Falls Baptist is more than a congregation of faith; it also operates a K-12 academy school and the Baptist College of Ministry and Theological Seminary at its church in the southeast part of the village. The school offers a full academic course in the basic subjects as well as religious and musical training. The college prepares adults for the ministry.
St. Anthony's Catholic Church stands on a ridge overlooking the busy town. Its soaring steeple is one of the most imposing and impressive landmarks in the area. The church operates a parish school serving K4 through 8th grade children.
The steeple of St. Pauls United Church of Christ has been a landmark of the village center of Menomonee Falls since 1880. In fact, it is the only church within the bounds of the Village Historic District. The original building has been added to with great care to preserve its historic appeal. While the greater United Church of Christ was formed only in 1957, among the several denominations that merged to form it were the Pilgrims and Puritans.
St. James Parish, on the far western border of Menomonee Falls , is two churches in one. It includes a large modern facility to serve a growing community, and the picturesque original built in 1848, which is among the oldest permanent structures in southeast Wisconsin. The church was founded by Irish families who settled nearby to work in the famed Lannonstone quarries.
This Roman Catholic church is in the northwest part of Menomonee Falls and operates five ministries considered essential to parish life: administrative, Christian formation, human concerns, pastoral care, and prayer and worship. The church also takes a very active role in social justice issues, ranging from helping to feed low-income families here to stopping violence in the Congo.
Pilgrim is associated with the Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod and operates both a pre-school, the Little Lambs of Pilgrim Learning Center, and Pilgrim Lutheran School for children through the 8th grade. It is located just south of Silver Spring Drive in the southern part of Menomonee Falls.
Located in the south part of the village center area, St. Francis is the only church of the Episcopal faith serving Menomonee Falls. Episcopal churches are found mainly in the Americas but are part of the worldwide Anglican Communion. As of December 2010, the St. Francis website is under construction. For information on service times and offered programs, be sure to call the telephone number provided.
This congregation adheres to Orthodox Presbyterianism, a more strict branch of the denomination that believes the Bible is the unerring word of God and in salvation by grace alone through faith. It is by no means a closed-off society, however; the church reaches out with regular worship services conducted at many area senior assisted living centers and each third Wednesday of the month at the Milwaukee Rescue Mission.
Gloria Dei brings the world into its church, and its church into the world with unusual features such as extensive gardens on the grounds, with not only ornamental beds but also vegetables and wildflowers. The church also operates a kiosk inside that sells coffee products to support the growers of the Mt. Meru region in Tanzania. It also has an extensive and uniquely designed library that is like stepping inside a classic sailing ship. Gloria Dei is an Evangelical Lutheran Church America congregation.
The Anglican Catholic Church is a worldwide body of Christians with churches in the United States, Canada, Great Britain, Australia, Africa, India, and South America, and adding. We are Anglican because our tradition of prayer and worship is rooted in the Church of England and its Book of Common Prayer. We are Catholic because we believe and practice the universal or catholic faith of the church. The word "Catholic" is often understood in opposition to the word "Protestant." However, this is both a recent and uniquely western perspective. In the ancient church, catholicism was understood to be the opposite of heresy, or false belief, and even today there are millions of Christians in Greece, Russia, and other parts of the world who consider themselves neither "Catholic" nor "Protestant," but "Orthodox."