für verantwortlich machen - traducción al alemán
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für verantwortlich machen - traducción al alemán

AMERICAN THEOLOGIAN
J Gresham Machen; Gresham Machen; John Machen; J.G. Machen; John Gresham Machen
  • Machen's grave in Greenmount Cemetery, Baltimore

fur coat         
  • Sandals with dyed fox fur
  • A French-Canadian man, wearing a fur coat and hat, around 1910
  • Fitch fur coat worked in the "let-out" method
  • Fur sewing machine ''Success'' from Allbook & Hashfield, [[Nottingham, England]]
  • Wholesale dealer (Leipzig, c. 1900)
  • Coypu]] jacket, reversible
  • Sami]] fur [[footwear]]
  • A fur trading in [[Tallinn]], [[Estonia]] in 2019
CLOTHING MADE OF FURRY ANIMAL HIDES
Fur coats; Fur coat; Furrier; Furriers; Fur in Retail; Mink coat; Fur Free Friday; Fur-Free Friday; Anti-fur; Furriery; Anti-fur activism; Anti-fur activist
Pelzmantel
für verantwortlich machen      
hold responsible
white collar crime         
FINANCIALLY MOTIVATED NONVIOLENT CRIME COMMITTED BY BUSINESS AND GOVERNMENT PROFESSIONALS
White collar crime; Business Crime; White-collar criminal; Fur-collar crime; White collar crimes; White Collar Crime; White collar criminal; White collar criminal defense; White-Collar Crime; White Collar crime
Weißkragenkriminalität (Wirtschaftskriminalität durch Angestellte oder Geschäftsleute)

Definición

Pelt
·noun The human skin.
II. Pelt ·vi To throw missiles.
III. Pelt ·vi To throw out words.
IV. Pelt ·noun A blow or stroke from something thrown.
V. Pelt ·noun The body of any quarry killed by the hawk.
VI. Pelt ·vt To Throw; to use as a missile.
VII. Pelt ·vt To strike with something thrown or driven; to assail with pellets or missiles, as, to pelt with stones; pelted with hail.
VIII. Pelt ·noun The skin of a beast with the hair on; a raw or undressed hide; a skin preserved with the hairy or woolly covering on it. ·see 4th Fell.

Wikipedia

J. Gresham Machen

John Gresham Machen (; 1881–1937) was an American Presbyterian New Testament scholar and educator in the early 20th century. He was the Professor of New Testament at Princeton Seminary between 1906 and 1929, and led a revolt against modernist theology at Princeton and formed Westminster Theological Seminary as a more orthodox alternative. As the Northern Presbyterian Church continued to reject conservative attempts to enforce faithfulness to the Westminster Confession, Machen led a small group of conservatives out of the church to form the Orthodox Presbyterian Church. When the northern Presbyterian church (PCUSA) rejected his arguments during the mid-1920s and decided to reorganize Princeton Seminary to create a liberal school, Machen took the lead in founding Westminster Seminary in Philadelphia (1929) where he taught New Testament until his death. His continued opposition during the 1930s to liberalism in his denomination's foreign missions agencies led to the creation of a new organization, the Independent Board for Presbyterian Foreign Missions (1933). The trial, conviction and suspension from the ministry of Independent Board members, including Machen, in 1935 and 1936 provided the rationale for the formation in 1936 of the OPC.

Machen is considered to be the last of the great Princeton theologians who had, since the formation of the college in the early 19th century, developed Princeton theology: a conservative and Calvinist form of Evangelical Christianity. Although Machen can be compared to the great Princeton theologians (Archibald Alexander, Charles Hodge, A. A. Hodge, and B. B. Warfield), he was neither a lecturer in theology (he was a New Testament scholar) nor did he ever become the seminary's principal.

Machen's influence can still be felt today through the existence of the institutions that he founded: Westminster Theological Seminary, the Independent Board for Presbyterian Foreign Missions, and the Orthodox Presbyterian Church. In addition, his textbook on basic New Testament Greek is still used today in many seminaries, including PCUSA schools.