]

In the late 1960s there were far fewer Coptic families. Every month, a priest from Los Angeles flew to Houston and started a mass in a borrowed Orthodox church or in a private house.[54] From 1968 to 2006 over 600 Copt families moved to Houston. Due to sectarian strife against Copts within Egypt, by 2006 the membership of Copt churches in Houston was growing.[55]

In 2006 Gregory Katz of the Houston Chronicle stated that partly because many Copt church leaders are accustomed to anti-Copt attitudes in Egypt, those who come to Houston are not accustomed to speaking freely about their religious beliefs and therefore "do not mingle easily with the rest of the large Christian community in the Houston area".[55]

After the 2011 Alexandria bombing, Houston Coptic churches cancelled their Coptic Christmas services.[56]

Ethiopians edit

 
Debre Selam Medhanealem Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahdo Church in Fondren Southwest

Houston's Ethiopian Orthodox church is the Debre Selam Medhanealem Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahdo Church (Amharic: ደብረ ሰላም መድኃኔዓለም የኢትዮጵያ ኦርቶዶክስ ተዋሕዶ ቤተ ክርስቲያን Debre Selam MedhaneAlem YeItyopphya Ortodoks Tewahedo Bete Kristiyan; the name approximately means "Sanctuary of Peace and the Savior") in Fondren Southwest.[57]

Prior to the construction of the church, those of the Ethiopian Orthodox faith worshiped at Coptic Orthodox churches. Mesfin Genanaw, a Houston Community College teacher who was one of the individuals who assisted with the building of the church, stated that in 1992 20 Ethiopian women who were attending a Coptic church planned the establishment of an Ethiopian church. In 1993 the group purchased a 2.5-acre (1.0 ha) site and a tent, and conducted church services in a tent. After fundraisers were held, in 1995 construction of the permanent church started, and the church later obtained an additional 5 acres (2.0 ha) of land. Genanaw stated in a 2003 Houston Chronicle article that there are an estimated 5,000 Ethiopians in Greater Houston.[57]

Greeks edit

Houston is within the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America, Metropolis of Denver.[58]

Malankara Syrians edit

The Malankara Orthodox Diocese of Southwest America is headquartered in Fort Bend County, Texas, near Beasley.[59]

Russians edit

As of 2010 St. Jonah Orthodox Church, located in an unincorporated area in Harris County with a Spring address, is the sole Anglophone Russian Orthodox church in the Houston area. The church began holding services in 1998. John Whiteford was the deacon and provided lay services. In 2001 Whiteford was ordained as an Orthodox priest and he became a reverend. Whiteford estimated that the church purchased its current property in 2006 and he stated that in order to purchase the construction of the new building, the church paid in cash. The ceremony to celebrate the completion of its current building was scheduled for Saturday and Sunday October 23–24, 2010. As of 2010 about 90 people attend this church.[60]

Another church, St. Vladimir's Russian Orthodox Church, holds services in Slavonic.[60]

Indian edit

In 2021, Fort Bend County had about 24 Indian churches.[61]

LGBT churches edit

 
Resurrection Metropolitan Community Church

Some Christian churches accept members of the LGBT community.[62] In 2008 Reverend Dwayne Johnson, the pastor of the Resurrection Metropolitan Community Church,[63] a church in Timbergrove Manor,[64] near the Houston Heights,[62] stated that there were about 15-20 openly gay Christian clergy members in Houston.[63]

Resurrection Metropolitan's main service group is the LGBT community.[63] In 1980 the pastor was gay, and almost all of the congregation was LGBT.[65] In December 2010 Reverend Harry Knox, a pro-LGBT activist, became the leader of the Resurrection Metropolitan. In 2011 Resurrection Metropolitan had 850 members.[62]

In 1995, Grace Evangelical Lutheran Church began accepting LGBT members and became a "Reconciling in Christ" Lutheran church; it was founded in 1922. In 2008, Rene Garcia, a member of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA), stated that she estimated that 40% of the members identified themselves as LGBT, with many of them coming from other Christian denominations such as Missouri Synod Lutheranism and Roman Catholicism.[63]

Over the years a number of Evangelical/Pentecostal LGBT affirming churches have also ministered to the Houston Community. Community Gospel Church began in the early 1980s and served the community until 2012, with about 150 members at its height. In 2012, Gateway of Hope Church [1] was birthed as a Pentecostal/Word of Faith, Spirit Filled, Word Based, Jesus Centered fellowship meeting off of Dacoma Street and Hempstead Highway and is pastored by Pastor Sven Verbeet. Founded in 2010, Living Mosaic Christian Church [2] pastored by Rev. Jason Wood meets at the Montrose Counseling Center.

In 2008, pro-LGBT activist Jay Bakker argued that Joel Osteen, pastor of Lakewood Church, should speak out in favor of the LGBT community, and invited him to join his group in a picnic.[66]

