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Topic: John XVIII


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In the News (Mon 4 Jun 12)

  
 John - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
John the Apostle, one of the twelve apostles of Jesus.
John the Evangelist, to whom the Gospel of John is attributed, often along with 1 John, 2 John, 3 John, and Revelation.
A Dear John letter is a correspondence in which a woman informs her fiancé or boyfriend of her intention to sever their romantic relationship, typically in situations where the man is stationed, as with the military, in a distant location for a period of time.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/John   (312 words)

  
 Gospel of John -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
The dating is important since John is agreed to be the last of the canonical Gospels to have been written and thus marks the end date of their composition.
This final date is assumed in large part because John 21, the so-called " (additional info and facts about appendix" to John) appendix" to John, is largely concerned with explaining the death of the "beloved disciple," probably the leader of the Johannine community that produced the gospel.
One of the most dramatic is the claim by Ramon K. Jusino that John was written by (Sinful woman Jesus healed of evil spirits; she became a follower of Jesus) Mary Magdalene.
www.absoluteastronomy.com /encyclopedia/g/go/gospel_of_john.htm   (2096 words)

  
 John the Baptist
For instance, St. Peter of Alexandria believed St. John was taken into the desert to escape the wrath of Herod, who, if we may believe report, was impelled by fear of losing his kingdom to seek the life of the Precursor, just as he was, later on, to seek that of the new-born Saviour.
John's reply was that he was Divinely "sent to baptize with water" (John, i, 33); to this, later on, our Saviour bore testimony, when, in answer to the Pharisees trying to ensnare him, he implicitly declared that John's baptism was from heaven (Mark, xi, 30).
The disciples of John came to him: "Rabbi, he that was with thee beyond the Jordan, to whom thou gavest testimony, behold he baptizeth, and all men come to him" (John, iii, 26-27).
www.crystalinks.com /johnbaptist.html   (3627 words)

  
 Chapter Joan <i>to</i> John of J by Brewer's Phrase & Fable
John of Suabia, called the Parricide, because he murdered his father Albert, after which he was a fugitive and a vagabond on the face of the earth, etc., etc.
John, being jealous of the state kept by the abbot, declared he should be put to death unless he answered three questions.
John the Evangelist is represented writing his gospel; or bearing a chalice, from which a serpent issues, in allusion to his driving the poison from a cup presented to him to drink.
www.bibliomania.com /2/3/255/1175/23123/3.html   (680 words)

  
 Saint John Apostle and Evangelist
John was the son of Zebedee and Salome, and the brother of James the Greater.
John alone remained near his beloved Master at the foot of the Cross on Calvary with the Mother of Jesus and the pious women, and took the desolate Mother into his care as the last legacy of Christ (John, xix, 25-27).
After the Resurrection John with Peter was the first of the disciples to hasten to the grave and he was the first to believe that Christ had truly risen (John, xx, 2-10).
www.deaconlaz.org /JohnApostle.html   (1299 words)

  
 Number of the Beast 666
In chapter 11, John gave us an account of the witnesses of Jesus, the Word of God, from the time it was all completed and brought into one volume, to the time it was restored to the Lord's people after lying dead (in dead languages) for 1260 years (chapter 11).
John XI (931-936), son of Sergius III and Morozia, was made pope by his mother at twenty years of age (De Montor, I 247; Cath.
This beast, says John, bears a distinct name, and his name (identity has a "number" that totals "666" This "number" is the number to two objects; one is "a man," and the other, "the kingdom" which he heads; and both the man and the kingdom, are observed bearing the same number—the number 666.
www.4thewordofgod.com /chapter13.htm   (7964 words)

  
 Gospel Contradictions: Part three
John: "He prophesied that Jesus should die for that nation; and not for that nation only, but that also he should gather together in one the children of God that were scattered abroad" (xi, 51, 52).
John, on the other hand, by a number of clear indications (John xiii, 1, xviii, 28, xix, 14, 31) implies that the Last Supper was eaten before the time of the regular Passover, and that the Lord suffered on the afternoon of Nisan 14, about the time of the slaying of the Paschal lamb.
John repeatedly declares that his trial and crucifixion occurred on "the preparation of the passover." If the Passover occurred on Friday, as the Synoptics state, he was crucified on the preceding day, or Thursday.
www.harrington-sites.com /tension-c.htm   (14880 words)

