135 W 31st St
New York, NY 10001
(212) 736-8500
Full Mass and Confession Schedule listed at our website, abbreviated schedule is here: Masses: Monday-Friday: 7:00, 7:30, 8:00 am, 12 Noon, 12:30, 1:00, 5:30 pm Saturday: 8:00 am, 12 Noon, Vigil Mass at 5:30 pm (Fulfills Sunday obligation) Sunday: 7:00, 8:00, 9:00, 10:15 am (Choir), 12 Noon, 1:00, 4:00 (Spanish), and 5:30 pm Confessions: Weekdays: After morning Mass and from Noon to 1:20 PM Saturdays: Noon to 12:45 PM and 3:30 to 5:30 PM Please note our comments disclaimer: Personal attacks and inappropriate comments will be flagged for removal; continuing to post such comments may result in removal as a fan.
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The Church of Our Lady of Guadalupe, is a former parish church under the authority of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York, located at 229 West 14th Street, between Seventh and Eighth Avenues, in the Chelsea section of Manhattan in New York City.With the merger in 2003 of the Parish of Our Lady of Guadalupe with the Parish of St. Bernard, farther west at 328 West 14th Street, the function was transferred to the nearby St. Bernard Church and the church was converted to other uses.HistoryThe parish was established in 1902 by the Augustinians of the Assumption as the first Spanish-speaking Catholic parish in New York City, serving working-class Spaniards. At the time, that area of 14th street was considered “Little Spain” and portrayed by filmmaker Artur Balder in his documentaries on Spanish immigration to New York City The parish was merged in 2003 with the neighboring St. Bernard Parish to create the Parish of Our Lady of Guadalupe & St. Bernard.BuildingThe church building is a former mid-19th-century brownstone rowhouse. Its conversion to a church created a double-story sanctuary. The church also included a "side chapel, tiny balcony, and clerestory." The monumental facade completed in the Spanish Baroque style or "classically proportioned Spanish Revival façade" was built in 1921 to the designs of Gustave Steinback. The "transformation which makes Guadalupe extremely rare, if not unique, in the city spanned two decades and involved several notable architects...." The AIA Guide to NYC (Fifth Edition, 2010) called it "an extraordinary brownstone conversion.... Its Iberian ancestry is expressed both in the language of its services and in its Spanish Colonial facade."
The Church of the Immaculate Conception is a Roman Catholic parish church in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York, located at 414 East 14th Street, near First Avenue, Manhattan, New York City.HistoryThe parish was established in 1855. A four-storey brick convent and parochial school at 415-419 East 13th Street and 414-416 East 14th Street was built in 1945 to designs by the eminent architectural firm of Eggers & Higgins of 542 Fifth Avenue for $700,000 There is another church of the same name on Staten Island established 1887. And another one in Ditmars, Astoria, Queens.FuneralsFrancis Barretto Spinola.
The Church of St. Leo is a former Roman Catholic parish church under the authority of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York, located at 11 East 28th Street, between Fifth and Madison Avenues in Manhattan, New York City.HistoryThe parish was established in 1880 to relieve the overcrowded St. Stephen's parish by the Rev. Thomas J. Ducey, its first rector, who continued there until his death in 1909. It was dedicated to St. Leo, patron saint of Pope Leo XIII, the reigning pontiff at the time. The Archbishop of New York at the time was John Cardinal McCloskey, the first American-born Cardinal, who was eligible to take part in the conclave that elected Leo pope (but did not because of travel delays). The parish was marked by its broad humanitarian spirit. It had a separate mortuary chapel at 9 East 28th Street for people of any faith who had died while temporarily being in the city, such as hotel guests. The bodies could remain there until being claimed for a proper funereal arrangement, or St. Leo's clergy would handle the service without remuneration. The parish was suppressed to become a mission of the former St. Stephen's Church. Some sources say the suppression took place in 1908; others that it occurred in 1909, following Fr. Ducey's death. The church building was given to the Sisters of Mary Reparatrix as a convent and retreat house following their expulsion from France in 1910, and the old rectory was turned into a convent inhabited in 1914 by thirteen professed nuns, three lay sisters and a postulant.
The Church of the Holy Innocents is a territorial Church founded in 1866 and completed in 1870 using Gothic Revival style architecture. Its history is filled with spiritual richness. One of the most extraordinary characteristics of the Church is the most beautiful mural which stands high above the main altar. It is a depiction of "The Crucifixion of Christ" painted by the famous Italian artist Constantino Brumidi. Constantino is best known for his work on the Great Rotundo of the United States Capital Building. He is known as the "Michael Angelo of the Capital" and Holy Innocents has one of his Master Pieces...
The Church of the Holy Innocents is a Roman Catholic parish church in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York, located at 126 West 37th Street at Broadway, Manhattan, New York City.HistoryThe parish was established in 1868. The present edifice was completed in 1870 using the Gothic Revival style of architecture. The first pastor engaged Constantino Brumidi to create a monumental fresco over the main altar. He later decorated the Great Rotunda of the U. S. Capitol Building. In the early years cows roamed the streets and open pastures around Holy Innocents. As the city rapidly expanded northward the community, known as the "Tenderloin", teemed with immigrants from Europe. By the early 1900s the area was known for newspaper publishing (The New York Herald) and theaters (The Metropolitan Opera House (39th St)). Holy Innocents was called the "actor's church". Eugene O'Neill, the playwright, was baptized in the church in 1888. Archbishop Patrick J. Hayes had the church build a twenty-storey storage and loft building at 135-9 West 36th Street in 1924 to designs by the eminent Emery Roth 19 West 40th Street for $600,000.Pastor Rev. Dr. Richard Brennan transferred here in 1890 from being pastor since 1875 of St. Rose of Lima's Old Church (New York City), after the death of the former pastor, Rev. Larkin.