Religious leaders edit

Prominent adherents edit

See also edit

References edit

  • Esparza, Jesus Jesse. "." () Houston History Volume 9, Issue 1. p. 2-8. Center for Public History, University of Houston.
  • Garza, Natalie. "." () Houston History Volume 9, Issue 1. p. 14-19. Center for Public History, University of Houston.
  • Pruitt, Bernadette. The Other Great Migration: The Movement of Rural African Americans to Houston, 1900-1941 (Sam Rayburn Series on Rural Life, sponsored by Texas A&M University-Commerce). Texas A&M University Press, October 24, 2013. ISBN 1603449485, 9781603449489.
  • Treviño, Robert R. The Church in the Barrio: Mexican American Ethno-Catholicism in Houston. UNC Press Books, February 27, 2006. 15. Retrieved from Google Books on November 22, 2011. ISBN 0-8078-5667-3, ISBN 978-0-8078-5667-3.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Shellnutt, Kate. "For Jeremy Lin: Houston church-hunting advice 2014-04-27 at the Wayback Machine" (). Houston Chronicle. July 19, 2012. Retrieved on May 3, 2014.
  2. ^ a b c "Maps and data files for 2020". U.S. Religion Census. Retrieved 2023-06-19.
  3. ^ Shellnutt, Kate. "Megachurches getting bigger; Lakewood quadruples in size since 2000 2014-05-03 at the Wayback Machine" (). Houston Chronicle. March 21, 2011. Retrieved on May 3, 2014.
  4. ^ "Contact Us 2014-07-02 at the Wayback Machine." Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston. Retrieved on February 27, 2011. "1700 San Jacinto Houston, TX 77002."
  5. ^ Archdiocese Cathedral History January 25, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ Carroll, Jill. "Family, history tied to church's project" (). Houston Chronicle. May 24, 2012. Retrieved on May 3, 2014.
  7. ^ McWhorter, Thomas. "From Das Zweiter to El Segundo, A Brief History of Houston’s Second Ward." Houston History Magazine. Volume 8, No. 1, p. 39. Retrieved on April 21, 2019.
  8. ^ a b Steptoe, Tyina Leaneice (University of Wisconsin-Madison). Dixie West: Race, Migration, and the Color Lines in Jim Crow Houston (PhD thesis for a history degree). ProQuest, 2008. ISBN 0549635874, 9780549635871. p. 195.
  9. ^ a b Treviño, p. 32.
  10. ^ a b Treviño, p. 9.
  11. ^ a b Garza, Natalie, p. 17.
  12. ^ Garza, Natalie, p. 15.
  13. ^ Esparza, p. 3.
  14. ^ Steptoe, Tyina Leaneice (University of Wisconsin-Madison). Dixie West: Race, Migration, and the Color Lines in Jim Crow Houston (PhD thesis for a history degree). ProQuest, 2008. ISBN 0549635874, 9780549635871. p. 195-196.
  15. ^ Steptoe, Tyina Leaneice (University of Wisconsin-Madison). Dixie West: Race, Migration, and the Color Lines in Jim Crow Houston (PhD thesis for a history degree). ProQuest, 2008. ISBN 0549635874, 9780549635871. p. 196.
  16. ^ Catholic Youth Organization, Diocese of Galveston. Houston District. Centennial: The Story of the Kingdom of God on Earth in that Portion of the Vineyard which for One Hundred Years Has Been the Diocese of Galveston. Catholic Youth Organization, Centennial Book Committee, 1947. p. 76. "Our Mother of Mercy Church, the second Negro parish to be established in Houston, was founded in June, 1929. Bishop Christopher E. Byrne purchased two city blocks, on Sumpter Street, and ground was[...]" ("Negro" is an outdated term for African-American).
  17. ^ Pruitt, p. 114.
  18. ^ Pruitt, p. 114-115.
  19. ^ Pruitt, p. 116.
  20. ^ Harris County Assessor's Block Book. Vol. 35. p. 110. - JPG - Church location indicated.
  21. ^ "St. Anne de Beaupre". Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston. Retrieved 2020-06-09. St. Anne de Beaupre Houston, TX 2810 Link Rd Houston, Texas 77009
  22. ^ Steptoe, Tyina L. Houston Bound: Culture and Color in a Jim Crow City (Volume 41 of American Crossroads). University of California Press, November 3, 2015. ISBN 0520958535, 9780520958531. p. 117.
  23. ^ Rogan, Catherine (2012-12-11). "Historic St. Nicholas turns 125". Texas Catholic Herald. Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Galveston-Houston. Retrieved 2020-06-02.
  24. ^ Takougang, Joseph (2014-03-06). Cameroonian Immigrants in the United States: Between the Homeland and the Diaspora. Lexington Books. p. 75. ISBN 9780739186947.
  25. ^ Treviño, p. 10.
  26. ^ Herrera, Sebastian (2017-03-25). "In Houston's Katy suburb, a Venezuelan population thrives". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 2018-07-11.
  27. ^ Klineberg, Stephen L. and Jie Wu. "DIVERSITY AND TRANSFORMATION AMONG ASIANS IN HOUSTON: Findings from the Kinder Institute’s Houston Area Asian Survey (1995, 2002, 2011) 2013-11-26 at the Wayback Machine" (). Kinder Institute for Urban Research, Rice University. February 2013. - Cited: p. 39.
  28. ^ a b Vara, Richard. "Area Asian Catholics to come together in celebration." Houston Chronicle. August 21, 1999. Religion p. 1. NewsBank Record: 3159522. Available from the Houston Chronicle website's newspaper databases, accessible with a library card and PIN.
  29. ^ a b Latson, Jennifer. "Mass honors those lost in Sherman bus crash" (). Houston Chronicle. September 8, 2008. Retrieved on May 5, 2014.
  30. ^ Orozco, Yvette (2019-05-04). "Polish-American community celebrates traditions at festival". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 2019-10-18.
  31. ^ Murphy, Bill. "Maronite cardinal tells of threat to Lebanon" (). Houston Chronicle. May 20, 2008. Retrieved on May 3, 2014.
  32. ^ Vara, Richard. "Maronite cardinal visits Houston" (). Houston Chronicle. May 23, 2008. Retrieved on May 3, 2014.
