There was St. John the Baptist who was beheaded before the death of Jesus, and St. John the Apostle who wrote the book of John. They were different people.
The earliest Pauline letter to proclaim Christ's crucifixion was probably I Corinthians (c. 53-54); at 1:23, Paul writes, " ... we proclaim Christ crucified ...."
First BC stands for Before Christ(Jesus), so you can write about some major thing that happened before Christ was born.
he once ruled England, and had six wives, the rhyme for his wives go like this, Divorced beheaded died Divorced beheaded survived. who is he???
No, bc means before Christ, you can not write a book about Christianity 2000 years before it came into being.
As a noun, "crucify" refers to the act of executing someone by nailing or binding them to a cross. It can also be used metaphorically to describe severe criticism or punishment directed towards a person.
"Before Christ" is "Avant Jésus-Christ" in French. You will find it abbreviated "Av. JC" in dictionaries and textbooks. The current era is spelled "Après Jésus-Christ" but isn't usually stated: you will write just the year when in current era, and add "av. JC" when the year is BC.
Yeshua
Χριστός
write or 'search and find'
No he did not. The gospels were written by others about His ministry.
Use a specific message you want to get across. (Like the fact that even while I was rebelling, God was reaching out to me and that he lives me and fills us like noone else can.) Before you begin, Pray and ask God to give you guidance as you write. (Exodus 4:12) Describe your life before you met Christ. Describe how you met Christ. Describe how your life has changed. Keep it only a few minutes long. Make sure Christ is in the center of your testimony and not yourself. (2 Cor. 10:27)
We don't know. The Bible makes no reference to it. It is possible that John submitted to baptism by one of the twelve Apostles, with whom he had contact from time to time.Even though the Bible makes no reference to it, some still say that John was baptized in his mother's womb before his actual birth (though that was Holy Spirit baptism, rather than water baptism).