Ya tu saves cabron ! that's what they believed
They believed it could be found in the American wilderness that was unknown and unavailable to Europeans.
In the human brain and/or in nature. I just finished learning about this in lit class!
Romantics felt that God could be reached by going out in nature. They believed that the existence of God is evident and found in any and all forms of life.
Some believe that Dr. Kelly's cure could be found in the enzymes of the pancreas.
Most of the answers can be found in Gone With the Wind.
designed castles,cathedrals,railway station,and city halls
Trough Jesus Christ
I wish that I could have found out. I believe Chicago would be a massive pile of ashes if he had lost. Too bad...... I wish that I could have found out. I believe Chicago would be a massive pile of ashes if he had lost. Too bad......
found some on gamefaqs.com
I believe that most people could not deal with mortality, so they came up with the ideal that is eternal life after death. think about it.... every religion has some form of afterlife in which there is no specified time limit. I also believe that people had no basis for the rules or laws that they had set in motion. They had already pushed the belief of the afterlife on the ignorant populace, so they had found a way to keep them in order by creating this kind of eternal damnation or punishment because of their disobedience of the laws and requirements that they have set to get into the endless afterlife.
I believe they named their first aeroplane after it. I could be wrong.
Jainism is most probably an Indian religion. (Jain roots have also been found in South Asia and parts of Central Asia.) Jains believe it to be an eternal religion, with no origin, or without any founder.
Short answer: Some do. Long answer: Most "reformed" churches do, some Baptist do, Catholics don't, Lutherans don't, Presbyterian do. I think the concept is best understand in the history and context of other reformed doctrines, a good source can be found at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Calvinist-Arminian_debate