In The Bible Cause, John Fea explores the American Bible Society (ABS) and the plucky Christians who built and sustained it. Published to coincide with the ABS’s 2016 bicentennial, the book offers a chronological institutional history peppered with quotations from letters written by supporters (and occasionally critics) and tales from agents working across the United States and the globe. At its heart, this book argues that two motivating commitments have driven the history of the ABS. Since its founding in 1816, it has sustained a belief in the power of the Bible to lead people to salvation and has maintained a cultural mandate to build a Christian society in the United States and throughout the world.…
The author uses quotes like “ I’ll get it!” she cried , jumping up “ and “ Darling , she said . if you’re too tired to eat out tonight as we planned , i can fix you something, there’s plenty of meat in the freezer. Her eyes waited for , a smile , a nod , but he made no sign .” she is clearly in love and content with her life & husband from the way she tends to her husband so fawningly that she is a dutiful wife who believes in supporting her husband , . In Mary's mind , her husband is the center of her universe…
Even though the Italians said the Gothic architecture is “barbaric” and should discontinue the style, surprisingly the style is still being constructed to this day. I chose the St. John the Divine because it has so much similarity to the Cathedral of Notre Dame, Paris. Even though the St. John the Divine is unfinished, it is a very big tourist attraction, just like the Cathedral of Notre Dame. They both have the whole gothic style look, such as the wheel windows, that you notice, almost always, first and stained glass windows. The only difference that is noticeably is how the Cathedral of Notre Dame has a different front look then St. John the Divine.…
During the time of Samuel, Judges ruled the people in Israel. The Israelites said to Samuel, “ You are old, and your sons do not follow your ways; now appoint a king to lead us, such as all the other nations have.” (APA, NIV, 1 Samuel 8:5) They desire a king because they thought the other nations having a man, as a leader will help them win their fight battles. Having a king would allow them to be lazy, and have someone else make all the calls and take on the burden of responsibilities they would have to deal with. The Israelites did not trust God’s judgment after the countless times he has provided for them. They wanted to be just like the other nations not knowing what God had in store for them. God being a favorable God give them what they wanted.…
below the surface of the text resonate with signals from below the surface of the text, allowing the gospel to say more than it otherwise might seem to be saying. Since the gospel’s humor constitutes a form of commentary that is by saying definition implicit, our task is to make some of the humorous explicit, and to consider how the humorous elements function and how they relate to the gospel’s message.” It is not very important about John’s gospel date because “one of the points urged by those who favor a late date is the contention that the manner of referring to the Jews points to a time when they had become enemies of the church.” Perhaps, “throughout this study I argue that John’s gospel with its rhetoric of distance is a text of imperial…
The first sign miracles Jesus performed were when he had gone to a wedding in Cana John 2:1-12). Jesus and his disciples (6 of them) had arrived at the wedding, which was already in progress. This miracle symbolizes the Church’s (the bride’s) relationship to Christ (The bridegroom). Mary, Jesus mother was at the wedding as well. She went to Jesus and told him that they had run out of wine. Mary probable was related to the bride because a wedding in Galilee was a family affair, and female’s relatives of the bride were in charge of the kitchens. Mary and Jesus were related to the bride because commentators think sense she took the initiative to so something about the wine. So Mary told the servant to do whatever Jesus asked them to do. They were to ask no question just do whatever was asked of them to do. Jesus really didn’t need the help of the servant but he chose to use them. This is the same when it comes to us God expects us to what we can. Jesus performed this miracle maybe because one His stamp of approval on marriage as a divine institution by His presence. Two the first miracle communicates typical truths regarding Christ’s preeminence in His relation to the church as His bride. Three Jesus was setting the stage for His ministry. Four He knew that wine was a sign of Joy. Wanted the world to know that there was joy (grace) in his coming. These are just some of the reason why Jesus may have performed his first miracle by turning water into wine. The miracle points to the deity of Christ in that its display his power over creation and a new beginning. John show it like this where Jesus change water into wine meaning that He changed the water of Judaism into the wine of Christianity, the water of the law into the wine of the gospel, the water of Christlessness into the wine of the richness and the fullness of eternal…
