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Topic: John Saul Howson


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In the News (Sat 14 Nov 09)

  
  John Saul Howson - LoveToKnow 1911
JOHN SAUL HOWSON (1816-1885), English divine, was born at Giggleswick-in-Craven, Yorkshire, on the 5th of May 1816.
In 1845 Howson, having taken orders, accepted the post of senior classical master at the Liverpool College under his friend W. Conybeare, whom he succeeded as principal in 1849.
The book is still of interest, especially for its descriptive passages, which were mostly done by Howson; but later researches (such as those of Sir W. Ramsay) have made the geographical and historical sections obsolete, and the same may be said of the treatment of the Pauline theology.
www.1911encyclopedia.org /John_Saul_Howson   (307 words)

  
 John Saul Howson: Definition and Links by Encyclopedian.com
John Saul Howson (May 5, 1816-1885), English divine, was born at Giggleswick-on-Craven, Yorkshire.
In 1845 Howson, having taken orders, accepted the post of senior classical master at the Liverpool College under his friend WJ Conyheare, whom he succeeded as principal in 1849.
The book is still of interest, especially for its descriptive passages,which were mostly done by Howson; but later researches (such as those of Sir WM Ramsay) have made the geographical and historical sections obsolete, and the same may be said of the treatment of the Pauline theology.
www.encyclopedian.com /jo/John-Saul-Howson.html   (383 words)

  
 saul   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-08)
Saul and his 600 men, a band which speedily increased to 10,000, perceiving the confusion, pursued the army of the Philistines, and the tide of battle rolled on as far as to Bethaven, halfway between Michmash and Bethel.
Saul's reign, however, continued to be one of almost constant war against his enemies round about (14:47, 48), in all of which he proved victorious.
Saul and the men of Israel went forth to meet them, and encamped on the northern slope of the same valley which lay between the two armies.
www.vocamania.com /saul.aspx   (1984 words)

  
 The Life and Epistles of St. Paul (2 Vols)
Conybeare and Howson's study on The Life and Epistles of St. Paul is one of the most significant contributions to Pauline scholarship to date.
William John Conybeare (August 1, 1815 - 1857), English divine, son of Dean WD Conybeare, was educated at Westminster and at Trinity College, Cambridge, where he was elected fellow in 1837.
[Howson's] sympathies were with the evangelical party, and he stoutly opposed the "Eastward position," but he was by no means narrow.
www.logos.com /products/details/2593   (674 words)

  
 People's New Testament | Christian Classics Ethereal Library
Herod Antipas, the husband of Herodias, the murderer of John the Baptist, is meant.
David's reign was forty years, Saul's the same, the period in the wilderness the same, Joshua ruled about twenty-five years, add four years for Solomon, and we have 149 years, which, taken from 480 years, leaves 331 for the time of Judges and Samuel.
John, who preached before the Savior's coming, is named because he was well known to the Jews, and most of them regarded him a prophet.
www.ccel.org /ccel/johnson_bw/pnt.pnt0513.html   (2518 words)

  
 FOOD & GOSPEL FOR POOR KIDS - John, the apostle
John, with his brother James, Simon, and Andrew, were called at the same time to be “fishers of men” (Mark 1:17-20; Luke 5:10).
John was the only disciple present at the crucifixion and was appointed by Jesus to care for Mary (John 19:26-27).
John was the first to recognize the risen Lord; Peter was the first to plunge into the water and swim toward the shore where Jesus stood (John 21:7).
www.ourchurch.com /view/?pageID=148163   (815 words)

  
 The Reverend John Howson   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-08)
Saul, (who was himself formerly a master at this school, and it was in memory of this lady that the doorway of the Junior School was erected by her five sons, of whom the Dean was one.
Howson's admirers proposed to present him with a testimonial in acknowledgment of his valuable services, but this design was frustrated by his lamented death in January, 1859.
A considerable amount, however, was raised, part of which was expended in the window, executed by Gibbs of London, now in the school.
mywebpages.comcast.net /jhowson/Howson/JohnHowson1787.htm   (199 words)

