SPHER, #0 ;; whats all around; Origins of zero and Alphabetic O reasonings applied to senses in multi-dimensional array of the literary; musical lyrical sense, artistic, scientific, machine, agricultural,..etc..
TO GOD song sung by Greek Orthodox "Let This Prayer Rise Up Lke Insence As An Offering To You "
10426 church[[English]] ipa :/tʃəːtʃ/ audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a3/En-uk-church.ogg [Alternative forms] - churche (obsolete) [Etymology] Middle English chirche < Old English ċiriċe, from West Germanic *kirika, from Ancient Greek κυριακόν (kuriakon), neuter form of κυριακός (“belonging to the lord”) from κύριος (kurios, “ruler, lord”). For vowel evolution, see bury. Greek κυριακόν (kuriakon) was used of houses of Christian worship since circa 300 AD, especially in the East, though it was less common in this sense than ἐκκλησία (ekklēsia, “congregation”) or βασιλική (basilikē, “royal thing”). An example of the direct Greek-to-Germanic progress of many Christian words, via the Goths; it was probably used by West Germanic people in their pre-Christian period. Cognate with West Frisian tsjerke, Dutch kerk, German Kirche, Danish kirke, Swedish kyrka, Norwegian kirke or kyrkje, and Icelandic kirkja. Also picked up by Slavic, via Old High German chirihha (compare Old Church Slavonic црькъі (crĭky), Russian церковь (cérkov’)). Romance and Celtic languages use variants of Latin ecclesia. [Noun] A church, with many architectural features traditional to such a structure.church (plural churches) 1.A Christian house of worship; a building where religious services take place. There is a lovely little church in the valley. 2.A Christian religious organization, local or general. The Church of England separated from the Roman Catholic Church in 1534. The church across the street has a service at 10 am. 3.A group of people who follow the same Christian religious beliefs, local or general. These worshippers comprise the Church of Christ. 4.Acts 20:28, New International Version: Be shepherds of the church of God, which he bought with his own blood. 5.A time of public worship; a worship service. I'll be there after church. [See also] Appendix:Ecclesiastical terms [Synonyms] - (building): chapel (small church), kirk (Scottish) - (group of worshippers): congregation [Verb] to church (third-person singular simple present churches, present participle churching, simple past and past participle churched) 1.(transitive) To conduct a religious service for a woman after childbirth 2.(transitive) To educate someone religiously, as in in a church. 00 2010/09/08 08:22 10427trainer[[English]] ipa :/ˈtreɪnə/[Anagrams] - retrain - terrain [Etymology] to train + -er [Noun] trainer (plural trainers) 1.a person who trains another; a coach 2.(UK) a running shoe or sneaker 3.(video games, slang) A patch for a video game that applies cheats. [Synonyms] - (person who trains another; coach): coach - (running shoe): dap, jogger, plimsoll (UK), runner, sandshoe/sand shoe, sneaker, tennis shoe [[Dutch]] [Noun] trainer m. and f. (plural trainers) 1.trainer 2.coach [[French]] [Anagrams] - rentrai - ternira - terrain [Verb] trainer 1.Alternative spelling of traîner. 00 2010/09/08 08:23 10429assumption[[English]] [Etymology] From Middle English assumpcioun < Medieval Latin assumption (“a taking up (into heaven)”) and Latin assumption (“a taking up, adoption, the minor proposition of a syllogism”); see assume. [Noun] assumption (plural assumptions) 1.The act of assuming, or taking to or upon one's self; the act of taking up or adopting. 2.The act of taking for granted, or supposing a thing without proof; a supposition; an unwarrantable claim. 3.The thing supposed; a postulate, or proposition assumed; a supposition. 4.1976, “The Journal of Aesthetic Education, Volume 10”[1]: No doubt a finite evaluative argument must make some unargued evaluative assumptions, just as finite factual arguments must make some unargued factual assumptions. 5.(logic) The minor or second proposition in a categorical syllogism. 6.The taking of a person up into heaven. 7.A festival in honor of the ascent of the Virgin Mary into heaven. [Synonyms] - See also Wikisaurus:supposition 01 2010/06/02 00:14 2010/09/09 10:14 10430insanely[[English]] [Adverb] insanely (comparative more insanely, superlative most insanely) 1.In an insane manner. 2.Expressing great intensity. That ramp is insanely difficult to jump. Disney has some insanely fun roller coasters. 00 2010/09/09 11:51 10431orbiter[[English]] [Noun] orbiter (plural orbiters) 1.an object which orbits another, especially a spacecraft that orbits a planet etc without landing on it [See also] - Space Shuttle [[French]] ipa :/ɔʁ.bi.te/[Verb] orbiter 1.to orbit (circle another object) 00 2010/09/09 11:54 10432voluntary[[English]] audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/42/En-us-voluntary.ogg [Adjective] voluntary (comparative more voluntary, superlative most voluntary) 1.Done, given, or acting of one's own free will. 2.Working or done without payment. [Antonyms] - compulsory - obligatory - involuntary [Etymology] From Middle English *voluntarie < Old French volontaire < Latin voluntarius (“willing, of free will”) < voluntas (“will, choice, desire”) < volens, present participle of velle (“to will”). [Noun] voluntary (plural voluntaries) 1.(music) A short piece of music, often having improvisation, played on a solo instrument 2.A volunteer [Synonyms] - discretionary - optional - willful - volitional 01 2010/09/10 11:56 10434disgruntled[[English]] [Adjective] disgruntled (comparative more disgruntled, superlative most disgruntled) 1.Unhappy; dissatisfied 2.frustrated. [Verb] disgruntled 1.(obsolete) Simple past tense and past participle of disgruntle. 00 2010/04/06 19:24 2010/09/11 23:43 tnishi 10439access[[English]] ipa :/ˈæk.sɛs/ audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/34/En-us-access.ogg [Etymology] From French accès or from Latin accessus, perfect passive participle of accēdō (“approach; accede”) < ad (“to, toward, at”) + cēdō (“move, yield”). [Noun] access (countable and uncountable; plural accesses) 1.(uncountable) A way or means of approaching or entering; an entrance; a passage. 2.All access was thronged. - Milton 3.(uncountable) The act of approaching or entering; an advance. 4.(uncountable) The right or ability of approaching or entering; admittance; admission; accessibility. 5.I did repel his fetters, and denied His access to me. - Shakespeare, Hamlet, II-i 6.(uncountable) Admission to sexual intercourse. 7.During coverture, access of the husband shall be presumed, unless the contrary be shown. - Blackstone 8.(countable) An increase by addition; accession; as, an access of territory. 9.I, from the influence of thy looks, receive access in every virtue. - Milton 10.(countable) An onset, attack, or fit of disease; an ague fit. 11.The first access looked like an apoplexy. - Burnet 12.(countable) An outburst of an emotion; a paroxysm; a fit of passion; as, an access of fury. 13.1946: Arnold J. Toynbee, A Study of History (Abridgement of Volumes I-VI by D.C. Somervell) It appears that, about the middle of the fourth century of the Christian Era, the Germans in the Roman service started the new practice of retaining their native names; and this change of etiquette, which seems to have been abrupt, points to a sudden access of self-confidence and self-assurance in the souls of the barbarian personnel which had previously been content to 'go Roman' without reservations. 14.(uncountable) (law) The right of a non-custodial parent to visit their child. 15.(uncountable) (computing) The process of locating data in memory. 16.(uncountable) (Internet) Connection to or communication with a computer program or to the Internet. [References] - access in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913 - access in The Century Dictionary, The Century Co., New York, 1911 - access at OneLook Dictionary Search [Verb] to access (third-person singular simple present accesses, present participle accessing, simple past and past participle accessed) 1.(transitive) To gain or obtain access to. 2.(transitive) (computing) To have access to (data). 00 2009/02/25 10:52 2010/09/11 23:47 10441information[[English]] ipa :/ˌɪnfəˈmeɪʃən/ audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/38/En-us-information.ogg [Etymology] From Anglo-Norman informacioun, enformation et al., Middle French informacion, enformacion et al. (French: information), and their source, Latin informātiō (“formation, conception; education”), from the participle stem of informāre (“to inform”). [Noun] information (usually uncountable; plural informations) 1.Things that are or can be known about a given topic; communicable knowledge of something. [from 14th c.] I need some more information about this issue. 2.The act of informing or imparting knowledge; notification. [from 14th c.] For your information, I did this because I wanted to. 3.(law) A statement of criminal activity brought before a judge or magistrate; in the UK, used to inform a magistrate of an offence and request a warrant; in the US, an accusation brought before a judge without a grand jury indictment. [from 15th c.] 4.