No. Jesus offered himself to God as the Lamb of God when he died on the cross for our sins.
My Father's House
I don't think so. Our bodies are the temple where God resides, but people are not gods.
An extemporaneous presentation is a presentation that you planned and rehearsed for. You might refer to notes or an outline, but you create the sentences as you speak.
It depends on which temple to Zeus you refer to.
AnswerThis passage begins with the "cleansing of the Temple". In the synoptic gospels, it occurred just before the arrest and trial of Jesus, and in fact was largely the reason for that arrest. In John, Jesus overturned the tables and drove the moneychangers from the Temple right at the beginning of his three-year minnistry.The author of John's Gospel is well known for his indulgence in plays on words. All the gospels were written after the destruction of the Temple, and so, beginning with Mark, incorporate a prophecy that the Temple would be destroyed. However, to John, the real temple is the body, so he has Jesus refer to his own future crucifixion and resurrection. He says that if you destroy this temple (which the Jews understand to be the Temple in which Jesus overturned the tables, but which he really meant to be his own body) then in three days he would raise the temple up again. john says that later, after the resurrection, the disciples remembered Jesus' words and believed.
Alee temple could refer to a temple in Nepal, specifically in the capital city of Kathmandu. It may also refer to a temple in India, particularly in the state of Tamil Nadu. Additional context or specifics would be needed to provide a more accurate answer.
Never. Jesus is always Jesus. Michael is the name of an angel - Archangel.
Yes
jesus
Jesus came into the Temple and disturbed the area where some small commerce was occurring (likely so that people could buy the sacrifices that they would make before entering the Temple). Since Jesus was causing a mess, overturning tables, and accusing the merchants of having no right to conduct their business, they asked him under what authority he came. Jesus said that as proof that he was on high, he would "destroy this Temple and raise it in three days." The response from the merchants and moneylenders was incredulity, saying that it had cost them 46 years to build, implying that if Jesus were wrong, the Temple would be irreparable. The narrator of the New Testament claims that he was using the word "Temple" to refer to his own body and the resurrection. However, it is curious to note that Jesus does not correct the moneylenders or merchants on this fact nor does the New Testament argue that his resurection did not convince any in attendence of this conversation who were not already convinced of Jesus' divinity. It would seem that this understanding comes ex post facto, not from the moment.
They are named after The Temple Church - now a ruin - built in the 12th Century by The Knights Templar.
Yes Jesus is mentioned in the quran. They, the Muslims refer to him as a prophet.