Genealogy
Page: 1, 2 Sub-Categories: ResourcesView list of family names in all cemeteries located in Penobscot, Maine
Cyndi's List -U.S.-MaineResource for searching Maines past and present history, culture, mailing lists, news groups, maps, military, newspaper, people, museums, cemeteries, documents and names.
FamilyHistory.com:Maine SurnamesMessage Board for Maine Surnames run by Family History.
First Maine Heavy ArtilleryMaine Civil War discussion forum for all regiments, plus a surname search.
Franco MaineHistory and unpublished research on the people of Maine's French communities. Includes marriage data from parishes.
Franco MaineHistory and unpublished research on the people of Maine's French communities. Includes marriage data from parishes.
Genealogy Directory: MaineLocal genealogy resources, information, web sites and links for Maine.
Genealogy Research in MaineProfessional family history research in the state of Maine. Small fee required.
Genealogy Resources about MaineGaunt and Fuller's annotated web links to Maine genealogy.
Jean's Maine Genealogy PageIndex of deaths and marriages as published in the Ellsworth Herald its successor, the Ellsworth American October 24, 1851 through December 29, 1865.
In article <3EBA8482-7077-C16F-C646-BAF452ED9FB0@srcbs.org>, Sarah Kanary
says...
>
>
>"ruth"
>news:DFFA38D4-FDE2-82F9-80E7-206F02689B0A@srcbs.org...
>>
>> lsenders@hotmail.com wrote:
>>> Sarah Kanary wrote:
>>>
>>> >
>>> > The individual books of the "NT" were written by individual Jewish
>>> > Christians,
>>>
>>> Luke was a Gentile.
>>
>> How do you know that?
>
>Luke was not a Gentile.
Oh, let us never never doubt, what nobody is sure about!
> Romans 3:1, 2 states that God entrusted his
>inspired utterances to the Jews.
You are quoting Romans out of context. If only you would pay attention to the
context, it would be obvious that St. Paul is referring to the Old Testament,
NOT the entirety of Scripture in ROm 3:1-2.
--
---------------------------
Subducat se sibi ut haereat Deo
quidquid boni habet, tribuat illi a quo factus est.
(St. Augustine, Ser. 96)
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In article <117.02.13.05.650610000@srcbs.org>, Gary McNees says...
>
[snip]
>Matthew, don't we all claim this? Does ANYONE think that they believe
>heresy? I think not. I hope you are not claiming that there are no
>errors in any of your beliefs.
But wait! There is a difference between 'error' and 'heresy'. Not every error is
heresy. Error becomes heresy when it is mixed with a particular kind of
stubborness, a kind that denies the faith.
That is one reason why the Church often waited decades before condemning a
particular error as heresy.
[snip]
>Amen! I agree this time with St. Basil. Never heard this quote before,
>and by the way, I appreciate the many quotes you provide from the
>fathers. They had a lot of wisdom.
Yes, they did. All the more the pity, then, that so many of their important
works are not even available at all in English. And those that are, are all too
often only available in really stilted and out-dated translations.
This quote is from "Quod Deus non est Auctor Malorum", which I have found on the
Web only in Russian.
>Also, do you know of an English version of Augustine's works which
>enunciate his position on free will?
Somewhere on http://www.ccel.org/fathers2/ I found the work I cited in English
translation. In fact, most of what is availble in English is there. But the way
they translted the title was a little surprising, so I always have trouble
finding it when I go back there.
> I looked on the net but was unabl