(obsolete) The act of informing against someone, passing on incriminating knowledge; accusation. [14th-17th c.] 5.(now rare) The systematic imparting of knowledge; education, training. [from 14th c.] 6.(now rare) The creation of form; the imparting of a given quality or characteristic; forming, animation. [from 17th c.] 7.(Christianity) Divine inspiration. [from 15th c.] 8.(information theory) Any unambiguous abstract data, the smallest possible unit being the bit. [from 20th c.] 9.A service provided by telephone which provides listed telephone numbers of a subscriber. [from 20th c.] 10.As contrasted with data, knowledge which is gathered as a result of processing data. [from 20th c.] And as you can see in this slide, we then take the raw data and convert it into information. [[French]] ipa :/ɛ̃.fɔʁ.ma.sjɔ̃/ audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a5/Fr-information.ogg [Noun] information f. (plural informations) 1.information 2.news, a piece of information Tous les jours, il regarde la télé le midi pour suivre les informations. Cette information nous est parvenue hier soir. [Synonyms] - (information): renseignement - (a piece of information): nouvelle [[Swedish]] [Noun] information c. 1.information 00 2009/02/04 14:07 2010/09/11 23:48 10448agile[[English]] ipa :/ˈæʤ.aɪl/ audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/82/En-us-agile.ogg [Adjective] agile (comparative agiler or more agile, superlative agilest or most agile) 1.Having the faculty of quick motion in the limbs; apt or ready to move; nimble; active; as, an agile boy; an agile tongue. [Etymology] From French agile, from Latin agilis (“agile, nimble”), from agō (“do, act; move”). See agent. [Synonyms] - active; alert; nimble; brisk; lively; quick. [[French]] audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/13/Fr-agile.ogg [Adjective] agile (epicene, plural agiles) 1.nimble, agile (quick and light in movement or action) [Anagrams] - aigle - gelai [Etymology] From Latin agilis (“swift”) [[Italian]] [Adjective] agile m. and f. (m and f plural agili) 1.agile, nimble [Anagrams] - gelai - legai [Etymology] From Latin agilis (“agile, nimble”), from agō (“do, act; move”). [[Latin]] [Adjective] agile 1.nominative neuter singular of agilis 2.accusative neuter singular of agilis 3.vocative neuter singular of agilis 01 2009/10/23 10:19 2010/09/11 23:59 tnishi 10449agony[[English]] ipa :/ˈæɡəniː/ audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/09/En-us-agony.ogg [Etymology] From Ancient Greek ἀγωνία (agonia, “emulation, competition, struggle”), from ἀγών (agon, “contest”). [Noun] agony (plural agonies) 1.Violent contest or striving. The world is convulsed by the agonies of great nations. —Thomas Babington Macaulay. 2.Pain so extreme as to cause writhing or contortions of the body, similar to those made in the athletic contests in Greece; and hence, extreme pain of mind or body; anguish; paroxysm of grief; specifically, the sufferings of Christ in the garden of Gethsemane. Being in an agony he prayed more earnestly. —Luke xxii. 44. 3.Paroxysm of joy; keen emotion. With cries and agonies of wild delight. —Alexander Pope. 4.The last struggle of life; death struggle. [Synonyms] - anguish; torment; throe; distress; pang; suffering. - See also Wikisaurus:agony 00 2009/04/03 16:23 2010/09/12 00:00 tnishi 10450convulse[[English]] [Etymology] From Latin convulsus, past participle of convellere (“to pluck up, dislocate, convulse”) < com- (“together”) + vellere (“to pluck, pull”) [Verb] to convulse (third-person singular simple present convulses, present participle convulsing, simple past and past participle convulsed) 1.(transitive) To violently shake or agitate. 2.(transitive) To create great laughter. [[Italian]] [Adjective] convulse f. 1.Feminine plural form of convulso 00 2010/09/12 00:01 10451convolute[[English]] ipa :/ˌkɒnvəˈluːt/ audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/27/En-us-convolute.ogg [Etymology] From Latin convolūtum, past participle of convolvere, "to roll together". [Verb] to convolute (third-person singular simple present convolutes, present participle convoluting, simple past and past participle convoluted) 1.(transitive) To make unnecessarily complex. 2.(transitive) To fold or coil into numerous overlapping layers. 00 2009/04/09 18:46 2010/09/12 00:03 tnishi 10453ambiguous[[English]] audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/8/86/En-us-ambiguous.ogg [Adjective] ambiguous (comparative more ambiguous, superlative most ambiguous) 1.Open to multiple interpretations. The politician was criticized for his ambiguous statements and lack of precision. 2.Vague and unclear. He gave an ambiguous answer. 3.Of persons: hesitant; uncertain; not taking sides. Thomas Salusbury (1662): And forasmuch as in this same question I am ambiguous, and Simplicius is resolute.... [Antonyms] - unambiguous - specifically defined - precise [Etymology] From Latin ambiguus (“moving from side to side, of doubtful nature”) < ambigere (“to go about, wander, doubt”) < ambi- (“around”) + agere (“to drive, move”). [References] - Oxford English Dictionary, Second Edition, 1989 [Synonyms] - equivocal 01 2010/09/11 23:45 2010/09/12 00:07 10455ardent[[English]] audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/31/En-us-ardent.ogg [Adjective] ardent (comparative more ardent, superlative most ardent) 1.Full of ardor; fervent, passionate. 2.Burning; glowing; shining. [Anagrams] - daren't - endart - ranted - red ant [Etymology] First attested circa 14th century, Middle English ardaunt, from Old French ardant, from Latin ardentem, nominative of ardens, present participle of ardeō (“to burn”). [[Latin]] [Verb] ārdent 1.third-person plural present active indicative of ārdeō. 01 2010/09/12 00:07 2010/09/12 00:12 10457auspicious[[English]] ipa :/ɔˈspɪʃəs/ audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/e2/En-us-auspicious.ogg [Adjective] auspicious (comparative more auspicious, superlative most auspicious) 1.Of good omen; indicating future success. 2.Conducive to success. This is an auspicious day. 3.Marked by success; prosperous. [Synonyms] - (conducive to success): favourable, favorable; promising; propitious; fortunate, lucky - (marked by success): lucky, fortunate 01 2010/09/12 00:12 2010/09/12 00:12 10459austere[[English]] ipa :/ɒstɪə(ɹ)/ audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/7c/En-us-austere.ogg [Adjective] austere (comparative austerer or more austere, superlative austerest or most austere) 1.Grim or severe in manner or appearance The headmistress was an austere old woman. 2.Lacking trivial decoration; not extravagant or gaudy The interior of the church was as austere as the parishioners were dour. [Antonyms] - (not lacking trivial decoration): overwrought, flamboyant; extravagant; gaudy, flashy [Etymology] From Old French, from Latin austērus (“dry, harsh, sour, tart”), from Ancient Greek αὐστηρός (austēros, “bitter, harsh”), having the specific meaning "making the tongue dry" (originally used of fruits, wines), related to αὔω (auō, “to singe”), αὖος (auos, “dry”). [Synonyms] - (grim or severe): stern, strict; forbidding - (lacking trivial decoration): simple, plain; unadorned, unembellished [[Italian]] [Adjective] austere pl. 1.Feminine form of austero. 01 2010/09/12 00:13 2010/09/12 00:13 10461brisk[[English]] ipa :/bɹɪsk/[Adjective] brisk (comparative brisker or more brisk, superlative briskest or most brisk) 1.Full of liveliness and activity; characterized by quickness of motion or action; lively; spirited; quick. We took a brisk walk yesterday. 2.Full of spirit of life; effervescing, as liquors; sparkling; as, brisk cider. 3.Stimulating or invigorating. This morning was a brisk fall day. It wasn't cold enough for frost but you wanted to keep moving. [Anagrams] - birks [[Albanian]] [Noun] brisk 1.razor 01 2010/08/25 17:26 2010/09/12 00:14 10465affected[[English]] audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/0e/En-us-affected.ogg [Adjective] affected (comparative more affected, superlative most affected) 1.influenced or changed by something The affected compass was impossible to use, so we got lost. 2.simulated in order to impress He spoke with an affected English accent. [Noun] affected (plural affecteds) 1.Someone affected, as by a disease. [Verb] affected 1.Simple past tense and past participle of affect. The thunderstorm affected the compass, and we got lost. 01 2010/09/11 23:49 2010/09/12 00:15 10467alarming[[English]] [Adjective] alarming (comparative more alarming, superlative most alarming) 1.causing apprehension, fear or alarm; frightening [Anagrams] - marginal [Verb] alarming 1.Present participle of alarm. 01 2010/09/11 23:38 2010/09/12 00:16 10471sta[[Dutch]] [Anagrams] - tas [Verb] sta 1.first-person singular present indicative of staan. 2.singular present subjunctive of staan. 3.imperative of staan. [[Italian]] [Pronoun] 'sta (demonstrative) 1.(dialect form of questa) this [See also] - sta' - stai - stanno - state - ste - sti - stiamo - sto [Verb] sta 1.third-person singular present tense of stare 2.second-person singular imperative of stare [[Latin]] [Verb] stā 1.second-person singular present active imperative of stō. 1."stand thou" 2."stay thou, remain thou" [[Romanian]] [Etymology] From Latin stāre, present active infinitive of stō. [Synonyms] - (3) şedea - (4) rămâne - (5) trăi, locui [Verb] a sta (third-person singular present stă, past participle stat) 1st conj. 1.to stay Stai acolo. Stay there. 