enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Mark 6 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_6

    Verse 6:30 is the only time in the received canonical texts where Mark uses "οι αποστολοι", although some texts also use this word in Mark 3:14 [23] and it is most frequently – 68 out of 79 New Testament occurrences – used by Luke the Evangelist and Paul of Tarsus. Mark then relates two miracles of Jesus. When they land, a large ...

  3. Evangelist portrait - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Evangelist_portrait

    The traditional symbols of the Evangelists were often included in the images, or especially in the Insular tradition, either given their own additional images on a separate page, or used instead of an evangelist portrait. The symbols are: the Lion of Mark, the Eagle of John, the Ox or Calf of Luke and the Angel or Man of Matthew.

  4. Synoptic Gospels - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Synoptic_Gospels

    Over three-quarters of Mark's content is found in both Matthew and Luke, and 97% of Mark is found in at least one of the other two synoptic gospels. Additionally, Matthew (24%) and Luke (23%) have material in common that is not found in Mark. [1] The calming of the storm is recounted in each of the three synoptic gospels, but not in John.

  5. Tetramorph - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tetramorph

    An Assyrian lamassu dated 721 BC.. Images of unions of different elements into one symbol were originally used by the Ancient Egyptians, Assyrians, and Greeks.The image of the sphinx, found in Egypt and Babylon, depicted the body of a lion and the head of a human, while the harpies of Greek mythology showed bird-like human women.

  6. Four Evangelists - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Four_Evangelists

    The meanings accruing to the symbols grew over centuries, with an early formulation by Jerome, [6] and were fully expressed by Rabanus Maurus, who set out three layers of meaning for the beasts: representing first the Evangelists, second the nature of Christ, and third the virtues required of a Christian for salvation. [7]

  7. Seven seals - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seven_seals

    Wax seals were typically placed across the opening of a scroll, [7] so that it was known to be authored by the proper person, when the document was opened in the presence of witnesses. [6] This type of "seal" is frequently used in a figurative sense, in the book of Revelation, [ 8 ] and only the Lamb is worthy to break off these seals.

  8. Get your free daily horoscope, and see how it can inform your day through predictions and advice for health, body, money, work, and love.

  9. Messianic Secret - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Messianic_Secret

    [1] [7] In Wrede's theory, the secrecy is a literary strategy meant to head off this objection while steering a middle course between two points of view in early Christianity about Jesus's role as messiah: that Jesus only became the messiah starting at the crucifixion (Phillipians 2:6-11), or that his role had been fully filled and preordained ...