  
 St John's Passion   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Recitative: St. John XVIII, 15-23 "And Simon Peter followed Jesus, and so did another disciple: that disciple was known unto the high priest, and went in with Jesus into the palace of the high priest.
John XVIII, 28-30 " Then led they Jesus from Caiaphas unto the hall of judgment: andit was early; and they themselves went not into the judgment hall, lest they should be defiled; but that they might eat the passover.
Recitative: St. John XIX, 31-37 "The Jews therefore, because it was the preparation, that the bodies should not remain upon the cross on the sabbath day,(for that sabbath day was an high day,) besought Pilate that their legs might be broken, and that they might be taken away.
home.insightbb.com /~wpyles/stjohns.htm   (2443 words)

  
 KOLBE'S GREATEST BOOKS: POPE JOHN XVIII
He was the son of a Roman priest named Leo, and, before his elevation to the papacy, his name was Phasianus.
John XVIII energetically opposed the pretensions of Archbishop Letericus of Sens and Bishop Fulco of Orléans, who refused to allow the Abbot of Fleury, Goslin, to make use of the privileges granted him by Rome, and tried to make him burn the papal charters.
The pope complained of this to the emperor, and called both bishops to his tribunal under threat of ecclesiastical censures for the entire kingdom.
www.greatestbooks.org /studentlibrary/churchpopes/john18.htm   (189 words)

  
 THE GOOD CONFESSION A Centennial Sermon* [Editor's note: This is not listed as a Circular Letter by the association as ...
Whatever Pilate may have thought of him as a King, he was evidently impressed with the purity of his life and the dignity of his character.
The great English philosopher and metaphysician, John Locke, celebrated alike for his advocacy of religious and civil liberty, testifies, that "The Baptists were the first and only propounders of absolute liberty, just and true liberty, equal and impartial liberty." -- Bitting, p.
Picket, and Ireland, and Harriss, and the three brothers Craig; John Waller, and Webber, and Greewood, and Barrow, and Weatherford, and Ware, and Wofford, and Tinsley, and perhaps a score of others, suffered such trials and indignites.
www.geocities.com /baptist_documents/1875cl_nbba.html   (6204 words)

  
 History of the Mass (9histort.htm)
John II's father had been executed in 998 by Otto III for his involvement in the revolt against Pope Gregory V. Now his son wanted revenge, but Otto III was out of harm's way in respect to the Romans reaching him but not the elements.
John XVIII placed many monasteries and sees under papal protection and the bishops of Sens and Orleans in France rebelled, ordering abbeys to burn the papal bulls granting papal exemption.
Pope John XVIII followed the precedent set by Pope John XV when he officially canonized the five Polish martyrs who had been murdered for the faith, led by Benedict who Pope John XVII had sent to the Slavic territories.
www.dailycatholic.org /9histort.htm   (2288 words)

  
 Eastwest Relations.   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
John XVIII seems to have devoted himself to bringing peace and harmony to the Church wherever such soothing administration was needed.
Because Pope John XIX was nearly broke this was a mighty tempting offer, but to a man his advisors, particularily certain abbots, objected strongly.
He had brought the Empire to its greatest glory and strength since the time of Justinian, but died (1025) in the sadness of knowing that one more objective, making his patriarch as strong in the East as the pope was in the west, had not been attained.
www.hist.edu /eastwe.html   (2019 words)

  
 St. James the Greater
He was the brother of John, the beloved disciple, and probably the elder of the two.
John was personally known to the high-priest (John, xviii, 16); and must have had wherewithal to provide for the Mother of Jesus (John, xix, 27).
Several incidents scattered through the Synoptics suggest that James and John had that particular character indicated by the name "Boanerges," sons of thunder, given to them by the Lord (Mark, iii, 17); they were burning and impetuous in their evangelical zeal and severe in temper.
www.ewtn.com /library/MARY/08279B.htm   (1530 words)