2.to stand 3.to sit Vreau să stau jos. I want to sit down. 4.to remain 5.to live (somewhere), inhabit, reside Ea stă în Bucureşti. She lives/stays in Bucharest. [[Sicilian]] ipa :[ʃta][Adjective] sta f. (m. stu, plural sti) 1.Contraction of chista; this 2.1874 Lionardo Vigo, Raccolta amplissima di canti popolari siciliani, page 443: [...] / E tu, curreri, ca vai d'ogni parti, / Te' cca sta littra, a la mè 'manti porti, / Cci dici ca non pozzu stari sparti, / La spartenza è cchiù brutta di la morti. [...] / And you, courier, who goes to and fro, / Take this letter, to my lover bring it, / Tell her that I can [no longer] remain separated, / Separation is worse than death. [See also] - chista [[Slovene]] [Verb] sta 1.second-person dual present tense form of biti. 2.third-person dual present tense form of biti. 00 2009/03/16 10:16 2010/09/12 12:14 10472windows[[English]] audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/62/En-us-windows.ogg [Noun] windows 1.Plural form of window. 00 2009/06/14 17:51 2010/09/12 12:18 10474accessible[[English]] ipa :/əkˈsɛsəbˑl/[Adjective] accessible (comparative more accessible, superlative most accessible) 1.Easy of access or approach; approachable. an accessible town or mountain 2.Of a person, easy to approach; approachable 3.(followed by to) Open to the influence of. 4.Minds accessible to reason. - Thomas Babington Macaulay 5.Obtainable; to be got at. 6.The best information ... at present accessible. - Thomas Babington Macaulay 7.Easily understood. [Antonyms] - inaccessible [Etymology] From French, from Late Latin accessibilis, from accessus, perfect passive participle of accēdō (“approach”) [[French]] ipa :/ak.sɛ.sibl/ audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/e8/Fr-accessible.ogg [Adjective] accessible (epicene, plural accessibles) 1.(of a place, information, etc.) accessible, attainable, obtainable, available. 2.(of a price) affordable 3.(of a person) approachable [Antonyms] - inaccessible [Etymology] From Late Latin accessibilis (“accessible”), from accessus, perfect passive participle of accēdō (“approach”). 00 2010/09/11 23:47 2010/09/12 12:44 10475either[[English]] ipa :/ˈiːð.ə(ɹ)/ audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/cc/En-us-either.ogg [Adverb] either (not comparable) 1.(conjunctive, after a negative) as well I don't like him and I don't like her either. [Anagrams] - theire [Conjunction] either 1.Introduces the first of two options, the second of which is introduced by "or". Either you eat your dinner or you go to your room. [Determiner] either 1.one or the other (of two) I don't mind whether your mother or father attends - you can bring either parent. 2.2009, A contract: ...be binding upon either party and its respective legal successors 3.2009, A contract: in no event shall either party be precluded from discussing 4.each of two The room has a door at either end. 5.not both of; either not one or not the other of 6.2006 December 5, Jackie Mason, quoted in “Mason drops lawsuit vs. Jews for Jesus”, USA Today: You can't be a table and a chair. You're either a Jew or a gentile. [Etymology] Old English ǣġhwæþer, from West Germanic, ultimately corresponding to ay + whether [Pronoun] either 1.(obsolete) Both, each of two (people or things). 2.1485, Sir Thomas Malory, Le Morte Darthur, Book VII: Than ayther departed to theire tentis and made hem redy to horsebacke as they thought beste. 3.1590, Edmund Spenser, The Faerie Queene, III.i: And either vowd with all their power and wit, / To let not others honour be defaste [...]. 4.One or other of two people or things. [See also] - neither - nor - or [Synonyms] - (one or the other): - (each of two): both, each - (at most one of two): - neither - too [Usage notes] - When there are more than two alternatives, "any" is used instead. 00 2009/02/25 10:54 2010/09/12 13:07 10477abundant[[English]] audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/fa/En-us-abundant.ogg [Adjective] abundant (comparative more abundant, superlative most abundant) 1.Fully sufficient; found in copious supply; in great quantity. 2.[W]ith their magical words they [poets] bring forth to our eyesight the abundant images and beauties of creation. — Leigh Hunt, On the Realities of Imagination 3.Richly supplied — followed by in, rarely by with. 4.Abundant in goodness and truth. — Exodus, 34:6 [Antonyms] - rare - scarce [Etymology] Old English (h)abundant, aboundant, French abondant, from Latin abudans, present participle of abundare. See abound [Synonyms] - ample (see here for explanation of distinctions) - bountiful - copious - exuberant - liberal - overflowing - plenteous - plentiful - profuse - rich - teeming - See also Wikisaurus:abundant [[Catalan]] [Adjective] abundant m and f (plural abundants) 1.abundant; plentiful [Etymology] Latin abudans [[Latin]] [Verb] abundant 1.third-person plural present active indicative of abundō. 00 2010/09/13 08:23 10479pronunciation[[English]] ipa :/pɹəˌnʌnsiˈeɪʃən/ audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/0b/En-us-pronunciation.ogg [Etymology] From Latin pronuntiatio, noun of action from perfect passive participle pronuntiatus, from verb pronuntiare (“proclaim”), from pro- for + nuntiare (“announce”). [Noun] pronunciation (countable and uncountable; plural pronunciations) 1.(countable) The standard way in which a word is made to sound when spoken. What is the pronunciation of "hiccough"? 2.(uncountable) The way in which the words of a language are made to sound when speaking. His Italian pronunciation is terrible. [See also] - SAMPA - phoneme - orthoepy [[Interlingua]] [Noun] pronunciation 1.pronunciation 2.pronunciation proclamation, manifest [Synonyms] - (proclamation): pronunciamento 00 2010/09/13 08:23 10481absurd[[English]] ipa :/æbˈzɝd/ audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/d7/En-us-absurd.ogg [Adjective] absurd (comparative absurder or more absurd, superlative absurdest or most absurd) 1.Contrary to reason or propriety; obviously and flatly opposed to manifest truth; inconsistent with the plain dictates of common sense; logically contradictory; nonsensical; ridiculous. 2.This proffer is absurd and reasonless. - Shakespeare, Henry VI, Part I, V-iv 3.This phrase absurd to call a villain great. - Alexander Pope [Etymology] Latin absurdus (“discordant, unreasonable”), from ab + surdus (“deaf”). Probably derived from the root svar (“to sound”); not connected with surd: compare French absurde. [Noun] absurd (plural absurds)Wikipedia has an article on:AbsurdismWikipedia 1.(obsolete) An absurdity. — Alexander Pope 2.(with the) That which is absurd. 3.(philosophy) The opposition between the human search for meaning in life and the inability to find any. [References] - absurd in Webster’s Revised Unabridged Dictionary, G. & C. Merriam, 1913 - absurd in The Century Dictionary, The Century Co., New York, 1911 [Synonyms] - foolish, irrational, ridiculous, preposterous, inconsistent, incongruous, ludicrous - See also Wikisaurus:absurd [[Danish]] ipa :/absurd/[Adjective] absurd (neuter absurd, definite and plural absurde) 1.absurd 2.(adverbial) absurdly [Etymology] From Latin absurdus (“discordant, unreasonable”). [[German]] [Adjective] absurd (comparative absurder, superlative am absurdesten) 1.absurd [[Polish]] audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/b4/Pl-absurd.ogg [Noun] absurd m. 1.nonsense Jego propozycje to jeden wielki absurd. His suggestions are one big nonsense. [[Swedish]] [Adjective] absurd 1.absurd 00 2010/09/13 10:28 10482english[[English]] audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/1/13/En-us-english.ogg [Alternative spellings] - English [Anagrams] - shingle [Noun] english (uncountable) 1.(US) Spinning or rotary motion given to a ball around the vertical axis, as in billiards or bowling. You can't hit it directly, but maybe if you give it some english. [Synonyms] - (spinning motion): side, spin, sidespin 00 2009/02/16 23:21 2010/09/13 10:31 tnishi 10483therefore[[English]] ipa :/ˈðɛəfɔː/ audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/5/52/En-us-therefore.ogg [Adverb] therefore (not comparable) 1.(conjunctive) For that or this purpose, referring to something previously stated. 2.I have married a wife, and therefore I can not come. — Luke, 14:20 3.Behold, we have forsaken all, and followed thee; what shall we have therefore? — Matthew, 19:27 4.(conjunctive) Consequently, by or in consequence of that or this cause; referring to something previously stated. 