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General: BARILOCHENSE Y SU MAGIA REVIENTA LOS FOROS...
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De: Porque77 (message original) |
Envoyé: 11/06/2017 05:35 |
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BARILOCHENSE Y SU MAGIA REVIENTA LOS FOROS...
BARILOCHENSE con sus temas interminables de cuentos de magia REVIENTA LOS FOROS... Deja ahogados todos los temas cristianos interesantes... Pero los apóstoles mandaron que se destruyeran todos los libros de magia...
El libro de los Hechos de los apóstoles nos hablan sobre los libros de MAGIA y así nos dice:
"Y muchos de los que habían creído venían, confesando y dando cuenta de sus hechos. Asi mismo muchos de los que habían practicado la magia trajeron los libros y los quemaron delante de todos; y hecha la cuenta de su precio, hallaron que era cincuenta mil piezas de plata. Así crecía y prevalecía poderosamente la palabra del Señor". (Hechos 19:18-20)
Y los profetas, cuando nos hablan de la magia, así nos dicen:
"Respondió el rey y dijo a Daniel, al cual llamaban Beltsasar: ¿Podrás tú hacerme conocer el sueño que vi, y su interpretación? Daniel respondió delante del rey, diciendo: El misterio que el rey demanda, ni sabios, ni astrólogos, ni magos ni adivinos lo pueden revelar al rey. Pero hay un Dios en los cielos, el cual revela los misterios, y él ha hecho saber al rey Nabucodonosor lo que ha de acontecer en los postreros días". (Daniel 2:26-28.)
"No os volváis a los encantadores ni a los adivinos; no los consultéis, contaminándoos con ellos. Yo Yavé vuestro Dios". (Levítico 19:31)
Como podemos ver, los cuentos y filosofías sobre magia son contrarios al Evangelio de Jesucristo...
Las personas que se creen inteligentes deberían avergonzarse por haber perdido tanto el tiempo predicando tantos cuentos de magia... LOS CUENTOS DE MAGIA HAN HECHO PERDER EL TIEMPO A MUCHÍSIMOS CRISTIANOS...
TIEMPO QUE HUBIERAN NECESITADO PARA APRENDER CORRECTAMENTE EL EVANGELIO...
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Northampton – The Sacred Heart
Pyramid Close, Weston Favell, Northampton
A modern church built on a budget, of striking external form and with an interior notable above all for its wall paintings.
The historic village of Weston Favell lies on the eastern side of Northampton and is now more or less absorbed into the town, following major expansion from 1968. The church lies close to the Weston Favell shopping centre, which opened in 1974. The parish (previously split between Great Billing and Abington) was formed in the same year, and the church of the Sacred Heart, served by the Sacred Heart Fathers (St Quentin) was opened by Bishop Grant in June 1976. The church is of unusual pyramidal form; the architect was George Mathers of the Cheltenham firm of Williams & Mathers. The contractors were the local firm of A. Glenn and Sons, who had also built the cathedral additions in 1960, and the church of St Aidan at Kingsthorpe in 1964. The church cost £147,500 and seats 300 people. The interior is notable for its wall paintings, by Martin Hughes from Cheltenham.
Description
The church is built in a dip, with the parish social facilities and attached presbytery located at the lower level, and the church above, reached by a concrete bridge from the footpath. The church is of steel frame construction, formed by exposed ‘A’ frames meeting at the apex to create a pyramidal form. The pyramid is clad in profiled aluminium sheeting, with an integral lantern towards the apex giving top light to the interior. The parish hall and the adjoining single storey, flat-roofed presbytery are clad with red brick, with uPVC windows.
The interior is a single square volume, naturally lit from above. The altar is of carved white stone, and there is a suite of sanctuary furnishings (ambo, font, and tabernacle) with abstract patterned resin cladding. Before the sanctuary hangs a white cross with a clothed figure of the teaching Christ. Behind the altar on the wall of the sanctuary is a striking large painting of the Last Supper by Martin Hughes. On the other three walls are further large paintings by Hughes, the Way of the Cross, some twenty feet high. The benches were made by the joinery firm of Alan Blenkinsop. The organ console is on the left hand side, with its pipes located in a projection over the entrance. At each side of the sanctuary are steps leading down to the sacristy, presbytery and parish hall.
