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Faye Elva Edgerton (26 March 1889 – 4 March 1968) was a missionary, linguist and Bible translator with Wycliffe Bible Translators.She translated the New Testament into the Navajo and Apache languages, as well as helping some with the Hopi and the Inupiat/Eskimo New Testaments.
Medieval depiction of Faith's martyrdom. Her popular hagiography, Liber miraculorum sancte Fidis, [6] attributed to the churchman Bernard of Angers (composed between ca 1013 and after 1020), calls miracles associated with Faith joca—Latin for "tricks" or "jokes", the kind that "the inhabitants of the place call Sainte Foy's jokes, which is the way peasants understand such things."
Thomas Bratton Warren (August 1, 1920 – August 8, 2000) was an American professor of philosophy of religion and apologetics at the Harding School of Theology in Memphis, Tennessee, USA, and was an important philosopher and theologian in the Churches of Christ during the latter half of the twentieth century.
Hugh (died before 1176) succeeded his father as Viscount; Raoul de Faye (died 1190) married Elisabeth, dame de Faye-la-Vineuse and had issue; he became grand seneschal of Aquitaine. Aénor de Châtellerault (c. 1103 – March 1130) married William X, Duke of Aquitaine, mother to Eleanor of Aquitaine, Petronilla of Aquitaine, and William Aubrey ...
A former Playboy model killed herself and her 7-year-old son after jumping from a hotel in Midtown New York City on Friday morning. The New York Post reports that 47-year-old Stephanie Adams ...
The wife of Phinehas is an unnamed character in the Hebrew Bible. Her story covers just a few verses at the end of 1 Samuel 4, where she is introduced as the daughter-in-law of Eli and the wife of Phinehas. She is about to give birth when she hears that the Ark of God had been captured by the Philistines.
Jane Seymour (Amina Faye) died 12 days after birthing Henry’s only son and feels that gives her prime hardship points. Anna of Cleves (Terica Marie) realizes she’s not one bit sorry her ...
Shectman also noted that Numbers 8:19 claimed that a "plague will strike the Israelites when they go near the sanctuary", [35] and in Numbers 16:42–50 [36] (or Numbers 17:7–15 in some Bible editions [37]), this actually happened and 14,700 Israelites died of a plague before Aaron stopped it by making an incense offering to Yahweh. [3]