  
 Chester Cathedral | British History Online
Howson, author of Horae Patrinae, or Studies in the Life of St. Peter (1883), and, jointly with W. Conybeare, of The Life and Epistles of St. Paul (1852), was evangelical in sympathy rather than a High Churchman.
Among Howson's interests in Chester were the Queen's School, the Grosvenor Museum, and the Chester School of Art; besides his guide-book to the cathedral he wrote works on local topography and history.
John Saul Howson, D.D., appointed 1867, died 1885.
www.british-history.ac.uk /report.asp?compid=39991   (6582 words)

  
 Johannine Bibliography: Epistles
The Doctrine of the Apocalypse, and Its Relation to the Doctrine of the Gospel and Epistles of John.
The Witness of St. John to Christ: Being the Boyle Lectures for 1870, with an Appendix on the Authorship and Integrity of St. John's Gospel and the Unity of the Johannine Writings.
Sawtelle, Henry A. Commentary on the Epistles of John.
catholic-resources.org /John/Bibliog-Epistles.html   (3191 words)

  
 People's New Testament | Christian Classics Ethereal Library
As the great change in the life of Saul is now recorded, it is proper to state what can be known of him before his conversion.
A revelation was needful from the fact that Saul was a terror to the church and all would avoid him.
In view of the terrible record of Saul the fears of Ananias were not unreasonable.
www.ccel.org /ccel/johnson_bw/pnt.pnt0509.html   (2066 words)

  
 Reverend John Saul Howson   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-08)
of the Rev. John, Second Master of Giggleswick Grammar School [and --, dau.
Restored the Cathedral, endowed the King's school, Chester, and contributed largely to the building of the new museum.
Charles Kingsley was a Canon of Chester for three years during Howson's time, and the two were on cordial terms, despite Howson's prejudice against Broad Churchmen; Kingsley contributed his well-known Letter on Betting to a series of short papers started by Howson, which was intended to repress the evils of the race-week at Chester.
mywebpages.comcast.net /jhowson/Howson/JohnSaulHowson1816.htm   (280 words)

  
 bible.org: The Conversion of Saul
(Acts 9:1-31)
  (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-08)
Saul was not content to punish some and to drive the rest from the “holy city.” He did not want to merely contain Christianity or to drive it from Jerusalem; he wanted to rid the earth of Christianity and its followers.
Saul was told at the time of his conversion that God had chosen him to bear witness to the Gentiles, to kings, and to the Jews (9:15).
Saul was not aware, until after our Lord’s words, that the One who had interrupted his journey was Jesus, and that Jesus was, indeed, the Messiah, the LORD, but he was certain, at this point, that whoever this One was, He was the LORD.
www.bible.org /page.php?page_id=2136   (15334 words)

  
 john paul stapp
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John Paul Stapp, M.D., Ph.D., Colonel, USAF (Ret.) (11 July 1910 - 13 November 1999) was a pioneer in studying the effects of deceleration on humans.
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www.vocamania.com /john_paul_stapp.aspx   (287 words)

  
 Response to John Noe   |  Critical Articles
To group preterists with those who denied any resurrection at all is to prove that you have nothing to say of value on the subject at all but rather to muddy the waters and condemn those who take Christ at His word...
Saul (Paul) was of this mindset when he Stephen was stoned to death.
By God's grace this man need to change his attitude and perhaps his name as did Saul - it is unfortunate that he calls himself a pastor - we have enough men of this spirit beating the sheep.
www.preteristarchive.com /CriticalArticles/garringer-robert_ca_01.html   (1805 words)

  
 FREDERICK W. HILLES MANUSCRIPT COLLECTION (MS VAULT HILLES)
Howson, John Saul ALS to the Archdeacon of Auckland 1883 Jun 24, Chester 2 p.
Endorsed on verso Signature of John Elwes on left margin of recto Kneller, Sir Godfrey ALS to Charles Lockyer 1721 Apr 3 1 p., with autograph of Kneller on verso Knowles, Mary ALS (with initials) to "Dear Cousins" 1778 Jul 28, Lancaster 1 p.
Law, John, Bishop of Elphin ALS to Thomas Percy 1801 Aug 8, Elphin 3 p., with address Smith, William ALS to Thomas Percy [1801?] Mar 3, Downpatrick 2 p., with address Smith, William ALS to [Thomas Percy] 1802 Aug 9, Armagh 2 p.
webtext.library.yale.edu /beinflat/general.HILLES.HTM   (10058 words)

