Tuesday, May 5, 2009

How Much Data Can You Use For 1 Mb On A Phone

Works of art and objects dedicated to Servetus

can find all the paintings and carvings on the Institute website Michael Servetus: http://www.miguelservet.org/servetus/iconography.htm well as that of Servetus International Society: http://www.servetus.org/en/michael-servetus/image-gallery/iconography / index.htm Capsule Bottle Collection "Personajes" produced for "El Cava de Aragon."

(collection of the author of this blog)

Blotter schoolboy prior to 1968, probably commissioned by the government and directed by Andrew Lorulot, printer-publisher Herblay (ex-Seine and today Oise Val d'Oise). It includes the portrait of Servetus, Jean Jaurès and Jules Ferry. texts prompts the student to learn and embrace the values of the secular republic such as respect for others and freedom of conscience.

http://labesacedesunitariens.over-blog.com/article-15625835.html




Cartoon anti-Calvinist. This triptych is limited quite similar to the Dutch engraving that gives Vincent Schmid in his book "Michael Servetus - On the pyre to freedom of conscience." The author pointed out to me that my board seems to be
"a mixture of elements from the engraving of 1566 and the background of the engraving of Van Shechem (1609) a portrait of Servetus. Characters (the executioner and the trustees probably ... Geneva) to the stake are nearly the same. But it is quite typical of the methods of the time, these engravings serving as a kind of leaflets ... "
.
"This triptych is directly inspired the black legend that Jerome Bolsec has made in his "Life of Calvin" in revenge for the reformer. Bolsec, theological opponent of Calvin (about double predestination), was a few years before Servetus bring a lawsuit that almost cost him his life. It has been his salvation as a ban on land given by a Bernese Little Council so hostile to Calvin. Some years after these events, Bolsec, returned to Catholicism, wrote a fake biography dependent to settle its accounts and of course, Calvin's opponents have seized it.

It is possible that this etching is the first gender. In fact, it has often been copied (it was a common usage) and adapted for purposes of propaganda. "

(collection of the author of this blog)



postcard signed and Daniel Lines edited by cARTed in 1994.

the back of the card contains these words:
"Michael Servetus (1509? -1553) antitrinitarian
Pursued by the Inquisition Roman
Sentenced to death on the orders of Calvin
Brule live in Geneva on 27 Oc tober 1553

"


See article on this blog: http://libertedecroyance.blogspot.com/2009/05/hommage-michel-servet-par-daniel-lines.html (collection of the author of this blog)

Monday, May 4, 2009

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Tribute to Michael Servetus by Daniel Lines What





During his college years Daniel Lines, from the neighborhood Champel in Geneva, spent each day watching the "expiatory monument "a committee composed of religious and official was erected in 1903. Having reached adolescence Lines Daniel was struck by the hypocrisy emanating from the words engraved on the monument.
This led him 25 years ago to make a collage from a postcard of the "Wall of the Reformers' (We recognize the statue of Calvin) and fragments of surrealist paintings as a sign of reaction to oppressive Calvinist morality that permeated the cultural milieu of his childhood.

I thank him very much for sending me this postcard publishing original and narrated me what had prompted him to compose this piece.

This map was published in 1994 by cARTed.
It can be found on display at the publisher's website at:
http://www.carted.eu/cartes/j012/01209.htm

the back of the card contains these words:

"Michael Servetus (1509? -1553)
antitrinitarian
Pursued by the Inquisition Roman
Sentenced to death on the orders of Calvin " A big thank you to Pascal Pithois (webmaster Carted.eu) that m ' allowed to make contact with Daniel Lines. left, the text "expiatory monument" Champel (Geneva): "Son friendly and recognizable

Monum

nt atoning.

the right, central part of the "wall of reformers in Geneva at the Parc des Bastions

(officially" International Monument to the Reformation ") composed by Guillaume Farel, Jean Calvin, Theodore Beza and John Knox.






Friday, May 1, 2009

Brent Corrigan Brent Eve

pantheism in Michael Servetus?

During his trial Servetus was accused of pantheism, the idea that everything that exists in the universe is a part of God.

But Pantheism of Servetus is quite limited because he believed in a personal God and transcendent, as opposed to the pantheistic system itself

where everything exists, not only by God, but God and it is not a personal being distinct from the world, but is immanent.

It remains and is certainly not theistic naturalist.