  33. ^ "Our Churches". Anglican Diocese of the Western Gulf Coast. Retrieved 2019-01-05.
  34. ^ Davis, Rod. "Houston's really good idea Bus tour celebrates communities that forged a city." San Antonio Express-News. Sunday August 3, 2003. Travel 1M. Retrieved on February 11, 2012.
  35. ^ "YATES, JOHN HENRY." Handbook of Texas Online.
  36. ^ Zuniga, Jo Ann (2002-03-24). "After 130 years, Good Hope still looks ahead". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 2018-04-29.
  37. ^ "Second Baptist will launch Spanish service on Easter." Houston Chronicle. April 6, 2012. Retrieved on May 3, 2014.
  38. ^ Shellnut, Kate. "New president to lead Missouri Synod Lutherans" (). Houston Chronicle. July 15, 2010. Retrieved on May 3, 2014.
  39. ^ "About Us". www.txcumc.org. Retrieved 2017-10-05.
  40. ^ "Houston has largest Methodist church." Associated Press at The Victoria Advocate. Saturday March 10, 2001. 4D. Retrieved from Google News (25 of 27) on October 16, 2012.
  41. ^ Wise, Lindsay (2008-05-12). "Power struggle leaves Houston Korean church in turmoil". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 2019-10-17.
  42. ^ Durham, Erika E. (2003-03-13). "Korean church opens in Woodlands". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 2019-10-17.
  43. ^ a b Barden-Smith, St. John (2016-10-23). "Temples of the gods: Houston's religious diversity reflects community". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 2018-07-12.
  44. ^ "Houston Deco | 1940s | Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints". www.houstondeco.org. Retrieved 2022-09-07.
  45. ^ "Houston Texas Temple District | ChurchofJesusChristTemples.org". Temples of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Retrieved 2022-09-07.
  46. ^ "Archived copy". Retrieved 2007-04-01.
  47. ^ "List of missions of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints", Wikipedia, 2022-09-03, retrieved 2022-09-07
  48. ^ a b Shellnut, Kate. "LDS opening new meetinghouse for growing congregation" (). Houston Chronicle. April 28, 2011. Retrieved on May 3, 2014.
  49. ^ Ketterer, Samantha (2018-09-08). "Sugar Land Mormon faces excommunication for criticism of church". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 2018-09-09.
  50. ^ Gardiner, Jenn; Rosie Nguyen (2018-09-16). "Former LDS bishop Sam Young officially ex-communicated". Good4Utah (Channel 4). Retrieved 2018-09-17.
  51. ^ Kever, Jeannie. "New converts flocking to ancient church in Houston" (). Houston Chronicle. January 9, 2011. Retrieved on May 3, 2014.
  52. ^ a b c "Orthodox Christians part of diverse fabric of Houston faith" (). July 23, 2013. Retrieved on May 3, 2014.
  53. ^ Vara, Richard. "Head of Armenian Apostolic Church visiting Houston." Houston Chronicle. Saturday October 20, 2007. Retrieved on April 27, 2016.
  54. ^ a b Vara, Richard. "New home is 'miracle' for Coptic Christians" (). Houston Chronicle. August 21, 2004. Retrieved on May 3, 2014.
  55. ^ a b c Katz, Gregory. "Egyptian Coptic Christians find bright future in Houston" (). Houston Chronicle. December 6, 2006. Retrieved on May 3, 2014.
  56. ^ Shellnutt, Kate. "Coptic Christians in Houston cancel Christmas services" (). Houston Chronicle. January 6, 2011. Retrieved on May 25, 2014.
  57. ^ a b Vara, Richard. "Ethiopian believers find strength in Orthodox church" (). Houston Chronicle. February 15, 2003. Retrieved on May 5, 2014.
  58. ^ "Parishes". Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America, Metropolis of Denver. Retrieved 2022-02-01. Annunciation Cathedral 3511 Yoakum Blvd. Houston, TX 77006
  59. ^ "Home". Malankara Orthodox Diocese of Southwest America. Retrieved 2022-02-01. Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church,Diocese of South-West America, 3101 Hopkins Rd Beasley, TX 77417
  60. ^ a b Meeks, Flori. "Russian Orthodox parish to celebrate new church" (). Houston Chronicle. October 14, 2014. Retrieved on May 5, 2014.
  61. ^ Bauman, Anna (2021-09-26). "Asian Americans are the fastest growing demographic in Houston's suburbs. Here's why". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 2021-11-19.
  62. ^ a b c Shelnutt, Kate. "Gay Christian community in Houston: Diverse, kid-friendly and working for justice" (). Houston Chronicle. January 28, 2011. Retrieved on May 3, 2014.
  63. ^ a b c d Karkabi, Barbara. "Grace Evangelical Lutheran welcomes gay pastor" (). Houston Chronicle. August 29, 2008. Retrieved on May 3, 2014.
  64. ^ Zuvanich, Adam (2020-07-22). "Community mourns death of progressive pastor". The Leader. Retrieved 2023-04-05.
  65. ^ Ennis, Michael. "What do these Rugged Texas He-Men Have in Common?". Texas Monthly. June 1980. Volume 8, No. 6. ISSN 0148-7736. Start page: 107. Cited: p. 107. Retrieved from Google Books on May 9, 2014. "It was Easter morning at Houston's Metropolitan Community Church of the Resurrection. [...]"
  66. ^ Feldman, Claudia. "Gay group, Tammy Faye's son invite Joel Osteen to picnic" (). Houston Chronicle. May 8, 2008. Retrieved on May 3, 2014.
  67. ^ Patrick, Diane (June 15, 2018). "What Would Beyoncé Do? Michael Arceneaux's Asking". Publishers Weekly. Retrieved 22 July 2018.
  68. ^ Decaille, Nia (2018-08-03). "'I Can't Date Jesus': Michael Arceneaux's memoir loosens the chastity belt on queer intimacy". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2018-08-06.
  69. ^ Vance, Carol. Boomtown DA. Whitecaps Media, 2011.

