963 resultados para First Church of Christ (Hartford, Conn.)
Resumo:
Translated from the Latin as found in Edward Burton's edition of the author's works, Oxford, 1827. Burton's notes are included. cf. Advertisement, v. 1, p. [iii]
Resumo:
Statistics of the church [admissions, baptisms, marriages, etc.]: p. 127-199.
Resumo:
Bound with: Meditations and discourses on the glory of Christ / by John Owen.
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
Includes bibliographical references.
Resumo:
Includes bibliographical references.
Resumo:
The print copy of this sermon is held by Pitts Theology Library. The Pitts Theology Library's digital copy was produced as part of the ATLA/ATS Cooperative Digital Resources Initiative (CDRI), funded by the Luce Foundation. Reproduction note: Electronic reproduction. Atlanta, Georgia : Pitts Theology Library, Emory University, 2003. (Thanksgiving Day Sermons, ATLA Cooperative Digital Resources Initiative, CDRI). Joint CDRI project by: Andover-Harvard Library (Harvard Divinity School), Pitts Theology Library (Emory University), and Princeton Theological Seminary Libraries.
Resumo:
David Peace’s novel Nineteen Seventy-seven concludes with the hack journalist Jack Whitehead being granted a terrifying apocalyptic vision, seconds before he is trepanned with a Phillips screwdriver by the sinister Reverend Martin Laws. Included in this vision is a curious reference to the wreck of the White Ship, a maritime disaster in 1120 that drowned William Atheling, heir to the English throne, and ultimately doomed England to years of civil war. This article explores Peace’s strange use of the shipwreck in his “Red Riding Quartet,” particularly the way he links it—in the quartet’s final volume, Nineteen Eighty Three—to a revisionist account of the aftermath of the crucifixion that leads a wounded Christ to a tragic death in the cold waters of the English Channel.
Resumo:
Letter from the President’s Office of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Salt Lake City, Utah. The letter is addressed to Welland D. Woodruff in response to his request regarding his ancestry. It is confirmed that the family descended through Matthew Woodruff who was the original proprietor of Farmingham Connecticut. The writer says that he has had interviews with several Woodruffs from Chicago and other places. The letter is signed by Wilford Woodruff [4th president of the Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter-Day Saints from 1889-1898], Dec. 7, 1887.
Resumo:
Lillian L. Kane, vocational counsellor.
Resumo:
These sermons are a response to the exclusion of slaveowners from communion. The author states why he opposes this practice and interprets New Testament passages on slavery.
Resumo:
With 64 illustrations.
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.
Resumo:
Mode of access: Internet.