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Wenham and also
Wenham was also a member of the first professional organization dedicated to aeronautics, the Royal Aeronautical Society of the United Kingdom.
Gettin Square also featured rising star David Wenham who demonstrated versatility with a string of critically acclaimed roles including the title role in Paul Cox's 1999 biopic Molokai: The Story of Father Damien and the 2001 thriller The Bank, directed by the politically conscious film director Robert Connolly.
*- ite ( Ann Arbor → Ann Arborite, Austin → Austinite, Brisbane → Brisbanite ( also " Brisbanian "), Chennai → Chennaite, Dallas → Dallasite, Delhi → Delhite, Denver → Denverite, Dunedin → Dunedinite, Irmo → Irmite, Israel → Israelite ( also " Israeli ", depending on the usage ; see below ), Karachi → Karachiite, Moscow → Muscovite ( also Latin " Muscovia "), New Hampshire → New Hampshirite, Perth → Perthite, Ruskin → Ruskinite, Seattle → Seattleite, Seoul → Seoulite, Springfield → Springfieldianite, Spokane → Spokanite, Tokyo → Tokyoite, Vancouver → Vancouverite, Wisconsin → Wisconsinite, Wyoming → Wyomingite ), Wenham → Wenhamite mostly for cities.
He also manufactured a set group of newspaper quarrels between the various " authors " for and against Mrs. Wenham to get free advertising.
His sons Gordon Wenham and David Wenham are also noted theologians.
" Facing Hell was published shortly after his death and is largely autobiographical, though also containing a paper Wenham published in regard to the doctrines of conditional immortality and the limited temporal nature of hell.
Wenham also argued for the Gospel of Mark being the second gospel written which he claims is consistent both with internal evidence and with the testimony of the church fathers.

Wenham and argued
John Wenham argued that, in the early Jerusalem Church, there would have been an early need for the production of a written record to augment the " atmosphere of spontaneity " within which the apostles, disciples, and eyewitnesses would have given instruction.
Wenham argued that an excess of such material, along with the constraints of scroll length, was one cause of his noticeable omission of material found in Matthew and Mark.

Wenham and Matthew
In 1992 John Wenham published Redating Matthew, Mark and Luke which discusses the dating of these gospels and the relationship of the gospels to one another ( prior to Wenham's work, John A. T. Robinson, a liberal theologian, had written a widely known book titled Redating the New Testament which advocated an early date of the gospels ).
In his work Redating Matthew, Mark and Luke Wenham wrote regarding the book of Matthew the following: " The fathers are almost unanimous in asserting that Matthew the tax-collector was the author, writing first, for Hebrews in the Hebrew language: Papias ( c. 60-130 ), Irenaeus ( c. 130-200 ), Pantaenus ( died c. 190 ), Origen ( c. 185-254 ), Eusebius ( c. 260-340 ), Epiphanius of Salamis ( c. 315-403 ), Cyril of Jerusalem ( c. 315-86 ) and others write in this vein.
" ( John Wenham, Redating Matthew, Mark & Luke ( 1991 ), p. 116 ).
Butler, but not by John Wenham, who instead explained the similar structure by arguing simply that Mark used both his recollection of his instruction from the Gospel of Matthew and his memory of the preaching of Peter to pen his own synthesis.

