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Genealogy

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A Thousand Genealogy Links; Michigan Genealogy

Over 40 genealogy links for Michigan, including ships passenger lists, census data, miltary records, and cemetery inscriptions.

Michigan Family History Network

Featuring 50,000 Michigan genealogy records online to further your family history research. Births, marriages, deaths, plus census, Civil War, Great Lakes shipping. Dibean Michigan Marriages featured.

Michigan Research at The Records Room

Locate resources (online listings, books, CD-Rom, lookups and addresses) for vital records in each county within the state of Michigan.

MichiganGenWeb Genealogy

Genealogy information for all of Michigan.

MIGenWeb: Michigan Genealogy

This site is an excellent entree to genealogy research in Michigan, including links to county sites and a variety of statewide resources.

StateGenSites - Michigan

Genealogy help for newbies, family researchers, genealogists, and professionals. Information and links to vital statistics, cemetaries, historical societies, and census records.

The Michigan Migration Project

County-by-county data on people who migrated into or out of Michigan. Search for your ancestors or add them to the database.



In article <134.05.19.05.159680000@srcbs.org>, lsenders@hotmail.com says...
>
>Stephen M. Adams wrote:

>> Despite your claims in another post - there is NO magesterium in the
>> Orthodox Church.

We do not normally _use_ the word 'magisterium', and neither in the Roman Church
nor in ours does it have anything to do with the relation between clergy and
laity. In fact, I can find nothing in the Catholic Encyclopedia article on
'magisterium' (http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/15006b.htm) that confines the
teaching authority of Tradition to the clergy.

>Come now. Let us be reasonable. I was not equating you to the RC
>system, but rather comparing you. How many times has Matthew stated
>that true interpretation come only from the magistrateum of the OC.

Never. For crying out loud, Loren, how can you dream of discussing a topic
knowledgeably when you can't even get the word right? It is 'magisterium', NOT
'magistateum'.

>How many times has it been said that the individual cannot have a
>revealing of the truth apart from it being accepted by ecclesiastical
>orders of the OC.

This is not what I ever said. Where are you getting this from? Is this from
Clendenin, or is it just yet another of your many, tiresom misreadings?

[snip]


--
---------------------------
Subducat se sibi ut haereat Deo
quidquid boni habet, tribuat illi a quo factus est.
(St. Augustine, Ser. 96)

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LBoogie wrote:
> A question came up in Bible study concerning the application of 1Pe
3:1-6.
>
> The passage is clear that God's will for women is to submit to her
> husband. Woman of faith are known and commended for their submission
to
> their husband.
>
> However, what if the husband tells his wife not to tithe and the wife

> feel that God's will for her is that she must tithe. Whose will
should
> she follow? Should she disobey her husband and tithe -- thus
inviting
> more strife between her and her husband. Or should she submit to her

> husband and not tithe. In both cases it is apparent that she is
doing
> God's will.
>
> The passage seems to suggest that the woman should obey her husband
(who
> may well be an unbeliever) and win him over by her conduct.
>
> What if her husband doesn't want her to go to Church? Worse, deny
God
> and Christ? Can any of you who have wisdom spell out how best to
apply
> this passage?

It is not the same context, but perhaps Acts 5:28-30 might be of some
help.

(