Pomona, California State, USA: Named for the ancient Roman goddess of fruit.
Shiloh, Tennessee State, USA: Named for the ancient Israelite religious site, nine miles north of Bethel. The modern site of the ancient Shiloh is a mound of ruins named Khirbet Seilun.
Tewin, England: Named for the ancient Norse god Tyr. The name comes from Tyr plus
"ing" (meadow) or "ingas" (people belonging to)."
Weedon Lois, England: From the Old English words "weo" (temple) plus "dun" (hill). "Lois" comes from the local religious figure, Saint Loys.
Nymph, Alabama State, USA: Nymphs were minor nature deities of ancient Latin and Greek mythology. They were depicted as beautiful and amorous young maidens who loved to dance and sing. The word "nymph" has been said to mean "a rosebud" or "a swelling" (as in "pregnant"), connoting fertility.
Showing posts with label fruit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label fruit. Show all posts
Wednesday, July 29, 2015
Religious Place Names
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Wednesday, March 26, 2014
Fiction in the Bible?
Critics of the Bible often decry it as a massive piece of
fiction. Some even deny that Jesus existed at all. The Christian response is
often to launch into an effort to convince the non-believer that the Bible is
true and, of course, it is. But
angrily rushing at critics is probably not the best way to respond.
It is a provable fact that the Bible is more historically
attested than many ancient secular documents which are themselves almost
universally accepted as genuine.
Whether or not the Bible is accepted as a supernatural book, it is
increasing being proven as a historically accurate document. The kings and kingdoms mentioned
actually existed. Many of the places
mentioned have been found by digging where the Bible says they were. The problem for the Christian apologist
is that these arguments will probably fall on skepticism-deafened ears.
I recently found an old book from 1946 which gave me an
insight about which I had never before thought. The book is How to Read the Bible, by Dr. Edgar Goodspeed. Dr. Goodspeed points out that the
parables of Jesus were fictional.
Jesus was a master storyteller; it was his “favorite and characteristic
vehicle.” He used his stories,
some of which are as short as a sentence in length, to teach spiritual insights
in a simple and clear manner.
A very good opening to start with a non-believer might be
Jesus’s parables. Once the
non-believer is interested in the parables, the Christian should point out that
though the parables are clearly fictional, the Bible itself is historically
based. Even if the non-believer
cannot be brought to a place of conviction, they may at least come to a place
where they recognize that the events depicted in the Bible actually happened.
This is progress which may later bear fruit.
Saturday, September 26, 2009
Christian Fellowship
Don't let yourself become disconnected from your Christian friends or from your church.
"Abide in me, and I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit of itself, except it abide in the vine; no more can ye, except ye abide in me." John 15: 4.
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