Prayer for life

Education

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Acadia Center for English Immersion

Summer English courses for adults, with small classes, expert teachers, near ocean beaches and national park: an unforgettable learning vacation. Brochures, fees, program dates, photographs, and map provided.

American Schools- Maine site

Use this search engine for address and information on many Maine schools.

Androscoggin Valley Education Collaborative

Educational association between Auburn, Lewiston, SAD #52, Union 29, Union 30, Union 44 and Bates College.

Bangor Theological Seminary

A center established for theological study in northern New England. Admissions, course descriptions, degrees, and campus information.

Camp Kieve

Operates a traditional summer camp for boys, provides details on wilderness trips, Junior Kieve, family adventures, and admission policies. Other programs offered through Kieve, include Leadership Institute, Science Camp for Girls, and teacher academies.

Camp Kieve

This is more than a youth camp. Established by the Kennedy family, Kieve is a leader in promoting 'skills in decision making and problem solving among youth.'

Camp Kieve

Operates a traditional summer camp for boys, provides details on wilderness trips, Junior Kieve, family adventures, and admission policies. Other programs offered through Kieve, include teacher academies, and a Science Camp for Girls.

Camp Kieve

Traditional summer camp for boys, located in Nobleboro. Also offers wilderness trips, a science and wilderness camp for girls, and a leadership institute. Program details, photos, videos, news, and online tour featured.

Darling Marine Center, University of Maine

A marine laboratory. Part of the University of Maine and School of Marine Sciences.

Education America Network: Maine

Resource for educational career seekers to find teaching jobs. Part of a national site. Database for Maine is limited.



lsenders@hotmail.com writes:
>Stephen M. Adams wrote:
>> lsenders@hotmail.com writes:
>
>> Didn't you just get on my case in another post for not taking Genesis
>> absolutely literally (7 24-hour days)??? And castiage the idea that
>> one need not interpret every verse of Scripture literally.
>>
>> I think you're contradicting yourself....
>>
>Not at all, if you would but look at what the grammatical-historical
>hermeneutic teaches. "Literally" allows for metaphors, typifications,
>figures of speech and the like. But the scriptures were always written
>in the common tongue of the time of their writing, whether Hebrew,
>Aramaic or Koine Greek specifically because they were to be read
>normally. ANd when we read normally it is not all that difficult to
>arrive at what the Author intended to reveal.

Ah, I get it. It's metaphor or type or figure of speech when you
say it is, and when it fits your theology. Otherwise, it has to
be taken litarally.

What a load of bologna.

>>>Faith alone is taught many places where salvation is declared a work of
>>>God.
>>
>>One more time - the *only* place in Scripture where the words 'by
>>faith alone' apear, they are preceeded by the word NOT. Clear as
>>day. Thus, your reading of the *other* verses is, of necessity,
>>wrong. You can't escape this.
>>
>Where? Again you have made this declaration and again you have not
>even so much as pasted in the verse. Is it so hard?
>
>James 2:24 You see that a man is justified by works, and not by faith
>alone.

Bingo. I don't HAVE to cite it because you all know it. And you,
like Luther, know it demolishes your false theology so you spend
reams and reams of paper trying to explain it away, say he meant
something else, or like Luther, simply declare that you "find nothing
of the Gospel" in James and it is "straw."

>There is no contradiction here. James is stating the obvious. That if
>you have made a true confession of faith, there will be external
>evidences of that pre-existing internal reality.

Not what he says. He says quite clearly - thaat faith without works is
dead. YOU say he means external signs. But that's your eisegesis.


>>Except Orthodoxy is NOT Arminian. We don't subscribe to the premises
>>on which Arminianism and Calvinism are based. Those premises are flat
>>out heretical. And others are dealing with that.
>>
>NO! It IS Arminian in presupposition. It may venture off in different
>exhibitions, but it rests upon the very same presupposition.

False on it's face. Since we do NOT accept the false western teaching
on original sin, no