Bond yields in Japan fell to 1.125 per cent, equal to the lowest
recorded by historians in the past 4,000 years, and well below the level of 1.75 per cent reached by US bonds in the Great Depression (Graph 2).
Gil you have asked some very good questions why does bad things happen in the world i personally do nt know God did nt explain to Job either why he had to suffer.What i do know is that God desires that none of us should perish but that all would have eternal life in him through Jesus Christ.This world will one day pass away and the real world will be reborn so our focus as christians is on whats to come and being a witness in the here and now.Both good and bad happens to either the righteous or the sinner so what are we to make of that.What we do know is that God will set all things right at the appointed time the wicked will be judged and the righteous will be rewarded for there faith isnt that enough reason for us to believe.Free will is only a reality if we can choose between good and bad but our hearts are deceitfully wicked we naturally are inclined toward sin that is another reason whyt we need to be saved from ourselves so what are we to do.For me Christ died and rose again that is a fact witnessed by over 500 people that were alive at the time and was
recorded by historians how many other religious leaders do you know that did that or did the miracles that Jesus did.As far as the bible is concerned much of the archelogical evidence has proven to be correct and many of prophetic words spoken many hundreds of years ago have come to pass including both the birth and the death of Jesus.Interested in what philosophy you are believing in if other than a faith in Jesus Christ so how does that philosophy give you the assurance that you are saved.Its really simple with christianity we just have to believe in Jesus Christ.brentnz
So why is it that, only thing we have is in the Bible, and not actually
recorded by the Historians or the Roman Empire who lived in Jesus's days?
Despite not being
recorded by any historian.
Scott's emotions have been
recorded by the historian James Grant: «The joy was therefore extreme when, the ponderous lid having been forced open... the regalia were discovered lying at the bottom covered with linen cloths, exactly as they had been left in 1707.»
(That tsunami was strong enough to be noted and
recorded by historians across the Pacific in Japan; here's a simulation of the waves.)
Not exact matches
We have
records from non-biblical sources (Josephus, Roman
historians, other writings) which give us some view of Jewish culture (the good guys and the bad guys), and how Jewish culture was viewed
by others.
Short after Christ's ascension the world was flooded with copies (still found today
by historians) of the gospels and St. Paul's letters, where the miracles of Jesus are
recorded.
There's a fairly new book, «Inventing George Washington: America's Founder, in Myth and Memory»
by historian Edward Lengel: «Lengel wants to set the
record straight, and he takes on the «cheats and phonies in addition to the well - meaning storytellers who have capitalized on the American public's insatiable and ever - changing demand for information about Washington.
These intensive analyses of the human scene
by historian, social scientist, political scientist, and anthropologist, do not cover up the brutal, tragic
record.
Yes, the Mighty Thor — who has been portrayed
by a man more or less since 1962 (well, really since Roman
historian Tacitus
recorded the Germanic deity known as Donar in the seventh century, but whatever)-- is getting a gender overhaul.
In many radiant lives known to him who even now are bearing what Paul called the fruits of the Spirit, in thousands of whom he has read who across the centuries have displayed those fruits, and in the many millions who, passing, have left behind them no written
records but presumably have also been characterized
by these fruits, the
historian sees the beginnings of the fulfillment of that purpose.
For example, the
records with which the
historian has to deal do not penetrate, except
by faith, into that life to which, so the Christian believes, existence on this planet is but a prelude.
According to food
historian Waverly Root, the first
recorded mention of its use in England was in 1640, where it was considered a crude food, eaten
by «country people and strong laboring men... [but] too strong for tender and gentle stomachs.»
The work began when HRPT hired
historian and architect John Reddick as the project's art consultant and Studio Hip Landscape Architecture, a three - person Manhattan firm, according to
records obtained
by Gay City News under the state Freedom of Information Law from the Cuomo administration, the state parks department, and the Hudson River Park Trust (HRPT), which operates the park that extends from West 59th Street to Battery Park.
And perhaps, deep within that
record, those
historians will find an online memorial built
by a grieving widower to a woman who died too young, at the dawn of the digital age.
Margaret Thatcher's fame, however, did not arise from the undergraduate degree she earned at Oxford University, although she wrote her thesis under future chemistry Nobel laureate Dorothy Hodgkin, who declared her a «good» student, according to an article in Notes &
Records of The Royal Society
by historian of science Jon Agar.
