Oh, dude, you're hitting me with some ancient vibes! So, to say "Jesus Christ is Lord" in Latin, you would say, "Iesus Christus Dominus est." Like, Latin is like the OG language of scholars and toga parties, so you're basically dropping some serious knowledge on your friends if you whip out that phrase.
Yes. Lord Jesus Christ.
Unless "Christ Jesus your Lord" is some regional dialect I'm unfamiliar with, I think you just did.
jesu l'oba
Amen, which means agreement. If you are in a Catholic mass, the response is: "Praise to You, Lord Jesus Christ"
"Benedictus, Benedicat"… (per Jesum Christum Dominum Nostrum) = "Blessed is He and may he bless [this food]" (through Jesus Christ Our Lord)"
no they did not. they worship god and jesus christ the lord
Lord Jesus' Father is Unknown. Jesus calls his Father "Father". Father (Father of Jesus Christ) made Jesus Christ. Jesus Christ invent Natural Things. Now People are natural. How can we get RBC (Red Blood Cells)?. People are really natural! Believe me! I say the truth! Now Lord made people...
I would say it is the Book of Isaiah. It has many topics and verses about the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ.
Christians tend to have Jesus Christ in high regard. They consider Him the Son of God, and usually believe that there is no other person like Him.
It doesn't. AD stands for Anno Domini which is Latin for the year of our Lord http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anno_Domini Based on year 1 of our calendar being the year that Jesus Christ ("Our Lord") was born
To confess Jesus Christ as Lord is simply as it says; to confess that Jesus IS in fact LORD! It doesn't say "if you MAKE Jesus Lord", but rather it says "confess that Jesus IS LORD". Many Arminians, but even some Calvinists seem to believe that Jesus must be made Lord of one's life, but the truth of the matter is that He is Lord over all, and we are to submit to His Lordship.
Oh, dude, so like, people say "after death of Jesus Christ" because it's a way to like, mark time after his supposed death, you know? "Anno Domini" is Latin for "in the year of our Lord," but like, who has time for Latin these days, am I right? So, yeah, it's just a tradition thing.