christianity, houston, christianity, most, widely, practiced, religion, city, houston, texas, 2012, kate, shellnutt, houston, chronicle, described, houston, heavily, christian, city, multiple, christian, denominations, originating, from, various, countries, pr. Christianity is the most widely practiced religion in the city of Houston Texas In 2012 Kate Shellnutt of the Houston Chronicle described Houston as a heavily Christian city 1 Multiple Christian denominations originating from various countries are practiced in the city among its Christian population the majority are either Catholic Baptist or non inter denominational 2 St Mary s Cathedral Basilica see of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Galveston Houston Lakewood Church in Houston is the largest church in the United States In 2010 it had 44 800 weekly attendees while in 2000 it had 11 000 weekly attendees In September 2010 needs update Outreach Magazine published a list of the 100 largest Christian churches in the United States and inside the list were the following Houston area churches Lakewood Second Baptist Church Houston Woodlands Church Church Without Walls and First Baptist Church According to the list Houston and Dallas were tied as the second most popular city for megachurches 3 Contents 1 Catholicism 1 1 Roman Catholics 1 2 Maronite Catholics 2 Protestantism 2 1 Anglicans and Episcopalians 2 2 Baptists 2 3 Lutherans 2 4 Methodists 2 5 Non inter denominationals 2 6 Presbyterians 3 The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints 4 Orthodoxy 4 1 Armenians 4 2 Coptics 4 3 Ethiopians 4 4 Greeks 4 5 Malankara Syrians 4 6 Russians 5 Indian 6 LGBT churches 7 Religious leaders 8 Prominent adherents 9 See also 10 References 11 NotesCatholicism editRoman Catholics edit nbsp The Sacred Heart Co Cathedral in Downtown Houston The city s Roman Catholic diocese is the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Galveston Houston The chancery of the archdiocese is located in Downtown Houston 4 The archdiocese s original cathedral church is St Mary Cathedral Basilica in Galveston with a co cathedral the Co Cathedral of the Sacred Heart located in Downtown Houston 5 The first Catholic church in Houston St Vincent s Church opened in 1839 6 John Odin a bishop arrived in 1841 to help establish it and in the fall of 1842 the building in the Second Ward was fully built This church converted into a parish catering to German Americans in 1871 when the larger Annunciation Church opened 7 The city s first black Catholic church was St Nicholas located in the Third Ward 8 nbsp Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Church in the Second Ward In 1910 there were no Mexican Catholic churches in Houston Some Mexicans were excluded from attending English speaking Catholic churches Mexicans who did attend found themselves discriminated against 9 In 1911 the Roman Catholic Diocese of Galveston brought the Oblates of Mary Immaculate a series of priests intended to minister to the Mexican population of Houston 10 In 1912 Our Lady of Guadalupe Catholic Church the first Mexican Catholic church opened 9 Due to an increase in demand in Catholic services oblates established missions in various Mexican American neighborhoods 11 The Roman Catholic Church established Our Lady of Guadalupe so that white people accustomed to segregation of races would not be offended by the presence of Mexican people in their churches 12 The second Mexican Catholic church Immaculate Heart of Mary Catholic Church opened in the 1920s 13 It originated as an oblate mission in Magnolia Park on the second floor of the residence of Emilio Aranda A permanent two story building funded by the community opened in 1926 11 nbsp Our Mother of Mercy Catholic Church in the Fifth Ward In the 1920s a group of Louisiana Creole people attended the Hispanic Our Lady of Guadalupe Church because OLG was the closest church to the Frenchtown area of the Fifth Ward 8 Because the OLG church treated the Creole people in a discriminatory manner by forcing them to confess and take communion after people of other races did so and after forcing them to take the back pews 14 the Creoles opted to build their own church 15 The Our Mother of Mercy Catholic Church in the Fifth Ward Houston s second black Catholic church was officially founded in June 1929 16 The number of African American Catholics in Houston increased after the Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 affected rural areas in the Southern United States 17 Most of them moved to the Fifth Ward 18 Due to a perception of the Catholic Church being more favorable than Protestant churches to African Americans the Catholic Church in Houston increased in popularity with African Americans in the 1930s 19 St Anne de Beaupre in Sunset Heights 20 21 the third black Catholic church named after the Basilica of Sainte Anne de Beaupre in Sainte Anne de Beaupre Quebec Canada opened in 1938 22 By 2012 the church held Swahili masses due to it gaining African immigrant parishioners 23 In particular St Nicholas has a group of Cameroonians in the congregation served by the Assumption Cameroonian Catholic Community so it has services each month tailored to that group 24 nbsp St Andrew Kim Catholic Church Korean 휴스턴한인천주교회 in Spring Branch In 1972 the Catholic church leaders and lay Hispanics in Houston participated in the Encuentro Hispano de Pastoral Pastoral Congress for the Spanish speaking Robert R Trevino author of The Church in the Barrio Mexican American Ethno Catholicism in Houston said that the event stands as a watershed in the religious history of Mexican American Catholics in Houston 10 Trevino also said that Mexican American Catholics competed for cultural space not only with the Anglo majority which included various groups of white Catholics but also with a large black population and a Mexican protestant presence as well 25 St Faustina Catholic Church popular with Greater Katy s Venezuelan population is in proximity to Cinco Ranch It previously held its services at Joe Hubenak Elementary School but in 2017 it moved into its own 1 600 seat building It has worship services in Spanish 26 The first wave of Vietnamese immigrants to Houston occurring after the end of the Vietnam War was mostly Catholic 27 In 1999 the Houston area had about 40 000 Filipino Catholics about 30 000 ethnic Vietnamese Catholics 350 Chinese Catholic families over 1 000 Korean Catholics and about 500 Indian Catholics 28 Vietnamese Catholic churches in the Houston area as of 2008 include Christ Incarnate Word Parish Vietnamese Giao Xứ Đức Kito Ngoi Lời Nhập Thể Holy Rosary Parish Our Lady of Lavang Giao Xứ Đức Mẹ Lavang Our Lady of Lourdes and Vietnamese Martyrs Giao Xứ Cac Thanh Tử Đạo Việt Nam 29 In 1999 there were four Vietnamese Catholic churches and five other churches with large numbers of Vietnamese people In 1988 the Chinese Catholic church Ascension Chinese Mission 美華天主堂 opened The Korean Catholic church St Andrew Kim Catholic Church Korean 휴스턴한인천주교회 named after Andrew Kim Taegon is in Spring Branch There were no particular Filipino and Indian Catholic churches 28 On August 8 2008 a bus with Vietnamese Catholics from the Houston area was traveling to a Missouri festival to honor the Virgin Mary and crashed near Sherman in North Texas 17 people died 29 The city has a Polish American church Our Lady of Czestochowa Roman Catholic Parish in Spring Branch established in the 1980s At the time Polish immigrants who resisted Communist rule in that country arrived in Houston 30 Maronite Catholics edit As of 2008 Our Lady of the Cedars Maronite Catholic Church has been Houston s only Maronite Church That year Christine Dow a spokesperson for the church stated that there were about 500 families who were members and that the community since the 1990s had increased 31 Richard Vara of the Houston Chronicle wrote that in 1991 there had only a handful of registered families in the Houston Maronite church 32 Protestantism editAnglicans and Episcopalians edit nbsp Christ Church Cathedral see of the Episcopal Diocese of Texas The Anglican Episcopalian tradition is served by a multitude of communities affiliated with the Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America and the Anglican Church in North America Among them the Episcopal Diocese of Texas within the Episcopal Church is the oldest Anglican or Episcopalian jurisdiction for the area Within the Anglican Church in North America several parish churches of Greater Houston are part of the Anglican Diocese of the Western Gulf Coast 33 Anglicans within The Anglican Diocese of the Western Gulf Coast of the Anglican Church in North America includes a number of parishes in metropolitan Houston Baptists edit nbsp Antioch Missionary Baptist Church Baptists are spread throughout numerous denominations for Greater Houston Numbering 926 554 adherents as of 2020 2 the largest Baptist denominations operating in the city and metropolitan area are the Southern Baptist Convention through its Southern Baptists of Texas Convention and Baptist General Convention of Texas the American Baptist Association American Baptist Churches USA Full Gospel Baptist Church Fellowship National Baptist Convention USA and National Baptist Convention of America and the National Missionary Baptist Convention The oldest predominantly African American Baptist church in Houston is the Antioch Missionary Baptist Church historically a part of the Fourth Ward and now in Downtown Houston 34 Jack Yates once served as the pastor of this church 35 Good Hope Missionary Baptist Church a black church was originally established in the Fourth Ward in 1872 but moved to the Third Ward in 1981 In 2002 it had 1 500 members Lonnie Smith was a leader in the congregation and filed the Smith v Allwright case along with the church s pastor A A Lucas in the 1940s 36 As of 2012 Second Baptist Church Houston led by Homer Edwin Ed Young is the largest Baptist church in the U S 37 Lutherans edit The Texas Louisiana Gulf Coast Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America serves Houston Houston is also within the Texas District of the Lutheran Church Missouri Synod In 2001 Reverend Gerald B Kieschnick a native of Houston began his role as the leader of the Missouri Synod Lutherans in the United States In 2010 he lost his reelection bid The 2010 election took place in Downtown Houston at the triennial convention 38 Methodists edit nbsp Texas Annual Conference of the United Methodist ChurchHouston lies within the Texas Annual Conference of the United Methodist Church which covers east and southeast Texas 39 although the African Methodist Episcopal Church and other Methodist denominations also maintain a significant presence within the area 2 As of 2001 Windsor Village United Methodist Church is the largest Methodist church in the U S 40 Non inter denominationals edit nbsp Lakewood Church Non inter denominational Christians are served by hundreds of churches some formerly affiliated with denominational synods and conventions Lakewood Church began Baptist but now identifies as non denominational Woodlands Church is also non denominational As of 2008 update the oldest ethnic Korean church is the Korean Christian Church of Houston In September 2007 Chul Chung the senior pastor returned to South Korea after he resigned In 2008 there was discord among factions in the church and around 100 people were expelled from the church The members who were suspended or expelled instead attended services at the Korean Senior Center 41 Presbyterians edit The Synod of the Sun of the Presbyterian Church USA serves Houston The denomination s flagship First Presbyterian Church is a conservative congregation that disaffiliated from the larger body in 2016 and affiliated with ECO The Presbyterian Church in America also has their own Houston Metro Presbytery including the congregation of Christ the King Presbyterian Church in east Spring Branch Other Presbyterian denominations in Houston include the EPC OPC and more recently ECO Houston s three largest Presbyterian churches Grace Presbyterian Memorial Drive Presbyterian and First Presbyterian Church are now members of ECO On December 25 2001 the Korean Community Church in The Woodlands with Presbyterian Korean language services and non denominational English services opened It opened to serve ethnic Koreans in The Woodlands Conroe Huntsville Kingwood and Spring 42 The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints edit nbsp LDS church in northwest Houston By 1918 members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints also known as The Church of Jesus Christ then commonly known as Mormons arrived in Houston In 1921 the first formal congregation was established and in 1933 the first meetinghouse was dedicated 43 The first meetinghouse built in Houston by the Church of Jesus Christ was built on Calumet Street at San Jacinto in Midtown Houston in 1941 44 It is no longer owned by the Church The Houston area was originally part of the Texas Louisiana Mission of the Church Today there are 22 Stakes of the