Category
page 2Christian new religious movements
In the Light of Truth: The Grail Message
book by Abd-ru-shin
Holy Ecclesia of Jesus
Christian denomination in Japan
Friends of Man
Christian denomination founded in 1919
The Shouters
offshoot Chinese Christian group labelled as a Christian sect by the PRC
Zionist Churches
group of Christian denominations
Agapemonites
The Agapemonites or Community of The Son of Man was a religious cult or sect that existed in England from 1846 to 1956. It was named from the meaning "abode of love". The Agapemone community was founded by the Reverend Henry Prince in Spaxton, Somerset. The sect also built a church in Upper Clapton, London, and briefly had bases in Stoke-by-Clare in Suffolk, Brighton and Weymouth.
Gloriavale Christian Community
christian community in New Zealand
Salvation sect
Inochentism
thumb|210px|Orthodox Church in Balta, Ukraine|Balta, center of the Inochentist movement (1941 photograph)
Inochentism (occasionally translated as Innocentism or the Inochentist church; ; Russian: Иннокентьевцы, Innokentevtsy) is a millennialist and Charismatic Christian sect, split from mainstream Eastern Orthodoxy in the early 20th century. The church was first set up in the Russian Empire, and was later active in both the Soviet Union and Romania. Its founder was Bessarabian monk Ioan Levizor, known by his monastic name, Inochenție.
Olive Tree
Christian new religious movement founded in South Korea by Park Tae Son
Evangelical Baptist Church of Korea
Christian new religious movement
Lumpa Church
Christian new religious movement in Zambia
Yehowists
Yehowists (also Yehowist-Ilyinites, Ilyinists, Ilyintsy, Jehovists, Sect of the Right-hand Brotherhood, The Message of Zion, ) is a Russian Spiritual Christian millenarian religious movement founded by retired army officer and religious thinker Nikolai Ilyin in the 1840s.
Legio Maria
new religious movement in Kenya
Rizalista religious movements
Religious groups believing in the divinity of José Rizal
Chrislam
Chrislam is a Christian expression of Islam, originating as an assemblage of Christian and Islamic religious practices in Nigeria; in particular, the series of religious movements that merged Christian and Muslim religious practice during the 1970s in Lagos, Nigeria. The movement was pioneered by the Yoruba people in south-west Nigeria. Chrislam works against the conventional understanding of Christianity and Islam as two separate and exclusive religions, seeking out commonalities between both religions and promoting an inclusive union of the two. Chrislam also occupies a distinct geographical
Apostles of Infinite Love
Canadian Christian denomination