5.He blushes; therefore he is guilty. — Spectator [Etymology] From Old English pronominal adverb therfore; see there, fore, and for [See also] Category:English pronominal adverbs [Synonyms] - (for that purpose): so, thus, to that end, to this end - (consequently): hence, then, thus, accordingly, as a result, ∴ (math) 00 2010/04/10 10:18 2010/09/13 10:32 10484馬鹿[[Japanese]] [Alternative forms] - 莫迦 - バカ [Etymology] Transcription of Sanskrit moha. The kanji are ateji. [Noun] 馬鹿 (hiragana ばか, romaji baka) 1.unintelligent and foolish; also, such a person 2.useless, futile 3.a type of bivalvia: Mactra chinensis; see bakagai 4.a tool used for counting coins [See also] - 阿呆 (ahō) 00 2010/09/13 10:34 10485stupid[[English]] ipa :/ˈst(j)uːpɪd/ audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/4/48/En-us-stupid.ogg [Adjective] stupid (comparative stupider or more stupid, superlative stupidest or most stupid) 1.Lacking in intelligence or exhibiting the quality of having been done by someone lacking in intelligence. Many people think that dummies are stupid and not very clever. 2.To the point of stupor. Neurobiology bores me stupid. 3.(archaic) Characterized by or in a state of stupor; paralysed. 4.1702 Alexander Pope, Sappho 128: No sigh to rise, no tear had pow'r to flow, Fix'd in a stupid lethargy of woe. 5.(archaic) Lacking sensation; inanimate; destitute of consciousness; insensate. 6.1744 George Berkeley, Siris §190: Were it not for [fire], the whole wou'd be one great stupid inanimate mass. 7.(slang) Amazing. That dunk was stupid! His head was above the rim! 8.Dangerous, obstructive. I fell over the stupid wire. [Adverb] stupid (comparative more stupid, superlative most stupid) 1.(slang, dated) Extremely. My gear is stupid fly. [Etymology] From Middle French stupide < Latin stupidus (“struck senseless, amazed”) < stupere (“be amazed or confounded, be struck senseless”) [Noun] stupid (plural stupids) 1.A stupid person; a fool. 2.1922, Elizabeth G. Young, Homestead ranch "What a stupid I am!" Harry exclaimed, as she watched the man ride away in the distance. 3.1996, Anita Rau Badamim, Tamarind Mem At least those stupids got their money's worth out of this country before they burnt their lungs out. [Synonyms] - dumb - See also Wikisaurus:stupid [[Danish]] ipa :/stupiːd/[Adjective] stupid (neuter stupidt, definite and plural stupide) 1.oafish 2.stupid (lacking in intelligence) [Etymology] From Latin stupidus (“senseless”). [[Romanian]] ipa :[stuˈpid][Adjective] stupid 4 nom/acc forms 1.stupid [Adverb] stupid 1.stupidly [Etymology] French stupide, Latin stupidus [Synonyms] - prost, tâmpit, idiot 00 2010/09/13 10:36 10486stupider[[English]] [Adjective] stupider 1.Comparative form of stupid: more stupid. 2.1928 Aldous Huxley, Point Counter Point, page 102: You people aren't stupider than anyone else. Not naturally stupider. 3.1985 Walker Percy; Lewis A. Lawson, Victor A. Kramer, Conversations with Walker Percy, page 165: Freud's disciples have been even more stupid about "creative writing". At least Freud had the good sense to know when to shut up, as he did in Dostoevski's case. But stupider still is the more recent Hemingway machismo number. 4.2002 Elizabeth George, A Traitor to Memory, page 827: "You'd be stupider / — "More stupid," she said. / — stupider," he repeated, "to find yourself dis'tangling your way out of a charge of obstruction in a police enquiry. [Anagrams] - disputer - purdiest 00 2010/09/13 10:36 10488athletes[[English]] [Anagrams] - stealeth [Noun] athletes 1.Plural form of athlete. 00 2010/09/14 07:36 10491and[[English]] ipa :/ænd/ audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/2/26/En-us-and.ogg [Anagrams] - ADN, - dan, Dan, Dan., DAN - DNA - nad, NAD - NDA [Conjunction] and 1.Used to connect two homogeneous (similar) words or phrases. Boys and girls come out to play. 2.Used at the end of a list to indicate the last item. bread, butter and cheese 3.Used to join sentences or sentence fragments in chronological order. I mended the chair and it broke again. 4.Used to indicate causation. Ask me the definition of “and” again and I’ll scream. 5.(informal) To; used to connect two finite verbs. Try and do better. Be sure and read it twice. Call and see whether John is coming over. 6.Used to ask for elaboration. A: I don't have a key. B: And... A: And I need one to get in. 7.(mathematics) Used to indicate addition. Five and six are eleven. 8.(now US dialect) If. 9.1485, Sir Thomas Malory, Le Morte Darthur, Book VII: "Where ys Sir Launcelot?" seyde King Arthure. "And he were here, he wolde nat grucche to do batayle for you." 10.1526, William Tyndale, trans. Bible, Matthew XIV: Peter answered, and sayde: master, and thou be he, bidde me come unto the on the water. [Etymology] Old English and, ond, from Proto-Germanic *unda, probably from Proto-Indo-European *h₂énti (“facing opposite, near, in front of, before”). Cognate with West Frisian en, Dutch en, German und, Danish end (“but”). [Synonyms] - (used to connect two similar words or phrases): as well as, together with, in addition to [[Danish]] ipa :/and/[Etymology] From Old Norse ǫnd, from Proto-Indo-European *h₂enh₁-ti- (“duck”). [Noun] and c. (singular definite anden, plural indefinite ænder) 1.duck 2.canard (false or misleading report or story) [[Estonian]] [Etymology] From Proto-Finno-Ugric *amta. Cognates include Finnish antaa and Hungarian ad. [Noun] and 1.gift [[Norwegian]] audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/e3/No-and.ogg [Noun] and m. and f. (definite singular anda/anden; indefinite plural ender; definite plural endene) 1.duck [[Old English]] ipa :/ɑnd/[Adverb] and 1.even; also [Conjunction] and 1.and [Etymology] Proto-Germanic *unda, probably from Proto-Indo-European *h₂énti (“facing opposite, near, in front of, before”). [[Old Frisian]] [Conjunction] and 1.and [[Swedish]] audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/72/Sv-and.ogg [Etymology] From Old Norse ǫnd, from Old High German anat, from Latin anas. [Noun] Declension of andand c. 1.a wild duck 00 2009/02/25 22:11 2010/09/15 10:20 10492horizontal[[English]] ipa :/ˌhɒɹɪˈzɒntəl/ audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/b/b7/En-us-horizontal.ogg [Adjective] horizontal (comparative more horizontal, superlative most horizontal) 1.perpendicular to the vertical; parallel to the plane of the horizon; level, flat. 2.(archaic) Pertaining to the horizon. 3.1667: As when the Sun new ris'n / Looks through the Horizontal misty Air — John Milton, Paradise Lost, Book 1, ll. 594-5 [Antonyms] - vertical [Noun] horizontal (plural horizontals) 1.A horizontal component of a structure. [[French]] ipa :/ɔ.ʁi.zɔ̃.tal/ audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/9/92/Fr-horizontal.ogg [Adjective] horizontal m. (f. horizontale, m. plural horizontaux, f. plural horizontales) 1.Horizontal; perpendicular to the vertical [[Galician]] [Adjective] horizontal m. and f. (plural horizontais) 1.horizontal [[German]] audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/0d/De-horizontal.ogg [Adjective] horizontal (not comparable) 1.horizontal [Antonyms] - vertikal, senkrecht [Synonyms] - waagrecht, waagerecht [[Spanish]] [Adjective] horizontal m. and f. (plural horizontales) 1.horizontal 00 2010/09/15 10:20 10493deceive[[English]] ipa :/dɪˈsiːv/[Etymology] < Middle English deceyven < From Old French deceivre (Modern French décevoir) < Latin decipere (“to deceive, beguile, entrap”) < de- (“from”) + capere (“to seize”); see captive. Compare conceive, perceive, receive. [Synonyms] - See also Wikisaurus:deceive [Verb] to deceive (third-person singular simple present deceives, present participle deceiving, simple past and past participle deceived) 1.To trick or mislead. 00 2009/07/14 09:58 2010/09/15 10:20 tnishi 10494flunk[[English]] [Etymology] Alteration of funk, or perhaps a blend of flinch and funk. [See also] - flunk out [Verb] to flunk (third-person singular simple present flunks, present participle flunking, simple past and past participle flunked) 1.(US) (transitive or intransitive) Of a student, to fail a class; to not pass. He flunked math, again. 2.(US) (transitive) Of a teacher, to deny a student a passing grade. Unsatisfied with Fred's progress, the teacher flunked him. 01 2010/09/15 10:20 10495dynamic[[English]] ipa :/daɪˈnæmɪk/ audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/37/En-us-dynamic.ogg [Adjective] dynamic (comparative more dynamic, superlative most dynamic) 1.Changeable; active; in motion usually as the result of an external force. The environment is dynamic, changing with the years and the seasons. He was a dynamic and engaging speaker. 2.Powerful 3.Able to change and to adapt 4.(music) Having to do with the volume of sound. The dynamic marking in bar 40 is forte. 5.(computing) happening at runtime instead of at compile time [Antonyms] - static [Etymology] From French dynamique < Ancient Greek δυναμικός (dunamikos) "powerful" < δύναμις (dunamis) "power" [Noun] dynamic (plural dynamics) 1.A characteristic or manner of an interaction; a behavior. Watch the dynamic between the husband and wife when they disagree. The study of fluid dynamics quantifies turbulent and laminar flows. 2.(music) The varying loudness or volume of a song or the markings that indicate the loudness. If you pay attention to the dynamics as you play, it's a very moving piece. 3.