  
 Charles Spurgeon - Sermon Notes 0191
Saul superstitious, worshipping form and ritual, full of reverence for the temple and the priests, and so forth.
Saul, giving his countenance, his vote, his assistance in the persecution of the servant of the Lord Christ.
He consents to his death from a sincere, though mistaken, conviction of duty; and the expression of his countenance is strongly contrasted with the rage of the baffled Jewish doctors and the ferocity of the crowd who flock to the scene of bloodshed.
www.sovereign-grace.com /spurgeon-sn/chsn0191.htm   (893 words)

  
 Discover the Wisdom of Mankind on HACKED BY TURK-SOPHİA
John Sainsbury, Baron Sainsbury of Preston Candover (en)
John Scott, 1st Earl Of, Viscount Encombe of Encombe, Baron Eldon of Eldon Eldon (en)
John Sheffield, 1st Duke Of, 3rd Earl of Mulgrave Buckingham and Normanby (en)
www.blinkbits.com /wikifeeds/JO?from=16500   (182 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-08)
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After receiving his early education at Giggleswick school, of which.
In 1845 Howson, having taken orders, accepted the post of senior classical master at the Liver-pool College under his friend W. Conybeare, whom he succeeded as principal in 1849.
encyclopedia.jrank.org /correction/edit?content_id=33698&locale=en   (549 words)

  
 Timeline of Apostle Paul's Life and Missionary Journeys: From Birth to Paul's First Missionary Journey - at ...
Saul is born into an Israelite family of the tribe of Benjamin (Phil.
Saul is also given the authority to arrest and bring these believers to Jerusalem for trial and punishment.
Saul (first referred to as Paul in Acts 13:9) stays in Damascus and powerfully preaches the gospel.
www.biblestudy.org /apostlepaul/timeline1.html   (1215 words)

  
 Roads - Jerusalem to Damascus
Whatever road was followed in Saul’s journey to Damascus, it is almost certain that the earlier portion of it brought him to Neapolis, the Shechem of the Old Testament, and the Nablus of the modern Samaritans.
The zeal which burnt in him was that of James and John, before their illumination, when they wished (in this same district) to call down fire from heaven, even as Elias did, on the inhospitable Samaritan village.
But Saul knew nothing of he little Church of Samaritan Christians, or, if he heard of them and delayed among them, de delayed only to injure and oppress.
www.gracenotes.info /topics/roads_jerusalem.html   (883 words)

  
 97rapple   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-08)
Kingsley, in common with F. Maurice, Thomas Hughes, and John Ruskin, was strongly influenced by the tenets of Christian Socialism, a short-lived mid-nineteenth-century movement which had as its primary aim the social and political reform of Victorian England.
As John Saul Howson, the Dean of Chester from 1867 to 1885, remarked: “I should have described him as a mixture of the Radical and the Tory, the aspect of character which is denoted by the latter word being, to my apprehension, quite as conspicuous as that which is denoted by the former.”
On the other hand, as he wrote in 1870 to John Stuart Mill, he had disassociated himself to a great degree from the rapidly burgeoning women’s movement and was becoming more closely bound to the male-centred Victorian age.
www.edu.uwo.ca /HSE/97rapple.html   (6765 words)

  
 A DICTIONARY
Howson, John Saul, Canon; Dean of Chester; b.
Undisputed tradition connects the Bible with John Rogers, the Smithfield martyr (see Rogers), who had reason to conceal his identity, 143.
Rogers, John; formerly a Catholic priest; later prebendary of St. Paul’s, London; burned at the stake for his Protestant faith at Smithfield, 1555; see Matthew, 144.
www.godswordtowomen.org /studies/resources/onlinebooks/dictionary.htm   (3979 words)

