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Lastly and Eusebius
Lastly, Eusebius quotes ( vi. 12. 2 ) from a pamphlet Serapion wrote concerning the Docetic Gospel of Peter, in which Serapion presents an argument to the Christian community of Rhossus in Syria against this gospel and condemns it:

Lastly and wrote
Lastly, Bagley wrote of the importance of accuracy, thoroughness and effort on part of the student in the classroom.
Lastly, Leontius intimates that Theodore wrote a portion of a liturgy ; " not content with drafting a new creed, he sought to impose upon the church a new Anaphora ".
Lastly, Victor Salva wrote Jeepers Creepers ( 2001 ) with Henriksen in mind for the role of the Creeper.
Lastly, he proposed a simple stage freed from the overworked scenic machinery that had become commonplace: " Pour l ' œuvre nouvelle, qu ' on nous laisse un plateau nu " (" For our new undertaking, just give us a bare platform "), he wrote ( Registres I, p. 32 ).
Lastly Martianus wrote Marriage of Philology and Mercury, the title referring to the allegorical union of intelligent learning with the love of letters.
Lastly, the Second volume gives a list of poets who wrote in the Slavic languages.

Lastly and .
Lastly, the speaker decried our organized program of emergency help calling it `` Civilian Defense ''.
Lastly, governmental and private planners will at this stage begin to see large capital requirements looming ahead.
Lastly, his father shows him all of the future heroes of Rome who will live if Aeneas fulfills his destiny in founding the city.
Lastly, his Mouseion ( a word invoking the Muses ) seems to have contained the narrative of the Contest of Homer and Hesiod, of which the version that has survived is the work of a grammarian in the time of Hadrian, based on Alcidamas.
Lastly, abiotic stress has enabled species to grow, develop, and evolve, furthering natural selection as it picks out the weakest of a group of organisms.
Lastly and most importantly, the precision in mimicking Cuyp ’ s style by his follower Abraham van Calraet and their contentious signatures makes it all the more difficult to determine which paintings are genuinely that of Cuyp and which ones are actually accurate reproductions in his style.
* Lastly, it established a system of control and dominance for the major leagues over the independents.
Lastly, mechanical properties of these biopolymers can often be measured using optical tweezers or atomic force microscopy.
Lastly, on the first floor there is a house common room with a kitchen and two couches.
Lastly, in 2011, the " Plate and the Moon " theory came about.
Lastly, two bases under British sovereignty, Akrotiri and Dhekelia, are located on the island.
Lastly, the Scheme standards documents require tail-call optimization, which the CL standard does not.
Lastly, there was not any consistency or standardization of the data in a file processing system which makes maintenance difficult.
Lastly, he added two new factions to the chariot races, Gold and Purple, to race against the existing White, Red, Green and Blue factions.
Lastly, registers for PALcode were defined.
Lastly, he provides receipt of both Epaphroditus ' heroism ( 3. 25-30 ) and the arrival of " the gift " ( 4. 10 ), along with his promise of a divine accounting ( 4. 17-20 ).
Lastly, the verses come into conflict with 11: 5 where women are described as praying and prophesying.
Lastly, an individual has to believe the actions caused by the in-group were unjustifiable, indefensible, and unforgivable.
Lastly, Su-Te has been positively identified as Sogdiana and the Yan-Cai with the Hephthalites.
Lastly, deacons also performed certain duties, such as tending to the poor and sick.
Lastly, the formation has encouraged autocratic states to develop into democracies in order to form an effective and internal government .< ref > Shannon, Megan.

