Bible and Saints

Posts in The Copybook tagged ‘Bible and Saints’

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St Nicholas and the Empty Granary Clay Lane

The saintly Bishop helped the captain of a merchant ship to cut through the red tape, and save his town from starvation.

St Nicholas (d. 343) was Bishop of Myra, a town in the Roman Province of Lycia, on the southwest coast of Asia Minor (modern-day Turkey). According to his 9th-century biographer, Michael, one miracle in particular gained him a reputation in the Imperial capital itself.

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1
And is there Care in Heaven? Edmund Spenser

Sir Guyon lies in an enchanted swoon, but he is not without help.

Sir Guyon, the Knight of Temperance, has been commissioned to help an old man whose land is troubled by a wicked witch. The journey is fraught with dangers, and Sir Guyon has been cast into an endless swoon by Mammon, the money-god, for refusing to be his slave. As the knight slumbers, Spenser reflects on God’s care for the helpless.

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2
A Mechanical Miracle Charles Babbage

The father of computing believed his machine held the key to some of life’s greatest mysteries.

One day, Charles Babbage was in his drawing-room showing off his calculating machine to two friends from Ireland, Dr Lloyd and Dr Robinson. He showed them how the machine automatically flipped back and forth between multiple programs ad infinitum, and remarked that there may be a parallel with the laws governing Evolution. The spark in the eyes of his two visitors made him even bolder.

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3
Blind Guide William Wirt

William Wirt recalls an overpowering sermon from a blind man in a little wooden chapel.

William Wirt, a rising Virginian lawyer, published The Letters of a British Spy in 1803. He took the character of a British tourist (not a secret agent) in the US, and remarked on the habits of the Americans twenty years after the Revolutionary War. This famous passage brings to startling life a blind Christian minister in a roadside chapel in Orange County, as he preaches the crucifixion of Jesus Christ.

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4
Better By Example Gregory Nazianzen

Gregory urged the persecuted Christians of Nazianzus to be the better men.

From 361 to 363, the Roman Empire was ruled by Julian the Apostate, so named because he had been brought up as a Christian but had chosen Roman paganism instead. In 362, Julian began a systematic persecution of Christians, leading to anger and rebellion. Gregory, a priest in the town of Nazianzus, told his parishioners not to play Julian’s game — even when the tables were turning.

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5
The Making of Mark Eusebius of Caesarea

St Mark wrote his Gospel as a summary of the preaching of St Peter.

Eusebius, Bishop of Caesarea from about 313, tells us here how St Mark’s Gospel came to be written. Drawing on testimony going back to the Apostles themselves, he explains that the Gospel should be heard as an echo of the living voice of St Peter, as he preached the good news in Rome.

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6
Ye Children, Hearken Unto Me The Book of Common Prayer

David, fresh from another close encounter with Saul’s men, shares his advice for living a charmed life.

Psalm 34 is said to have been written as a thanksgiving by David, when he was on the run from the madness of King Saul. He took refuge with Achish (Achimelech or Abimelech) the King of Gath, and to ensure that news of him did not get about, passed himself off as a harmless lunatic. This extract comes from the elegant translation made in 1535 by Yorkshireman Myles Coverdale.

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