(music) A symbol in a musical score that indicates the desired level of volume. [Synonyms] - (changeable, active): active, fluid, moving - (powerful): energetic, powerful - (a characteristic or manner of an interaction; a behavior): apparatus, course of action, design, effect, function, functioning, implementation, interchange, interplay, mechanism, method, modus operandi, motif, nature, operation, pattern, process, regimen, workings 00 2010/09/15 11:24 10496advanced[[English]] [Adjective] advanced (comparative more advanced, superlative most advanced) 1.at or close to the state of the art 2.enhanced; 3.something that has moved forward in time or space (e.g. advanced ignition timing) 4.in a late stage of development; greatly developed beyond an initial stage [Synonyms] - progressive, professional, sophisticated [Verb] advanced 1.Simple past tense and past participle of advance. 00 2010/06/02 00:13 2010/09/16 11:22 10497deceptive[[English]] ipa :/dɪ.ˈsɛp.tɪv/[Adjective] deceptive (comparative more deceptive, superlative most deceptive) 1.misleading, likely or attempting to deceive 01 2010/09/13 08:23 2010/09/16 18:47 10498warrant[[English]] ipa :/ˈwɒɹənt/ audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/cf/En-us-warrant.ogg [Etymology 1] From Old Northern French warant, warand ( = Old French guarant > modern garant), present participle of a Romance verb from Frankish *warjan. [Etymology 2] From Old Northern French warantir, warandir ( = Old French guarantir > modern garantir), a Romance formation from the noun, Etymology 1, above. [[Italian]] [Etymology] English [Noun] warrant m. inv. 1.warrant (document or certificate) 00 2010/09/16 18:47 10499work[[English]] ipa :/wɜːk/ audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/f/ff/En-uk-work.ogg [Etymology 1] Old English weorc, worc; akin to Old Frisian werk, wirk, Old Saxon, Dutch werk, German Werk, Old High German werc, werah, Icelandic & Swedish verk, Danish værk, Gothic gawaúrki, Ancient Greek ἔργον (“work”), Avestan verez (to work), Armenian գործ (gorç, “work”). Cognates include: bulwark, energy, erg, georgic, liturgy, metallurgy, organ, surgeon, wright. [Etymology 2] Old English wyrċan, cognate with Old Frisian werka, wirka, Old Saxon wirkian (Dutch werken), Old High German wurken (German wirken), Old Norse yrkja (Swedish yrka), Gothic 𐍅̰̺̰̿͂̾̽. 00 2009/03/11 14:06 2010/09/16 18:47 tnishi 10500你[[Translingual]] [Etymology] Radical 亻 (人) + 尔 [Han character] 你 (radical 9 人+5, 7 strokes, cangjie input 人弓火 (ONF), four-corner 27292, composition ⿰亻尔) 1.second person pronoun: you [[Cantonese]] [Hanzi] 你 (jyutping nei5, Yale néih (nei5)) [[Japanese]] [Kanji] 你 [[Korean]] [Hanja] 你 (hangeul 니, revised ni, McCune-Reischauer ni) [[Mandarin]] audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/73/Zh-n%C7%90.ogg [Hanzi] 你 (pinyin nǐ (ni3), Wade-Giles ni3) [Pronoun] 你 (traditional and simplified, Pinyin nǐ) 1.you [[Min Nan]] [Pronoun] 你 (traditional and simplified, POJ lí) 00 2010/09/17 10:26 10501botany[[English]] [Etymology] First attested in 1696: a back-formation from botanic. [Noun] botany (countable and uncountable; plural botanies) 1.(uncountable) The scientific study of plants, a branch of biology. Typically those disciplines that involve the whole plant. 2.The plant life, or the properties and life phenomena exhibited by a plant, plant type, or plant group. 3.(countable) A botanical treatise or study, especially of a particular system of botany or that of a particular place. 00 2010/09/17 11:01 10502ascetic[[English]] ipa :/əˈsɛtɪk/[Adjective] ascetic (comparative more ascetic, superlative most ascetic) 1.Of or relating to ascetics; characterized by rigorous self-denial or self-discipline; austere; abstinent; involving a withholding of physical pleasure. [Anagrams] - accites [Etymology] From Ancient Greek ἀσκητικός (askētikos), from ἀσκητής (askētēs, “monk, hermit”), from ἀσκέω (askeō, “I exercise”). [Noun] ascetic (plural ascetics) 1.One who is devoted to the practice of self-denial, either through seclusion or stringent abstinence. [Related terms] - ascetical - asceticism 00 2010/09/17 15:32 10503aberrant[[English]] ipa :/əˈbɛrənt/[Adjective] aberrant (comparative more aberrant, superlative most aberrant) 1.Differing from the norm, from the expected type; abnormal, anomalous. 2.Deviating from morality; straying from the right way. 3.(biology) Deviating from the ordinary or natural type; exceptional; abnormal. 4.Charles Darwin, The more aberrant any form is, the greater must have been the number of connecting forms which, on my theory, have been exterminated. [Etymology] Coined between 1820 and 1830 from Latin aberrāns, present active participle of aberrō (“go astray; err”).[1] See aberr. [Noun] aberrant (plural aberrants) 1.A person or object that is aberrant. [Shorthand] - Gregg (Version: Centennial,Series 90,DJS,Simplified): a - b - r - a - nt (Version: Anniversary): a - b - e - r - a - nt (Version: Pre_Anniversary): a - b - e - r - nt [[Catalan]] [Adjective] aberrant m and f (plural aberrants) 1.aberrant 2.(pathology) aberrant (indicating an organ or other tissue which is not in its expected location) [Etymology] From Latin aberrant-, stem of aberrāns, present active participle of aberrō (“go astray; err”). [[French]] audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a5/Fr-aberrant.ogg [Adjective] aberrant m. (f. aberrante, m. plural aberrants, f. plural aberrantes) 1.Aberrant, abnormal or anomalous. 2.(sciences) Which is impossible according to the norms or rules. [References] 1.^ Aberrant at Dictionary.com [[Latin]] [Verb] aberrant 1.third-person plural present active indicative of aberrō. 00 2010/09/17 15:32 10505obeisance[[English]] ipa :/oˈbeɪsəns/ audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/e/e2/En-us-obeisance.ogg [Etymology] Middle English obeisaunce (“obedience, obeisance”), from Old French obeïssance, derived from obeïssant (“obedient”), participle of obeïr (“to obey”), from Latin oboedire, obedire; ob- (“to, for”) + audire (“to hear”). [Noun] obeisance (plural obeisances) 1.Demonstration of an obedient attitude, especially by a bow 2.1845, Edgar Allan Poe, "The Raven": Open here I flung the shutter, when, with many a flirt and flutter, / In there stepped a stately raven of the saintly days of yore; / Not the least obeisance made he; not a minute stopped or stayed he; / But, with mien of lord or lady, perched above my chamber door — / Perched upon a bust of Pallas just above my chamber door — / Perched, and sat, and nothing more. 3.An obedient attitude. 01 2010/09/17 15:33 2010/09/17 15:33 10506parry[[English]] ipa :/ˈpɜɹi/[Etymology] Probably representing French parez, imperative of parer ‘prepare’. [Noun] parry (plural parries) 1.A defensive or deflective action; an act of parrying. 2.(fencing) A simple defensive action designed to deflect an attack, performed with the forte of the blade. [Verb] to parry (third-person singular simple present parries, present participle parrying, simple past and past participle parried) 1.To avoid, deflect, or ward off (an attack). 00 2010/09/17 15:33 10508subjugate[[English]] [Etymology] < Latin subjugatus, past participle of subjugare (“to bring under the yoke, subugate”) < sub (“under”) + jugum (“yoke”); see yoke. [Verb] to subjugate (third-person singular simple present subjugates, present participle subjugating, simple past and past participle subjugated) 1.To forcibly impose obedience or servitude. 01 2010/09/17 15:33 2010/09/17 15:33 10509complaisance[[English]] [Noun] complaisance (uncountable) 1.The quality of being complaisant, amiable or agreeable 00 2010/09/17 15:34 10510hyperbole[[English]] ipa :/haɪˈpɜːbəli/ audio:http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/6/6d/En-us-hyperbole.ogg [Antonyms] - meiosis - understatement [Etymology] From Latin hyperbole < Ancient Greek ὑπερβολή (huperbolē, “excess, exaggeration”) < ὑπέρ (huper, “above”) + βάλλω (ballō, “I throw”). [Noun] hyperbole (plural hyperboles) 1.(uncountable) Extreme exaggeration or overstatement; especially as a literary or rhetorical device. 2.(uncountable) Deliberate exaggeration. 3.(countable) An instance or example of this technique. 4.(countable, obsolete) A hyperbola. [Synonyms] - overstatement - exaggeration [[French]] ipa :/i.pɛʁ.bɔl/[Etymology] From Latin hyperbole < Ancient Greek ὑπερβολή (huperbolē, “excess, exaggeration”) < ὑπέ (huper, “above”) + I throw (ballō). [Noun] hyperbole f. (plural hyperboles) 1.(rhetoric) hyperbole 2.(geometry) hyperbola [[Latin]] ipa :/hʏˈpɛːrbɔleː/[Etymology] From Ancient Greek ὑπερβολή (huperbolē, “excess, exaggeration”) < ὑπέ (huper, “above”) + I throw (ballō). [Noun] hyperbolē (genitive hyperbolēs); f, first declension 1.exaggeration; hyperbole 2.ablative singular of hyperbolē 3.vocative singular of hyperbolē 00 2009/09/29 09:45 2010/09/17 15:36 tnishi
THREE HUNDRED AND SIXTY DEGREES AROUND There may be just a little difference between two people at the same place from the same time , sharing the same history. Astrology may outline a lot of conjuct aspects, but if there was something to define each degree of differences, then the 180 opposite person at the Axis of your chart could share the most fulfilling to each other's views than any conjunction; possibile? Who knows; the thing that differentiates between opposite attraction and simply settling, backsliding , or conforming to demands; rules of whom, or for dedication for whom; in all, while knowing Christ has set the individual free?