  
 The Life of Christ - Foreword
As I came abreast of the old stately buildings comprising Trinity College, I reflected on a few of its eminent "sons" who had once walked its courts, studied or taught in its halls, and who, each in his own way, had served his generation.
The names of Henry Alford, Francis Bacon, Arthur James Balfour, Isaac Barrow, William John Conybeare, John Cotton, Frederic William Farrar, Fenton John Anthony Hort, John Saul Howson, Frederick John Foakes Jackson, John Barber Lightfoot, Handley Moule, Sir Isaac Newton, J.
One biographer wrote of him that he "exerted a vast popular influence upon the religious feeling and culture of the middle classes for fully forty years by virtue of his boundless industry." In considering the value of Dean Farrar's writings, the words of John W. Foster need constantly to be borne in mind.
christianwritings.net /foreword.htm   (846 words)

  
 ipedia.com: Encyclopedia Browse > J > Jo   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-08)
John Hamilton-Gordon, 1st Marquess of Aberdeen and Temair
John I Stanley of the Isle of Man
John II Stanley of the Isle of Man
fav.ipedia.com /ipedia/j/jo/index.html   (226 words)

  
 JOHN SAUL HOWSON (1816... - Online Information article about JOHN SAUL HOWSON (1816...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-08)
Search over 40,000 articles from the original, classic Encyclopedia Britannica, 11th Edition.
Howson, having taken orders, accepted the See also:
This post he held until 1865, and it was largely due to his See also:
encyclopedia.jrank.org /HOR_I25/HOWSON_JOHN_SAUL_1816_1885_.html   (667 words)

  
 The River Dee: Its Aspect and History
Images from The River Dee: Its Aspect and History by J. Howson.
John Saul Howson died in 1885; Alfred Rimmer died in 1893.
``It was exactly in the year 1200 that Madoc, Lord of Bromfield, at the time when Prince Llewellyn was contending with King John, founded this monastic house in a deep hollow, already called the Valley of the Cross, from a monumental cross which stood there previously, and stands theire still [...] [more...
www.fromoldbooks.org /Howson-RiverDee   (358 words)

  
 NAAM
When David was a fugitive from Saul, he and his followers sought refuge in the wilderness of Paran, near the possessions of Nabal, and protected the latter’s flocks and herds from the marauding Bedouin.
It is, of course, possible that Nahash, the father of Hanun, was a son or grandson of the king defeated at Jabesh-gilead by Saul.
According to the "Genealogies of the Twelve Apostles" (compare Budge, Contendings of the Apostles, II, 50), Nathanael was the same as Simon, the son of Cleopas, and was one of the Twelve.
www.heraldmag.org /olb/contents/dictionaries/0NISBE.htm   (17104 words)

  
 JOHN SAUL HOWSON (1816... - Article en ligne de l'information environ JOHN SAUL HOWSON (1816...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-09-08)
- Article en ligne de l'information environ JOHN SAUL HOWSON (1816...
MARS, EARL de JOHN ERSKINE, 1ER OU 6ÈME DE (d.
MARS, EARL DE JOHN ERSKINE, 6ÈME OU 11ÈME DE (1675-1732)
encyclopedia.jrank.org /fr/HOR_I25/HOWSON_JOHN_SAUL_1816_1885_.html   (1000 words)

  
 Christian Biography, Chapter 10, The Web Edition of Biblical Counsel: Resources for Renewal
Cairns, John (1818-1892), Memoir of John Brown, D.D. (of Edinburg, 1784-1858) [microform]: senior minister of the United Presbyterian congregation, Broughton Place, Edinburgh, and professor of exegetical theology to the United Presbyterian Church (Edinburgh, Scotland: Edmonston and Douglas, 1860), ATLA fiche 1989-2589; OCLC Accession No.: ocm24922185; ISBN: 0790593645 (microfiche)
"As Cunningham states, 'John Calvin was by far the greatest of the Reformers with respect to the talents he possessed, the influence he exerted, and the services he rendered in the establishment and diffusion of important truth.' Here we have a succinct account of Calvin's works and the leading principles that he maintained.
It was the biography of John Knox by Thomas M'Crie.
members.aol.com /lettermen5/bcrr10ch.html   (10094 words)

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