The scandal, which had been buried in the
records of a U.S. Public Health Service researcher, is documented in work released
by a
historian at Wellesley College, Susan Reverby.
The Trent Park
records discovered and analysed
by historian Sönke Neitzel, author of Tapping Hitler's Generals, show that the 84 German generals who were interned at Trent Park were aware of the severity of the war crimes they had been involved in and that some discussed them almost compulsively.
EXTRAS: In addition to an audio commentary
by Roy E. Disney and
historian John Canemaker, the Signature Collection edition includes new featurettes on the film's iconography and character design, archival
recordings of Walt Disney discussing the project, deleted scenes, an alternate sequence and much more.
Those features, all in HD, begin with an audio commentary
by Alain Silver and James Ursini,
historians who have
recorded tracks for nearly twenty noir films of the 1940s and»50s.
Special Features Audio Commentary
by Critic /
Historian Andrew Sarris, James Ellroy, Russell Crowe, Kevin Spacey, Guy Pearce, James Cromwell, Ruth Myers, David Strathairn, Kim Basinger, Brian Helgeland, Jeannine Oppewall, Dante Spinotti and Danny DeVito Whatever You Desire: Making L.A. Confidential Sunlight and Shadow: The Visual Style of L.A. Confidential A True Ensemble: The Cast of L.A. Confidential L.A. Confidential: From Book to Screen L.A. Confidential TV Series Pilot Off the
Record: Vintage Cast / Creator Interviews Director Curtis Hanson's Photo Pitch The L.A. of L.A. Confidential Interactive Map Tour Music - Only Track (5.1) Showcasing Jerry Goldsmith's Score Trailers and T.V. Spots Digital HD
This Twilight Time release features the original commentary
recorded by Frankenheimer for the laserdisc release almost 20 years ago plus a new commentary track with Twilight Time founder and
historian Nick Redman and film
historians Julie Kirgo and Paul Seydor, as well as the usual isolated score track and eight - page booklet.
Next, we get the audio commentary
recorded for the 2002 Special Edition DVD hosted
by the late Roy Disney and featuring Leonard Maltin,
historian John Canemaker, Wendy's voice Kathryn Beaumont, animators Marc Davis, Frank Thomas, Ollie Johnston, and Tinker Bell's model Margaret Kerry, among others.
From formalized propaganda shots and portraits of Party leaders to the candid
recordings of daily life in cities and rural regions, China offers readers incredible insight into the country's physical, emotional and spiritual infrastructures, an intimate perspective ably enhanced
by cogent, well - researched captions and quotes from Chinese intellectuals and artists, as well as international
historians, diplomats and academicians.
MCA Monographs offer an ongoing visual
record of today's freshest and most influential work, in all its far - ranging variety, in conjunction with thought - provoking essays
by leading art
historians and critics.
The journal's name refers to the school's motto Nulla Dies Sine Linea or «No Day Without a Line,» traditionally attributed to the famous Greek painter Apelles
by the
historian Pliny the Elder, who
recorded that Apelles would not let a day pass without at least drawing a line to practice his art.
Mr. Berg's work was displayed in a 2012 - 13 retrospective exhibit at Guild Hall in East Hampton, and chronicled in the book, 360 Sound: The Columbia
Records Story (2012),
by the
historian Sean Wilentz.
One had to feel a little sorry for him in the reckoning: One of his paintings, through no doings of his own, breaks auction
records for a work
by a living European artist, and he gets pitted against no less a luminary than Giovanni Battista Tiepolo as quintessential of what art
historian James Meyer called the market's «overestimation of the contemporary.»
Linocuts
by Margaret Burroughs, co-founder of the Chicago Arts and Crafts Guild; a silkscreen
by artist and art
historian Samella Lewis, who founded the Museum of African American Arts in Los Angeles; surrealist etchings
by Camille Billops, who created a vast archive of African - American visual and
recorded performing arts; an etching
by Rutgers professor Vivian Browne, who founded SoHo 20.
Published
by Ivorypress, it provides a complete visual
record of the commission alongside a critical analysis of the work
by the celebrated writer Geoff Dyer and expert contextual essays on cowardice, desertion and psychological trauma brought on
by military service
by the acclaimed
historians Sir Hew Strachan and Dr Helen McCartney.
Note 1 Glacier
records have been painstakingly researched
by numerous glaciologists and
historians over many years.