I would say that a complete study of the scriptures, in their meaning and in our understanding of them and the gaining of a testimony that they speak the truth in so far as they are translated correctly.Then applying their teachings in our lives. To bare record that Jesus is the Christ, that He died to save us all from our sins through our repentance, faith and our good works.
Yes
She traveled with Jesus and the disciples and other women as Jesus went about preaching in Judea and Samaritan areas so she lived at the same time as Jesus.
The same way the disciples lived in the 1st Century - character and moral wise that is. To be a 'disciple' is to be an 'imitator' of Jesus. With God's Holy Spirit guiding the repentant and baptized disciple, he/she would live a life putting God's Law first and foremost in their lives.
Nothing that I know of. It is OK to be a servant and live in servants quarters. Jesus was a servant when he washed the disciples feet
The disciples Mark, Matthew, Luke, and John were believed to have lived in the 1st century AD, during the time of Jesus Christ. Their writings are included in the New Testament of the Christian Bible.
The Sermon on the Mount in the Bible was addressed to Jesus' disciples and the crowds gathered to listen to him teach. It is a collection of Jesus' teachings on how to live a righteous life and be blessed by God.
The disciples did not understand in John 14:15-31, when Jesus was explaining to them of His departure and His sending them the Holy Spirit of God who would live within them.
Prior to the Resurrection, the disciples did not fully understand who Jesus was. After His death, none of them believed that He would live again.It was only when they saw Him bodily and had his identity confirmed that they believed. What they witnessed turned them from fearful men hiding from the Jewish authorities into bold witnesses of what they had seen and who Jesus really was. Many of them would suffer greatly for sticking to their testimony.
Jesus gained disciples when he began preaching. Probably, his message appealed to people, so people began to follow him, especially the twelve. Some or all of the disciples remained with him for the rest of his life. All but John deserted him when he was arrested, but they gradually re-formed and began preaching to the nations. If you count all believers in Christianity as disciples, then Jesus has had disciples ever since.
Jesus made the claim that he "came to seek and save the lost sheep of Israel". After his resurrection, he told his followers to "make disciples of all the nations".
The 12 apostles were disciples of Jesus Christ who lived in various regions in the ancient Near East, primarily in Judea and Galilee. After Jesus's death and resurrection, they spread out to different parts of the known world to preach the teachings of Christianity.
It gives you strength and the human body can't live without fat.
Pentecost, which literally means 50 or it is 50 days after the Passover and First Fruits. Jesus returned to visit his Disciples after his resurection and promised to wait for the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit did not come then. Jesus disappeared in a cloud. The Holy Spirit came upon the disciples 50 days later when they were praying together in Jerusalem.