Οι Εσταυρωμένοι Σωτήρες, ιστορικό μυθιστόρημα του Δημ Σαραντάκου – 22 (τελευταίο) wordpress.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wordpress.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
In 2012, National Geographic published a story about a papyrus fragment containing a reference to the wife of Jesus Christ. The fragment was later declared fraudulent, but Sue Monk Kidd had started th.
Humor resistance and jewish cultural persistence book revelation roasting rome | Biblical studies - New Testament cambridge.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from cambridge.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
by Stephanie SanHamel
In 1960, Norman Cousins, former editor of Saturday Review, wrote, “There is every reason for Judaism to lose its reluctance toward Jesus. His own towering spiritual presence is a projection of Judaism, not a repudiation of it.”1 Yet decades later, Jesus still remains an enigma – the Jewish man who claimed to be Messiah, Lord and God, resulting in billions of people following him and calling themselves Christians. So, what was Jesus’ religion? The simple answer is: Judaism. Jesus was a rabbi, a teacher of Judaism. He taught about the kingdom of God, he taught ethics, and at his final Passover meal he talked about a new covenant (alluding to Jeremiah 31:31–34), according to which God would write His laws onto the hearts and minds of His Jewish people. As the New Testament describes it, this takes place for those who come to understand who Jesus is: the promised Messiah who gave his life for our sins and rose from the dead.
Vignettes from Abanobi’s dad-and-daughter relationship-guidebook
On
By Moses Ogu
Chika Abanobi’s “What’s-Up Message From ‘Best Dad’ To Dearest Daughter: Secret Worries Of A Doting Dad” is a hands-on book that time has come. In many homes where the falcon can no longer hear the falconer; where things have fallen apart between the father and the daughter, and the centre can no longer hold, this is a book that has come not only to fill the ever-widening void but to also act as a roadmap to the much-needed restoration and reconciliation between dad and daughter.
In it, the author aptly captured the anxieties that perhaps every father who has a girl-child goes through before she is able to become something in life. It’s a book that many fathers and, perhaps, mothers are going to find handy in handling some of the complexes that could arise as their teenage or adolescent daughters march their way into adulthood.