8,445 research outputs found

    Annual budget (Gilbert, Ariz.)

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    abstract: The budget includes a profile of Gilbert and its government, a financial overview, details of operating and non-operating funds, capital improvement, and the town's deb

    Gilbert Police Department annual report

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    abstract: A report on the organization and activities of the Gilbert Police Departmen

    120. Matthew 2:13-15, 19-23

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    Chapel Sermon by Dan Gilbert from Matthew 2:13-15, 19-23 on Wednesday, March 19, 2025. Para obtener una versión de subtítulos en español, vaya a CC en la parte inferior derecha del video y elija 2

    News Clipping, Lincoln-Douglas Celebration Set at Matthew Gilbert

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    Newsclipping: Article regarding annual Lincoln-Douglas observance to be held in the auditorium of Matthew W. Gilbert High School. Dr. J. Irving Scott, Speaker. Note: Second paragraph mentions Eartha White. Undated

    Comprehensive annual financial report year ended June 30 (Gilbert, Ariz.)

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    abstract: A complete set of audited financial statements for the town of Gilbert, Arizon

    Zechariah and the Gospel off Matthew: the use of a biblical tradition

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    This thesis examines the use of Zechariah traditions in Matthew's Gospel. It analyzes and interprets the ways Matthew transmits, alters or adds Zechariah traditions to his sources. Instead of looking at portions of the Gospel in light of Zechariah 9-14 only, this study addresses the entire Gospel and all of Zechariah. In focusing on Zechariah tradition, the thesis has kept the following considerations in view. First, the content and function of Matthew's explicit uses of Zechariah are examined. Second, ways in which tradition derived from Zechariah may have exerted influence on portions of the gospel sub-structure are identified. Third, it explores the extent to which Matthew alludes to characteristic Zechariah themes. Together, these components illuminate how Matthew's Gospel incorporates its Zechariah material, whether alone or in combination with other prophetic traditions. Thus the methodological approach of the thesis is not only grounded in classical methods of biblical criticism but is also open to recent literary methods. In addition to explicit citations, numerous allusions and echoes of Zechariah tradition are present in Matthew. They appear in Matthean materials and in traditions Matthew has taken from Mark and Q. Because the focus of this thesis is open to both the Gospel and the Zechariah traditions in their entirety, two important observations have been made. First, traces of Zechariah material are found in the Infancy and Gaililean healing Narratives as well as in the Passion Narrative. Not only is the impact of Zechariah 9-14 observed, but important sections of Zechariah 1-8 are also discerned in Matthew's narrative structure. Moreover, Matthew's Son of David Christology is enriched and partially defined by Zechariah's prophet-shepherd imagery, as well as by the royal messianic motif

    Award From Matthew W. Gilbert High School to Eartha M. M. White

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    Award: Certificate of Award from Matthew W. Gilbert High School for outstanding accomplishments in Civic Enterprises for school year 1952-53. Date: 1953

    Award From Matthew W. Gilbert High School to Eartha M. M. White

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    Award: Certificate of Award from Matthew W. Gilbert High School for outstanding accomplishments in Civic Enterprises for school year 1953-54. Date: 1954

    Town of Gilbert heads-of-households survey : attitudes on planning and services 2010

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    abstract: The results of a late 2010 telephone survey of 502 residents of Gilbert, to determine resident attitudes to growth and development, town policies, allocation of tax dollars, town services and general satisfaction with the quality of life in Gilbert, Arizon

    Wisdom and apocalyptic in the Gospel of Matthew : a comparative study with 1 Enoch and 4QInstruction

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    Recent scholarship has demonstrated that Matthew's gospel has significantly developed both sapiential and apocalyptic elements within its narrative. Little attention has been paid, however, to the question of how these two features of Matthew's gospel might relate to one another. It is this gap in scholarly literature that the present study is intended to fill, by means of a comparative study with two other texts of mixed genre: 1 Enoch and 4Qlnstruction. An examination of these texts demonstrates that each is marked by an inaugurated eschatology, within which the revealing of wisdom to an elect group, defined in distinction to the Jewish parent group, serves as the pivotal moment of inauguration. In addition, within 4Qlnstruction the idea is developed that possession of this revealed wisdom allows the remnant to live in fidelity to the will of the Creator and to the patterns built-in to the original creation. Thus, possession of revealed wisdom facilitates a recovery of creation. These findings provide lines of enquiry that may be brought to Matthew. Three sections of the gospel are examined (chapters 5-7; 11-12; 24-25). It is argued that Jesus is presented as an eschatological figure who reveals wisdom to an elect group. This wisdom cannot be reduced to great moral insight or interpretation of Torah, but is presented as prophetic revelation, happening in eschatological time. It remains the case, however, that Matthew presents it as wisdom and presents Jesus as a sage. More tentatively, it is suggested that creation provides the patterns for the ethical requirements of Jesus' wisdom, thus indicating that the idea of restored creation is also at work in Matthew. The fall of the temple may also be connected in Matthew's narrative to such a restoration, but again, the evidence for this is not clear
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