  
 Gospel of John   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
The Gospel of John is the fourth gospel in the sequence of the canon as printed in the New Testament, and scholars agree it was the fourth to be written.
Papyrus fragment of John at the John Rylands Library; illustrated.
John Rylands papyrus: text, translation, illustration and a bibliography of the discussion
www.worldhistory.com /wiki/G/Gospel-of-John.htm   (1941 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Pope John XVII (XVIII)
Thus the faction of Crescentius again won the upper hand, and John Crescentius, son of the patricius whom Otto III had defeated and put to death, seized the authority for himself.
The three following popes were indebted to him for their elevation, and were made to feel his supremacy.
A Roman, Sicco, was first elected, and consecrated on 13 June as John XVII, but died on 6 November.
www.newadvent.org /cathen/08428b.htm   (164 words)

  
 Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, Series II, Vol. XII
Further, concerning John, notary of your church, the charity wherewith we love you and have long loved you warns us to write, lest you should order anything with regard to him while you are still provoked by his fault.
For we write, not as defending John or commending him personally without reason, but lest your soul should be in any way burdened with sin under the incitement of anger.
But neither have we presumed to ordain John, the presbyter, who is ignorant of the psalms, since this circumstance certainly shewed him to be too little in earnest about himself.
www.ccel.org /fathers2/NPNF2-12/Npnf2-12-232.htm   (16650 words)

  
 The Cardinals of the Holy Roman Church - Creations of Cardinals of the XI Century
Teofilatto, of the counts of Tusculum, nephew of Pope Benedict VIII and John XX, created cardinal deacon, his deaconry is not known.
It was suppressed in 1587 by Pope Sixtus V (1585-1590) and reestablished in 1959 by Pope John XXIII (1958-1963).
John XVIII (1003 - 1009) - 2 cardinals
www.fiu.edu /~mirandas/consistories-xi.htm   (6224 words)

  
 §18. John Day. XVIII. The Book-Trade, 1557–1625. Vol. 4. Prose and Poetry: Sir Thomas North to Michael ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Among all the stationers and printers of this period the most prominent name is that of John Day, whose career, beginning in 1546, extended into four reigns.
His important patent for printing the Psalms in metre and the ABC and Catechism has already been referred to; but, in addition to this advantage, he was fortunate in securing the support of those in authority and especially of archibishop Parker, in whom he found a generous patron.
In 1569, he published An orthographie by John Hart, Chester herald, which contains examples of phonetic spelling.
www.bartleby.com /214/1818.html   (391 words)

  
 Register of the Journals of Abraham Cannon 1879-1896 Collection at the Utah State Historical Society
Rudolph, xviii: 139 Bowen, Mrs., xviii: 138 Bowen, D. M., vii: 33, 45, 140 Bowen, John, v: 157; vi: 19; vii: 94, 218-19 Bowler, Bro., i: 16, 17 Bowman & Co., xviii: 14 Bowman, Dorothy, xviii: 114 Box, Elijah A., vii: 154; viii: 51 Boyd, Mrs.
Lewis), 123-24, 137, 142, 143, 204, 208; xviii: 11, 32, 40, 43, 90, 166; xix: 1, 8, 37, 46, 49, 67, 80, 106, 155, 162, 190, 196, 208 Cannon, Margaret, vii: 41; xviii: 59 Cannon, Maria Bennion (Mrs.
Maria Y., xi: 6; xv: 66-67, 89, 104 Dougall, Wilby, xviii: 80 Dougall, William B. viii: 121; xiv: 49, 51; xv: 91; xvi: 148; xviii: 16 Dougall, William H., xix: 168 Dougall, M/M Wm.
history.utah.gov /FindAids/B00105   (3814 words)

  
 The Testimonium Flavianum
But later, with John's passage out of chronological order, it became obvious that the TF (if kept here) would look like an addendum to (the much longer) John's story (with Jesus consequent of the Baptist).
And they have difficulty to explain why the TF is not directly linked to any other events, as John's and James' passages are (respectively, the defeat of Antipas' army and the removal of a high priest).
The work is lost except for a rather lengthy fragment preserved in John of Damascus' Sacra Parallela which includes the excerpt on Hades and the comparison between Minos, Rhadamanthos, and Christ.
www.geocities.com /b_d_muller/appe.html   (11423 words)

