Mary, then Joseph, then Mary's cousin, Elizabeth.
It was the shepherds who first got the word of Jesus birth from angels.
Shepards
Shepards
The first people to hear about Christ's birth were people all the way back to Isaiah's time when he prophesied the coming of the Messiah. If you mean when he was actually born it was Mary or Elisabeth, and the first one to see Christ were Mary, Joseph, the shepherds, and the Magi. The shepherds were the first people to hear about it and saw them first. The Magi came to vsit them many months after.
you hear at first, first testament before jesus, then a psalm then a second readig from the second testemant or a letter, during jesus, and then a gospel which is when jesus would give parables
they first mention his name in the book of Matthew
mary and josepph
First the Jews and Romans. But moreso, anyone who would listen and hear his Word.
Hear Us Say Jesus was created on 2004-10-05.
From his birth we don't hear much about Jesus in the bible until he was around 12 years old. His parents took him to the city for a celebration and he slipped away. They found him in the temple discussing biblical matters with the elders/Rabbi who were impressed with his knowledge. The next we hear of Jesus in the bible is when he was about 30 years old. His ministry then lasted about 3 years before he was crucified and after 3 days raised from the dead to become salvation for all who sin in the world.
If you mean first god alive, that would have to be the God of the Bible, but the first god in Greek mythology is Chaos. He gave birth to Gaia, who gave birth to the Titans, who gave birth to the Greek gods you hear about in most myths.
In Sychar, Jesus spoke with a Samaritan woman at a well, revealing His identity as the Messiah to her. He offered her living water, which symbolized eternal life that He could provide. This encounter led to many Samaritans in the town believing in Jesus as the Savior of the world.
I don't know where you hear this from.But jesus mejia is not gay.
There are two accounts, both in the Bible. The first is in the book of Matthew, starting at Chapter 1 verse 18, and ending at Chapter 2 verse 23. In this account we hear of the Wise Men, the escape to Egypt and the return of Mary, Joseph and jesus to Nazareth, their home town. The second account is in the book of Luke beginning with Chapter 1, verse 1 where we hear of the birth of Jesus' cousin John the Baptist, and then his own birth and presentation at the temple, through to the time when Jesus was at the Temple aged 12. These childhood stories end at the end of Chapter 2 verse 51, where, again, we are told Jesus returns to Nazareth. The reason why there are two stories is that Matthew tels his account from the Jewish point of view. In his account he mentions the foreigners (the Wise Men) as Jesus came for non-Jews as well as Jews. In Matthew's gospel we also hear of how prophets long before had foretold Jesus' birth, and so Matthew, being a good Jew, included these quotes from the prophets to corroborate his belief that Jesus was, indeed, the Messiah. Luke, however, was not a Jew and so he did not include prophesies like Matthew as they simply did not interest him. Instead, he was commissioned by a man called Theophilus to write a more detailed history of the events surrounding Jesus. As Luke was a doctor and learned man, he states in the first few verses of his book that he systematically went through the facts and presented them in as complete a form as possible. Scholars believe that Luke had met and interviewed Peter and Mary, the mother of Jesus, and from her he obtained the birth stories, including a song she sang at the announcement of the birth. Luke went on to write a second book - the Acts of the Apostles - which tells of the early Christian Church, which can also be found in the Bible after John's gospel.