Wiktionary
n. A member of a congregation
Usage examples of "congregant".
Each congregant knew his Bible well from an early age, and any deviation from its teachings on the part of any minister or other congregant was fuel for scandal.
Saul Naumann only learns of his daughters exclusion through one of his congregants who, after Shabbat services, announces loudly enough for the people on the other side of the cookie table to overhear that her son has been identified as Talented and Gifted.
Most congregants have never been to a Havdalah service, have never heard the crisp crszh of the Havdalah flame being quenched by the wine, the true moment of Sabbaths end.
By playing the strict traditionalist, Rabbi Mayer makes the congregants feel as if they are being the type of Jew of whom their parents would approve.
The congregants are supposed to remain standing for as long as they wish to pray, sitting down when they have finished.
On Fridays when congregants ask him where Aaron is, he tells them his son is trying out a different temple.
Once a congregant brought a holocamera to services, but, thank You, Lord God, was bustled out by two burly monks before he could torment me further.
They intoned Phos' creed along with Agathios and the rest of the congregants: "We bless thee, Phos, lord with the great and good mind, by thy grace our protector, watchful beforehand that the great test of life may be decided in our favor.
That probably helped reconcile some of the congregants to the arrangement.
A buzz of talk rose from the congregants as they made their way out to the mundane world once more.
Thank God he was far enough from the other congregants that few seemed to notice his departure.
But he had underestimated the symbolic power of the Forest in the minds of his female congregants, and the depths of their hatred for the Hunter.
First, they peeled off the prince's sturdy gauntlets, displaying the jeweled, lifeless hands to the congregants, like battle trophies.
One was a long, unmoving line, composed of hopeful congregants trying to get a seat in the last row of the balcony, some of them waving credit cards which the ushers tried not to sneer at.
The actual congregants had to be content with the cheap seats and the television screens.