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- ...kw. Mag. 25:619 sq.; 27:179; 29:523; 1, 806; Lond. Quart. Rev. 10:101 sq.; North. Amer. Review, 1864, 606 sq. </p>51 KB (8,533 words) - 11:02, 15 October 2021
- ...is so much influenced by [[Pauline]] ideas as to designate all Asia Minor north of the [[Taurus]] by enumerating the Roman provinces. St. Paul, then, calls ...urned northward at a point not far distant from Pisidian Antioch, to reach North Galatia through Phrygia from the southwest. See the Map of Asia Minor. </p>104 KB (16,528 words) - 07:51, 15 October 2021
- ...ion of printing. These small Bibles were produced almost as plentifully in England as in France, and in an identical style, which continued well into the 14th ...closer concentration of power. After long and self-denying studies in the East and West, Jerome went to Rome (A.D. 382), probably at the request of Damasu112 KB (18,524 words) - 08:28, 15 October 2021
- ...uteronomy 2:8; Judges 11:18 ), at length reaching the country to the north of the Arnon. Here they remained for some time till they had conquered [[Ba ...etation has a certain resemblance to the downs of the southern counties of England. </p> <p> Of the language of the Moabites we know nothing. or next to nothi52 KB (8,667 words) - 11:17, 15 October 2021
- ...eir great disinterestedness and diligence in propagating the [[Gospel]] in England, these good men, it has been remarked, within thirty years after the commen ...sbyter and that of bishop. After the success of Augustine and his monks in England, the Culdees had shut themselves up within the limits of Scotland, and had20 KB (3,345 words) - 10:05, 15 October 2021
- ...ch, which was a direct outgrowth of Mr. Wesley's publication enterprise in England, mentioned above. It was begun in [[Philadelphia]] by official action of th45 KB (7,279 words) - 17:24, 15 October 2021
- ..., therefore, according to others, was some where in Media, Armenia, or the north of Mesopotamia; all mountainous tracts, and affording, instead of the sicke ...is from a junction after their long wanderings, a hundred and twenty miles north of the Persian gulf, and where the river [[Ulai]] flows in from the northea34 KB (5,605 words) - 18:19, 15 October 2021
- ...as they might ordain, may have the right to fulfill the same functions in England and Ireland. </p> <p> In consequence, Dr. M'Caul, of Ireland, having declin7 KB (1,087 words) - 10:54, 15 October 2021
- ...[Augustus]] contirmed to them. Occupying their own quarter of the city-the north-eastern-and forming, under their ethnarch or ‘alabarch,’ a community wi ...airo]] was another blow, and the discovery in 1497 of the new route to the East <em> via </em> the Cape of Good Hope almost destroyed its trade. At the beg79 KB (12,736 words) - 14:23, 16 October 2021
- ...and [[Sadducees]] of old. The former prevail in Russia, [[Poland]] and the East; the latter in [[Germany]] and America. Many of the Jews today are deists, ...of the liberal spirit, and there also the Jews were heartily welcomed. In England, also, they soon after (1655), by the success of t </p>76 KB (12,534 words) - 08:34, 15 October 2021
- ...r from the sun, a large and terrible cave, and the doors of it open to the north. This cave is built of serpents wattled together, and the heads of all the44 KB (7,976 words) - 11:27, 15 October 2021
- ...p> </td> <td> <p> Rom. Cath. </p> </td> <td> <p> Prot. </p> </td> <td> <p> East Chur </p> </td> </tr> <tr> <td> <p> N.Amer. </p> </td> <td> <p> 59000000 </57 KB (9,209 words) - 16:54, 15 October 2021
- ...nland; the Periodical Accounts of their Missions; Loskell's History of the North american Indian Missions; Oldendorp's History of the Brethren's [[Missions] ...ons are assistants to presbyters, much in the same way as in the church of England. Deaconesses are retained for the purpose of privately admonishing their ow40 KB (6,659 words) - 18:44, 15 October 2021
- ...bed the circuitous route by which the nation approached Palestine from the east, and to his generalship, the two successful campaigns in which Sihon and [[ ...almost succeeded in uniting the people of the south with the people of the north. Perhaps the most important Old testament figure that must be interpreted a295 KB (49,820 words) - 18:45, 15 October 2021
- ...hearing the explanation given, they were satisfied that the tribes on the east were faithful in heart. </p> <p> Joshua 23 , Joshua 24 . In con ...uben, [[Gad]] and half of Manasseh) received their inheritance in the land east of Jordan that Israel had conquered in the time of Moses (13:1-14:5). Of th82 KB (13,566 words) - 08:01, 15 October 2021
- ...world (vitiated, in the eyes of the present writer, by its support of the North-Galatian view), in A. Deissmann, St. Paul: a Study in Social and [[Religiou48 KB (8,143 words) - 11:14, 13 October 2021
- ...non. ‘More boats are upset, and more lives are lost in the breakers at the north end of the ledge of rocks that defend the inner harbour, than anywhere else ...t off-shore made entrance from the south impossible. [[Entrance]] from the north was shallow and treacherous, but small vessels could navigate it. </p> <p>44 KB (7,276 words) - 18:34, 15 October 2021
- ...his time he took with him four seamen and two catechists. They sailed from England in the month of September, 1850. On reaching their destination, it is said22 KB (3,705 words) - 16:31, 15 October 2021
- ...siastical territory became known as a “diocese” or “see” (“eparchy” in the East). Bishops of churches that had been founded by apostles were said to be in ...ordaining priests and deacons differs not essentially from the practice in England. </p>126 KB (20,296 words) - 17:56, 15 October 2021
- ...ter the Conference of 1881, when it was proposed to send a deputation from England to Australia to consider the question fully. The Rev. F. W. Bourne was nomi38 KB (6,249 words) - 09:16, 15 October 2021