In it Christ and His disciples are at a wedding, and the wine runs out. Christ’s mother, the Virgin Mary, comes to him and tells Him, “they have no wine.” (Jn 2:3) Christ asks her, “Woman, what have you to do with me? My hour has not yet come,” (Jn 2:4) whereupon the Blessed Virgin speaks her last words preserved for us: “Do whatever he tells you.” (Jn 2:5) Christ then turns the water that the servants bring him into wine, specifically, into the best wine. The wedding of Cana echoes the seventh day of creation and the meeting of Adam and Eve. In it Christ elevates the institution of Marriage to a sacrament, and demonstrates the core of His coming: that God has saved the best until last. It can also be referred back to the doxology psalm 104, in which King David praises the Lord for all of creation, speaking in verse of “Wine, which gladdens the heart of Man.” (Ps 104:15) A new creation is being instituted, and Christ, the perfect bridegroom, has saved the best wine---the wine of the new covenant---for last, not destroying the old covenants, but transforming and perfecting…
The most helpful resource that I found whilst translating the first eighteen verses of St. John’s Gospel was also the most detrimental. At some moments, comparing my own translation to others could lead to a better understanding of the overall passage, but it could also become more muddled if the other translator and I had different ideas as to what the original text meant. There were, of course, other times where both the other translations and mine came to the same idea, but worded it differently, which is simply aesthetic. In its totality, St. John’s Gospel was a challenge to translate, through comparing, searching for vocabulary, and tying everything together in a way that didn’t sound like a child wrote it, I was given a deeper understanding…
Imperial Rome, during the first century A.D. was expanding it's boundaries by adding new territories. They expanded into northern Europe and Britain and conquered or attempted to conquer various types of people. Based on my reading of Tacitus' The Agricola and The Germania, I have knowledge of the life and customs of the Britons, subject of the Agricola, and the Germans, subject of the Germania. This of course being the Romans, and more specifically Tacitus,' observation and view of these groups of people.…
6 Nearby stood six stone water jars, the kind used by the Jews for ceremonial washing, each…
1 Wife of Bath sees marriage as a means for her to have sex and she has a strong sexual appetite. She feels that God gave women sexual desires and that it can't be wrong to give in to those desires because they are God-given. Furthermore, she says that she knows men also have strong sexual desires so she uses sex, or the lack of it, to control her husbands The Wife of Bath begins the Prologue to her tale by establishing herself as an authority on marriage, due to her extensive personal experience with the institution. Since her first marriage at the tender age of twelve, she has had five husbands. She says that many people have criticized her for her numerous marriages, most of them on the basis that Christ went only once to a wedding, at Cana in Galilee. The Wife of Bath has her own views of Scripture and God’s plan. She says that men can only guess and interpret what Jesus meant when he told a Samaritan woman that her fifth husband was not her husband. With or without this bit of Scripture, no man has ever been able to give her an exact reply when she asks to know how many husbands a woman may have in her lifetime. God bade us to wax fruitful and multiply, she says, and that is the text that she wholeheartedly endorses. After all, great Old Testament figures, like Abraham, Jacob, and Solomon, enjoyed multiple wives at once. She uses this power as an “instrument” to control her husbands.…
Beginning her tale unannounced, the Wife of Bath bursts onto the scene taking the entire pilgrimage by surprise. Her agenda is to engage in the medieval debate on marriage, confronting the scholarly authority of the church from the standpoint of common experience. Her main emphasis is on maistrie and believes that women should have the upper hand in marriage, making winning and retaining maistrie their main objective. She also refutes canon law which says you are only allowed one husband, distorting and manipulating carefully selected parts of the bible and mythology to support her argument.…
Geoffrey Chaucer 's Canterbury Tales have long been respected as the embodiment of popular sentiment toward love and marriage in the Middle Ages. In these tales, Chaucer repeatedly addresses two main issues concerning marriage: male vs. female sovereignty in marriage and the place of sex in marriage.…
Like Tom and Jane, many believers are facing hard times in their marriages, and they want to consider their options. Before making any life-altering decisions, they want to get the proper perspective on the issues involved and know what the Bible says about such things. It is wise and good that Tom and Jane have turned to a student of the Word for help.…
Marriage is a controversial topic when thinking about then and now. Then, women had no choice in who they wanted to marry. Either their father choose, or her suitors had to pass a test, or in Portia’s case, choose the correct casket to find…