4,358 research outputs found
Anuson Walter Vella
Cremation volume for Vella, Walter F. (Walter Francis), 1924-1980, American author on Thailand; comprises condolences and papers on Thailand by both crematee and others
Inscription in Nova Solyma, the ideal city; or, Jerusalem regained; an anonymous romance written in the time of Charles I
Probable editor's gift inscription, "Jacobo Hiltonio Amico Suo Amicissimo D. D. D Libri hujus Editor et Interpres. W. B. A.D. CMMII".Nova Solyma, the ideal city; or, Jerusalem regained; an anonymous romance written in the time of Charles I. Now first drawn from obscurity, and attributed to the illustrious John Milton. With introduction, translation, literary essays and a bibliography by the Rev. Walter Begley.
Begley, Walter, 1845-1905, ed. and tr.
Gott, Samuel, 1613-1671, supposed author.
Milton, John, 1608-1674, supposed author
Vitalistic information systems in the South African public health system : a transactional analysis perspective
Includes bibliographical references
Series 3: Candidacy for Mayor of Los Angeles
Letter written to the editor and printed in the 1906 December 3 edition of the Los Angeles Times regarding Walter Lindley's suitability to the office of mayor
CCDC 2109552: Experimental Crystal Structure Determination
Related Article: Adam W. Earnhardt, Kevin Boyle, Tyler Adams, Michael G. Walter, Yizhou Wang, Yong Zhang, Adesola Adeyemi, Jon Merkert, Askhat N. Bimukhanov, Anuar A. Aldongarov, Colin D. McMillen, Thomas A. Schmedake|2021|J.Organomet.Chem.|961|122208|doi:10.1016/j.jorganchem.2021.12220
CCDC 2109550: Experimental Crystal Structure Determination
Related Article: Adam W. Earnhardt, Kevin Boyle, Tyler Adams, Michael G. Walter, Yizhou Wang, Yong Zhang, Adesola Adeyemi, Jon Merkert, Askhat N. Bimukhanov, Anuar A. Aldongarov, Colin D. McMillen, Thomas A. Schmedake|2021|J.Organomet.Chem.|961|122208|doi:10.1016/j.jorganchem.2021.12220
CCDC 2109551: Experimental Crystal Structure Determination
Related Article: Adam W. Earnhardt, Kevin Boyle, Tyler Adams, Michael G. Walter, Yizhou Wang, Yong Zhang, Adesola Adeyemi, Jon Merkert, Askhat N. Bimukhanov, Anuar A. Aldongarov, Colin D. McMillen, Thomas A. Schmedake|2021|J.Organomet.Chem.|961|122208|doi:10.1016/j.jorganchem.2021.12220
Series 3: Candidacy for Mayor of Los Angeles
Article from the 1906 December 3 edition of the Los Angeles Times confutes the claim made by the Los Angeles Examiner that the Republican party was going to abandon Walter Lindley in favor of Lee C. Gates
Faith at the fractures of life : an examination of lament and praise in response to human suffering with special reference to the theology of Walter Brueggemann and David Ford
This thesis explores the role of lament and praise in the respective theological
approaches of Walter Brueggemann and David Ford for the purpose of examining how
Christian faith transforms human response to suffering.
The first three chapters trace Brueggemann’s engagement with Israel’s lament psalms,
beginning with his observation that their typical dual form mirrors the collective shape
of Israel’s psalter as well as all biblical faith. Influential interactions with sociology
eventually lead Brueggemann to propose faith not simply as response to God’s
faithfulness, but rather through rhetorical tension maintained between conflicts
perceived in aspects of scripture such as praise and lament. We critique this view of
irresolvable textual tension for leaving Brueggemann with an unresolved understanding
of divine fidelity which obscures biblical expectation that God will respond faithfully to
human lament.
The fourth and fifth chapters concern David Ford’s consistent engagement with praise
and subsequently, Christian joy. His early collaborative scholarship proposes praise as
the result of faith in who God is through the suffering person and work of Jesus Christ.
Nevertheless, continued ethical concerns lead Ford to identify Christian faith as an
inextricable relationship between joy and responsibility resulting from “facing” Christ’s
life and suffering death. We critique Ford for failing to clarify how such “facing” is
made possible through who God is in Christ, rendering faith merely the result of human
expression of Christ’s example, and thus obscuring any real reason for praise amidst
suffering.
Beyond a synthesis of Brueggemann and Ford’s respective approaches to lament and
praise, the final chapter argues that a trinitarian approach to Christ’s atonement is
necessary to propose how God confronts both suffering and sin thereby producing
faithful human response amidst persistent evil. We conclude by arguing that a trinitarian
understanding of praise cannot be proposed apart from either who God is in Christ’s
atonement or how the atoning Christ is humanly faithful in lament
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