Wenham and was
The first person to experiment in this fashion was Francis Herbert Wenham, who in doing so constructed the first wind tunnel in 1871.
Gordon Wenham in his commentary on Leviticus expresses the idea that Christianity removed the need for animal sacrifice in these words: " With the death of Christ the only sufficient " burnt offering " was offered once and for all, and therefore the animal sacrifices which foreshadowed Christ's sacrifice were made obsolete.
J. Wenham asserts that Luke was " one of the Seventy, the Emmaus disciple, Lucius of Cyrene and Paul's kinsman.
" Not all scholars are as confident of all of these attributes as Wenham is, not least because Luke's own statement at the beginning of the Gospel of Luke () freely admits that he was not an eyewitness to the events of the Gospel.
Wenham ( IVP New Bible Commentary ) execution was normal for rape cases, so Potiphar may have had doubts about his wife's story.
Wenham was first settled in 1635 and officially incorporated in 1643.
Wenham was originally a part of Salem.
Although slaves were owned by Wenham residents in the 18th century, by the 1850s sentiment was fervently in favor of abolition.
He was born in Great Wenham, Suffolk.
His father, James Hopkins, was a Puritan clergyman and vicar of St John's of Great Wenham, in Suffolk.
* Jane Wenham was tried at the Hertford Assizes for witchcraft in 1712.
These experiments convinced Chanute that the best way to achieve extra lift without a prohibitive increase in weight was to stack several wings one above the other, an idea proposed by British engineer Francis Wenham in 1866 and realized in flight by Lilienthal in the 1890s.
Wenham was born in Marrickville, Sydney, Australia, the son of Kath and Bill Wenham.
Olsen was a trustee of Gordon College in Wenham, Massachusetts.
A fortified house was built in nearby Little Wenham between 1260 and 1290.
The Wenham unit was based at a dugout under Jermyn's Farm to the north of the village, and a dugout a short distance away housed their supply of explosives.
It was created by Andrew Knight and Deborah Cox and starred Sigrid Thornton, David Wenham, William McInnes, John Howard, Tom Long and Kerry Armstrong.
When an election was called in 1774, Wenham stood for the seat of Norfolk, with his son asked to stand in his place for Derby.
Wenham was not impressed when Coke asked him to let them be married, as he had picked out the daughter of a baronet for his son, but with the intercession of Wenham's friend Harbord Harbord, he finally consented to their marriage, which occurred on 5 October 1775.
In one of the last witch trials recorded, Jane Wenham, of Walkern, was convicted of witchcraft in 1712.
Tudor ice was harvested at Walden Pond in Concord, Fresh Pond in Cambridge, Spy Pond in Arlington, Sandy Pond in Ayer, Horn Pond in Woburn, Lake Quannapowitt in Wakefield, Haggett's Pond in Andover, Suntaug Lake in Lynnfield, Spot Pond and Doleful Pond in Stoneham, and Wenham Lake in Wenham ( all places in Massachusetts ).
It is said without undue exaggeration that no dinner party in London was considered complete without ice from Wenham Lake.

Wenham and would
Gordon Wenham suggests that the name " Cain " means " smith " ( which would anticipate the remarks about his metal-working skill ), or that he is called " Tubal Cain " in order to distinguish him from the other Tubal, the son of Japheth.

Wenham and have
It is now used by Beverly as a storage site and is under the scrutiny of many environmental organizations, as it and the surrounding areas — such as Casco Chemical — have polluted the groundwater, which could be potentially hazardous to the nearby Wenham Lake water supply.
Two other Wenham landmarks, the Tea House and the Wenham Museum, have their roots in the Wenham Village Improvement Society.
* Mephisto ( Doug Bayne ) ( aka James Wenham ) may or may not have been a security guard at one time or another, but it is certain that he did take a three week training course in security guarding, and has retained some of the knowledge from that course.
" Past CICCU members have included Josh Moody, Basil Atkinson, John F. Wenham, John Stott and Vaughan Roberts.

Wenham and had
English settlers first came to Wenham in the 1630s, but the area had been home to Native American Algonquian peoples for hundreds of years.
For example, in 1712 the witch trial of Jane Wenham had the public's interest, and one partner wrote a pamphlet exonerating her, while another condemned her, and both pamphlets were sold at all three shops.
David Wenham had opted not to renew his contract, so, two episodes into the second season, Diver Dan left Pearl Bay for the Galapagos Islands.
Wenham had the distinction of being a conservative theologian and a defender of Biblical inerrancy, but one who held to the position of " conditional immortality "-or the belief that the human soul is not by default eternal in nature ; this belief goes hand in hand with the notion that sinners, once cast into hell, are at some point burned up and essentially no longer exist.

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