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24
Aug 20, 2021
08/21
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tyndale thought i was d going to translate this into english. to the bishop ofhe londn and set of course not, if you do that. they did a brilliant job and smuggled into england. thousands of copies began to get sold because they were forbidden so the bishop was chasing illegal copies, five copies of illegal bibles to bring back to england and burned him so tyndale was finally caught and murdered. now what is the epilogue? the illegal bible was separately times change very soon and bicker up with the church tyndale's version of the bible became the core of the king james bible so this ultra forbidden document became mainstream and now fasting for five or six session. >> there is a boomerang of an sometimes i think we don't know the full story. i think if you ask most people say i remember he y wrote aboutn offended islamic who put out one on him which is kill him if you see him and he had to go into hiding and england and it looked bad and now he was appear where i live and i saw him near me and my first thought should i move? it looks as though
tyndale thought i was d going to translate this into english. to the bishop ofhe londn and set of course not, if you do that. they did a brilliant job and smuggled into england. thousands of copies began to get sold because they were forbidden so the bishop was chasing illegal copies, five copies of illegal bibles to bring back to england and burned him so tyndale was finally caught and murdered. now what is the epilogue? the illegal bible was separately times change very soon and bicker up...
60
60
Aug 19, 2021
08/21
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. >> e, in fact let's start with tyndall being now termed by the is a lessbrary important writer in the english language and that was shakespeare. >> tyndall lived in the early 16th century and he was a scholar, again a professor at oxford and cambridge and he read martin luther's illegal translation of the bible. there is a big battle back then. keep people from reading it in their own s languages that tyndl thought i'm going to translate this into english. he went to thehe bishop of londn and taken i do this in the bishop said of course not greatly will kill you if you do that. he went to the convent and did a brilliant job of it and smuggled it into england. thousands and thousands of copies began to get sold and again because they were for bitten. and so the bishop was chasing all the illegal copies and he was telling people by copies of the illegal bible in order to bring them back to england and burn them. and so it tents all was finally caught and murdered. what is the epilogue to this? the illegal bible was so brilliant that times change very soon in henry viii broke with the ch
. >> e, in fact let's start with tyndall being now termed by the is a lessbrary important writer in the english language and that was shakespeare. >> tyndall lived in the early 16th century and he was a scholar, again a professor at oxford and cambridge and he read martin luther's illegal translation of the bible. there is a big battle back then. keep people from reading it in their own s languages that tyndl thought i'm going to translate this into english. he went to thehe bishop...
74
74
Aug 31, 2021
08/21
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thank you. >> governor, no commissioner tyndall, you felt like we dodged a bullet. can you speak to this idea? we always know that we prepare for the worst, pray for the best, but just this idea of how you all are feeling, if you felt like you could tell it is not as bad as it could have been? gov. reeves: let's be honest, i spoke with governor edwards on friday morning. governor edwards in louisiana was mentioning to me that he and administrator criswell were together on thursday morning i believe in morgan city, if i'm not mistaken, because it was the one-year anniversary of the storm that hit morgan city last year. when they were sitting there thursday morning, neither of them anticipated that ida was going to become a hurricane, much less a high cap 4 and hitting the gulf coast -- cat 4 hurricane hitting the gulf coast. one of those particular things that this storm reminded us is that every storm is different and we are looking at three different disturbances off the coast of africa right now, but most of them -- but they are not going to get in the golf or hea
thank you. >> governor, no commissioner tyndall, you felt like we dodged a bullet. can you speak to this idea? we always know that we prepare for the worst, pray for the best, but just this idea of how you all are feeling, if you felt like you could tell it is not as bad as it could have been? gov. reeves: let's be honest, i spoke with governor edwards on friday morning. governor edwards in louisiana was mentioning to me that he and administrator criswell were together on thursday morning...