Church of Jesus Christ that serve the Houston Texas area Stakes are geographical groupings of congregations comparable to but smaller than Catholic dioceses and typically include 6 12 congregations called wards or branches which meet in multi congregational meetinghouses or chapels 45 The Church of Jesus Christ in Houston includes congregations that speak English Spanish Chinese Vietnamese and ASL There are also congregations designated for single college age adults Young Single Adult and for inmates Correctional One Temple the Houston Texas Temple lies outside the Houston area in unincorporated Harris County with a Spring address and serves the stakes in the area It is the second temple built in Texas after the Dallas Texas Temple and one of the four currently operating in Texas today It was dedicated on August 26 2000 by President Gordon B Hinckley 46 There are three missions of the Church of Jesus Christ in the Houston area the Texas Houston Mission the Texas Houston East Mission and the Texas Houston South Mission 47 In 2011 Kate Shellnut of the Houston Chronicle stated that the Church of Jesus Christ was increasing in size in the Houston area 48 On Saturday April 30 2011 a new meeting house located on a 7 acre 2 8 ha site in Sienna Plantation was scheduled to open The facility was scheduled to serve a 200 member English speaking ward and a 200 member Spanish speaking ward Prior to the church s opening Sienna Plantation area church members attended congregations in the Sharpstown area of Houston and in Sugar Land 48 As of 2016 update according to Church records there were about 50 000 members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints in the Houston area 43 In 2018 church member Sam Young from Sugar Land advocated against bishops meeting one on one with children and asking them questions about sexual activity the law of chastity In response an excommunication hearing for him was set up Young stated that Protecting children is more important than my membership in the church I m not going to shut up That would be immoral on my part 49 He was excommunicated in September 2018 50 Orthodoxy edit nbsp Annunciation Orthodox Church in Montrose Houston As of 2011 Eastern Orthodox churches in Houston are having growing memberships Immigrants from Eastern Europe the Middle East and other countries have added to Houston s Orthodox population As of 2011 in the entire State of Texas there were 32 000 people who actively attend Orthodox churches 51 In 2013 Father John Whiteford the pastor of St Jonah Orthodox Church near Spring stated that there were about 6 000 9 000 Eastern Orthodox Christians in Houston 52 As of 2013 the largest Orthodox congregations are Annunciation Cathedral Greek and St George Antiochian Orthodox parishes hold festivals such as the Greek Festival Former District Attorney of Harris County Pat Lykos and the members of the Pappas family operating Pappas Restaurants are Greek Orthodox 52 In 1861 the first Orthodox church in the Houston area named after Saints Constantine and Helen was in Galveston The worshippers were in Galveston and after 1911 in Houston with the latter using the Galveston Houston Inter Urban Train The priest Father Theoclitos Triantafilides was sent by Tsar Nicholas II of Russia Nicholas II also sent funds to the church Whiteford stated that those in Houston took the train to Galveston to attend services Immigrants founded Orthodox congregations in Southeast Texas from 1908 to the turn of the 20th century Immigrants came from the Arab world Greece Romania Russia Syria and Antakya in Turkey 52 Armenians edit See also Armenian American nbsp St Kevork Armenian Church St Kevork Armenian Church which was established around 1982 serves as the Armenian Apostolic Church facility in Houston As of 2007 update about 10 of the estimated 4 000 5 000 ethnic Armenians in Houston are active in this church 53 Coptics edit See also Coptic American and Coptic Orthodox Church in the United States nbsp St Mark Coptic Orthodox Church Bellaire Houston is within the Coptic Orthodox Diocese of the Southern United States As of 2004 there were three Coptic Orthodox churches in Houston St Mark Coptic Orthodox Church in Bellaire the St Mary and Archangel Michael Church in northwest Harris County and the Archangel Raphael Coptic Orthodox Church in Clear Lake City The St Mary and Archangel Michael church began church services on July 25 2004 had 200 families in August of that year and had a cost of 2 5 million 54 The St Mary and Archangel Michael church is the largest Copt church in the Houston area 55 In the late 1960s there were far fewer Coptic families Every month a priest from Los Angeles flew to Houston and started a mass in a borrowed Orthodox church or in a private house 54 From 1968 to 2006 over 600 Copt families moved to Houston Due to sectarian strife against Copts within Egypt by 2006 the membership of Copt churches in Houston was growing 55 In 2006 Gregory Katz of the Houston Chronicle stated that partly because many Copt church leaders are accustomed to anti Copt attitudes in Egypt those who come to Houston are not accustomed to speaking freely about their religious beliefs and therefore do not mingle easily with the rest of the large Christian community in the Houston area 55 After the 2011 Alexandria bombing Houston Coptic churches cancelled their Coptic Christmas services 56 Ethiopians edit nbsp Debre Selam Medhanealem Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahdo Church in Fondren Southwest Houston s Ethiopian Orthodox church is the Debre Selam Medhanealem Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahdo Church Amharic ደብረ ሰላም መድኃኔዓለም የኢትዮጵያ ኦርቶዶክስ ተዋሕዶ ቤተ ክርስቲያን Debre Selam MedhaneAlem YeItyopphya Ortodoks Tewahedo Bete Kristiyan the name approximately means Sanctuary of Peace and the Savior in Fondren Southwest 57 Prior to the construction of the church those of the Ethiopian Orthodox faith worshiped at Coptic Orthodox churches Mesfin Genanaw a Houston Community College teacher who was one of the individuals who assisted with the building of the church stated that in 1992 20 Ethiopian women who were attending a Coptic church planned the establishment of an Ethiopian church In 1993 the group purchased a 2 5 acre 1 0 ha site and a tent and conducted church services in a tent After fundraisers were held in 1995 construction of the permanent church started and the church later obtained an additional 5 acres 2 0 ha of land Genanaw stated in a 2003 Houston Chronicle article that there are an estimated 5 000 