John's gospel chapter 2.
The Wedding Feast of Cana is a Christian religious painting depicting the biblical miracle of Jesus turning water into wine at the wedding in Cana. It falls within the genre of religious art and is specifically a part of the Renaissance period.
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 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.
A:The miracle in which Jesus turned water into wine is described only in John chapter 2, occurring "on the third day", or soon after the baptism of Jesus, and Jesus told his mother that his time [for miracles] had not come. Caution should be exercised in accepting this miracle as having really happened. In the synoptic gospels, Jesus had begun his forty days in the wilderness at this time, so could not have been at a wedding in Cana.The author of John's Gospel, as the gospel name implies traditionally regarded as the apostle John, liked to ascribe to Jesus miracles similar to those attributed to the pagan gods. Just as the god Dionysus turned water into wine, so Jesus turned water into wine. Later in the same gospel, we are told of Jesus healing the lame man at the five-sided pool, now known to have been part of an Asclepium. a temple to the Greek god Asclepius. When Asclepius (John's "angel") came by and disturbed the water, the first to enter would be cured, but the lame man was never able to reach the water first. This points to these miracles as literary creations, not events that can be dated with precision.
The first miracle did by Jesus was to turn the water into wine at the wedding feast.
yes
The Wedding Feast of Cana is a Christian religious painting depicting the biblical miracle of Jesus turning water into wine at the wedding in Cana. It falls within the genre of religious art and is specifically a part of the Renaissance period.
Jesus first miracle was turning water into wine at a wedding feast. (John 2:1-11)
Jesus performed his first miracle at a wedding feast in Ca'na of Galilee. (John 2:1-11)
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.
Jesus at the wedding feast changed the water into wine, at Canaan it was his first miracle.
When he turned the water into wine at the wedding.
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 first miracle performed by Jesus was of changing the water into wine at the wedding feast.
There is no feast day of the 'miracle of St. Joseph.' However, St. Joseph has two feast days each year, March 19 and May 1.
Two cooks were hired to prepare the Capulet's wedding feast.