https://taking-stock.org.uk/building/northampton-the-sacred-heart/ |
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, MA History, BA History
Jesus Christ had twelve disciples, each of whom accompanied the Biblical savior during His time on earth. Many of them continued His Christian work after the ascension. The twelve men were Peter, James (Jesus’ brother), John, Andrew, Philip, Judas Iscariot (who betrayed Jesus, and was replaced by Matthias), Matthew, Thomas, James, the son of Alpheus, Bartholomew, Judas Thaddeus; and Simon the Zealot. Of them all, Saint James, also known as James, brother of Jesus, James, son of Alpheus, James the Lesser, James the Minor, and James the Just, was one of the most prominent and significant.
James, Son of Alphaeus, James the Greater, and James, the Brother of Jesus
St James the Minor, Peter Paul Rubens, 1613. Source: Wikipedia
Various Gospels are often ambiguous, at times, as to which James is being referenced. Two to three James’s are spoken of in the Gospels – James, brother of John (aka James the Greater); James, brother of Jesus, and James, son of Alphaeus. The Catholic doctrine of the perpetual virginity of Mary holds that James the son of Alpheus and James, brother of Jesus are the same person, as James could not be Jesus’ physical full brother. In Protestant readings, the two are separate. If the two are separate, then very little is known regarding James, son of Alpheus.
James, Brother of Jesus
Statue of St. James the Less in the Archbasilica of St. John Lateran by Angelo de Rossi. Source: Wikipedia
James, the brother of Jesus, was a follower and Disciple of Jesus Christ during His earthly ministry and one of the first leaders of the early Christian Church. He remained in Jerusalem as leader of the church following the death, burial, resurrection, and ascension of Jesus, and was likely martyred at the temple in Jerusalem.
James’ Position in the Early Church
St. James the Minor, by Georges de la Tour, 1615-20. Source: Wikipedia
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In Acts 15, a Council in Jerusalem was held regarding circumcision over which James presided. The Acts 15 Council is considered probably the first Christian council, where many Apostles congregated to discuss the matter brought by Paul and Barnabas. In Galatians 1, the Apostle Paul records a meeting with James in the process of Paul confirming his conversion to the other Apostles. James may have been the first elected leader within the early church. Through the writings of Eusebius in the 200s, we have the records of Clement of Alexandria from the second century that James was elected leader of the Jerusalem Church.
St James Was Martyred
Saint James the Less (Menologion of Basil II). Source: The Byzantine Life
The death of James the Just around 62 CE is recorded by Eusebius, Clement of Alexandria, and Josephus. Eusebius copied the chronicles of an earlier Christian, Hegesippus, who wrote that James was martyred by being thrown from the pinnacle of the temple in Jerusalem, and beaten with a club when the fall did not kill him.
Non-canonical Writings Attributed to Saint James
The Protoevangelium of James, James Orr. Source: Rakuten Kobo
The Gospel of James, also known as The Protoevangelium of James, is a book of unknown source that was being circulated within the second century church. Both Origen and Clement of Alexandria reference the book in their writings, so it was at least written around that time. The Gospel of James contains the first mention of the idea of the perpetual virginity of Mary, the mother of Jesus. The book was condemned by Pope Innocent I in 405, and it has generally not been accepted throughout church history as canonical due to its late writing and inconstant content.
The First and Second Apocalypse of James and the Apocryphon of James are other 2nd century books whose author claimed to be James. Each of these books were from a collection of gnostic (secret knowledge) texts found in Egypt in 1945. In addition to an authorship too late to be James, they are also part of gnostic texts written in an attempt to legitimize the early movement within Christianity.
James, the Son of Alphaeus
Two Martyr Saints in an Initial S (Alphaeus and Zacchaeus), 14th century. Source: Victoria and Albert Museum
James the son of Alphaeus, while mentioned in the listings of the apostles, has very few details known regarding his life. Outside of being listed among the apostles, and described in the Gospel of Mark as “the lesser” or “the smaller,” he is barely mentioned in the Bible. Several early Christian writings attempt to identify him with James the Just, but most try to maintain the perpetual virginity of Mary in a complex manner. It is speculated that he died as a martyr by crucifixion in Ostrakine, Egypt.
https://www.thecollector.com/who-was-saint-james-brother-of-jesus/ |
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