199,707 research outputs found

    Sale Barn, Gregory SD, Gregory County

    No full text
    35 mm slide, an octagonal cupola on a shingled roof supported by wood framingDrawer info: City Halls Round Barns County Courthouses; Gregory Sale BarnKodachrome Film Gregory Sale Barn Gregory Co. D. Mc Pheeters 35 Jun 94F0

    Sale Barn, Gregory SD, Gregory County

    No full text
    35 mm slide, a single-story wood building with an octagon cupola and a shingled roofDrawer info: City Halls Round Barns County Courthouses; Gregory Sale BarnKodachrome Film Gregory Sale Barn Gregory Co. D. Mc Pheeters 32 Jun 94F0

    Sale Barn, Gregory SD, Gregory County

    No full text
    35 mm slide, a wood fence in front of a single-story wood building with an octagonal structure in the background, the text on the single-story building includes "Gregory Livestock Auction Sale Every Thursday Owner Jack Clark"Drawer info: City Halls Round Barns County Courthouses; Gregory Sale BarnKodachrome Film Gregory Co. (crossed out) Sale Barn Gregory Co. D. Mc Pheeters 26 Jun 94F0

    Sale Barn, Gregory SD, Gregory County

    No full text
    35 mm slide, a leafy tree next to a three-story octagonal wood building with a single-story additionDrawer info: City Halls Round Barns County Courthouses; Gregory Sale BarnKodachrome Film Gregory Sale Barn Gregory Co. D. Mc Pheeters 27 Jun 94F0

    Sale Barn, Gregory SD, Gregory County

    No full text
    35 mm slide, wood corrals with metal cattle gates in front of a single-story wood building with an octagon cupola and a shingled roofDrawer info: City Halls Round Barns County Courthouses; Gregory Sale BarnKodachrome Film Gregory Sale Barn Gregory Co. D. Mc Pheeters 30 Jun 94F0

    Sale Barn, Gregory SD, Gregory County

    No full text
    35 mm slide, wood corrals with metal cattle gates in front of a paved road, residential buildings, and trees with spring budsDrawer info: City Halls Round Barns County Courthouses; Gregory Sale BarnKodachrome Film Gregory Yards @ Gregory Sale Barn Gregory Co. D. Mc Pheeters 33 Jun 94F0

    Inside the Sale Barn, Gregory SD, Gregory County

    No full text
    35 mm slide, a bank of pigeonholes on a plaster wall with a box fan in the window, signs on the wall bear the text "[?]St [?]Banks [?]n Dakota N.A [?]Way. [?]orwest [G]regory, SD" and "Golden Sun Colome Farm Service"Drawer info: City Halls Round Barns County Courthouses; Gregory Sale BarnKodachrome Film Interior, Gregory Sale Barn Gregory Co. D. Mc Pheeters 28 Jun 94F0

    Herbert E. Gregory Book 9: Utah, California, 1924-1928

    No full text
    Herbert E. Gregory Book 9: Utah, California, 1924-1928: Album containing photographs from several of Herbert Gregory\u27s U.S.G.S. expeditions: 1924 in southern Utah; 1925 in Death Valley and Panamint Valley, California; 1925 in San Juan County, southern Utah; 1927 in San Juan County, southern Utah; 1928 in San Juan County, southern Utah; and . Also includes photos of Natural Bridges National Monument area by W. H. Hopkins and Laurence M. Gould (1924); photos from San Juan County by Hugh D. Miser; an 1870s photo by William Henry Jackson; 1907 photos of Natural Bridges National Monument area by Charles H. Goodman; photos of Elk Ridge-Bears Ears and Natural Bridges region by Frank B. Oastler; 1925 photos from southwestern Colorado and southern Utah by Lee; and 1927 photos of Bears Ears by Arthur Alan Baker

    THEOLOGIA AND OIKONOMIA: THE SOTERIOLOGICAL GROUND OF GREGORY OF NAZIANZUS’S TRINITARIAN THEOLOGY.

    No full text
    This dissertation explores the soteriological ground of the trinitarian theology of Gregory of Nazianzus and establishes a consistent link in his thought between the spheres of oikonomia and theologia. His writings are studied against the background of contemporary theological and philosophical trends thus demonstrating the context within which he elaborated his main theological concepts as well as their novelty. Although Gregory drew heavily on the heritage of his intellectual master Origen, he significantly changed his perspective from cosmological speculations to reflections on the historical embodiment of Christ’s salvific activity. This shift was to lead Gregory towards a positive view of the body and of bodily desire which he considered a vital force in human existence capable of union with God in the process of deification. Gregory thus fully identified Christ with humanity in its total manifestation, including the human mind with its fallen and rebellious desire, now assumed and redeemed in the incarnation. Hence Gregory placed the suffering image of Christ at the heart of his trinitarian theological construction. As this thesis argues, around this image evolves the whole dogmatic edifice of Gregory’s theology. Christ’s divine sovereignty is understood not in separation and independence from the passion on Cross. Rather, its full manifestation is only possible because of the cross, because of Christ’s free and willing acceptance of it. The whole set of interrelationships between the suffering Christ and the Father and the Holy Spirit are depicted according to the logic of coincidence of sovereignty and humiliation. It is precisely in this combination of theological themes – expressed with our new concept of “kenotic sovereignty” – that the focus of the present thesis is located. This innovative spiritual disposition shapes both Gregory’s theological epistemology and his hermeneutical strategy. Arguing for the possibility of knowing the divine in and through human bodily existence and corroborating this view with suitably interpreted Scriptural evidence, he opens the horizons for the human ascension to the realm of the divine trinitarian life. In this way Gregory envisages access to the transcendent theology of the Trinity which is understood by him in purely personal terms, insofar as it implies the intimate conversation of God with us “as friends” (Or. 38.7). This unique reworking of classical and Christian themes is possible because of Gregory’s insistence that divine sovereignty and transcendence become intelligible exclusively in the context of Easter. Thus the habitually neglected narrative of the cross and resurrection of Christ in the thought of the Theologian is the only key to unlock his understanding of the luminous mystery of the Trinity

    [Telegram from E. D. Joost to M. C. Gregory - October 3, 1933]

    No full text
    Telegram from E. D. Joost, secretary on behalf of Odelia R. Staiti, to Mrs. M. C. Gregory of Unadilla, Okego County, New York, informing her of the passing of Henry Staiti on Monday, October 2, 1933
    corecore