John the Baptist - translation to italian
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John the Baptist - translation to italian

1ST-CENTURY JEWISH ITINERANT PREACHER
John the Forerunner; Jesus and John the Baptist; St. John the Baptist; Saint John the Baptist; St John the Baptist; Saint John the Forerunner; John the Dipper; John the Baptizer; John the baptist; John The Baptist; John The Baptiser; John the Baptiser; Johannes the Baptist; Jon The Baptist; Decollation of St. John; Failure of John the Baptist; John the baptizer; John the baptiser; Yahyai; St. Hans; John (Baptist); Islamic view of John the Baptist; John the babtist; Conception of John the Baptist; Ministry of John the Baptist; Islamic Views on John the Baptist; John Baptist; يحيى; Yoḥanan ha-mmaṭbil; Ywḥnạ ạlmʿmdạn; Yoḥanan Mamdana; Yovhannēs Mkrtičʿ; Ioánnes o Baptistḗs; Ioánnes o Pródromos; Ioannes Baptista; John the Precursor; Yahia ben Zakaria; St. John the Forerunner; Sancta Iohannes
  • Armenian]] kisses the hand of St John the Baptist at [[Chinsurah]].
  • ''The Birth of John the Baptist'', a fresco in the [[Tornabuoni Chapel]] in [[Florence]]
  • Catholic church at his traditional birthplace in [[Ein Kerem]]
  • John the Baptist setting off into the desert, by [[Giovanni di Paolo]], 1454
  • 1430}}, oak
  • John the Baptist (right) with the [[Christ Child]], in ''The Holy Children with a Shell'' by [[Bartolomé Esteban Murillo]]
  • St John (right) in ''[[Christ in the House of His Parents]]'' by [[John Everett Millais]], 1849–50
  • Eastern Orthodox [[icon]] ''John the Baptist – the Angel of the Desert'' ([[Stroganov School]], 1620s) [[Tretyakov Gallery]], [[Moscow]]
  • The Druze Maqam al-Nabi Yahya (John the Baptist) in [[As-Suwayda Governorate]].
  • ''Beheading of St John the Baptist'' by [[Massimo Stanzione]], 1635
  • upright
  • 1665}}, by [[Mattia Preti]]
  • 1235}}
  • [[Monastery of Saint John in the Wilderness]]
  • Sebastia]], near [[Nablus]]
  • [[Salome]] is given the severed head of John the Baptist, [[Onorio Marinari]], 1670s
  • 1448–50}}
  • upright=1.8
  • Wooden statue. [[Pietro Paolo Azzopardi]], 1845, [[Xewkija]].
  • Coptic]] [[monastery]] in [[Lower Egypt]]. The bones of Saint John the Baptist were said to have been found here.
  • author-link=:hy:Կամսար Ավետիսյան}}</ref>
  • Shrine of John the Baptist in the [[Umayyad Mosque]], which purportedly houses John the Baptist's head

