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Topic: Paul <b>of<



  
 <b>Paulb> of Tarsus - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
<b>Paulb> was also one of the first Christians to expound the doctrine of Christ's divine nature.
Maccoby believes that <b>Paulb>'s revelation was thus actually a resolution of his divided self; <b>Paulb> subsequently fused the mystery religions, Judaism and the Passion of Jesus into an entirely new belief, centered on the death of Jesus as a mystical atoning sacrifice.
<b>Paulb> believed the advantage of the Jews was their being entrusted with the oracles of heaven, and that the law was upon them.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_of_Tarsus   (5816 words)

  
 from jesus to christ: the first christians: <b>paulb>'s mission and letters
<b>Paulb>'s notion that it was possible for gentiles to enter the congregation of God without some of the rules of Judaism interestingly enough seems to be a conviction on his part that comes from his own interpretation of the Jewish scriptures.
<b>Paulb> had decided to preach to gentiles apparently out of his own revelatory experience that this was the mission that had been given him by God when God called him to function as a prophet for this new Jesus movement.
For <b>Paulb> the Bible means the Hebrew Scriptures, or more precisely, the Greek translation of the Hebrew Scriptures that we call the Septuagint.
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/religion/first/missions.html   (5570 words)

  
 <b>Paulb>, Saint. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001-05
There can be no doubt that <b>Paulb>’s interpretation of the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus, his doctrine of the church as the mystical body of Christ, his teaching on law and grace, and his view of justification have been decisive in the formation of the Christian faith.
<b>Paulb> spent the next 13 years learning the faith, part of the time living in seclusion in the Arabian desert.
<b>Paulb> became a fountainhead of Christian doctrine, and countless interpretations have been given of his teachings.
http://www.bartleby.com/65/pa/Paul-St.html   (1043 words)

  
 St. <b>Paulb>
<b>Paulb> accepted eagerly the commission to preach the Gospel of Christ, but like many another called to a great task he felt his unworthiness and withdrew from the world to spend three years in "Arabia" in meditation and prayer before beginning his apostolate.
At Athens <b>Paulb> preached in the Areopagus, and we know that some of the Stoics and Epicureans heard him and debated with him informally, attracted by his vigorous intellect, his magnetic personality, and the ethical teachings which, in many respects, were not unlike their own.
The most quoted of New Testament writers, <b>Paulb> has given us a wealth of counsel, aphorisms, and ethical teachings; he had the power of expressing spiritual truths in the simplest of words, and this, rather than the building up of a systematic theology, was his contribution to the early Church.
http://www.ewtn.com/library/MARY/PAUL.HTM   (1554 words)

  
 The <b>Paulb> Page: Dedicated to the New Perspective on <b>Paulb>
The <b>Paulb> of History and the Apostle of Faith by N.T. Wright is a 1978 lecture.
The PCA and the NPP: Why a Denomination with Southern Presbyterian Roots Should Carefully Consider the "New Perspective on <b>Paulb>" by Rich Lusk is an appeal from the assistant pastor of Auburn Avenue Presbyterian Church.
<b>Paulb>'s Letter to the Galatians is an article which briefly summarizes the Galatian controversy in light of the new perspective.
http://www.thepaulpage.com   (3720 words)

  
 Patron Saints Index: Saint <b>Paulb> the Apostle
So do not be ashamed of your testimony to our Lord, nor of me, a prisoner for his sake; but bear your share of the hardship for the gospel with the strength that comes from God.
He was baptized, changed his name to <b>Paulb> to reflect his new persona, and began travelling and preaching.
The communities of Christ in Judea had no idea what I looked like; they had only heard that "he who was formerly persecuting us is now preaching the faith he treid to destroy," and they gave glory to God on my account.
http://www.catholic-forum.com/saints/saintp12.htm   (468 words)

  
 Chronology of Apostle <b>Paulb>'s Journeys and Epistles
So it could have been written when <b>Paulb> was alone in Athens in the winter of 51-52 AD, which would make it <b>Paulb>'s first letter.
We know that it was soon after the first letter, because like the first letter, Silas was with <b>Paulb> when second Thessalonians was written.
It is most helpful to know the year of the beginning or end of the reigns of political rulers that are mentioned in the text.
http://www.matthewmcgee.org/paultime.html   (2835 words)

  
 St. <b>Paulb> - Catholic Online
In his Epistles, St. <b>Paulb> shows himself to be a profound religious thinker and he has had an enduring formative influence in the development of Christianity.
<b>Paulb>, the indefatigable Apostle of the Gentiles, was converted from Judaism on the road to Damascus.
We gather, however, from the Pastoral Epistles and from tradition that at the end of the two years St. <b>Paulb> was released from his Roman imprisonment, and then traveled to Spain, later to the East again, and then back to Rome, where he was imprisoned a second time and in the year 67, was beheaded.
http://www.catholic.org/saints/saint.php?saint_id=91   (590 words)

