Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Sarah Edwards (January 9, 1710 – October 2, 1758) was an American missionary and the wife of theologian Jonathan Edwards. Her husband was initially drawn to her spiritual openness, direct relationship with God, and periods of spiritual ecstasy. As a theological student at Yale, he had longed to have a personal relationship with God.
In 1894, Samuel was forced to declare bankruptcy. Olivia was given "preferred creditor" status, and all Samuel's copyrights were assigned to her. These measures saved the family's financial future. Olivia helped her husband with the editing of his books, articles, and lectures. She was a "faithful, judicious, and painstaking editor", Clemens wrote.
Mary, who suffered from chronic biliary atresia, a rare and serious medical condition, had said her goodbyes to her family, when some good news came their way. Find out how Robert saved his wife's ...
Bree throws her plant and breaks it then she runs away and when found says she wants to live with her grandmother. Amber prays for an answer. Mike Nelson tells Amber about how her husband saved his life. His last words were: "You are loved more than you will ever know." Mike gives her a cross that Darren had made from IED scraps.
Horatio Gates Spafford (October 20, 1828, Troy, New York – September 25, 1888, Jerusalem) [1] was an American lawyer and Presbyterian church elder. He is best known for penning the Christian hymn "It Is Well With My Soul" following the Great Chicago Fire [2] and the deaths of his four daughters on a transatlantic voyage aboard the S.S. Ville du Havre.
Sarah Marinda Bates lived in Henderson, New York from the time of her birth in 1817 until October 1836. While she was there, her family encountered Mormon missionaries and in the summer of 1835, she and several siblings were baptized into the faith. She also fell in love with one of the missionaries, Orson Pratt, who, after leaving to preach in ...
As April explains, in her first year of marriage, "I took on that traditional wife role and did my 'wifely duties.' "Related: New Mom Asks Husband's Family to 'Stay Elsewhere' During 2-Month Visit ...
After Isobel's 1954 cancer diagnosis, the Kuhn family returned to the United States and settled back in Wheaton, Illinois, where she continued to write and published several books. [8] Isobel died on March 20, 1957, with her husband at her side. [3]: 121 Her funeral was held at Wheaton College Church. [9]