Matthew 12:40
For as Jonas was three days and three nights in the whale's belly; so shall the Son of man be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth.
footnote
The Jordan River figures prominently in the New Testament as the place where Jesus was baptised.
It's not an idiom, but a Biblical reference. It's the place where Joseph went in the Old Testament and it can be used as an exclamation to replace a swear word, as in "Land O'Goshen, what a lie you just told!"
The duration of The Heart of No Place is 1.42 hours.
Heart in the Right Place was created in 1981.
The Heart of No Place was created on 2009-03-21.
The reference pont.
Allusion:a brief reference to a person, event, place, or phrase
A reference point
No, there is no direct reference to these concepts. There is also no reference to birth control or abortion, and the New Testament does not say anything about Christmas (nor does it say there should be a holiday on December 25th). After the Hebrew Bible and the New Testament were complied, rituals, customs and holy days were created by the leading scholars who studied the texts to determine what they meant and how best to apply them to the lives of the worshipers. Thus, Catholic concepts like purgatory and limbo were developed by Church theologians, and they did not become official church doctrine till the Middle Ages.
According to "Say, Did You Know?" by Webb Garrison, published 1992, the expression "Heart in the right place" is descended from a belief of medieval physicians. They observed that the rate and intensity of blood vessel's throbbing differed between people, and even between the limbs on one individual's body, and to explain this, concluded that the heart could move about in the body. Hence, someone whose "heart was in the right place" was properly ordered physically, and therefore, probably properly ordered mentally.
The first century AD.