Eusebius and wrote
Although Eusebius wrote of eight books of the work, only seven undoubtably survive.
* Hwaetberht ( died 740s ), Abbot of Monkwearmouth-Jarrow Priory, who wrote under the pen-name of Eusebius
His successor at the see of Caesarea, Acacius, wrote a Life of Eusebius, but this work has been lost.
After the Emperor's death ( c. 337 ), Eusebius wrote the Life of Constantine, an important historical work because of eye witness accounts and the use of primary sources.
In his Church History or Ecclesiastical History, Eusebius wrote the first surviving history of the Christian Church as a chronologically-ordered account, based on earlier sources complete from the period of the Apostles to his own epoch.
Arnaldo Momigliano wrote that in Eusebius's mind " chronology was something between an exact science and an instrument of propaganda " Drake in the 21st century treats Eusebius as working within the framework of a " totalizing discourse " that viewed the world from a single point of view that excluded anything he thought inappropriate.
Eusebius also wrote a work Quaestiones ad Stephanum et Marinum, " On the Differences of the Gospels " ( including solutions ).
Eusebius also wrote treatises on Biblical archaeology:
Elsewhere in his Church History, Eusebius reports seeing what he took to be portraits of Jesus, Peter and Paul, and also mentions a bronze statue at Banias / Paneas, of which he wrote, " They say that this statue is an image of Jesus " ( H. E.
Initially growing up in Bithynia, raised by his maternal grandmother, at the age of seven he was under the guardianship of Eusebius of Nicomedia, the semi-Arian Christian Bishop of Nicomedia, and taught by Mardonius, a Gothic eunuch, whom Julian wrote warmly of later.
" Although Eusebius believed the Apostle wrote the Gospel and the epistles, it is likely that doubt about the fidelity of the author of 2 and 3 John was a factor in causing them to be disputed.
However, Eusebius of Caesarea, ( AD 260 – 340 ), one of the earliest and most comprehensive of church historians, wrote of Christ's disciples in Demonstratio Evangelica, saying that " some have crossed the Ocean and reached the Isles of Britain.
Eusebius wrote an extant reply to the pamphlet of Hierocles, where he claimed that Philostratus was a fabulist and that Apollonius was a sorcerer in league with demons.
Eusebius of Caesarea wrote that the " Greek translation the Bible also differs from the Hebrew, though not so much from the Samaritan " and noted that the Septuagint agrees with the Samaritan Pentateuch in the number of years elapsed from Noah's Flood to Abraham.
* Diocles of Cnidus, Greek philosopher who wrote a work quoted by Eusebius
Ever since the 2nd century, some bishoprics in the Eastern Roman Empire had counted years from the birth of Christ, but there was no agreement on the correct epoch — Clement of Alexandria () and Eusebius of Caesarea () wrote about these attempts.
About the origins of the Gospels, Papias ( as quoted by Eusebius ) Quoting John the Elder wrote:
Eusebius of Caesaria wrote for Crispus that he is " an Imperator most dear to God and in all regards comparable to his father.
In explaining his actions against Arius, Alexander of Alexandria wrote a letter to Alexander of Constantinople and Eusebius of Nicomedia ( where the emperor was then residing ), detailing the errors into which he believed Arius had fallen.
One explanation ( that goes back to Eusebius of Caesarea in the fourth century ) is that John wrote his gospel not to overlap with the synoptic gospels, but to supplement it, and hence did not include all of their narrative.
A leading participant in the Council, Eusebius of Caesarea, wrote: " It is fitting that those in the priesthood and occupied in the service of God, should abstain after ordination from the intercourse of marriage.
The date of Hegesippus is insecurely fixed by the statement of Eusebius that the death and apotheosis of Antinous ( 130 ) occurred in Hegesippus ' lifetime, and that he came to Rome under Pope St. Anicetus and wrote in the time of Pope St. Eleuterus ( Bishop of Rome, ca 174-189 ).
Hegesippus ' works are now entirely lost, save eight passages concerning Church history quoted by Eusebius, who tells us that he wrote Hypomnemata ( Ὑπομνήματα ; " Memoirs " or " Memoranda ") in five books, in the simplest style concerning the tradition of the Apostolic preaching.
Through Eusebius Hegesippus was also known to Jerome, who is responsible for the idea that Hegesippus " wrote a history of all ecclesiastical events from the passion of our Lord down to his own period ... in five volumes ", which has established the Hypomnemata as a Church history.

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