The protoevangelium refers to the first prophecy in The Bible in Genesis 3:15, where God predicts that the seed of the woman will crush the head of the serpent. This verse is seen as a foreshadowing of Jesus Christ's victory over Satan.
The Proto-Evangelium is this Bible verse:"And I will put enmity between thee and the woman, and between thy seed and her seed; it shall bruise thy head, and thou shalt bruise his heel" (Genesis 3:15).This is important because was the first time God revealed something about his plan for the salvation of the world- Jesus Christ, Son of Mary (the woman) who would bruise the head of the devil (the serpent).In referring to these verses as the protoevangelium the Latin means 'first Gospel' coming from the word proto or protos meaning first (from where we get the English word prototype etc) and evangelium referring to the Gospel or Good News of salvation in Jesus Christ.The wound to Jesus 'heel' would not be ultimately fatal, (in terms of hinting that Jesus would rise again) whereas the blow to Satan would indeed destroy him in that mankind would have a ready remedy for sin through the cross.
The is one called the 'History of Joseph the Carpenter' and the Infancy Gospel of James or Protoevangelium of James to name two. There are many other works.
It is a Greek compound term. 'Proto' meaning 'first' and 'evangelion' meaning 'gospel'. In essence, it means 'first gospel'. The Protoevangelion is another term for the Book of James. The Protoevangelium refers to Genesis 3:15.
While Saints Anne and Joachim, her husband, do not appear in scripture, the first mention of their names is in the apocryphal writing the Protoevangelium of James which has been dated to about AD 150. From earliest times the Protoevangelium carried a great deal of importance in the Eastern Church and parts of it were incorporated into the readings on the feast days of these saints. The cults of Anne and Joachim did not become popular with the Latin Church until many years later. While the veracity of the Protoevangelium is certainly questionable there can be no doubt that Mary had both a mother and a father so the Church decided to use the names given in this early writing.
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Refer, as in "The doctor wants to refer you to a specialist."
refer = referir
REFER was created in 1997.
The past tense of refer is referred.
Referring is the present participle of refer.
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