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Beacon and Lights
Holland House was built in 1727 and the Old Beacon dating from 1789 was the third lighthouse to be built by Thomas Smith for the Commissioners of the Northern Lights.
The Old High Beacon, as well as the High and Low Lights, still exist today as private residences.
* Beacon Lights of Evangelical History
The seven New Jersey Revolutionary War sites: Beacon Hill in Summit, South Mountain Reservation in South Orange, Fort Nonsense in Morristown, Washington Rock in Green Brook, the Navesink Twin Lights, Princeton, and Ramapo Mountain State Forest near Oakland.

Beacon and 1929
An improved version was introduced by the UK as the Orfordness Beacon in 1929 and used until the mid-1930s.
Dia: Beacon, Riggio Galleries in Beacon, New York is located in a former printing plant built in 1929 by Nabisco.
In 1929 Kinnaird Head became home to the first Radio Beacon in Scotland.
Dia ’ s most recent conversion, its museum in Beacon, is located in a former printing plant built in 1929 by Nabisco ( National Biscuit Company ).

Lights and 1929
The following all-color musicals were produced in 1929 and 1930 alone: The Show of Shows ( 1929 ), Sally ( 1929 ), The Vagabond King ( 1930 ), Follow Thru ( 1930 ), Bright Lights ( 1930 ), Golden Dawn ( 1930 ), Hold Everything ( 1930 ), The Rogue Song ( 1930 ), Song of the Flame ( 1930 ), Song of the West ( 1930 ), Sweet Kitty Bellairs ( 1930 ), Under A Texas Moon ( 1930 ), Bride of the Regiment ( 1930 ), Whoopee!
Warner Bros. released a large number of color films from 1929 to 1931, including The Show of Shows ( 1929 ), Sally ( 1929 ), Bright Lights ( 1930 ), Golden Dawn ( 1930 ), Hold Everything ( 1930 ), Song of the Flame ( 1930 ), Song of the West ( 1930 ), The Life of the Party ( 1930 ), Sweet Kitty Bellairs ( 1930 ), Under A Texas Moon ( 1930 ), Bride of the Regiment ( 1930 ), Viennese Nights ( 1931 ), Woman Hungry ( 1931 ), Kiss Me Again ( 1931 ), Fifty Million Frenchmen ( 1931 ), and Manhattan Parade ( 1932 ).
* Warner Brothers produces the first movie with a soundtrack Don Juan in 1926, followed by the first Part-Talkie The Jazz Singer in 1927, the first All-Talking movie Lights of New York in 1928 and the first All-Color All-Talking movie On with the Show, 1929.
He appeared in lavish early Technicolor musicals, such as The Show of Shows ( 1929 ), the widescreen musical Song of the Flame ( 1930 ; the movie's poster noted that " Noah Beery will thrill you with his wonderful bass voice, twice as low as any ever recorded "), Bright Lights ( 1930 ), Under A Texas Moon ( 1930 ) and Golden Dawn ( 1930 ; in which he wore blackface as an African native ).
All of the feature-length movies Edward Everett Horton made from 1928 to 1929 with Warner Brothers are lost, except Lights of New York ( 1928 ).
Under George William Brock, in 1929 the school founded a student newspaper called Campus Lights ( now called The Muse ).

Prophecy and Interpretation
The Puritan Hope: A Study in Revival and the Interpretation of Prophecy.
The Puritan Hope: A Study in Revival and the Interpretation of Prophecy.
The Puritan Hope: Revival and the Interpretation of Prophecy.
# ‘ Authority of Scripture ’, ‘ Canon ’, ‘ Eisegesis ’, Oracle ’, ‘ Prophets and Prophecy ’, and ‘ Verbal Inspiration ’ in A Dictionary of Biblical Interpretation ( ed.

Prophecy and Amos
# ‘ The Theology of Amos ’, Prophecy and the Prophets in Ancient Israel, ed.

Prophecy and Ezekiel
In the book of Ezekiel, the Prophecy of New Jerusalem ( or City ( where ) God ( is ) there (, Jehovah-shammah ), also titled Heavenly Jerusalem, in the Book of Revelation as well as Zion in other books of the Bible ) is Ezekiel's prophetic vision of a city to be established to the south of the Temple Mount that will be inhabited by the twelve tribes of Israel in the Messianic era.
Mount Seir is also referenced in Ezekiel 35: 10 (" A Prophecy Against Edom ")
* Wycliffe Bible Encyclopedia, ( Prophecy, p. 1410, Book of Ezekiel, p. 580 ), Chicago, Moody Bible Press, 1986.

