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The sayings of Jesus on the cross (sometimes called the Seven Last Words from the Cross) are seven expressions biblically attributed to Jesus during his crucifixion. Traditionally, the brief sayings have been called "words". The seven sayings are gathered from the four canonical gospels. [1] [2] In Matthew and Mark, Jesus cries out to God.
— Gary Otte, quoting one of Jesus' seven last words, right before being executed (13 September 2017) "I'm OK." [159] — Hugh Hefner, American magazine publisher and founder of Playboy; said to his wife Crystal while being administered antibiotics to treat a soon-fatal E. coli infection (27 September 2017) "Death is so boring. So slow.
The piece contains seven movements, each of which quotes the last words of an unarmed Black man before he was killed. [3] Thompson has said that in composing the piece, he "used the liturgical format in Haydn 's The Seven Last Words of Christ in an effort to humanize these men and to reckon with my identity as a black man in this country in ...
As we embrace the multifaceted historical realities of Black History Month, it is not irony but ethnic reality that calls our attention to those passages of scripture in Mark 15:21 and Luke 23:26.
John 16 is the sixteenth chapter of the Gospel of John in the New Testament of the Christian Bible.It records Jesus' continued Farewell Discourse to his disciples, set on the last night before his crucifixion.
During the morning after his arrest, the trial of Jesus before the Sanhedrin is concluded with plans to have Jesus executed , and he is taken to Pontius Pilate, the Roman governor of Judea. [7] As Jesus was being led away, [ 8 ] Judas Iscariot , who had betrayed Jesus, sees that his former teacher has been condemned, [ 9 ] and is overcome by ...
OPINION: So often, when weaponizing MLK's words against Black people, white people like to lecture us about "what he died for" as if his death was voluntary. It was not. The post Dear white people ...
The seven meditations on the Last Words are excerpted from all four gospels. The "Earthquake" movement derives from Matthew 27:51ff. Much of the work is consolatory, but the "Earthquake" brings a contrasting element of supernatural intervention—the orchestra is asked to play presto e con tutta la forza—and closes with the only fortississimo (triple forte) in the piece.