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The fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man
Abstract Oscar Hammerstein II is a pivotal figure in the history of musical theatre, establishing in his collaborations with Richard Rodgers the concept of the integrated musical. Most commentators and biographers describe him either as an essentially secular figure or as Jewish. In fact, his own autobiographical writings suggest that heopenaire +1 more source
Ancient Near Eastern Literature and the Hebrew Scriptures about the Fatherhood of God (review)
Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies, 2006Ancient Near Eastern Literature and the Hebrew Scriptures about the Fatherhood of God, by David R. Tasker. New York: Peter Lang, 2004. 230 pp. $65.95. Dissatisfied with what he calls anthropocentric approaches to the study of God as Father by feminists, psychologists, sociologists, and anthropologists, Tasker proposes a linguistic, literary, and ...
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The Golden Rule of the Fatherhood of God and The Brotherhood of Man
1996Abstract The late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries in America were times of great economic expansion and inequality, opportunity and abuse, times of American power and of world war. Early scientific doctrines of evolution were being used to gain understanding of the human species and social life, and the result was a profound ...
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The Fatherhood of God: Athanasius and Gregory of Nazianzus
2011This thesis examines the concept of God as Father in the thinking of two Patristic authors: Athanasius (c. 293-373) and Gregory of Nazianzus (c. 329-390). Since God is called Father frequently in the New Testament both Athanasius and Gregory see the name as fundamental to understanding the nature of the intradivine life, as well as God’s relationship ...
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2009
Within the literature that concerns itself with North American responses to the Holocaust, there exists a wide range of opinion. On one end of the spectrum is David Wyman’s verdict that the American reaction to Jewish plight amounted to abandonment, and on the other end is William Rubinstein’s insistence that it was a myth that anything significant ...
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Within the literature that concerns itself with North American responses to the Holocaust, there exists a wide range of opinion. On one end of the spectrum is David Wyman’s verdict that the American reaction to Jewish plight amounted to abandonment, and on the other end is William Rubinstein’s insistence that it was a myth that anything significant ...
openaire +1 more source