World history, and the human developements of language, writing, tools trade and crafts, migrations, natural and super natural, imagination and understandings; relate within and beyond those borders. From a variety of websiteS and search engine results and Before a KEYWORD search for some answers,, LOOK AT A FEW OF THE CLASSES BY TOPIC AND THEMES DISCUSSED BY tHE Late DR GLENN KIMBALL from a couple of almost 4 and 5 year old class NewsLetters and the last issue I had found from November 2010 (AT END POST IN ITS ENTIRETY) (other authors and resources are pasted in here after these Glenn Kimball notes, AND .. BEFORE THE 2010, November Newsletter)
If you dont already have one of these, this is one of the most critical books for your collection. It contains more of the words of Jesus by many times than the Bible.
Read a little excert of this 2007 Newsletter from The Late (short only his final Doctorate thesis before his death) "Dr" Glenn Kimball :Many of you are missing classes. Each one contains a lesson unique to itself. It will open the doors to your understanding in a way you have never heard before. I let the brightest minds of the world, which includes the foremost scientists, help you understand. Chase and I merely have connected the dots in an environment where speaking about faith and the miracles is like discussing politics with strangers. If you want to fill in the gaps in your collections, call me on the phone and I will help you personally. 1-888-904-9394.
This month the classes are on the history of the Middle East at the time of Jesus. It connects the dots between Jesus and the daughters of Cleopatra. This one will make the Bible come alive and explain the political environment of Jesus in a way you have never known. Another of the classes discusses the prophet Daniel, who had a vision of history. This one will rivet your attention and help you understand prophecy. The last class will be on the unheralded prophets of Glastonbury. We all know about Joseph of Arimathea if you have listened to me at all. However, there were others too.
Christianity; conforming over the ages to what modern day perpectives from within might differ from what appropriates to true potentials; i.e. concidering a fundamental tolerence and a potential of purposes, the place and time on Earth differs within groups and individual types of people. An Excert from a 2008, Kimball College / Ancient Manuscripts News Letter>>> Abraham is someone we can all connect to. However, I tell you the story of Abraham from the perspective of the people in India who owned the trade routes to the Far East at the time. It will sound to many of you like I am Hindu. The answer is that I am intimately connected to the beliefs of Hindu, though I am not, and never will be, Hindu. In the movie Gandhi he says that he is Christian, Hindu, Moslem and Jew all at the same time. When you listen to our class on Abraham you will understand how right he was. It cost him his life. Strangely the one who shot him was Hindu, like he was.
The important thing about the classes this month isn’t the label of religion. It is the links between the religions of the world. ... ..we have done the real story of Mohammed and the Holy Quran. This isn’t a fantasy cooked up by some “camel jockey” in the desert. The story of Mohammed is the story of a branch or our family whose leader wanted to fix the confusion over the life of Jesus. He found a way to contact the angel Gabriel and had two great experiences. I know thousands of people who have seen angels. I have seen many of them myself. I am not crazy. I am not holy. I am not a prophet.
One important differential in a cultural migration is the adaptation to the appropriate purposes of the Trueness and Faith among believers and non-believers; that is, towards the native people and local functional society or group, adaptations could and may tend to what works on the surface moment.
look at this NewsLetter from the Late Glenn Kimball : Isaac Newton/Alchemy/Prophecy
Last month we came out with the first part of Glenn Kimball's Autobiography. We have just released parts II and III (Glenn Kimball's Autobiography Part 2, Glenn Kimball's Autobiography Part 3). The third one was intended to be the last, but we may do one more sometime in the future. The third audio that just came out is titled Isaac Newton: Revelations. The first audio that came out about Isaac Newton gave the events of his life leading up to the story of the apple falling from the tree, sparking his thoughts about gravity. This one picks up where the first left off. In it we discuss some of the most important manuscripts that he wrote, including the Principia which changed the lives of everyone forever. It eventually led to the Industrial Revolution. We also discuss a major project that Newton worked on that almost no one knew about for over 200 years after his death. These manuscripts were compiled by Newton in secret because he knew the ramifications of letting others know about them. They show his obsession with decoding the secret messages in the Bible and using his mathematical expertise to come up with a date for the end of the world. Many people today don't know that our modern Chemistry came from what is known as Alchemy. Most people believe that Alchemists were just some crazy people that were trying to turn base metals into gold. Although that was partially true in the later years for some of the Alchemists, it is not THE TRUTH behind what was going on. In this audio we discuss this issue as well as showing that Alchemy played a major role in what Isaac Newton was trying to accomplish. He understood that there were forces that governed everything on earth and in the heavens. After figuring out the laws governing how large bodies (planets, stars, etc.) move and interact, he figured the same laws must be true for smaller bodies (people, molecules, atoms, etc.). During his lifetime the technology to see and study particles, such as atoms, did not exist, but this did not stop him from trying to figure out how they worked. His ultimate goal was to find an answer to everything. He theorized that t here existed a simple equation that could explain how everything in the universe worked. This has been an ongoing project for countless physicists up until our day and age. Even Albert Einstein was unable to figure it out in his lifetime. Because we have been doing the research for the Isaac Newton audio, and have found that he used alchemy to help formulate his ideas, we thought that it would be best to add a few new books to the website about the subject. For those of you who would like to know more about Alchemy, and how it helped influence our sciences and religions of today, you can find some fascinating information in these two books: 1- Alchemists, Founders of Modern Chemistry, When you order this book we will send you a free copy of our new 'Isaac Newton: Revelations' CD 2- Alchemy and Astrology, When you order this book we will send you a free copy of our 'Christianity and Astrology' CD. We also added to our website another book that you will love entitled: Ancient Christian Magic: Coptic Texts of Ritual Power. This is a thought-provoking collection of magical texts from ancient Egypt and shows the exotic rituals, esoteric healing practices, and incantatory and supernatural dimensions that flowered in early Christianity. These remarkable Christian magical texts include curses, spells of protection from "headless powers" and evil spirits, spells invoking thunderous powers, descriptions of fire baptism, and even recipes from a magical "cookbook." You might wonder why this was added along with the Alchemy books. Well, the reason is because Alchemy can be traced back to ancient Egypt (although not just Egypt). So, this book shows you other important teachings that were being developed alo ngside Alchemy. When you order this book we will send you a free copy of our 'Ancient Egyptian Philosophy' CD. There are many other audios that we have that would help your understanding on these subjects. You can check them out at LostTreasuresfromHistory.com. Thank you. Glenn and Chase Kimball
File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat - Quick View principles of the Mosaic Law and the original Moral Law known to Adam, but takes them ...... (Ex 16:27-30) This was before the Ten Commandments at Sinai. ..... In the KJV the only verses are Ps 105:9-10 and 1 Chron 16:17. ..... amplification and internalisation of his law on the Sermon on the Mount, he constantly ...
From Adam to Abraham there were only 3 people recorded to have displayed faith. ..... The Sermon on the Mount did not do away with the Law of Moses, rather it opened the ... In Exodus 19:5, which is before the Ten Commandments were given, ..... Miracles & Healings of Jesus - Chart · The Parables of Jesus - Chart...
Find EXACT phrase: AGE OF GRACE Found 12 documents, showing 1 - 12.
*Titus 2:11 Commentary Search chap/verse Search word: Retrieve verses, illustrations, etc INDEX PREVIOUS NEXT COLLECTIONS ... http://www.preceptaustin.org/titus_211-16.htm • Saturday, 11 June 2011, 4:11pm GMT • 423.9k
1 Peter Commentaries 3 Search chap/verse Search word: Retrieve verses, illustrations, etc COLLECTIONS Commentaries, Word Studies, ... ... While this is the age of grace in which He still bids the sinner to repent and accept His offer ... http://preceptaustin.org/1_peter_commentaries_3.htm • Sunday, 30 January 2011, 4:08pm GMT • 255.5k
Daniel 9 Commentary(1) Search chap/verse Search word: Retrieve verses, illustrations, etc DANIEL COMMENTARY Daniel 8 Commentary ... ... , they say. In the age of grace, there is no need for shame. Or so we are told. But that is just ... http://preceptaustin.org/daniel_9_commentary(1).htm • Saturday, 11 June 2011, 4:00pm GMT • 353.7k
Colossians 3:12-14 Commentary Search chap/verse Search word: Retrieve verses, illustrations, etc INDEX PREVIOUS NEXT COLLECTIONS ... ... in this glorious age of grace in which we live, if only we will ask Him in repentance and ... http://preceptaustin.org/colossians_312-25.htm • Wednesday, 23 March 2011, 10:42am GMT • 475.2k
Luke 13:22-30 Commentary Search chap/verse Search word: Retrieve verses, illustrations, etc INDEX TO LUKE COMMENTARIES PARALLEL ... ... the passage to the age of grace." (Gaebelein, F, Editor: Expositor's Bible Commentary 6-Volume New ... http://preceptaustin.org/luke_1322-30_commentary.htm • Wednesday, 9 March 2011, 1:24am GMT • 398.9k
1 Peter 3:8-12 Commentary Search chap/verse Search word: Retrieve verses, illustrations, etc INDEX PREVIOUS NEXT COLLECTIONS ... ... While this is the age of grace in which He still bids the sinner to repent and accept His offer ... http://preceptaustin.org/1_peter_38-12.htm • Saturday, 11 June 2011, 3:33pm GMT • 364.5k
Ephesians 2:7-10 by Wayne Barber Search chap/verse Search word: Retrieve verses, illustrations, etc INDEX PREVIOUS NEXT COLLECTIONS ... http://preceptaustin.org/new_page_13.htm • Sunday, 30 January 2011, 4:06pm GMT • 144.8k
Romans 3:25-26 Commentary Search chap/verse Search word: Retrieve verses, illustrations, etc INDEX PREVIOUS NEXT COLLECTIONS ... ... to this present age of grace (also called by some the church age) preceding the Messianic ... http://preceptaustin.org/romans_325-26.htm • Tuesday, 20 September 2011, 8:35pm GMT • 247.9k
Romans 2:9-12 Commentary Search chap/verse Search word: Retrieve verses, illustrations, etc INDEX PREVIOUS NEXT COLLECTIONS ... ... in the present age of grace noting that "He who believes in the Son has eternal life; but he ... http://preceptaustin.org/romans_29-16.htm • Tuesday, 20 September 2011, 9:11pm GMT • 270.8k
2 Peter 1:15-18 Commentary Search chap/verse Search word: Retrieve verses, illustrations, etc INDEX PREVIOUS NEXT COLLECTIONS ... http://www.preceptaustin.org/2_peter_115-18.htm • Sunday, 30 January 2011, 4:07pm GMT • 242.2k
Hebrews 4:6-7 Commentary Search chap/verse Search word: Retrieve verses, illustrations, etc INDEX PREVIOUS NEXT COLLECTIONS ... ... the Last Day. The age of grace is not forever. This is why immediate action is a basis of ... http://preceptaustin.org/hebrews_46-7.htm • Sunday, 30 January 2011, 4:09pm GMT • 206.6k
1 Peter 1:10-12 Commentary Search chap/verse Search word: Retrieve verses, illustrations, etc INDEX PREVIOUS NEXT COLLECTIONS ... ... about the coming age of grace revealed through them, the grace which all believers experience. ... http://preceptaustin.org/1_peter_110-121.htm • Sunday, 30 January 2011, 4:07pm GMT • 200.5k
ANOTHER GLENN KIMBALL NEWSLETTER (2006, NOVEMBER):
THERE IS IMPORTANT INFORMATION AT THE END OF THIS LETTER FOR THOSE OF YOU WHO ARE DOWNLOADING CLASSES, OR WHO HAVE HAD TROUBLES WITH THE DOWNLOADS.