  
 nl10yr1
Christie¼s - XI: 125; XII: 54; XIII: 54-55, 108-109, 155; XIV: 6, 31-32, 160; XV: 135-136; XVII: 118-119, 124, 135-136; XVIII: 72-73, 191; XIX: 45, 58-60, 110-111
Obituaries - XI: 32, 61, 97, 128; XII: 56-57, 98; XIII: 32, 67, 158; XIV: 36, 79-82, 128-130, 165; XV: 40, 84-86, 138; XVI: 39-40, 83, 85-86, 153-154; XVII: 40-41, 71-72, 122, 182; XVIII: 37-40, 77, 129-133, 193-194; XIX: 47, 93, 138, 207-214
UACC - XVII: 36, 63-65; XVIII: 128; XIX:
www.manuscript.org /nltenyri.html   (3514 words)

  
 JOHN XVIII - Online Information article about JOHN XVIII
JOHN XVIII - Online Information article about JOHN XVIII
mere creature of the patrician John Crescentius, and ultimately he abdicated and retired to a monastery, where he died shortly afterwards.
Highlight the code below, right click, and select "copy." Then paste it into your website, email, or other HTML.
encyclopedia.jrank.org /JEE_JUN/JOHN_XVIII.html   (111 words)

  
 Matthew Henry's Commentary on the Whole Bible [John XVIII].
Matthew relates another reason which Christ gave for this rebuke, but John preserves this, which he had omitted; in which Christ gives us, (1.) A full proof of his own submission to his Father's will.
John several times in this gospel speaking of himself as another disciple, many interpreters have been led by this to fancy that this other disciple here was John; and many conjectures they have how he should come to be known to the high-priest; propter generis nobilitatem--being of superior birth, saith Jerome, Epitaph.
Marcel., as if he were a better gentleman born than his brother James, when they were both the sons of Zebedee the fisherman; some will tell you that he had sold his estate to the high priest, others that he supplied his family with fish, both which are very improbable.
www.biblestudyguide.org /comment/matthew-henry/mh-complete/MHC43018.HTM   (15124 words)

  
 Footnotes
That is to say, while Christ's answer to the disciples and Peter's act might easily have been synchronous, the Lord could not have addressed Himself in different senses to two distinct parties at the same time, namely, to the persons who put the question, and to Peter.
[It is implied here that the denials of Peter took place in the house of Annas, and also that Matthew and Mark, in their account of the night examination, refer to the same event described by John (xviii.
In his 114 Tractate on John, Augustin again attempts to grapple with the difficulty created here by the reading which was before him, namely, to Caiaphas, instead of from Caiaphas.
www.bible.ca /history/fathers/NPNF1-06/footnote/fn23.htm   (450 words)

  
 DESERT SHIELD/STORM INTERVIEWS
Interviewed 28 October 1990 at the XVIII Airborne Corps Main Command Post ("Dragon City"), Saudi Arabia, by Dr. Robert K. Wright, Jr., XVIII Airborne Corps Historian.
Interviewed 3 June 1991 at Headquarters, XVIII Airborne Corps, Fort Bragg, North Carolina, by MAJ Robert K. Wright, Jr., Historian, XVIII Airborne Corps.
MAJ John Barker, XVIII Airborne Corps G-3 Executive Officer.
www.army.mil /cmh-pg/documents/swa/dsit/dsit.htm   (5311 words)

  
 §3. Dion Boucicault; John Brougham. XVIII. The Drama, 1860–1918. Vol. 17. Later National Literature, Part II. ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference > Cambridge History > Later National Literature, Part II > The Drama, 1860–1918 > Dion Boucicault; John Brougham
When 1860 dawned, Dion Boucicault (1822–1890) and John Brougham (1810–1880) reigned supreme in American popularity, and they were both Irish.
One would say of Boucicault, as one would claim of John Brougham, that his local influence was due to local popularity rather than to any impetus he gave to native drama.
www.bartleby.com /227/1103.html   (178 words)

  
 [No title]
XV to XXI, by Alexander Maclaren #8 in our series by Alexander Maclaren Copyright laws are changing all over the world.
9-11) THE ONENESS OF THE BRANCHES (John xv.
We talk about the mysticism of John's Gospel, about the depth of these last sayings of Jesus Christ.
www2.cddc.vt.edu /gutenberg/etext05/exp0810.txt   (18268 words)

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