The Church of St. Joseph in Greenwich Village is a Roman Catholic parish church located at 365 Avenue of the Americas (Sixth Avenue) at the corner of Washington Place in the Greenwich Village neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City. Built in 1833 - 34, it is the oldest purpose-built Roman Catholic church building in New York City.HistorySt. Joseph's Parish was founded by Bishop John Dubois in 1829. At the time St. Joseph's Parish began, the population of New York, numbering 203,000, was concentrated in the southern half of Manhattan. The parish boundaries stretched from Canal Street to 20th Street, and from Broadway to the Hudson River. Early church records indicate that St. Joseph's first congregants were predominantly Irish-Americans.St. Joseph's was the sixth parish to be established in Manhattan, among those still in existence in the Archdiocese of New York. Parishes that preceded it were St. Peter's on Barclay Street (1785), St. Patrick's Old Cathedral on Mulberry Street (1809), St. James on Oliver Street (1827) and Transfiguration on Mott Street (1827).
The Church of the Sacred Heart of Jesus is a Roman Catholic parish church, located in Hell's Kitchen/Clinton, Manhattan, New York City. Founded in 1876, it is a parish of the Archdiocese of New York and is located at 457 West 51st Street. Sacred Heart of Jesus School is located at 456 West 52nd Street. Since 2009, the pastor has been the Rev. Gabriel Piedrahita.HistoryThe parish was founded in 1876 with the Rev. Martin J. Brophy as the first pastor. The congregation first met in the converted Plymouth Baptist Church at 487 West 51st Street.Vicar-General Mooney, pastor of the church in the 1890s, was a strong proponent of the parochial school system, as opposed to secular public schools. During a sermon at the dedication to the now closed and demolished St. Rose of Lima Parish School, he "urged his hearers to send their children to the parochial schools, where, he said, the religious instruction they would receive was far more important than the secular instruction they could receive in the public schools."BuildingsIt is one of the largest churches in Midtown Manhattan.According to the parish history, the cornerstone of the present Victorian Romanesque church building was laid on July 23, 1884 and the finished church building was dedicated by The Most Rev. Michael A. Corrigan, Archbishop of New York, on May 17, 1885. However, according to the AIA Guide to NYC (1978), the "symmetric confection of deep red brick and matching terra cotta frosted with light-colored stone arches, band courses, and copings" was built around 1901 to the designs by the prominent architectural firm of Napoleon LeBrun & Sons. The address listed in 1892 was 447 West 51st Street.
God (Sovereign Lord)…(Exodus 6:3-6),Bless (an empowerment/enablement to succeed in every area) U (all that wants to be empowered to succeed in every area of one’s life) Ministry (an organization ministering to/teaching God’s Word in the form of public service to cause Prosperity in one’s daily life).
Meditation and yoga events to experience calmness, inner peace, and a heightened state of awareness, to gain energy, creativity and great isights into your every day life. Classes are taught in Manhattan using teachings of Living Incarnation Paramahamsa Nithyananda. Donation based.
Crenshaw Christian Center was founded more than 35 years ago, by Dr. Frederick K.C. Price. The Los Angeles-based location boasts a membership of 22,000 members The sanctuary, the FaithDome, is among the most notable and largest in the nation, with a seating capacity of 10,000. Crenshaw Christian Center East is the New York location of Crenshaw Christian Center.
The Church of the Holy Innocents is a territorial Church founded in 1866 and completed in 1870 using Gothic Revival style architecture. Its history is filled with spiritual richness. One of the most extraordinary characteristics of the Church is the most beautiful mural which stands high above the main altar. It is a depiction of "The Crucifixion of Christ" painted by the famous Italian artist Constantino Brumidi. Constantino is best known for his work on the Great Rotundo of the United States Capital Building. He is known as the "Michael Angelo of the Capital" and Holy Innocents has one of his Master Pieces...
We invite you to worship with us and to become involved in the large variety of program groups and events we host on a regular basis. Visit Marble Church in person: http://www.bing.com/maps/default.aspx?v=2&pc=FACEBK&mid=8100&where1=Fifth+Avenue+at+West+29th+Street%2C+New+York%2C+NY+10001&FORM=FBKPL0&name=Marble+Collegiate+Church
Serbian Orthodox Church and School Community of Saint Sava Cathedral is a registered non-profit 501(c)(3) organization (EIN #13-2685013). Your donation is tax-deductible to the fullest extent allowed by law. Contact: Very Rev. Dr. Živojin Jakovljević, [email protected] Very Rev. Vladislav Radujković, [email protected] Media contact: [email protected]
Bnei Akiva of New York Now Has one of the Largest Selections of Lulavim and Etrogim in the New York Tri-State Area. All Lulavim, Etrogim and Hadassim Are SHipped Directly from Israel.
We welcome those celebrating faith or struggling with doubt, those seeking both spiritual and physical nourishment, and those of diverse ages, races, and sexual orientations.
The Reverend Robert J. Robbins, K.C.H.S., Pastor The Reverend Peter K. Meehan, Parochial Vicar The Reverend Monsignor Kevin Sullivan, In Residence The Reverend Monsignor Hilary C. Franco, Honorary Associate Mr. Paul J. Murray, K.C.H.S., Director of Music and Organist
CCM11은 New Frontier Church의 대학부입니다.
Information about Opus Dei, especially for media professionals, bloggers, etc. Opus Dei helps people come closer to God in their work and everyday lives.
To all who are weary and need rest, To all who mourn and need comfort, To all who are lonely and need friendship, To all who are complacent and need disturbing, To all who sin and need a savior, To all who are glad and would serve, This church opens wide its doors.