There is always a problem in starting a new venture. We thought we had envisioned all the potential problems, but we didn’t figure on how difficult it would be for some to download the classes over the net. Therefore, we have gone to “plan two” and have revamped the entire system to avoid having to use Itunes and the subscription model. The problems we had come from the interface between the subscription programming and Itunes. It just didn’t work for most people. Therefore, we are asking that if you want a subscription to continue for your downloads that you call Glenn Kimball on the phone and register your credit information with him. He will enter it every month for you so that you don’t miss a class. I am sorry but you who are downloading need to register all over again. You who are taking the class via CD don’t have to do anything. You are fine and your classes will continue. If you just want to download one of the classes immediately you can get it at www.kimballcollege.com . If you have had trouble downloading a class that you have paid for, just email Glenn at .COM ... and he will have the support staff help you retrieve what you have paid for. We are still having a little trouble pointing www.ancientmanuscripts.com back to the www.kimballcollege.com site. This is a political problem that will be solved very soon. They will be one and the same in the future. In addition we will be reloading all the books back on the site in the coming week so that you can get them for Christmas.
CHRISTMAS PRESENTS
Most of you will want to give gifts from the site for Christmas. You can use the site if you want, which will allow you to enter a different destination for your gifts than you use as the basis for your credit information. If you want to use a check to pay for Christmas items, send them to: Glenn Kimball 3625 East Ray Rd. #1074 Phoenix, AZ 85044 You can get the pricing from the site or you can call Glenn for a package price at 1-888-904-9394. We recommend that the greatest gift you can give someone is the gift that lasts the longest…that of knowledge. We recommend that you send a month’s classes as gifts, however, if you want to pick your favorites and send them in any quantity you choose, you can do so on the site or by calling Glenn.
Jesus said that his kingdom was not of this world. That was perhaps the most profound statement ever said in mortality. It opens the doors to understand why Jesus did what he did and the secrets to understanding the behavior differences of God in dealing with different groups of people at various times in history. Many have viewed the discrepancies in the behavior of God’s dealings with mortals as evidence that either God is a myth, that He changes his mind or that He is very moody and temperamental. None of these descriptions are true. The truth is that His kingdom isn’t of this world and operates on very different protocols than do we. We have superimposed our protocols over our observations of what God has done in an attempt to both understand and to find consistency. For example, our protocols suggest that a longer life is better than a shorter life. The truth is that no matter how long you life it is an extremely small part of eternity. That was the design for mortality from before the world was created. The winner in life isn’t the one who lives the longest with the fewest diseases, biggest house and the most power. The winner in life isn’t the one who teaches the most people. That is exactly why I say that I am unimportant as an individual and that I consider my life as nothing special, especially in comparison with all life on the earth. I am a part of a grand whole, as are you. I have said for decades that, “The greatest work a man will ever do is within the confines of his own flesh”. Those who learn how to conquer self are the true winners of mortality. That means that a quadriplegic has a better chance of fulfilling his destiny than someone who is distracted my money power and fame. The good may in fact die young for a good reason. The good don’t need large quantities of life. In fact none of us need large quantities of life, given the fact that we will eventually share all of our lives with everyone in the end anyway. When you meet people in the heavens you know them completely as if you were seeing through their eyes at their own lives. That is the reason Jesus said that we can’t be saved alone. We need to know the good and evil that was experienced by everyone. It isn’t possible to know it all for ourselves in one lifetime or in a million. However, it is possible to completely understand the good and evil on the earth when we share it all in common. That is why lone lives aren’t necessary. We view suffering, or the lack of suffering, as one of the critical agendas in life. We all knew that we would suffer coming into the world. The one who suffered most was the greatest of them all, Jesus. Figure that one out for yourself. Again this is a man imposed agenda superimposed over the relationship between God and man. I understand wanting to be healthy and love to see when people get well, but a ministry exclusively based on mortal welfare misses the point entirely. There is a bigger story than that. One of our artificial prime agendas in mortality is competition. We love to see the winner of a sporting event, the winner of a war, the one elected to office, the lottery winners, the one with the most attractive mates, the ones who drive the most beautiful cars and live in the biggest homes. We argue with each other as if the rhetorical winner of a disagreement is better than the one who appears less well informed. We fight over the election to political office as if the winners are better than the losers. We never see political candidates basing their election solely on their ability to contribute to society. We construct most of our elections based on the avoidance of electing someone who doesn’t belief like we do. That is the least productive protocol on the planet at this moment in history. No where else in the real world of occupations, other than in politics, does one have to pay a thousand times more than they will earn from the job to obtain the employment. I can’t think of anything less productive. No business would survive such a protocol. The world of humans would become extinct based on that kind of protocol. Clearly in this time of political elections we see a perfect insanity. The founding fathers had a better plan. They elected people to office based on the nominations of the most qualified. Today we vote for power mongers who nominate themselves. No qualified person would want to hold office. You have to have a monumental ego to want to hold office. The best man we could elect as president of the United States would likely have to be coaxed, and maybe coerced to run for office. Those who want the job are often madmen. Those who hold political office for any period of time become contaminated by a system riddled with graft, greed, ego and power. There was once a group of people five thousand years ago in the Middle East who elected their kings of office for six years. After the six-year term was up they put them on trial for their lives based on how they performed. We will be doing a class on those people in the future. Certainly their system was better than our own. We give those who retire from office pensions and protection. In many cases we ought to hold them accountable for what they have done. More than that, the heavens have no place for competition. There are no sporting events, casinos, beauty pageants, lotteries, political offices or even competitions for a mate. The fabled Great War in heaven before the world came into being is a story we have again imposed our protocol over the top. It was nothing like any war we have ever experienced here in mortality. The motivations behind the conflict aren’t anything that we could understand and the penalty for the losers was that they were exiled from Heaven. They had their connection to the whole disconnected which ended their pipeline to love. One would have to ask why any entity would fight the creator of the universe. That was a war well won by deity before it began. There was something else going on which motivated a third of the hosts of heaven to rebel. We can speculate from our vantage point, but assuredly we would be wrong. In other words the competition wasn’t tolerated. In the heavens the greatest of them all is the servant of them all. This suggests a connection between us all that we have yet to understand. Mortality is something very akin to death itself. We are outside the heavens exiled to a plane of existence which allows us to find out for ourselves. There are few handbooks and we can’t remember a thing from before. There are those who ask why doesn’t God just tell us about what is really going on or allow us to remember or see into the heavens so that we could make better choices. They answer is painfully obvious. We weren’t supposed to be connected with our past of the heavens at this instant in our existence. There is something about being ignorant and alone that is extremely valuable. The next question is why would God test us at the very time we have the least information? That doesn’t make sense on any level. The truth is that we didn’t come here for testing. Again we have superimposed our agendas over a story we don’t understand. Most of the individuals in the world think that they have never had a spiritual experience in their lives. Few have recognized any evidence that there is a God in heaven. That doesn’t mean that there isn’t any evidence. The evidence is everywhere. Human beings are proficient at seeking and finding their own destruction. It is a story that has been repeated many times. Why are we so gifted and finding a path to our own destruction and can’t seem to find our connection with God? Life itself is prima fascia evidence that God exists. For me the fact that we haven’t already destroyed the earth is evidence that God exists, given our propensity for devolution. The earth is an enormously complicated system of balances which depend on each other for survival. If we raised the temperature of the earth 20 degrees on average none of us would be alive. How lucky we are to find a place with the temperature of earth. If we had more oxygen we would decay. If our oceans were different sizes or if the mountains were higher we would be dead. If we were a lot bigger or smaller we wouldn’t be here. If we didn’t have immune systems and self repairing bodies we would be dead. The list is next to impossible to contemplate. All of these systems are balanced so precisely that there is no other explanation than a supreme council which organized the earth. The best protocol to examine the earth is the curvilinear law of statistics. Any time you see something totally unique there is a unique cause. Things that are unique are the footprints of causal components. Usually you will find that the causal components leave evidence. We have abundant evidence, both scriptural and every other way, that God has had dealings with human beings. If we were just to look at the complexity of the DNA molecule this is something that didn’t just appear out of nowhere. It