John the Baptist         
Giovanni Battista
baptist church         
  • Believer's baptism of adult by immersion at [[Northolt]] Park Baptist Church, in [[Greater London]], [[Baptist Union of Great Britain]], 2015.
  • Baptist Hospital Mutengene ([[Tiko]]), member of the [[Cameroon Baptist Convention]].
  • Chümoukedima Ao Baptist Church building in [[Chümoukedima]], [[Nagaland]] affiliated with the [[Nagaland Baptist Church Council]] (India).
  • [[Martin Luther King Jr.]], a Baptist minister and civil rights leader, at the 1963 civil rights march on Washington, D.C. The [[Civil Rights movement]] divided various Baptists in the U.S., as slavery had more than a century earlier.
  • John Smyth]] led the first Baptist church in [[Amsterdam]] in 1609.
  • Church sign indicating that the congregation uses the [[Authorized King James Version]] of the Bible of 1611.
  •  [[Ebenezer Baptist Church]] in [[Atlanta]], affiliated with the [[Progressive National Baptist Convention]].
  • [[Charles Spurgeon]] later in life.
  • ''A Short Declaration of the Mistery of Iniquity'' (1612) by Thomas Helwys. For Helwys, religious liberty was a right for everyone, even for those he disagreed with.
  • Rivas]], [[Baptist Convention of Nicaragua]], 2011.
EVANGELICAL CHRISTIAN MOVEMENT
Baptist church; Baptist Church; Baptist minister; Baptist/Evangelical; Babtist; Baptist; Baptist Christian; Christian - Baptist; Wet Heads; Baptist seminary; Baptist churches; Baptism (denomination); Baptist Christianity; Baptists Church; Baptism (religion); Bapitst; Baptistism; Baptist tradition
Chiesa Battista, Chiesa Protestante Evangelica
John Lackland         
  • Capetian]] holdings in France. Blue: French royal domains,
Green: Fiefs held on behalf of the French crown,
Yellow: Church lordships,
Red: Fiefs held on behalf of the English crown
  • Historia Anglorum}}
  • A [[silver]] King John [[penny]]
  • stag hunt]]
KING OF ENGLAND FROM 1199–1216
John Lackland; John I of England; John (of England); John the Bad; John lackland; John Lackland of England; King John of England; King John I of England; John Softsword; John Soft-sword; Bad King John; John, Earl of Cornwall and Gloucester; Sans Terre; Softsword; King John I Of England; John Soft-Sword; Soft-Sword; John the Incompetent; Earl of Moreton; John I Lackland; John I Lackland of England; Prince John's rebellion; Jean sans Terre; John of England; Johan Sanz Terre; Johan sanz Terre; Joh. 1; John I, King of England; King John Lackland
Giovanni senza terra

Definition

Johannean
·adj Of or pertaining to John, ·esp. to the Apostle John or his writings.

Wikipedia

John the Baptist

John the Baptist (c. 1st century BCc. AD 30) was a Judaean preacher active in the area of the Jordan River in the early 1st century AD. He is also known as John the Forerunner in Christianity, John the Immerser in some Baptist Christian traditions, and Prophet Yahya in Islam. He is sometimes alternatively referred to as John the Baptiser.

John is mentioned by the Roman Jewish historian Josephus and he is revered as a major religious figure in Christianity, Islam, the Baháʼí Faith, the Druze Faith, and Mandaeism, the latter in which he is considered to be the final and most vital prophet. He is considered to be a prophet of God by all of the aforementioned faiths, and is honoured as a saint in many Christian denominations. According to the New Testament, John anticipated a messianic figure greater than himself, and the Gospels portray John as the precursor or forerunner of Jesus. Jesus himself identifies John as "Elijah who is to come", which is a direct reference to the Book of Malachi (Malachi 4:5), that has been confirmed by the angel who announced John's birth to his father, Zechariah. According to the Gospel of Luke, John and Jesus were relatives.

Some scholars maintain that John belonged to the Essenes, a semi-ascetic Jewish sect who expected a messiah and practiced ritual baptism. John used baptism as the central symbol or sacrament of his pre-messianic movement. Most biblical scholars agree that John baptized Jesus, and several New Testament accounts report that some of Jesus' early followers had previously been followers of John.

According to the New Testament, John was sentenced to death and subsequently beheaded by Herod Antipas around AD 30 after John rebuked him for divorcing his wife Phasaelis and then unlawfully wedding Herodias, the wife of his brother Herod Philip I. Josephus also mentions John in the Antiquities of the Jews and states that he was executed by order of Herod Antipas in the fortress at Machaerus.

Followers of John existed well into the 2nd century AD, and some proclaimed him to be the messiah. In modern times, the followers of John the Baptist are the Mandaeans, an ancient ethnoreligious group who believe that he is their greatest and final prophet.

Examples of use of John the Baptist
1. John the Baptist, considered to be Christianity‘s greatest prophet.
2. Just like John the Baptist paving the way for Jesus?
3. We do not need another John the Baptist, we do not need another transitional government.
4. "Thank you, God." "The relic is the right hand of St John the Baptist.
5. John (after John the Baptist) and its foundations were laid in 544.