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Servant of the Servants of God
Church History, 1943In words familiar to us all St. Paul observes that in Christ there is “neither Greek nor Jew, circumcision nor uncircumcision, Barbarian, Scythian, bond nor free.” This is usually, and I think correctly, not taken to mean that the Apostle's ideal is the abolition of human distinctions in a blank uniformity.
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David K. Daltridge: Servant of God
Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, 1998exaly +2 more sources
2016
As with both Maimonides and Aristotle, I will begin my description of moral and intellectual development with the goal for doing so, and I will adopt Maimonides’ goal that a person should aspire to serve God with love. Yet, Maimonides’ use of the term eved [Hashem (servant of God)] to describe a person who has achieved his telos frequently has negative
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As with both Maimonides and Aristotle, I will begin my description of moral and intellectual development with the goal for doing so, and I will adopt Maimonides’ goal that a person should aspire to serve God with love. Yet, Maimonides’ use of the term eved [Hashem (servant of God)] to describe a person who has achieved his telos frequently has negative
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Servants of god?: Servi in the letters of Gregory the great
Journal of the Australian Early Medieval Association, 2021When Gregory the Great styled himself 'servant of the servants of God' in his correspondence, he was drawing on a long tradition of using service as a metaphor to describe appropriate religious leadership and piety. However, his letters also reveal a church filled with servi, whose service to religion was neither metaphorical nor chosen, and upon whom ...
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Blackfriars, 1950
There were giants in those days’. It was in reference to the I past generation of Catholic writers that the remark was made, to the generation of Chesterton, Gill, Belloc and Baring, all those whose brilliance and wit led to talk of a Catholic revival in fashionable circles.
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There were giants in those days’. It was in reference to the I past generation of Catholic writers that the remark was made, to the generation of Chesterton, Gill, Belloc and Baring, all those whose brilliance and wit led to talk of a Catholic revival in fashionable circles.
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The ‘Servant of God’: Divine Favour and Instrumentality under Constantine, 318–25
Studies in Church History, 2018This article focuses on the doctrine of divine favour and instrumentality as viewed from the emperor's own perspective, in relation to the early development of the ‘Arian controversy’ as far as the Council of Nicaea. While modern writers have focused on explicit statements by Constantine to suggest that unity was the emperor's highest priority, this ...
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