Ethiopians in Greater Houston 57 Greeks edit Houston is within the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America Metropolis of Denver 58 Malankara Syrians edit The Malankara Orthodox Diocese of Southwest America is headquartered in Fort Bend County Texas near Beasley 59 Russians edit As of 2010 St Jonah Orthodox Church located in an unincorporated area in Harris County with a Spring address is the sole Anglophone Russian Orthodox church in the Houston area The church began holding services in 1998 John Whiteford was the deacon and provided lay services In 2001 Whiteford was ordained as an Orthodox priest and he became a reverend Whiteford estimated that the church purchased its current property in 2006 and he stated that in order to purchase the construction of the new building the church paid in cash The ceremony to celebrate the completion of its current building was scheduled for Saturday and Sunday October 23 24 2010 As of 2010 about 90 people attend this church 60 Another church St Vladimir s Russian Orthodox Church holds services in Slavonic 60 Indian editIn 2021 Fort Bend County had about 24 Indian churches 61 LGBT churches editSee also LGBT culture in Houston nbsp Resurrection Metropolitan Community Church Some Christian churches accept members of the LGBT community 62 In 2008 Reverend Dwayne Johnson the pastor of the Resurrection Metropolitan Community Church 63 a church in Timbergrove Manor 64 near the Houston Heights 62 stated that there were about 15 20 openly gay Christian clergy members in Houston 63 Resurrection Metropolitan s main service group is the LGBT community 63 In 1980 the pastor was gay and almost all of the congregation was LGBT 65 In December 2010 Reverend Harry Knox a pro LGBT activist became the leader of the Resurrection Metropolitan In 2011 Resurrection Metropolitan had 850 members 62 In 1995 Grace Evangelical Lutheran Church began accepting LGBT members and became a Reconciling in Christ Lutheran church it was founded in 1922 In 2008 Rene Garcia a member of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America ELCA stated that she estimated that 40 of the members identified themselves as LGBT with many of them coming from other Christian denominations such as Missouri Synod Lutheranism and Roman Catholicism 63 Over the years a number of Evangelical Pentecostal LGBT affirming churches have also ministered to the Houston Community Community Gospel Church began in the early 1980s and served the community until 2012 with about 150 members at its height In 2012 Gateway of Hope Church 1 was birthed as a Pentecostal Word of Faith Spirit Filled Word Based Jesus Centered fellowship meeting off of Dacoma Street and Hempstead Highway and is pastored by Pastor Sven Verbeet Founded in 2010 Living Mosaic Christian Church 2 pastored by Rev Jason Wood meets at the Montrose Counseling Center In 2008 pro LGBT activist Jay Bakker argued that Joel Osteen pastor of Lakewood Church should speak out in favor of the LGBT community and invited him to join his group in a picnic 66 Religious leaders editKirbyjon Caldwell Daniel DiNardo Joseph Fiorenza Joel Osteen Jack Yates Homer Edwin YoungProminent adherents editMichael Arceneaux author of I Can t Date Jesus 67 which discusses his previous Catholic faith 68 Carol Vance former District Attorney of Harris County 69 page needed See also editReligion in Houston Christianity in the United StatesReferences editEsparza Jesus Jesse La Colonia Mexicana A History of Mexican Americans in Houston Houston History Volume 9 Issue 1 p 2 8 Center for Public History University of Houston Garza Natalie The Mother Church of Mexican Catholicism in Houston Houston History Volume 9 Issue 1 p 14 19 Center for Public History University of Houston Pruitt Bernadette The Other Great Migration The Movement of Rural African Americans to Houston 1900 1941 Sam Rayburn Series on Rural Life sponsored by Texas A amp M University Commerce Texas A amp M University Press October 24 2013 ISBN 1603449485 9781603449489 Trevino Robert R The Church in the Barrio Mexican American Ethno Catholicism in Houston UNC Press Books February 27 2006 15 Retrieved from Google Books on November 22 2011 ISBN 0 8078 5667 3 ISBN 978 0 8078 5667 3 Notes edit Shellnutt Kate For Jeremy Lin Houston church hunting advice Archived 2014 04 27 at the Wayback Machine Houston Chronicle July 19 2012 Retrieved on May 3 2014 a b c Maps and data files for 2020 U S Religion Census Retrieved 2023 06 19 Shellnutt Kate Megachurches getting bigger Lakewood quadruples in size since 2000 Archived 2014 05 03 at the Wayback Machine Houston Chronicle March 21 2011 Retrieved on May 3 2014 Contact Us Archived 2014 07 02 at the Wayback Machine Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Galveston Houston Retrieved on February 27 2011 1700 San Jacinto Houston TX 77002 Archdiocese Cathedral History Archived January 25 2007 at the Wayback Machine Carroll Jill Family history tied to church s project Houston Chronicle May 24 2012 Retrieved on May 3 2014 McWhorter Thomas From Das Zweiter to El Segundo A Brief History of Houston s Second Ward Houston History Magazine Volume 8 No 1 p 39 Retrieved on April 21 2019 a b Steptoe Tyina Leaneice University of Wisconsin Madison Dixie West Race Migration and the Color Lines in Jim Crow Houston PhD thesis for a history degree ProQuest 2008 ISBN 0549635874 9780549635871 p 195 a b Trevino p 32 a b Trevino p 9 a b Garza Natalie p 17 Garza Natalie p 15 Esparza p 3 Steptoe Tyina Leaneice University of Wisconsin Madison Dixie West Race Migration and the Color Lines in Jim Crow Houston PhD thesis for a history degree ProQuest 2008 ISBN 0549635874 9780549635871 p 195 196 Steptoe Tyina Leaneice University of Wisconsin Madison Dixie West Race Migration and the Color Lines in Jim Crow Houston PhD thesis for a history degree ProQuest 2008 ISBN 0549635874 9780549635871 p 196 Catholic Youth Organization Diocese of Galveston Houston District Centennial The Story of the Kingdom of God on Earth in that Portion of the Vineyard which for One Hundred Years Has Been the Diocese of Galveston Catholic Youth Organization Centennial Book Committee 1947 p 76 Our Mother of Mercy Church the second Negro parish to be established in Houston was founded in June 1929 Bishop Christopher E Byrne purchased two city blocks on Sumpter Street and ground was Negro is an outdated term for African American Pruitt p 114 Pruitt p 114 115 Pruitt p 116 Harris County Assessor s Block Book Vol 35 p 110 JPG Church location indicated St Anne de