  
 Memory-of.com - Memorial website in memory of <b>Paulb> Vande Ven (1986-2005)
We even had a cashier from a local grocery store show up, and even someone who had never met <b>Paulb>, but had been on the recieving end of <b>Paulb>'s great smile.
Tami -GP (Angel Ryan Hook) lit a candle on 02/04/2006: "So sorry for the loss of your son <b>Paulb>.
<b>Paulb> was always proud of the fact that he had never been grounded.
http://paul-vande-ven.memory-of.com   (1165 words)

  
 New Testament Gateway: <b>Paulb> the Apostle
From the Unbound Bible at Biola University; this is more of an "Acts" link, but it does feature what it calls "<b>Paulb>'s resume" and a conservative Acts-based chronology.
James D. Dunn, The Theology of <b>Paulb> the Apostle (US) / UK
Current features include Corinth at the Time of <b>Paulb>'s Arrival, Maps Related to the Life of <b>Paulb> and an Annotated Bibliography and more features are to be added throughout 2000 and 2001.
http://www.ntgateway.com/paul   (535 words)

  
 Wycliffe Bible Translators Australia - Article by Kirk Franklin - Four Bible Translators of the 18th and 19th centuries
Though living in Denmark, Egede was born in Norway and therefore was keenly interested in the welfare of a Norse community established in Greenland in the tenth century with a population of 3,000.
The outcomes of the service of Ziegenbalg, Egede, Martyn and Judson indicates that the availability of vernacular Scriptures has been the foundation for effective cross-cultural mission and fundamental for the health of an indigenous church.
Egede ‘found [the Eskimo language] seemingly deficient in terms that could be used for the expression of the Christian truth’ (Neill 1986:201).
http://www.wycliffe.org.au/about/kirk_articles/article3.html   (2762 words)

  
 Boston Collaborative Encyclopedia of Western Theology: <b>Paulb> Tillich
Tillich refers to the New Testament concept to describe this moment as the "fulfillment of time" as the words used by "Jesus and John the Baptist when they announced the fulfillment of time with respect to the Kingdom of God, which is ‘at hand" (369).
Tillich was born on August 20, 1886 in Starzeddel, a province of Brandenburg, Germany.
Tillich believes that such an ontological question of being-itself springs from the "shock of nonbeing." Nonbeing is experienced as the threat to being, which generates a sense of finitude.
http://people.bu.edu/wwildman/WeirdWildWeb/courses/mwt/dictionary/mwt_themes_755_tillich.htm   (6316 words)

  
 <b>Paulb> Kurtz - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Kurtz believes that the nonreligious members of the community should take a positive view on life.
Science and Religion by <b>Paulb> Kurtz, et al, 2003 ISBN 1591020646
<b>Paulb> Kurtz page at the Council for Secular Humanism site
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Kurtz   (6316 words)

  
 Pope John <b>Paulb> II - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
John <b>Paulb> II was a conservative on doctrine and issues relating to reproduction and the ordination of women.
In addition, John <b>Paulb> II chose not to do away with the discipline of mandatory priestly celibacy, though he did encourage married clergymen of other Christian traditions who later became Catholic to be ordained as Catholic priests.
John <b>Paulb> II was succeeded by the Dean of the College of Cardinals, Joseph Cardinal Ratzinger of Germany, the former head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith who had led the Funeral Mass for John <b>Paulb> II.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pope_John_Paul_II   (6919 words)

  
 <b>Paulb> Twitchell - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Twitchell told his biographer Brad Steiger that he expected The Tiger's Fang to be controversial, having announced that it "would shake the foundation of the teachings of orthodox religions, philosophies, and metaphysical concepts." Twitchell even claimed that to have been informed that the Pope saw the book and found it worrying.
After the religion was founded or uncovered, Twitchell then turned to writing for magazines, and in that position gave out spiritual advise, claiming to communicate with God about the problems of those who wrote to him.
According to Gail, Gross was indeed <b>Paulb> Twitchell's choice, as he had visited her in a dream to give his endorsement.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Paul_Twitchell   (629 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: St. <b>Paulb>
According to them <b>Paulb> was the creator of theology, the founder of the Church, the preacher of asceticism, the defender of the sacraments and of the ecclesiastical system, the opponent of the religion of love and liberty which Christ came to announce to the world.
<b>Paulb> says to the neophytes: "Thanks be to God, that you were the servants of sin, but have obeyed from the heart unto that form of doctrine, into which you have been delivered.
<b>Paulb>, doubtless concluding that Cyprus, the natural dependency of Syria and Cilicia, would embrace the faith of Christ when these two countries should be Christian, chose Asia Minor as the field of his apostolate and sailed for Perge in Pamphylia, eighth miles above the mouth of the Cestrus.
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/11567b.htm   (10754 words)