took us decades just to map it; let alone the centuries it will take us to understand it completely. It must have taken immense understanding to plan its creation. When you learn what goodness is something mysterious happens to you. You learn how to enjoy from afar, without having to be a direct participant. You find out goodness has nothing to do with competition. Understanding goodness is learning how to bless the world with who you are, for no other reward than participating. That is anti competition which requires winners and losers. I know I lived amongst the poorest people in the world. I learned that they possessed something better than we have. It was a complete shock to my system. The best part of the third world is that it hasn’t been as infected by the world of competition. Something magical happens to you when you base your life on goodness rather than competition. You begin to feel the truth about things. You can tell if someone is treating you with selfish intents or if they are being genuine. You can hear a story and know whether it is true or not because it fits with your understanding of the heavens. Many of you who have been taking the classes are experiencing something very unique. They carry a completely different feeling about them, though the main part of the story is something that has existed in libraries long before I was ever born. You wake up one day and the story begins to tell itself inside your head too. Goodness becomes its own reward rather than receiving your rewards from competition and conquest. Those who are truly good begin to realize that professions choose you because of your passion. It no longer is a matter of money, fame and position. These are things that come as a byproduct of your passion. There are those who are bored within their jobs, or are discouraged because they can’t find something meaningful to occupy their time. A great man, a friend of my father, told me a long time ago when I got out of college and was asking him for a job that the best way to find a job was to find my passion. He said there are no boring jobs, just boring people. He told me that his best employees were people who do what they do because of their passion for what they do. They seem to make mundane tasks into an adventure. He said he paid them the most. He said that they were worth the most. He said they would be doing what they do without pay. He said they found a way to make their jobs more than what they were asked to do. I didn’t understand at the time. I needed to feed a family. I thought that the degree won me the right to the path to security. I had just spent nine years of my life in college. I was wrong. A degree didn’t buy me anything. It didn’t make me smarter than other people. The most successful graduates were those who used their educations as a launching pad for their passions. The classes are designed to spark that passion inside you. I have taken many positive attitude training sessions with the best. I thought that by being constructive and having a good attitude was the secret. That isn’t the whole story at all. The main part of the story is to become the positive feeling about what you do and who you are. Pretending was just practice for the real thing. You will notice that the classes are not in competition with any, or all, belief systems. Many religions have fallen victim to competitive protocols to spread their agendas. Certainly we all want to know the truth, but the way to achieve that isn’t through a system of competition. Competitions usually have penalties and rules. One of the famous competitive religious protocols is the “one error…all error” philosophy. We tend to think that our beliefs must be perfect or they are not worthy. Few systems in life could withstand such scrutiny. Certainly the entire educational process would be destroyed if we had to be perfect in order to graduate. The reality of life is that we get better at what we do over time. Our wisdom improves over time. Our understanding expands over time. If we evaluate ourselves based on the day we graduated from college none of us would be worth a thing. Recent college graduates always lack essential skills in the real world. Amazingly the joy in the heavens doesn’t come from winning the competition. The join in heaven comes from being a part of a “whole” that is concerned with everything else too.
Adam Clarke comments, "Where divine revelation, and the faithful ..... Jesus preached a much more effective deterrent in His Sermon on the Mount: ..... Though this happened long before the Ten Commandments and the other laws were .... Therefore, if you died with Christ from the basic principles [rudiments, KJV] of ...
GOD made the day holy at Eden and gave it to Adam and Eve before sin entered ...... In fact, in Exodus 16:28, before the Ten Commandments were given at Sinai, ...... Sermons on Several Occasions, “On the Sermon on the Mount” Discourse 6, pp 75, 76 ..... there is no reference whatever to the first table of the law, ...
File Format: PDF/Adobe Acrobat Adam and Eve (Gen. 3:21) or when Jacob and his family returned to Bethel (Gen. ..... Thus, our Lord instituted the “Lord's table” as a commemoration of ...... of the Sermon on the Mount, Christian Counter-Culture.20 ...... The King James, Revised Standard, and New International Versions render YHWH by "the LORD" ...
Adam and Eve were created sinless but with a nature that was subject to temptation. .... translate the New Testament into English for the King James Version in 1611. ... The laws and commandments of God as revealed in both the Old Testament ... worship for 3000 years before the Ten Commandments were given to Israel. ...
*A RANDOM SEARCH RESULT FROM THE FIRST COMMENTARY Titus 2-11 1-50 of 180 matching sites for: "TITUS 2"
Over the past years I have been trying to figure out the best way to get the most information out to everybody at the lowest cost. I figured that the best way to get information out for free was to create some kind of forum on our website, kind of like a blog. This would be created so that everyone could ask questions and also contribute what they know about various subjects including new and old discoveries. This format would be beneficial for everybody because it would allow everyone to contribute and you would not just be listening to what my research alone finds. Of course I will still be making the new audios each month, but now you will have the opportunity to give your insight, and ask your questions, while I am creating them. I feel that this will help make the new audios better and more comprehensive for everyone. Everyone has knowledge and everyone has questions. By creating this forum, I believ e that we can expand our knowledge exponentially. Like I said before, I have been trying to get this forum put together for a while. The problem I have faced has been the cost of putting it all together and the up-keep. Then my wife said to me the other day, "Why don't you just set up a Facebook account for the company? You can do everything that you are trying to set up on your website, right on your Facebook page! Anyone can set up a Facebook account for free and most people already have one. Also, you won't have to pay someone to create it on your site, pay all the server costs, or all the maintenance costs." Well, she had solved my problem. This was the perfect idea. So, I just set up the Facebook account for the company under the name 'Ancient Manuscripts.' I had never used Facebook before and found that it was very easy to set up (it only took a couple minutes). So, now I will be posting topics, questions, new discoveries, etc. on the Ancient Manuscripts Facebook page a few times per week. This is going to make it so that you all can contact me at anytime, keep up to date with what is going on, post research links, or just go on to ask or answer questions. It will be fun to see everyone's posts and for all of you to now be able to communicate with each other if you would like.
Also, I have added six new audios to the website and four more are coming by the end of the month. Here are the back covers of the six new ones:
Sermon on the Mount Explained
Most people have heard of the Sermon on the Mount that Jesus gave to a large group of people on the mountainside 2000 years ago. There are many important teachings found in this Sermon, many of which seem pretty straight-forward. Here we analyze it, providing more details and a better understanding of what was being said.
Tibet New Testament Narrative 2: End of Blood Sacrifice
Previously, in the audio entitled 'Tibet New Testament,' we discussed the issues surrounding a document claimed to have been found in Tibet. It contained a slightly different version of the Gospels of the New Testament. Furthermore, its authenticity and importance were also discussed. Here we give you the second part in the series. In this part we find some differences from the current four Gospels that are very interesting.
Tibet New Testament Narrative 3: Kingdom of Heaven
This is the third part to the series taken from what has been called The Tibet New Testament or in some cases called The Gospel of the Holy Twelve. It begins with Jesus giving the Sermon on the Mount and ends with Jesus relating seven parables to teach us about the Kingdom of Heaven.
Ten Commandments Found in America
Here in America we have many books and writings about the Ten Commandments which Moses brought down from Mount Sinai. What most people don't know is that writings containing the Ten Commandments were here in America 2000 years ago!
Tibet New Testament Narrative 4: The True Temple of God
This is the fourth part of the Tibet New Testament. In it you will find insight into some of Jesus' most important teachings. Your body is a Temple. Temples, throughout all of history, have had one main function- to communicate with the other side. It's important that we try to understand this.
Tibet New Testament Narrative 5: God is All, All is God
This is the fifth part to the series. In it you will hear principles that are critical to understanding meaning in this life. One of the most important of which is a description of God. We all have some sort of image of what God is like in our heads. If we wish to have as clear of a picture of God as possible, we should probably listen to Jesus' explanation.
If you would like to see what the four new audios are going to be about, check out our Facebook page under the name Ancient Manuscripts. If any of you need help setting up your Facebook account you can email me and I will help walk you through the steps (once again, it is very simple). For those of you who don't know, after setting up your Facebook account, you need to send a 'friend request' to Ancient Manuscripts (you only have to do this once). Everyone will be accepted! After being accepted, you will always have access to what is on our page and will always be able to contribute. So, let's have fun while on this new adventure...our quest for truth, knowledge and wisdom!
Chase Kimball
END NEWSLETTER
FINALLY, TO END THIS POST, UPDATES TO LINKS AND WEBSITES WILL BE APPLIED AS FOUND TO THE OLD LINKS , SEARCHING ALSO FOR, ANY NEW CONNECTIONS TO THE CLASSES OR MATERIALS OF MOST OF THOSE MENTIONED ABOVE.