Beaupre Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Galveston Houston Retrieved 2020 06 09 St Anne de Beaupre Houston TX 2810 Link Rd Houston Texas 77009 Steptoe Tyina L Houston Bound Culture and Color in a Jim Crow City Volume 41 of American Crossroads University of California Press November 3 2015 ISBN 0520958535 9780520958531 p 117 Rogan Catherine 2012 12 11 Historic St Nicholas turns 125 Texas Catholic Herald Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Galveston Houston Retrieved 2020 06 02 Takougang Joseph 2014 03 06 Cameroonian Immigrants in the United States Between the Homeland and the Diaspora Lexington Books p 75 ISBN 9780739186947 Trevino p 10 Herrera Sebastian 2017 03 25 In Houston s Katy suburb a Venezuelan population thrives Houston Chronicle Retrieved 2018 07 11 Klineberg Stephen L and Jie Wu DIVERSITY AND TRANSFORMATION AMONG ASIANS IN HOUSTON Findings from the Kinder Institute s Houston Area Asian Survey 1995 2002 2011 Archived 2013 11 26 at the Wayback Machine Kinder Institute for Urban Research Rice University February 2013 Cited p 39 a b Vara Richard Area Asian Catholics to come together in celebration Houston Chronicle August 21 1999 Religion p 1 NewsBank Record 3159522 Available from the Houston Chronicle website s newspaper databases accessible with a library card and PIN a b Latson Jennifer Mass honors those lost in Sherman bus crash Houston Chronicle September 8 2008 Retrieved on May 5 2014 Orozco Yvette 2019 05 04 Polish American community celebrates traditions at festival Houston Chronicle Retrieved 2019 10 18 Murphy Bill Maronite cardinal tells of threat to Lebanon Houston Chronicle May 20 2008 Retrieved on May 3 2014 Vara Richard Maronite cardinal visits Houston Houston Chronicle May 23 2008 Retrieved on May 3 2014 Our Churches Anglican Diocese of the Western Gulf Coast Retrieved 2019 01 05 Davis Rod Houston s really good idea Bus tour celebrates communities that forged a city San Antonio Express News Sunday August 3 2003 Travel 1M Retrieved on February 11 2012 YATES JOHN HENRY Handbook of Texas Online Zuniga Jo Ann 2002 03 24 After 130 years Good Hope still looks ahead Houston Chronicle Retrieved 2018 04 29 Second Baptist will launch Spanish service on Easter Houston Chronicle April 6 2012 Retrieved on May 3 2014 Shellnut Kate New president to lead Missouri Synod Lutherans Houston Chronicle July 15 2010 Retrieved on May 3 2014 About Us www txcumc org Retrieved 2017 10 05 Houston has largest Methodist church Associated Press at The Victoria Advocate Saturday March 10 2001 4D Retrieved from Google News 25 of 27 on October 16 2012 Wise Lindsay 2008 05 12 Power struggle leaves Houston Korean church in turmoil Houston Chronicle Retrieved 2019 10 17 Durham Erika E 2003 03 13 Korean church opens in Woodlands Houston Chronicle Retrieved 2019 10 17 a b Barden Smith St John 2016 10 23 Temples of the gods Houston s religious diversity reflects community Houston Chronicle Retrieved 2018 07 12 Houston Deco 1940s Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints www houstondeco org Retrieved 2022 09 07 Houston Texas Temple District ChurchofJesusChristTemples org Temples of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints Retrieved 2022 09 07 Archived copy Retrieved 2007 04 01 List of missions of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints Wikipedia 2022 09 03 retrieved 2022 09 07 a b Shellnut Kate LDS opening new meetinghouse for growing congregation Houston Chronicle April 28 2011 Retrieved on May 3 2014 Ketterer Samantha 2018 09 08 Sugar Land Mormon faces excommunication for criticism of church Houston Chronicle Retrieved 2018 09 09 Gardiner Jenn Rosie Nguyen 2018 09 16 Former LDS bishop Sam Young officially ex communicated Good4Utah Channel 4 Retrieved 2018 09 17 Kever Jeannie New converts flocking to ancient church in Houston Houston Chronicle January 9 2011 Retrieved on May 3 2014 a b c Orthodox Christians part of diverse fabric of Houston faith July 23 2013 Retrieved on May 3 2014 Vara Richard Head of Armenian Apostolic Church visiting Houston Houston Chronicle Saturday October 20 2007 Retrieved on April 27 2016 a b Vara Richard New home is miracle for Coptic Christians Houston Chronicle August 21 2004 Retrieved on May 3 2014 a b c Katz Gregory Egyptian Coptic Christians find bright future in Houston Houston Chronicle December 6 2006 Retrieved on May 3 2014 Shellnutt Kate Coptic Christians in Houston cancel Christmas services Houston Chronicle January 6 2011 Retrieved on May 25 2014 a b Vara Richard Ethiopian believers find strength in Orthodox church Houston Chronicle February 15 2003 Retrieved on May 5 2014 Parishes Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America Metropolis of Denver Retrieved 2022 02 01 Annunciation Cathedral 3511 Yoakum Blvd Houston TX 77006 Home Malankara Orthodox Diocese of Southwest America Retrieved 2022 02 01 Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church Diocese of South West America 3101 Hopkins Rd Beasley TX 77417 a b Meeks Flori Russian Orthodox parish to celebrate new church Houston Chronicle October 14 2014 Retrieved on May 5 2014 Bauman Anna 2021 09 26 Asian Americans are the fastest growing demographic in Houston s suburbs Here s why Houston Chronicle Retrieved 2021 11 19 a b c Shelnutt Kate Gay Christian community in Houston Diverse kid friendly and working for justice Houston Chronicle January 28 2011 Retrieved on May 3 2014 a b c d Karkabi Barbara Grace Evangelical Lutheran welcomes gay pastor Houston Chronicle August 29 2008 Retrieved on May 3 2014 Zuvanich Adam 2020 07 22 Community mourns death of progressive pastor The Leader Retrieved 2023 04 05 Ennis Michael What do these Rugged Texas He Men Have in Common Texas Monthly June 1980 Volume 8 No 6 ISSN 0148 7736 Start page 107 Cited p 107 Retrieved from Google Books on May 9 2014 It was Easter morning at Houston s Metropolitan Community Church of the Resurrection Feldman Claudia Gay group Tammy Faye s son invite Joel Osteen to picnic Houston Chronicle May 8 2008 Retrieved on May 3 2014 Patrick Diane June 15 2018 What Would Beyonce Do Michael Arceneaux s Asking Publishers Weekly Retrieved 22 July 2018 Decaille Nia 2018 08 03 I Can t Date Jesus Michael Arceneaux s memoir loosens the chastity belt on queer intimacy The Washington Post Retrieved 2018 08 06 Vance Carol Boomtown DA Whitecaps Media 2011 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Christianity in Houston amp oldid 1211899477, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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