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  1. www.graciacalvarychapel.org › historia-calvary-chapelHISTORIA DE CALVARY CHAPEL

    Calvary Chapel empezó hacia fines de los sesenta como una pequeña iglesia no denominacional, compuesta de 25 miembros pastoreada por Chuck Smith.“The Word for Today” una organización sin fines de lucro creada por Chuck Smith, publica libros de estudios bíblicos y discos compactos por todo el mundo, y conjuntamente con la estación de radio KWVE transmiten la palabra de Dios a todo el ...

  2. A principios de la década de 1970, Calvary Chapel era el hogar de diez o más grupos musicales que eran representativos del movimiento del pueblo de Jesús. En 1982, John Wimber , pastor de Calvary Chapel, y el liderazgo de Calvary Chapel acordaron mutuamente separarse.

    • Calvary Chapel History - Dropping The Barriers
    • Calvary Chapel History - A Network of Churches, Not A Denomination
    • Calvary Chapel History - Across The U.S. and The World

    California is often on the cutting edge of change. In the 1960s, the state was home to hundreds of thousands of long-haired hippies. Pastor Chuck Smith looked past their unkempt appearance and saw souls hungering for Jesus Christ. But these rebels rejected traditional churches as being too stodgy and restrictive. The movement began with 25 people i...

    It wasn't long before Calvary Chapels were established in other cities. While Smith approved them and set the basic theology, he was not interested in starting a new denomination. He had left Foursquarebecause of politics and bureaucracy. Instead, Calvary Chapel became an association or network of churches, loosely affiliated but each one independe...

    Over the years, Calvary Chapel expanded into book publishing, music publishing, and radio stations. Smith's "Word for Today" radio program became popular throughout the United States. Smith's followers, like Greg Laurie, Raul Ries, Mike Macintosh, and Skip Heitzig, planted many other large churches, started international Bible colleges, retreat cen...

  3. Two notable ones were Calvary Chapel and Vineyard Fellowship. House churches were also part of this new transition away from the mainline denominational churches. At the height of the revival, through the ministries of Calvary Chapel Costa Mesa, California, alone: 200 were won to Christ each week.

  4. Late 1960s – 1970s: The Jesus People Movement. What a shock it was to the conservative, middle-class congregation when the hippies arrived! Parents were deeply concerned about the Hippie influence on their children and the criticism of their neighbors and other churches in the area.

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  5. 5 de oct. de 2021 · Music. Jesus, drugs and rock ’n’ roll: How an O.C. hippie church birthed contemporary Christian music. Hundreds of Calvary Chapel members take part in a baptism ceremony, 1973. (Steve Rice /...

  6. 14 de ago. de 2020 · By 1970 Calvary Chapel had grown from 150 people to thousands of young hippies who became followers of Jesus. One particularly memorable story goes that the elders of the church put up a sign, “No Bare Feet Allowed in the Church” to protect the carpet in their new facility.