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Altars and which
THEY, by a strange Frenzy driven, fight for Power, for Plunder, and extended Rule — WE, for our Country, our Altars, and our Homes .— THEY follow an ADVENTURER, whom they fear — and obey a Power which they hate — WE serve a Monarch whom we love — a God whom we adore ... They call on us to barter all of Good we have inherited and proved, for the desperate Chance of Something better which they promise .— Be our plain Answer this: The Throne WE honour is the PEOPLE ' S CHOICE — the Laws we reverence are our brave Fathers ' Legacy — the Faith we follow teaches us to live in bonds of Charity with all Mankind, and die with Hope of Bliss beyond the Grave.
On the lower terrace are found a Doric Temple, probably to Apollo ; the Fountain House, with the Agora in front of it ; and Peribolos of the Altars, which contained dedications to various deities.
Keats also had access to prints of Greek urns at Haydon's office, and he traced an engraving of the " Sosibios Vase ", a Neo-Attic marble volute krater, signed by Sosibios, in the Louvre Museum, which he found in Henry Moses's A Collection of Antique Vases, Altars, Paterae.
The Art Institute of Chicago has done restoration work on the paintings in the Shrine Altars at St. Mary of Perpetual Help which date back to 1890, with further plans calling for restoration of the stained glass windows and to complete the painting of the interior ceilings and rotunda.
* The piazza is featured in Dan Brown's 2000 thriller Angels and Demons, in which the Fontana dei Quattro Fiumi ( the " Fountain of the Four Rivers ", i. e. the Danube, the Ganges, the Nile, and the Rio de la Plata ) is listed as one of the Altars of Science.

Altars and were
Altars (, mizbe ' ah, " a place of slaughter or sacrifice ") in the Hebrew Bible were typically made of earth or unwrought stone.
Altars were generally erected in conspicuous places.
Altars were erected by Abraham, by Isaac, by Jacob, and by Moses, ( Adonai-nissi ).
Altars to Greek gods were set up and animals prohibited to Jews were sacrificed on them.
They were also called Devotional Altars, since they could look like small Side Altars or bye-altars.
Together they opened a portrait studio in Mexico City and were commissioned to travel around Mexico taking photographs for Anita Brenner ’ s book Idols Behind Altars.
Altars to Greek gods were set up and animals prohibited to Jews were sacrificed on them.

Altars and large
* He is entablatured in the Cathedral Chapel of the Nine Altars ( Durham ) and is portrayed in the Great Hall of Durham Castle ( University College, Durham ) as a large, imposing man, with a heavy beard.

Altars and churches
Altars are usually found at shrines, and they can be located in temples, churches and other places of worship.
Altars occupy a prominent place in the sanctuaries of many churches, especially those belonging to the ancient Christian traditions, such as the Eastern Orthodox, Oriental Orthodox, Assyrian, Roman Catholic, and Anglican Churches.

Altars and Cathedral
He was fondly remembered by the natives of Durham, and was honoured with a burial in the Chapel of the Nine Altars in the Durham Cathedral.

Altars and tomb
In the 1968 field season, after excavating many tombs in Structure B-4, also called the Temple of the Masonry Altars, the seventh phase of construction revealed the most elaborate tomb at the site nicknamed “ The Sun God ’ s Tomb ”.

Altars and stood
Altars stood in its midst, and the images of the gods.

Altars and their
Little Altars Everywhere chronicles the adventures of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood-four eccentric women-and their children, affectionately called the Petites Ya-Yas.

Altars and .
Altars in the Anglican Communion vary widely.
* Sheehan, Jonathan, The Altars of the Idols: Religion, Sacrifice, and the Early Modern Polity, Journal of the History of Ideas 67. 4 ( 2006 ) 649 – 674 ()
* eMEGO 082 Marcus Schmickler: Altars Of Science DVD + ( 10. 2007 )
* Lawrence Watt-Evans adopted the name for the immortal high priest of Death in a series of novels -- The Lure of the Basilisk, The Seven Altars of Dusarra, The Sword of Bheleu, and The Book of Silence -- collectively known as The Lords of Dûs.
* St. Joseph's Day Altars
The largest of Altun Ha's temple-pyramids, the " Temple of the Masonry Altars ", is 54 feet ( 16 m ) high.
The Sun God ’ s Tomb is located in Structure B-4, also called the Temple of the Masonry Altars.
In 1854 appeared his last volume of verse, ' Altars, Hearths, and Graves.
The Patio of the Altars was the main access to the pyramid and is named for the various altars that surround a main courtyard.
There is indigenous dancing in the Patio of the Altars and the greeting of the sun on that morning.
Constructions at the site include a Mesoamerican ballcourt, the Plaza of the Altars, the Plaza of Day and Night and the Plaza of Time.
He is instead rewarded for his part in the pilgrimage's success with a job as " Cleanser of the Altars " and all the leftovers he can eat.
* Eamon Duffy, The Stripping of the Altars: Traditional Religion in England, c. 1400 to c. 1580, Yale University Press, 1992, ISBN 0-300-06076-9
Their first proper studio album, Altars of Madness, was released in 1989.
Records such as Deicide's debut album, Deicide ; Morbid Angel's debut album Altars of Madness, Scream Bloody Gore from Death, as well as many other classic death metal albums.
Altars.
Although less striking and displaying a lesser degree of craftmanship, Altars 2 and 3 are similar to Altars 4 and 5.

