The wedding feast of Cana was a large affair. It was the place where Jesus performed his first miracle of turning water into wine.
The Wedding Feast at Cana is a painting by Italian artist Paolo Veronese, created in the 16th century. It is a religious painting depicting the biblical story of Jesus turning water into wine at a wedding feast in Cana. The genre of the painting is considered to be religious or biblical art.
The miracle of the wedding feast at Cana is found in the Gospel of John.
The first miracle performed by Jesus was of changing the water into wine at the wedding feast.
Only one miracle has been recorded. That doesn't mean He did no others there, it just means there is only one we know of. There may have been more, but effectively our answer is one. Buck Burch wrote: Jesus actually performed 2 miracles in Cana. Both are recorded in John. In John 2:1-11, Jesus was at a wedding and turned the water into wine. After some time (John 4:46-54), Jesus returned to Cana and healed a royal official's son, albeit by distance. The son was in Capernaum while Jesus pronounced him healed in Cana.
Oh, dude, Cana and Canaan are like cousins. They're related but not the same. Cana is a village in Galilee where Jesus turned water into wine at a wedding, and Canaan is an ancient region in the Near East. So, they're kind of like distant relatives in the family tree of geography.
The Wedding Feast at Cana is a painting by Italian artist Paolo Veronese, created in the 16th century. It is a religious painting depicting the biblical story of Jesus turning water into wine at a wedding feast in Cana. The genre of the painting is considered to be religious or biblical art.
The account of the wedding feast at Cana is found only in John 2:1-11.
The miracle of the wedding feast at Cana is found in the Gospel of John.
The Wedding at Cana (or The Wedding Feast at Cana) is a massive painting by the late-Renaissance or Mannerist Italian painter, Paolo Veronese. It is on display in the Musée du Louvre in Paris.
1) The Annunciation 2) The Visitation 3) The Wedding Feast at Cana 4) The Last Supper 5) The Ascension 6) Pentecost
You're probably thinking of the wedding feast at Cana in John 2:1-11. At this feast, Jesus (apparently) changed water into wine, as his first miracle.
There is no record in the Bible of his marriage nor of whom he married. Neither is there any record of who it was that was married at the wedding feast in Cana.
When pink elephants flew through the sky with green moustaches. They also had blue polka dots.
At a wedding in Cana, Galilee:John 2:1-3New International Version (NIV)Jesus Changes Water Into Wine2 On the third day a wedding took place at Cana in Galilee. Jesus' mother was there, 2 and Jesus and his disciples had also been invited to the wedding. 3 When the wine was gone, Jesus' mother said to him, "They have no more wine."
This, according to John's gospel, was at a wedding feast where Jesus turned water into wine.It was in the small town of Cana in Galilee.
the event during at cana
JOHNJohn 2:1-11 describes a marriage feast that took place in Cana of GalileeJohn 4:7-26 tells us about the woman of Samaria who came to draw water.