Prophecy and 1929
The Voice Of Prophecy is a long-running Seventh-day Adventist religious radio broadcast founded in 1929 by H. M. S.
The first of these was H. M. S. Richards ' radio show The Voice of Prophecy, which was initially broadcast in Los Angeles in 1929.

Interpretation and Amos
* Rosenbaum, Stanley Ned Amos of Israel: A New Interpretation Georgia: Mercer University Press: 1990.

Interpretation and 1929
Versuch einer philosophischen Interpretation ( 1929 ).

Amos and Hosea
Amos, an older contemporary of Hosea and Isaiah, was active c. 750 BC during the reign of Jeroboam II, making the Book of Amos the first biblical prophetic book written.
The Masoretic text places Joel between Hosea and Amos ( the order inherited by the Tanakh and Old Testament ), while the Septuagint order is HoseaAmos – Micah – Joel – Obadiah – Jonah.
Jeroboam's reign was also the period of the prophets Hosea, Joel, Jonah and Amos, all of whom condemned the materialism and selfishness of the Israelite elite of their day: " Woe unto those who lie upon beds of ivory ... eat lambs from the flock and calves ... sing idle songs ..." The book of Kings, written a century later condemns Jeroboam for doing " evil in the eyes of the Lord ", meaning both the oppression of the poor and his continuing support of the cult centres of Dan and Bethel, in opposition to the temple in Jerusalem.
His name occurs in the Old Testament only in 2 Kings 13: 13 ; 14: 16, 23, 27, 28, 29 ; 15: 1, 8 ; 1 Chronicles 5: 17 ; Hosea 1: 1 ; and Amos 1: 1 ; 7: 9, 10, 11.
Shabbat is also described by the prophets Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, Hosea, Amos, and Nehemiah.
The prophets Amos and Hosea write of events during the 8th century kingdom of Israel ; the prophet Jeremiah writes of events preceding and following the fall of Judah ; Ezekiel writes of events during and preceding the exile in Babylon ; and other prophets similarly touch on various periods, usually those in which they write.
First come those prophets dated to the early Assyrian period: Hosea, Amos, Obadiah, Jonah, and Micah ; Joel is undated, but it was possibly placed before Amos because parts of a verse near the end of Joel ( 3. 16 in Hebrew ) and one near the beginning of Amos ( 1. 2 ) are identical.
This notion predates both Christianity and the Greek philosophers, appearing first in the eighth-century BC Hebrew prophets, Amos, Hosea, Micah and Isaiah.
Looking at the oracles in Amos, Hosea, First Isaiah, and Jeremiah gives a clear sense of how messages of imminent punishment develop into the later proto-apocalyptic literature, and eventually into the thoroughly apocalyptic literature of Daniel 7-12.
It is considered by some that this stone circle was the ( unnamed ) religious sanctuary that was severely condemned by the Book of Amos ( Amos 4: 4, 5: 5 ) and Book of Hosea ( Hosea 4: 15 )
Scholars differ over how much of the book is from Jeremiah himself and how much from later disciples, but the French scholar Thomas Romer has recently identified two Deuteronomistic " redactions " ( editings ) of the book of Jeremiah some time before the end of the Exile ( pre-539 BCE ) – a process which also involved the prophetic books of Amos and Hosea.
* Anderson, Bernhard W. & Foster R. McCurley The Eighth Century Prophets: Amos, Hosea, Isaiah, Micah Wipf and Stock: 2003.
The earliest mentions are in the prophets Amos ( possibly ) and Hosea ( certainly ), both active in 8th century BCE Israel ; in contrast Proto-Isaiah and Micah, both active in Judah at much the same time, never do ; it thus seems reasonable to conclude that the Exodus tradition was important in the northern kingdom in the 8th century, but not in Judah.
* The Eighth Century Prophets: Amos, Hosea, Isaiah, Micah ( ISBN 1592443540 )

Amos and Jeremiah
* Isaiah 2, 13, 34, 58, Jeremiah 46: 10, Lamentations 2: 22, Ezekiel 13: 5, Joel 1, 2, 3, Amos 5: 18, 20, Zephaniah 1, 2, Zechariah 14: 1, Malachi 4: 5
in Amos ( 1: 14 ), Jeremiah ( 49: 2, 3 ), and Ezekiel ( 21: 20 ; 25: 5 ).
Thus ( Irenaeus, i. 30, p. 109 ) the first archon sent Moses, Joshua, Amos, and Habakkuk ; the second Samuel, Nathan, Jonah, and Micah ; the third Elijah, Joel, and Zechariah ; the fourth Isaiah, Ezekiel, Jeremiah, and Daniel ; the fifth Book of Tobit and Haggai ; the sixth Micah ( qu.

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