320115《John Gill’s Exposition of the Bible â
... to Tarshish, the reverse of it; to the sea, as the Targum, the Mediterranean sea, which lay west, as Nineveh was to the east. Tarshish sometimes is used for the sea; see Psalm 48:7; he determined to go to sea; he did not care where, or to what place he might find a ship bound; or to Tarsus in Cilic ...
... to Tarshish, the reverse of it; to the sea, as the Targum, the Mediterranean sea, which lay west, as Nineveh was to the east. Tarshish sometimes is used for the sea; see Psalm 48:7; he determined to go to sea; he did not care where, or to what place he might find a ship bound; or to Tarsus in Cilic ...
The Day of At-One-Ment
... make amends with the people they really love, they stop worrying about the small stuff and take time to do the things that really matter. In the end, the characters find out that they are fine and are left feeling like the whole experience was a gift. The original scrooge ...
... make amends with the people they really love, they stop worrying about the small stuff and take time to do the things that really matter. In the end, the characters find out that they are fine and are left feeling like the whole experience was a gift. The original scrooge ...
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... of the Christian Faith), first published in 1559 and later in many more editions, was written in typical confessional language and included several passages that expressed his pastoral concern. A striking example is the lengthy section 4:20 which he inserted in the Latin version and later French ver ...
... of the Christian Faith), first published in 1559 and later in many more editions, was written in typical confessional language and included several passages that expressed his pastoral concern. A striking example is the lengthy section 4:20 which he inserted in the Latin version and later French ver ...
Philosophy, Christian Philosophy, and Christian Faith: Reply
... PHILOSOPHY, CHRISTIAN PHILOSOPHY, AND CHRISTIAN FAITH: REPLY TO HASKER ...
... PHILOSOPHY, CHRISTIAN PHILOSOPHY, AND CHRISTIAN FAITH: REPLY TO HASKER ...
ABSOLUTE - Polskie Towarzystwo Tomasza z Akwinu
... the Demiurge did not create it, but in a cognitive and normative sense is dependent upon it. Aristotle developed a conception of the absolute, in a certain sense the most perfect conception in the ancient world, in his "first philosophy" (ontology, metaphysics). It is associated with his realistic a ...
... the Demiurge did not create it, but in a cognitive and normative sense is dependent upon it. Aristotle developed a conception of the absolute, in a certain sense the most perfect conception in the ancient world, in his "first philosophy" (ontology, metaphysics). It is associated with his realistic a ...
the fragility of consciousness: lonergan and the postmodern concern
... In order to understand the modern turn to the subject, we must grasp what is most crucially distinctive about modern in contrast to premodern reflection on human being. It is not that premodern philosophers had not distinguished clearly the human from all other species of being, for they were admira ...
... In order to understand the modern turn to the subject, we must grasp what is most crucially distinctive about modern in contrast to premodern reflection on human being. It is not that premodern philosophers had not distinguished clearly the human from all other species of being, for they were admira ...
SPIS TREŚCI
... beings.1 Now that mortal men possess fire, they are able to transform their world and are no longer captive to the capriciousness of the gods or the divine order of nature. Instead, they have the imaginative power to fashion and form their own world, creating culture from nature. Zeus, infuriated by ...
... beings.1 Now that mortal men possess fire, they are able to transform their world and are no longer captive to the capriciousness of the gods or the divine order of nature. Instead, they have the imaginative power to fashion and form their own world, creating culture from nature. Zeus, infuriated by ...
Studien- und Prüfungsordnung für das Masterstudium im Fach
... Elective module Contents: The module covers all eras of Jewish history and deepens previously acquired knowledge of inner-Jewish developments in reaction to the historical and cultural contexts. Theological, organisational and cultural answers to the challenges of existing during the diaspora are an ...
... Elective module Contents: The module covers all eras of Jewish history and deepens previously acquired knowledge of inner-Jewish developments in reaction to the historical and cultural contexts. Theological, organisational and cultural answers to the challenges of existing during the diaspora are an ...
Teaching Narrative
... text but absent from our textbooks and classrooms discussions. I hope that this changes. As educators, we have the opportunity to build with our students a biblical framework that is contextualized, especially with regard to core concepts such as covenant. Put another way, it’s worth knowing that wh ...
... text but absent from our textbooks and classrooms discussions. I hope that this changes. As educators, we have the opportunity to build with our students a biblical framework that is contextualized, especially with regard to core concepts such as covenant. Put another way, it’s worth knowing that wh ...
