Peter Griffin

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    Yr 11 Gospels

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    Caitlin Plummer Yr 11 Gospels Assessment AS90816 The Gospels are stories of Jesus’ life and teachings, told by Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John, in the first four books of the New Testament. There is little difference between the first three, they tell the same stories of jesus but with slight differences. But the gospel of John, the gospel that traditionally appears fourth in the new testament, has many differences to the gospels of Matthew, Mark, and Luke. They are used to spread the teachings of

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    put Peter in charge and established a foundation of unity for the succession of the apostles and the succession of Peter as the representative of Christ. Jesus called the disciples and put Peter in charge and before he was crucified he sent them to Israel and to the rest of the

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    While reading Dr. Bruce Perry’s The Boy Who Was Raised as a Dog, I found the case of Peter to be the most interesting. At the age of three Peter was rescued from the inhumane conditions of a Russian “baby warehouse” in which one caretaker was responsible for the wellbeing of thirty wailing newborns (Perry and Szalavitz 218). This less than ideal solution for the issue of finding appropriate childcare left Peter and hundreds of other infants deprived of human interaction. During such a crucial period

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    The Truth In The Odyssey

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    Although Capernaum was Jesus' earthly headquarters, its citizenry ignored his prophetic pronouncements and even questioned Jesus' authority. Jesus responded thusly, "I tell you the truth, unless you can eat the flesh of the Son of Man and drink his blood, you have no life in you." (John 6: 53) Many in the crowd, upon hearing this, "turned back and no longer followed him." (John 60: 61, 66) Even Jesus' disciples questioned him, "Who can accept it?’  Jesus then asked the twelve, "You do not want to

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    He had captured her once again. For the millionth time Hook was going to use Wendy Darling against Peter Pan. He didn't particularly like this game of "capture the Wendy". It was always the same. Hook would capture her, Pan would come after her, they would fight, and Pan would always end up flying away with the girl. In a way he felt bad for Wendy. She hadn't asked to be put in the middle of this feud, but oh well. The pirate captain never mistreated Wendy while she was aboard the ship.

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    4. Symbols: - The Beast: It represents the evil within all human beings. The boys were all afraid of “the beast”, unaware that it existed within them all. Simon was the only one who figured it out, and when he was going to inform the others, he was tragically killed in the process. The beast became more and more existent to the boys the more savage and violent their behavior got. - The Signal Fire: In the beginning of the book, after all the boys were gathered, they made a fire on the mountain. It

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    For my journal I will be talking about the 2005 movie King Kong. I will be giving a little synopsis over it and also give an analysis on the primate behavior and how I think we are related. The movie starts off in New york where a sketchy movie director wanting to make a movie but ends up taking a different route. The director sets for sail with his crew and an actress he just picked off of the side of the streets. With not much of a plan and him being wanted by police the captain plans on stopping

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    of him. As Jesus walked along the Sea of Galilee, he saw two brothers, Simon Peter and Andrew casting their net into the sea. Jesus said to them follow me, and immediately they left their nets and followed Him. (Matt 4:18-20). Jesus gives a general invitation to everyone to follow Him by accepting his charge and allowing him to be the Lord, leader, and master of their lives. With this invitation and acceptance, Peter and Andrew were willing to give up all earthly possessions to follow Christ

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    Jesus the Christ: Analyse the meanings in a sacred text within a religious tradition The letters to the Ephesians is the 10th book in the New Testament. The texts that were written before and after it, are the letters to the Galatians and the letters to the Philippians respectively. According to tradition, the Apostle Paul wrote the letter while he was in prison in Rome, around 62 AD. Paul wrote the letter to the to Gentile (non-Jewish) followers of Christ, most likely a church in Ephesus. Paul

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    Rule Consequentialism

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    Deriving the ethicality of actions from both the compliance with the rules and the consequences that result from the actions is the basis of rule-consequentialism. First, it is pertinent that the value of a rule is determined, in order to determine whether the value of an action is enough to surpass it. Value, as defined by Hugh LaFollette and Ingmar Persson in their book The Blackwell Guide to Ethical Theory, can be measured by the presence of pleasure and absence of pain, or the fulfillment of

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