denying the Holy and Righteous One, his own most gracious Master. It was the deepest humiliation, yet was he a true saint and a loving disciple; but so it was because he entered into temptation at his own charges, instead of enduring it, when tried by it,...
failed utterly even when tried by the slenderest test. The race had not even the wish nor yet the notion. Self-will characterised all nations, most strongly (perhaps it is that we know them best) Greeks and Latins. All sinned, these boldly: nothing more preposterous in the eyes of either...
“Shameless Popery’s analysis is consistent with Martin Luther’s assessment of James. Luther saw James in such sharp contradiction to Sola Fide that he tried to make it a non-canonical book.” That’s a little inaccurate. Luther in his introduction to the New ...
All that she needed to do was to wait; by the terms of her father's will, if Edward died without issue—an event that seemed increasingly likely—she would become queen. On Edward's death in July 1553, when the Duke of Northumberland tried to preserve the Protestant regime by placing ...
Greg has tried to shame dissenters of the Israeli regime by calling them ‘antisemitic’. So this freedom of speech thing works both ways GREG HUNTER – Do you hear me? Reply eddiemd 04/03/2020 • Troll alert. One must speak the truth. It is the Wuhan China coronavirus. Just ...
Valerian tried new methods against the clergy and other leaders, martyring St. Cyprian and St. Sixtus II in 258, but the church held firm. His successor Gallienus granted toleration in practice and perhaps legal recognition. A period of comparative security was ended by the series of ...
To address the common charges that their religion was novel or godless, the Apologists usually tried to prove the antiquity of their religion by emphasizing it as the fulfillment ofHebrew Bibleprophecy, they argued that their opponents were really godless because they worshipped the gods ofmythology...
Valerian tried new methods against the clergy and other leaders, martyring St. Cyprian and St. Sixtus II in 258, but the church held firm. His successor Gallienus granted toleration in practice and perhaps legal recognition. A period of comparative security was ended by the series of ...
Valerian tried new methods against the clergy and other leaders, martyring St. Cyprian and St. Sixtus II in 258, but the church held firm. His successor Gallienus granted toleration in practice and perhaps legal recognition. A period of comparative security was ended by the series of ...