[136856] in SIPB IPv6

home help back first fref pref prev next nref lref last post

Congratulations - Details Apply

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Ultimate Offers Program)
Wed Mar 19 09:09:37 2025

X-Original-To: sipbv6-mtg@pergamon.mit.edu
Mime-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: multipart/alternative; boundary="ba17daabdb6923e5677344356d4ae106_2c395_56fef"
Date: Wed, 19 Mar 2025 14:08:35 +0100
From: "Ultimate Offers Program" <Congratulations@varicose911.best>
Reply-To: "Confirmation Needed" <UltimateOffersProgram@varicose911.best>
To: <sipbv6-mtg@charon2.mit.edu>
Message-ID: <7nepdv9l0hjxj2y9-eq3zqnv0g7ca0xyh-2c395-56fef@varicose911.best>

--ba17daabdb6923e5677344356d4ae106_2c395_56fef
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit

Congratulations - Details Apply

http://varicose911.best/J-ZNu8YnDc5we_Ukh1a21tZ1iJwocxKf2F6-v70IC6KFIkepoQ

http://varicose911.best/42ZN66PoZqALexZtWjtXFNbOtyQ-UFETlFmntC0-x47NRede

nalism is a Reformed (Calvinist) tradition of Protestant Christianity that enjoins a church polity in which congregations are self-governing (cf. congregational polity). Through the years, Congregationalists have adopted various confessional statements, including the Savoy Declaration, the Cambridge Platform and the Kansas City Statement of Faith.

Unlike Presbyterians, Congregationalists practise congregational polity (from which they derive their name), which holds that the members of a local church have the right to decide their church's forms of worship and confessional statements, choose their own officers and administer their own affairs without any outside interference. Congregationalist polity is rooted in a foundational tenet of Congregationalism: the priesthood of all believers. According to Congregationalist minister Charles Edward Jefferson, this means that "Every believer is a priest and ... every seeking child of God is given directly wisdom, guidance, power". Consequently, there is an absence of godparents, since the whole congregation is the godparent to all the children in the church.[citation needed]

Congregationalists have two sacraments: baptism and the Lord's Supper. Congregationalists practise infant baptism, but hold that ".. there is no distinction between "infant baptism" and "believer's baptism"." The Lord's Supper is normally celebrated once or twice a month. Congregationalists do not invoke the intercession of saints. Certain Congregationalist hymns that have become popular across Christendom inc

--ba17daabdb6923e5677344356d4ae106_2c395_56fef
Content-Type: text/html; charset=UTF-8
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit

<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/loose.dtd">
<html>
<head>
	<title>Newsletter</title>
	<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8" /><meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0">
</head>
<body><a href="http://varicose911.best/HuQko4DD2wmUNpE9rEbnot5ynJbMEEvbIynpJj-8oq3nUANOSw"><img src="http://varicose911.best/d43dd69a7afe45304d.jpg" /><img height="1" src="http://www.varicose911.best/-fFN3_-r85pAFyhzNcGydeziXEfErjq2wIaH973iCOMHvacnVw" width="1" /></a>
<center>
<table>
	<tbody>
		<tr>
			<td>
			<center>
			<div style="font-size:22px;font-family:'Roboto','Roboto','Oxygen','Ubuntu','Cantarell','Fira Sans','Droid Sans','Helvetica Neue',sans-serif;width:600px;"><a href="http://varicose911.best/J-ZNu8YnDc5we_Ukh1a21tZ1iJwocxKf2F6-v70IC6KFIkepoQ" style="font-size:26px;color:#f6a800;" target="blank">Congratulations - Details Apply</a><br />
			<br />
			<a href="http://varicose911.best/J-ZNu8YnDc5we_Ukh1a21tZ1iJwocxKf2F6-v70IC6KFIkepoQ" target="blank"><img src="http://varicose911.best/2a54725b79f33b784a.jpg" /></a><br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<a href="http://varicose911.best/y7BQqGZGnEDNZwd86qDMK_FAPjVKRYVzw684d0HVofcDc7Sarg" target="blank"><img src="http://varicose911.best/bbc710c6da35d8954e.jpg" /></a><br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			&nbsp;
			<div style="color:#FFFFFF;font-size:8px;">nalism is a Reformed (Calvinist) tradition of Protestant Christianity that enjoins a church polity in which congregations are self-governing (cf. congregational polity). Through the years, Congregationalists have adopted various confessional statements, including the Savoy Declaration, the Cambridge Platform and the Kansas City Statement of Faith. Unlike Presbyterians, Congregationalists practise congregational polity (from which they derive their name), which holds that the members of a local church have the right to decide their church&#39;s forms of worship and confessional statements, choose their own officers and administer their own affairs without any outside interference. Congregationalist polity is rooted in a foundational tenet of Congregationalism: the priesthood of all believers. According to Congregationalist minister Charles Edward Jefferson, this means that &quot;Every believer is a priest and ... every seeking child of God is given directly wisdom, guidance, power&quot;. Consequently, there is an absence of godparents, since the whole congregation is the godparent to all the children in the church.[citation needed] Congregationalists have two sacraments: baptism and the Lord&#39;s Supper. Congregationalists practise infant baptism, but hold that &quot;.. there is no distinction between &quot;infant baptism&quot; and &quot;believer&#39;s baptism&quot;.&quot; The Lord&#39;s Supper is normally celebrated once or twice a month. Congregationalists do not invoke the intercession of saints. Certain Congregationalist hymns that have become popular across Christendom inc</div>
			<br />
			<br />
			<a href="http://varicose911.best/42ZN66PoZqALexZtWjtXFNbOtyQ-UFETlFmntC0-x47NRede" target="blank"><img src="http://varicose911.best/e01c06bf9d9679064f.jpg" /></a><br />
			<br />
			<br />
			&nbsp;</div>
			</center>
			</td>
		</tr>
	</tbody>
</table>
</center>
</body>
</html>

--ba17daabdb6923e5677344356d4ae106_2c395_56fef--

home help back first fref pref prev next nref lref last post