43
43
Aug 20, 2021
08/21
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tyndale was in the early 16th century a scholar again a professor at oxford and cambridge and he read martin luther's illegal translation of the bible. 10 dolph i'm going to translate this into english. he went to the bishop but of london and said can i do it and the bishop said of course not. we will kill you if you do that. he went to the convent and did it and did a brilliant job of it and to get to and when. thousands and thousands of copies were sold again because they were forbidden. and so the bishop went chasing all the illegal copies. five copies of the illegal bible to bring them back to england then burning them. he was finally caught and murdered. what is the epilogue to this? the illegal bible was so brilliant that times change very soon and they broke with the church and the bible became the court the king james bible so this altar for bitten document is now a bestseller. also it's part of the core bible >> yours is the meringue effect and sometimes sometimes they said we don't know the full story. i'm thinking of someone rushdie here and if you ask most person they'd sa
tyndale was in the early 16th century a scholar again a professor at oxford and cambridge and he read martin luther's illegal translation of the bible. 10 dolph i'm going to translate this into english. he went to the bishop but of london and said can i do it and the bishop said of course not. we will kill you if you do that. he went to the convent and did it and did a brilliant job of it and to get to and when. thousands and thousands of copies were sold again because they were forbidden. and...
30
30
Aug 19, 2021
08/21
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and so tyndale was finally caught and murdered. now, what's the epilogue to this? his illegal bible was so brilliant that times changed very very soon, and tyndale's version of the bible became the core of the king james bible, so this ultra forbidden document became mainstream -- >> best seller today. >> and lasting for five or six centuries because it is still part of the core bible. >> yeah. so there is this boomerang effect, and sometimes -- sometimes i think we don't know the full story. i'm thinking of rushti. people will say he wrote a book that offended islamic mullahs that put out a kill if you see him, and he had to go into hiding in england, and that looked bad. salman rushti was up in the mountains where i live not long ago having dinner. at first i thought oh, should i move? but no anyway. [laughter] >> it looks as though salman rushti came out just fine. he's still writing and all of that. but isn't there a kind of lingering effect of something like that? there's a kind of censorship that people kind of watch themselves, on whether they are going to p
and so tyndale was finally caught and murdered. now, what's the epilogue to this? his illegal bible was so brilliant that times changed very very soon, and tyndale's version of the bible became the core of the king james bible, so this ultra forbidden document became mainstream -- >> best seller today. >> and lasting for five or six centuries because it is still part of the core bible. >> yeah. so there is this boomerang effect, and sometimes -- sometimes i think we don't know...
18
18
Aug 26, 2021
08/21
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the hurricane that hit tyndall and the massive flooding, we look to learn from those.e are incurring the lessons learned and reevaluating. we're looking at adaptation and the idea of resilience as well. the idea of adaptation into effects of the climate in the future, as we are rebuilding those installations, making sure that we understand not only what today's floodplain is omma but the potential plan of those flood planes and building above those, looking at what rising water levels might be. those are the immediate lessons that we are learning and putting into the development of installations in the future. in the maintenance of our current installations, understanding that is not only hurricanes and floods, there are natural disasters. as we are looking at the sustainment requirement across all of our facilities, looking to harden our installations, we are looking at that up tatian of what the climate is doing to our current installations. we need to build in and are looking at our future design, building digital models to fully understand how we might be able to b
the hurricane that hit tyndall and the massive flooding, we look to learn from those.e are incurring the lessons learned and reevaluating. we're looking at adaptation and the idea of resilience as well. the idea of adaptation into effects of the climate in the future, as we are rebuilding those installations, making sure that we understand not only what today's floodplain is omma but the potential plan of those flood planes and building above those, looking at what rising water levels might be....
65
65
Aug 5, 2021
08/21
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they took the f5, the new ones, from tyndall which got devastated by the hurricane down there, and they are moving those up, and they will form an adversary squadron of the new airplanes, trying to figure that one out. two great ones there. there is the building, that's home! yeah, and those are a4's. we started to study, we painted each airplane a different camouflage. random around the world and took a look at various colors games. some of those airplanes were so good, you couldn't see them from a mile away, you know? and you think about the merge, coming head on at 1000 miles an hour. so, anyhow, hey, there he is! i borrowed someone's a4, and that guy in the back seat is pretty famous. that is jc smith. he relieved me as in charge of top gun. he got the first make of the war, first one shot down before the school even started. he's a wild man. he's a cnn angela, texas. this will break you up, i can't believe it myself. he owns two cadillac agencies and texas. he owns a funeral parlor, and a country club. i think he's a deacon in his church. [laughs] anyhow, great airplane, meg 21. st
they took the f5, the new ones, from tyndall which got devastated by the hurricane down there, and they are moving those up, and they will form an adversary squadron of the new airplanes, trying to figure that one out. two great ones there. there is the building, that's home! yeah, and those are a4's. we started to study, we painted each airplane a different camouflage. random around the world and took a look at various colors games. some of those airplanes were so good, you couldn't see them...