Congregation in a sentence as a noun

Then they serve the "congregation", as it's called.

In the mean time some of the congregation will snort in derision and deny there's a problem.

I met my fiancee at church, and some of my deepest friendships are with people from my congregation.

The people in the congregation listen and when they go to buy a car, they go to the preacher's favorite dealer.

The congregation came to believe that they faced eventual extinction if they remained there.

The more epic the narcissism, the more epic the congregation.

A quick google search says about 3/4 of Americans identify as Christian, and about 62% are members of a church congregation.

And it goes in the other direction too: epic congregation implies epic narcissism.

Americans, male and female, toggle between acting like a a pack of feral dogs and a congregation of calvinists whenever the subject comes up.

A drone missile hit their congregation killing Abdulrahman and several other teenagers.

I wouldn't be accepted into an Orthodox congregation except by conversion, because I am considered a gentile in their eyes.

If you can live with being asked questions when you're asking something funny long enough to convince regulars you usually know what you're doing, it's an excellent congregation of some hella smart people.

Tight-knit communities have been disrupted by economic development and urbanization, but even in a big city you can get to know the people in your congregation very well.

Saint Peter wasnt named Prince of the Apostles until today, but hes been the chief executive at the congregation since Jesus started this his third medical leave back in January, and probably even before that.

I doubt that much of what they sell is sold to fulfill practical wants and needs--their congregation of faithful parishioners who come to worship and trample every Black Friday for the year's must have electronic gadget attend regularly on a more distributed schedule throughout the year as well.

Congregation definitions

noun

a group of people who adhere to a common faith and habitually attend a given church

See also: fold faithful

noun

an assemblage of people or animals or things collected together; "a congregation of children pleaded for his autograph"; "a great congregation of birds flew over"

noun

the act of congregating

See also: congregating