THE MU`TAZILITE QĀD `ABD AL-JABBĀR ON THE DENOTATION
... The third method is considered to be the most fundamental among the argumentations in religious texts (scriptures) (See ibid., p. 160). Here, „Abd al-Jabbār engages in a number of linguistic discussions. He argues that speech, and the understanding of it, depends on a priori convention; he holds tha ...
... The third method is considered to be the most fundamental among the argumentations in religious texts (scriptures) (See ibid., p. 160). Here, „Abd al-Jabbār engages in a number of linguistic discussions. He argues that speech, and the understanding of it, depends on a priori convention; he holds tha ...
Predestination - St. Louis Center for Christian Study
... vitality of the American church. We have lost sight of God’s greatness. How rare today is a sermon on God’s majesty, his sovereign power, his wrath, his judgment, his overpowering rule over history, his supremacy, his fierceness, his eternal predestination. If we’re really, really honest with oursel ...
... vitality of the American church. We have lost sight of God’s greatness. How rare today is a sermon on God’s majesty, his sovereign power, his wrath, his judgment, his overpowering rule over history, his supremacy, his fierceness, his eternal predestination. If we’re really, really honest with oursel ...
Translational Eschatology, Death, and the Absence of God in Rajiv
... anticipated risks becoming strikingly present, leveled off, a word, reckoned. […] The drama, it seems, is not so much that we lose the friend after death but that we can no longer lose them; they who were once so distant become all too close, too close because now only within us. (Brault, 2001, p. 2 ...
... anticipated risks becoming strikingly present, leveled off, a word, reckoned. […] The drama, it seems, is not so much that we lose the friend after death but that we can no longer lose them; they who were once so distant become all too close, too close because now only within us. (Brault, 2001, p. 2 ...
Critical Analysis of
... Israel, which becomes the foundation for the entire document. The Commission states that its official source for Catholic/Jewish relations is Vatican II’s Nostra aetate, and although admitting that a covenant between God and Israel “cannot be explicitly read into Nostra ae ...
... Israel, which becomes the foundation for the entire document. The Commission states that its official source for Catholic/Jewish relations is Vatican II’s Nostra aetate, and although admitting that a covenant between God and Israel “cannot be explicitly read into Nostra ae ...
John Updike`s Theological World by Robert K. Johnston Robert K
... One could add further examples of banality from each of Updike’s books -- wifeswapping in suburbia, “American religiosity,” impersonal old people’s homes, concrete cities, clergy rehabilitation centers. Given external circumstances such as these, it is no wonder that one’s heart turns hard. A loss o ...
... One could add further examples of banality from each of Updike’s books -- wifeswapping in suburbia, “American religiosity,” impersonal old people’s homes, concrete cities, clergy rehabilitation centers. Given external circumstances such as these, it is no wonder that one’s heart turns hard. A loss o ...
MARTIN HEIDEGGER Being, Beings, and Truth
... Heidegger believes that consciousness of decontextualized objects (“de-worlded” objects) can only make sense against a background of a very different, more “primordial” kind of understanding—what the analytic philosopher Gilbert Ryle called “knowing-how” rather than “knowing-that”. Actually, Dasein ...
... Heidegger believes that consciousness of decontextualized objects (“de-worlded” objects) can only make sense against a background of a very different, more “primordial” kind of understanding—what the analytic philosopher Gilbert Ryle called “knowing-how” rather than “knowing-that”. Actually, Dasein ...
Nihilism in Turgenev`s `Fathers and Sons` Nihilism (from the Latin
... abstract concepts of any kind often places him among the first philosophical nihilists. For Sterner, achieving individual freedom is the only law; and the state, which necessarily imperils freedom, must be destroyed. Even beyond the oppression of the state, though, are the constraints imposed by oth ...
... abstract concepts of any kind often places him among the first philosophical nihilists. For Sterner, achieving individual freedom is the only law; and the state, which necessarily imperils freedom, must be destroyed. Even beyond the oppression of the state, though, are the constraints imposed by oth ...
Print this article - Women in Judaism: A Multidisciplinary Journal
... though she was born Hadassah. Indeed, “this is the virtuous Esther who is called Hadassah” (Megilah 10b),7 “Why then was she called Esther? Because she concealed … the facts about herself, as it says, Esther did not make known her people or her kindred” (13a). The book of Esther has been interpreted ...
... though she was born Hadassah. Indeed, “this is the virtuous Esther who is called Hadassah” (Megilah 10b),7 “Why then was she called Esther? Because she concealed … the facts about herself, as it says, Esther did not make known her people or her kindred” (13a). The book of Esther has been interpreted ...