  
 <b>Paulb> Tillich (1886-1965)
Tillich's studies were interrupted by the events of World War 1 in which he served as a chaplain where his encounters with mass death and destruction was the cause of two nervous breakdowns and a crisis of faith that transformed his view of God.
Tillich's theology has been most notably used by radical theologians seeking to move from a transcendent view of God to a more immanent view of God (and in many cases towards a projection theory of God - see God as the Sum of Our Highest Ideals (Religious non-realism)).
<b>Paulb> Tillich has become known as the 'Apostle to the Intellectuals' because his intellectual quest was to communicate the Christian faith to 'humanistically educated sceptics'
http://www.faithnet.org.uk/Theology/tillich.htm   (1941 words)

  
 <b>Paulb> Wei - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
One day while he was praying at a church in Beijing, <b>Paulb> received the baptism of the Holy Spirit and started experiencing glossolalia.
However, when an Elder from the Apostolic Faith Mission named Sheng-Min Xin (新聖民) laid hands on him, his dreadful illness was miraculously cured and so he became a member of their church.
He was once a member of the London Missionary Society in China but after researching the Seventh Day Adventist teachings, he became one of their believers.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Wei   (361 words)

  
 Booknotes
BERMAN: Well, the doctrine that comes out of this really is to spread Islam in this particular politicized version, which is not identical to all versions of Islam, all over the world and to make Islam the world religion and rescue all of mankind by bringing Islam to mankind.
BERMAN: I think, you are talking about the Shia and the kind of movement that`s come to power, and that`s been in power for many years in Iran, next door, and I would say that yes, I haven`t been able to explain what Qutb`s final goal is, and this is how to answer your question.
BERMAN: I mean, this is one of the great mysteries, but each one of the totalitarian movements has obsessed about the Jews.
http://www.booknotes.org/Transcript?ProgramID=1733   (6175 words)

  
 TBN - TRINITY BROADCASTING NETWORK, <b>Paulb> Crouch
<b>Paulb> Crouch claims that the reason TBN exists is to present the gospel of Jesus Christ to the whole world.
<b>Paulb> Crouch, stating that he and TBN represent the gospel of Jesus Christ, must answer the questions as to whether the ethical and moral elements of the character of Jesus Christ and His gospel are illustrated in the conduct of the business operations of the organization.
<b>Paulb> Crouch then turns the verses on their heads, stating that it is the giving or the payment that subsequently brings the reward of a monetary return, when it is precisely the opposite.
http://www.ondoctrine.com/10tbn.htm   (12464 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: St. <b>Paulb>
<b>Paulb> says to the neophytes: "Thanks be to God, that you were the servants of sin, but have obeyed from the heart unto that form of doctrine, into which you have been delivered.
According to them <b>Paulb> was the creator of theology, the founder of the Church, the preacher of asceticism, the defender of the sacraments and of the ecclesiastical system, the opponent of the religion of love and liberty which Christ came to announce to the world.
It is an elementary and often repeated doctrine of St. <b>Paulb> that Jesus Christ saves us through the Cross, that we are "justified by His blood", that "we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son" (Romans v, 9-10).
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/11567b.htm   (12464 words)

  
 Pope John <b>Paulb> I - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
John <b>Paulb> I intended to prepare an encyclical in order to confirm the lines of the Second Vatican Council ("an extraordinary long-range historical event and of growth for the Church", he said) and to enforce the Church's discipline in the life of priests and the faithful.
He was a public defender of Pope <b>Paulb> VI's 1968 Humanæ Vitæ [2], an encyclical on sexual mores which restated the Catholic Church's opposition to artificial birth control in the age of the contraceptive pill, [3] [4].
Pope John <b>Paulb> I was not in office long enough to make any major practical changes within the Vatican or the Roman Catholic Church (except for his abandonment of the Papal Coronation).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pope_John_Paul_I   (12464 words)

  
 <b>Paulb> Crouch - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In October 2004, Judge Robert J. O'Neill awarded <b>Paulb> Crouch $136,000 in legal fees to be paid by Ford for Ford's violation of the terms of the setllement agreement, specifically the prohibition of discussing the settlement's details.
<b>Paulb> F. Crouch (born March 29, 1934) is the co-founder, chairman, and president of the Trinity Broadcasting Network (TBN), the world's largest Christian television network.
In 1961 he was hired to run the Assemblies of God's broadcast production facility in Burbank, California.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Crouch   (840 words)