In fact Servet simply argued that since everything that exists comes from God, it was automatically taken from himself, his "Force"

That suggests the Bible, for example with Isaiah 40:25-28, Genesis 1:7 or Genesis 1:2 where the Hebrew word "werouaḥ" (from "rouah) translates as "spirit" but also "wind" and other words that denote an active force invisible. This contrasted somewhat with the teaching of theologians from St. Augustine, who were content to teach God created the universe from nothing.

I suggest you read below what apes have written Domeyne Stone, George and Roland Bainton Haldas about "pantheism" Michel Servet.

Domeyne Pierre - Michel Servet: At the risk of losing



On supposed pantheism of Servetus, Calvin breaks loose as he later tell about the assertion that Servetus

all creatures are the very substance of God and therefore all things are full of God.

Here is an excerpt of the exchange:

Calvin What, wretch, so each time you host a floor, we should say that we also host God? Do you not ashamed of such nonsense?


Servetus:

But yes, I have no doubt that this bench here, and everything that you could not show me either the substance of God. Calvin The devil would be God by his essence?

Servetus:

Do you doubt it by chance, that is good is my fundamental principle that all things are part and portion of God and the nature things are substantially the spirit of God,

(Calvin note here that Servetus laughed ...)

In this exchange, Servet reply with a subtle humor in reasoning led to the absurd and a formidable sense of dialectics. Here is a Spaniard about Narrated by Calvin always has at least the merit of the answers mention of Servet may turn against him

You said if you stir it up, you do You stepwise movement in God. So you Browse through the Devil. But we move and live in God, in which we live. Even if you're a blind demon, you don 'are equally supported by God. Chapter V. Pages 98 and 99. Abstract presented with the permission of the author.

Edition L'Harmattan (Paris) 2008 - ISBN: 978-2-296-05942-9 - Target price: 17 €

http://www.editions- harmattan.fr / index.asp? navig = catalog & obj = book & no = 26663


George Haldas - Passion and Death of Michael Servetus

pantheistic For inspiration, finally, Servet:


35 ° Whether the air is the spirit of God, and God is named Spirit that gives life to all things by its spirit of air.


Meets Servetus:

he does not remember having written this way. However, he confesses that the air is called

mind

and that God is

mind both in its essence as it inspires and enlivens the air. ... PANTHEISM If you exclude the idea of God, nothing can be longer as stones, gold, flesh, of soul of man, man, as is the idea of God creating the existence of specific and individual things. God essentializes species. It gives fuel to heavenly spirits. From it derives the line of divine essences, which, in turn, infusing his essence into other beings. God Himself is in them and the light of his word radiates in them. He sustains all things in their essence, so that any creature that does not support is reduced to nothingness. Because it contains within itself the essences of all things, he shows himself to us in the reality of fire, stone, a stick, a flower, etc.. It is not altered, but it is a stone that is seen in God. Is this a real stone? Yes, for God in the wood is wood, and the stone is stone, and having in itself the shape of the stone, the substance of the stone, so I consider it to be effectively stone, bearing the essence and form, although not having no matter. (From the re Christianismi - ed)


Chapter III. Pages 80 and 239.


Edition L'Age d'Homme (Lausane) 1975 - ISBN:

2-8251-2937-2 - Indicative price: 24 € http://www.lagedhomme.com/boutique/fiche_produit.cfm?ref=2-8251-2937-

2 & type = 22 & code_lg lg_fr = & num = 91 & pag = 8

Roland H. Bainton - Michael Servetus - Heretic and Martyr - 1553-1953

Regarding points of doctrine, Calvin, and relates the discussion of Pantheism:

When he says that all creatures are the very substance of God and therefore all things are full of God (Because he was not ashamed to express his thoughts well in writing and orally), I was indignant, wounded to the quick: "What, wretch 1 Then each time you host a floor, we should say we crowd as his God? Do you not ashamed of such nonsense? "-" Yes, "he replied, and I have no doubt that this bench that here, and everything you could show me is the essence of God." And when I told him again objected: "The devil would be God by his essence? "He replied with a chuckle:" Do you doubt it by chance? This is where my fundamental principle that all things are part and portion of God and the nature of things is substantially the spirit of God "

the

.

Servet commented this discussion as follows:

You said if you stir it up, you do stepwise movement in God. So you Browse through the Devil. But we move and live in God, in which we live. Even if you're a blind demon, you're not less supported by God.

Edition Droz (Geneva) 1953 - ISBN: 978-2-600-03204-9 ISSN: 0082-6081

- Prices: $ 25

reprinted in French, but not available in English at: http:/ / www.amazon.com/Hunted-Heretic-Michael-Servetus-1511-1553/dp/0972501738/ref=pd_sim_b_1