which and Calvinists
* Extent of the atonement – Arminians, along with four-point Calvinists or Amyraldians, hold to a universal drawing and universal extent of atonement instead of the Calvinist doctrine that the drawing and atonement is limited in extent to the elect only, which many Calvinists prefer to call ' particular redemption '.
Traditional Calvinists believe in the doctrine of the perseverance of the saints, which says that because God chose some unto salvation and actually paid for their particular sins, he keeps them from apostasy and that those who do apostatize were never truly regenerated ( that is, born again ) or saved.
One approach, the regulative principle of worship, favoured by many Zwinglians, Calvinists and some radical reformers, considered anything that was not directly authorised by the Bible to be a novel and Catholic introduction to worship, which was to be rejected.
To sum up: Without being a great dogmatician like his master, nor a creative genius in the ecclesiastical realm, Beza had qualities which made him famous as humanist, exegete, orator, and leader in religious and political affairs, and qualified him to be the guide of the Calvinists in all Europe.
Calvinists, Anabaptists and Mennonites, angry with their being persecuted by the Roman Catholic Church and opposed to the Catholic images of saints ( which in their eyes conflicted with the Second Commandment ), destroyed statues in hundreds of churches and monasteries throughout the Netherlands.
Calvinists contend that God extends mercy and grace to whom He will according to His plan ( Romans 8 ), and administers justice ( which, by its very nature is the punishment for sin, and thus in every way good and holy in concordance with the character of God ) to all others.
Regarding the claim by universalists that an omnipotent God would not fail to save everyone, Calvinists would point to the doctrine of irresistible grace, which teaches that if God has elected to save someone, God's omnipotence will mean that this person will eventually repent, no matter how much resistance ( s ) he puts up.
The Edict of Beaulieu granted many concessions to the Calvinists, but they were short-lived in the face of the Catholic League which the ultra-Catholic, Henry I, Duke of Guise, had formed in opposition to it.
For 100 years of its history, Phillips Academy shared its campus with the Andover Theological Seminary, which was founded on Phillips Hill in 1807 by orthodox Calvinists who had fled Harvard College after it appointed a liberal Unitarian theologian to a professorship of divinity.
In the following year he began publishing a monthly periodical ( Scherzhafte und ernsthafte, vernüftige und einfältige Gedanken über allerhand lustige und nutzliche Bücher und Fragen ) in which he ridiculed the pedantic weaknesses of the learned, taking the side of the Pietists in their controversy with the orthodox, and defending mixed marriages of Lutherans and Calvinists ; he also published a volume on natural law which emphasized natural reason and a paper defending marriage between Lutherans and members of the Reformed church.
This happened under the influence of ideas of the Anabaptists which were ideas also seen in the Donatists in North Africa in 311 A. D. ( Jack Hoad, The Baptist, London, Grace Publications, 1986, page 32 ) and these ideas then spread to Calvinists through the Congregationalist and Baptist movements, and to Lutherans through Pietism ( although much of Lutheranism recoiled against the Pietist movement after the mid-19th century ).
Furthermore, in the frame of the controversy around Jansenius ' Augustinus, during which the Jesuits attacked the Jansenists claiming they were heretics similar to Calvinists, Arnauld wrote in defense the Théologie morale des Jésuites ( Moral Theology of Jesuits ), which would put the base of most of the arguments later used by Pascal in his Provincial Letters denouncing the " relaxed moral " of Jesuit casuistry.
Following the revocation of the Edict of Nantes, a document which had hitherto given rights to Calvinists, in 1685, 2, 000 French Huguenots emigrated to the Electoral Palatinate.
Alba quickly erected a tribunal, the Council of Troubles, which soon became known to the Calvinists as the " Council of Blood ," to try all persons who had been engaged in the late commotions that the rule of Philip had excited.
Although Calvinists believe God and the truth of God cannot be plural, they also believe that those civil ordinances of man which restrain man from evil and encourage toward good, are ordinances of God ( regardless of the religion, or lack of it, of those who wield that power ).
Ill-prepared for the realities of the New World and, above all, torn apart by theological controversy which sets the Catholics and Calvinists among them against one another, these French pioneers see their dreams of colonisation gradually dissipate.
The Baptists diluted the concept of the calling relative to Calvinists, but other aspects made its congregants fertile soil for the development of capitalism — namely, a lack of paralyzing ascetism, the refusal to accept state office and thereby develop unpolitically, and the doctrine of control by conscience which caused rigorous honesty.
He ineffectually resisted the efforts of the Calvinists, led by Caspar Olevianus, to introduce the Presbyterian polity and discipline, which were established at Heidelberg in 1570, on the Genevan model.
Dumoulin had, in 1552, written Commentaire sur l ' édit du roi Henri II sur les petites dates, which was condemned by the Sorbonne, but his Conseil sur le fait du concile de Trente created a still greater stir, and aroused against him both the Catholics and the Calvinists.
Calvinists advocate the satisfaction theory of the atonement, which developed in the writings of Anselm of Canterbury and Thomas Aquinas.
Calvinists do not believe the power of the atonement is limited in any way, which is to say that no sin is too great to be expiated by Christ's sacrifice, in their view.

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