Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. William Plumer (June 25, 1759 – December 22, 1850) was an American lawyer, Baptist lay preacher, and politician from Epping, New Hampshire. He is most notable for his service as a Federalist in the United States Senate (1802–1807), and the seventh governor of New Hampshire as a Democratic-Republican (1812–1813, 1816–1819).

  2. William Swan Plumer (1802-1880) fue un destacado teólogo y escritor presbiteriano estadounidense del siglo XIX. Nacido el 20 de junio de 1802 en Greersburg, Pennsylvania, Plumer mostró desde temprana edad un profundo interés por el estudio de las Escrituras y una gran habilidad intelectual.

  3. William Swan Plumer. William Swan Plumer, American clergyman, author and religious educator. William Swan Plumer (July 26, 1802 – October 22, 1880) was an American clergyman, theologian and author who was recognized as an intellectual leader of the Presbyterian Church in the 1800s.

  4. Cristo el Mediador | Sermon de William S. Plumer Nadie puede leer las Escrituras sin ver la gran importancia que estas le dan a Cristo Jesús en el plan de salvación. (1) Dice allí que es el Primero y el Último, el Alfa y el Omega, el Autor y Consumador de nuestra fe.

    • William Plumer
  5. Bio. Books. Resources. Minister, author, and theological professor, William Swan Plumer (1802-80) was one of Princeton Theological Seminary’s most well-known students. Born in Griersburg, Pennsylvania, Plumer would graduate from Washington College in Virginia in 1825.

  6. William S. Plumer (1802- 1880) L arrepentimiento pertenece exclusivamente a la religión de pecadores. No tiene cabida en las actividades de criaturas no caídas. Aquel que nunca ha cometido un acto pecaminoso, ni ha tenido una naturaleza pecaminosa, no necesita perdón, ni conversión, ni arrepentimiento. Los ángeles santos nunca se arrepienten.

  7. WILLIAM PLUMER, the eleventh and thirteenth governor to serve New Hampshire, was born in Newburyport, Massachusetts on June 25, 1759. His early education was attained at the Newburyport South Writing School. He later studied law, was admitted to the bar in 1787, and then established his legal career in Epping, New Hampshire.