There is a lot of discussion over what the 'real' Jesus actually said and did. But when anyone mentions the term 'miracle' it is not uncommon for some schol- ars to jump to their feet and shout, 'Objection! You cannot go there as a histo- rian'. Although I am not an attorney, ...
Jesus said to them, “A prophet is not without honor except in his own town, among his relatives and in his own home.” He could not do any miracles there, except lay his hands on a few sick people and heal them. He was amazed at their lack of faith. ...
is said to have been the first to claim that Jesus was born on the 25th of December. It turns out that Africanus might have had Jesus’ birthday confused with another prominent event in His life – the visit of the Magi, scholars and astronomers from Babylon who likely were intellectual de...
Mayfield DM (1983) The genealogical library of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Libr Trends 32:111–127 Google Scholar Mckay AC (2002) Genealogists and records: preservation, advocacy, and politics. Arch Issues 27:23–33 Google Scholar Nash C (2002) Genealogical identities...
At that time, was crimes trials were about to begin in Germany; the idea that the emperor might be hanged was a possibility Tokyo could not ignore. Because the Japanese regarded the emperor as a deity--more like Jesus or the Buddha than an ordinary human being--most top American officials...
Once again a miracle occurred - they found the True Cross buried under the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, the site of Jesus’ tomb. It certainly made more sense for that relic to be there; never mind what some crusaders must have known (i.e., that there were already relics of the ...
以前我自己也在总结这样的电影清单,没想到早有人做好了,还蛮全的 Ancient art Europe, Northern Africa, and the Near East, up through the fourth century CE Jesus Christ Superstar -- 1973 "The "temple" in J.C. Superstar looks a lot like the ruins on Masada, though how they would have ...
a modified Alexandrian computation based on Victorius’ cycle. He discarded the Alexandrian era of Diocletian, reckoned fromad284, on the ground that he “did not wish to perpetuate the name of the Great Persecutor, but rather to number the years from theIncarnationof Our Lord Jesus Christ.”...