The blood he spilt on the cross is a symbol of His sacrifice. In the Old Testament the Jews would have the blood of an animal split to sacrfice for their sins. Today we have the blood of Jesus Christ that we can claim for the forgiveness of our sins. We no longer have to make a sacrifice. Jesus is our sacrifice every time we do something wrong and ask forgiveness. There more we do wrong the more it hurts Jesus.
Emanuel is another name for Jesus. Jesus is the Messiah the Jews had been waiting for since the beginning of time. To emphasise the divinity of Christ, Emmanuel means 'God is with us'..
the body is the body of jesus and blood is jesus blood... ! :))
No, the word 'emphasise' (US spelling 'emphasize') is a verb.The noun form of the verb to emphasise is emphasis.
The Blood of Jesus was created in 1941.
Jesus was born with a body and blood.
The duration of The Blood of Jesus is 3420.0 seconds.
The noun form of the verb to emphasise is emphasis.
The Luhya word for the English word 'emphasise' is "kasana".
blood, sin, jesus
Jesus's blood is the cup of wine and the bread is his body
the blood of Jesus = הדם של ישו
Christians believe that Jesus Christ was God-incarnate; thus Jesus was truly God and truly human. However, Christians approach this belief in more than one way. Some writers emphasise the divinity of Jesus, others emphasise the humanity whilst still others strive to maintain a balance. When people emphasise Christ's divinity, sometimes to the expense of His humanity, this is termed "High Christology" (Christology being the study of Christ). People who stress the divinity of Christ will lay emphasis on (a) miracles (b) Jesus' union with the will of His Father (c) the Gospel account of John, which has a high Christological approach. Conversely, when Christians emphasise Christ's humanity this is termed "Low Christology". Such people will stress (a) Christ's suffering (b) His struggles (c) the Gospel accounts of Mark and Luke. Related links:http://people.smu.edu/dwatson/johannine_christology_001.htm (High Christology) http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/Christology (Low Christology)