Gay church nj
Christ the Liberator MCC
Hamilton Township, Mercer County, New Jersey
Google Map listing
Facebook:
About this MCC church: Metropolitan Community Church of Christ The Liberator is an LGBTQ & Allies Church in Hamilton, New Jersey. MCC CTL was founded over 4o years ago by a small collective of gays and lesbians who sought a faith community where they could openly worship as gender non-conforming people. Since September 17, , CTL has embraced members of the LGBTQ community with the God’s liberating message of aspire and inclusion. Promoting the values of Inclusion, Collective, Spiritual Transformation, and Justice, CTL continues to suggest healing from the spiritual violence perpetrated by those who would use the Bible as a weapon against us. We confidence that God calls us from the margins and into wholeness. We cure from guilt, shame, and fear. We believe that LGBTQ people are made and loved by GOD and that nothing can separate us from that love! CTL is a sacred place where we seek to spiritually metamorphose ourselves so that we can transform the earth. “And what does the Lord require of
We are a group of Roman Catholic parishes and ministries that welcome and support lesbian, gay, attracted to both genders, transgender and queer (LGBTQ+) persons, their family and friends sharing our faith through prayer, scripture and dialogue. While we are a Catholic organization, we welcome all regardless of background in conversation with the larger community to understand and recognize that we are all members of God's family.
The purpose of this website is to introduce ministries around New Jersey that are welcoming and inclusive of the LGBTQ community. Each ministry page is unlike, and each ministry is responsible for the communication displayed on a particular page.
Please contact the individual ministry for specific questions. For general inquiries, please contact NJCatholicPride@
Google Sites
Report abuse
Page details
Page updated
Google Sites
Report abuse
Union Congregational Church (Union Cong) is a part of the United Church of Christ (UCC), a denomination known for welcoming all, loving all, and inquiring justice for all. The UCC was founded in by a merger of two denominations, but our denominations history goes back a lot farther than that. Known as a denomination of firsts: the Joined Church Of Christ was the first historically white denomination to ordain an African-American person, the first to ordain a woman, the first to ordain an openly male lover man, and the denomination contained the first Christian church to affirm the right of same-gender couples to wed. Today, the denomination continues to alter lives and reside out a faith in the still-speaking God.
Each United Church Of Christ church belongs to both a larger team of churches (known as a conference), as well as a regional association. The purpose of both the conference and the association is to assist, challenge, and enhance local churches, bringing them together in community and mission and in relation to the larger church and society.
The nat
Our Open and Affirming Statement
We, the members of the First Congregational Church of Montclair, New Jersey, declare ourselves to be Expose and Affirming (ONA). In so doing, we wish to honor and embrace our founding rule that discrimination is incompatible with Christ’s gospel of unconditional love.
We acknowledge that in the past the Christian church has often condemned and excluded people because of race, culture, age, gender, economic status, disability or sexual orientation. While the church has made progress in being expose and affirming of many groups, there continues to be condemnation of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender persons by the society of faith, or at least, a tolerance of such condemnation and exclusion through silence. We believe such actions are contradictory with Christ’s teachings.
With God’s grace, we seek to be a congregation that includes all persons, embracing differences of sexual orientation, gender identity, marital status, religious upbringing, age, mental and physical ability, as well as racial, ethnic, or socio-ec