  
 <b>Paulb> Tillich -- Theism Rewritten for an Age of Science
Tillich summarized these conclusions in his famous aphorism "Religion is the substance of culture, culture is the form of religion."
At home Tillich learned the meaning of the Christian holidays and seasons; in school he was instructed in the catechism, learned the great hymns of the church, and studied the Bible.
<b>Paulb> Tillich was born on August 20,1886, in a Lutheran parish house in Starzeddel, Germany.
http://www.godweb.org/Tillich.htm   (8123 words)

  
 The Relationship of the Bicameral
This is a goal that involves both Kurtz and Jaynes; religion is a vestige of a different time, but not one that precludes man's belief in his own individuality.
The first aspect of this relationship is a similarity: both Jaynes and Kurtz have abandoned any physical proof of religion, judging the religious proclivity of man to be purely psychological.1 This point is best explained by comparing their views relating Moses to the mediums and psychics of the paranormal.
It follows only logically, that if Kurtz can be shown to recognize primitive origins of religion as seen in sections I and II, then the response in section III is certainly that one theory contains both the phenomena of religion, and of the paranormal.
http://www.meta-religion.com/Psychiatry/The_Paranormal/relationship_of_the_bicameral.htm   (8123 words)

  
 Paolo Sarpi - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In folio appeared his History of Ecclesiastical Benefices, in which, says Matteo Ricci, "he purged the church of the defilement introduced by spurious decretals." In 1611 he assailed another abuse byhis treatise on the right of asylum claimed for churches, which was immediately placed on the Index.
An attempt to obtain another small bishopric in the following year also failed, Pope Clement VIII having taken offence at Sarpi's habit of corresponding with learned heretics.
Sarpi told Dohna that he greatly disliked saying mass, and celebrated it as seldom as possible, but that he was compelled to do so, as he would otherwise seem to admit the validity of the papal prohibition, and thus betray the cause of Venice.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paolo_Sarpi   (8123 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: St. <b>Paulb>
<b>Paulb> says to the neophytes: "Thanks be to God, that you were the servants of sin, but have obeyed from the heart unto that form of doctrine, into which you have been delivered.
It is an elementary and often repeated doctrine of St. <b>Paulb> that Jesus Christ saves us through the Cross, that we are "justified by His blood", that "we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son" (Rom., v, 9-10).
According to them <b>Paulb> was the creator of theology, the founder of the Church, the preacher of asceticism, the defender of the sacraments and of the ecclesiastical system, the opponent of the religion of love and liberty which Christ came to announce to the world.
http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/11567b.htm   (8123 words)

  
 Knights of Columbus - Pope <b>Paulb> VI Assembly, No. 2367
<b>Paulb> met with leaders of other churches and in 1969, addressed the World Council of Churches.
<b>Paulb> issued frequent reassertions of papal primacy in the facing of growing dissent within the Roman Catholic Church itself.
Pope <b>Paulb> VI Assembly 2367 is a very active assembly with patriotic programs and charitable activities dedicated to the Church, Community and Youth.
http://www.mdkofc.org/popepaul   (8123 words)

  
 Pope <b>Paulb> VI - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Coat of Arms of Pope <b>Paulb> VI Pope <b>Paulb>'s most controversial decision occurred on July 24 1968, when in his encyclical Humanæ Vitæ, "Of Human Life", he rejected the recommendations of a commission established by John XXIII and reaffirmed the Catholic Church's disapproval of artificial birth control.
Some of Pope <b>Paulb>'s statements in the 1970s seemed critical of the direction taken by the Church after Vatican II, expressing his dislike of some of the "pedestrian" language used in some translations of the New Mass.
Pope <b>Paulb> VI caused considerable surprise in 1968 when, to the consternation of his aides, he apparently denied rumours that he was homosexual.
http://www.hackettstown.us/project/wikipedia/index.php/Pope_Paul_VI   (8123 words)

  
 NodeWorks - Encyclopedia: <b>Paulb> Tillich
Thus for Tillich, Christ is not God per se in himself, but Christ is the revelation of God.
In his metaphysical approach, Tillich was a staunch existentialist, focussing on the nature of being.
Tillich taught theology at the universities of Berlin, Marburg, Dresden, and Leipzig, and philosophy at Frankfurt.
http://pedia.nodeworks.com/P/PA/PAU/Paul_Tillich   (1289 words)

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