First Prize: An Analysis of the Ontological Argument of St Anselm
... Arguments1 are a priori2 arguments purporting to establish the existence of God from the very definition of the same. Many such arguments have been advanced since Anselm’s, but Anselm’s original argument has remained a popular object of study. The Argument Anselm’s argument is set out in the second ...
... Arguments1 are a priori2 arguments purporting to establish the existence of God from the very definition of the same. Many such arguments have been advanced since Anselm’s, but Anselm’s original argument has remained a popular object of study. The Argument Anselm’s argument is set out in the second ...
But whatever the exact meaning of these two reasons given by the
... not because there is anything wrong with either one of them. This is quite typical of the Ramban. The Ramban sees nothing unusual in explaining a verse in more than one way, and similarly he sees nothing strange in answering the question, "what is God's purpose in giving this mitzva?", with more tha ...
... not because there is anything wrong with either one of them. This is quite typical of the Ramban. The Ramban sees nothing unusual in explaining a verse in more than one way, and similarly he sees nothing strange in answering the question, "what is God's purpose in giving this mitzva?", with more tha ...
Hobbes` Leviathan. The Irresistible Power of a
... “no society can be great and lasting, which begins from vain glory” 5. The problem of pride, as presented by Hobbes, has an indubitable theological origin that goes back to Saint Augustine. Pride was in Augustine the source of rebellion and evil that stood at the origins of the ‘City of Man’. For pr ...
... “no society can be great and lasting, which begins from vain glory” 5. The problem of pride, as presented by Hobbes, has an indubitable theological origin that goes back to Saint Augustine. Pride was in Augustine the source of rebellion and evil that stood at the origins of the ‘City of Man’. For pr ...
Summa Contra Gentiles: I, 13
... Jewish doctrine of creation, which was absent from the Greek philosophers. Philosophy built up by reflection on sense-experience. Proofs for God’s existence always begin with the sensible world and proceed to God. Thomism is objective and compatible with modernity; can be viewed philosophically rath ...
... Jewish doctrine of creation, which was absent from the Greek philosophers. Philosophy built up by reflection on sense-experience. Proofs for God’s existence always begin with the sensible world and proceed to God. Thomism is objective and compatible with modernity; can be viewed philosophically rath ...
God`s Passion for His Glory
... their times, or even to comprehend the deepest meaning of the intellectual and other influences that were effectual upon them. Jonathan Edwards was such an original.”3 It is not so much that Edwards dealt with new reality but, as Vergilius Ferm said, he “seemed to have had the powers and the drive t ...
... their times, or even to comprehend the deepest meaning of the intellectual and other influences that were effectual upon them. Jonathan Edwards was such an original.”3 It is not so much that Edwards dealt with new reality but, as Vergilius Ferm said, he “seemed to have had the powers and the drive t ...
ECD SPR15 Prolegomena
... and Islam are simultaneously different religions and different worldviews because of their divergent conceptions of deity. However, conservative Judaism, Islam, and Christianity—the classic western monotheistic religions—have much in common because of their similar ideas of God.10 b. Ultimate Realit ...
... and Islam are simultaneously different religions and different worldviews because of their divergent conceptions of deity. However, conservative Judaism, Islam, and Christianity—the classic western monotheistic religions—have much in common because of their similar ideas of God.10 b. Ultimate Realit ...
Jonah 04 - Clover Sites
... which chewed the plant so that it withered. 8 When the sun rose, God provided a scorching east wind, and the sun blazed on Jonah’s head so that he grew faint. He wanted to die, and said, “It would be better for me to die than to live.” 9 But God said to Jonah, “Is it right for you to be angry about ...
... which chewed the plant so that it withered. 8 When the sun rose, God provided a scorching east wind, and the sun blazed on Jonah’s head so that he grew faint. He wanted to die, and said, “It would be better for me to die than to live.” 9 But God said to Jonah, “Is it right for you to be angry about ...
Kolkhozniks. An anthropological study of the identity of Belarusian
... Belarusian village. The kolkhozniks’ social world-view, described as a result of analyzing and interpreting dialogues with the respondents, extends in their communicative memory back to the beginnings of the 20th century, while in the realm of meaning it reaches back to archaic layers of cultural co ...
... Belarusian village. The kolkhozniks’ social world-view, described as a result of analyzing and interpreting dialogues with the respondents, extends in their communicative memory back to the beginnings of the 20th century, while in the realm of meaning it reaches back to archaic layers of cultural co ...