Amis de JesusForum où les chrétiens peuvent échanger des idées, des versets bibliques et discuter sur des thèmes de la vie chrétienne
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Esther Administrateur
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Joined: 29 Oct 2007 Posts: 37
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Posted: Thu 17 Apr - 11:39 Post subject: Prière pour mes collègues de travail |
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Pourriez-vous prier pour mes collègues qui ne connaissent pas encore le Seigneur . Il y en a parmi eux des homosexuels 
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Esther Administrateur
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Posted: Fri 14 Nov - 16:10 Post subject: Prière pour mes collègues de travail |
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Je vous remercie pour vos prières
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guihuomao
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Joined: 09 Mar 2009 Posts: 5
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Posted: Mon 9 Mar - 03:09 Post subject: Prière pour mes collègues de travail |
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Frederic wow power leveling, Francois Chopin, Polish-born composer and renowned pianist, was the creator of 55 mazurkas, 13
polonaises, 24 preludes, 27 etudes, 19 nocturnes, 4 ballads, and 4 scherzos Although Chopin later attended the Lyceum where his father taught, his early training began at home. This included receiving piano lessons from his mother. By the age of
six, Chopin was creating original pieces, showing innate prodigious musical ability. His parents arranged for the young Chopin to take piano instruction from Wojciech Zywny.
When wow gold, Chopin was sixteen, he attended the Warsaw Conservatory of Music, directed by composer Joseph Elsner. Elsner, like
Zywny, insisted on the traditional training associated with Classicalmusic but allowed his students to investigate the more original imaginations of the Romantic style as well.
As wow gold, often happened with the young musicians of both the Classical and Romantic Periods, Chopin was sent to Vienna, the
unquestioned center of music for that day. He gave piano concerts and then arranged to have his pieces published by a Viennese publishing house there. While Chopin was in
Austria, wow gold, Poland and Russia faced off in the apparent beginnings of war. He returned to Warsaw to get his things in preparation of a
more permanent move. While there, his friends gave him a silver goblet filled with Polish soil. He kept it always, as he was never able to return to his beloved Poland.
French by heritage, and desirous of finding musical acceptance from a less traditional audience than that of Vienna, Chopin ventured to Paris. Interestingly, other young
musicians wow gold, had assembled in the city of fashion with the very same hope. Chopin joined Franz Liszt, Hector Berlioz, Felix
Mendelssohn, Vincenzo Bellini, and Auguste Franchomme, all proponents of the "new" Romantic style.
Although Chopin did play in the large concert halls on occasion, he felt most at home in private settings, enjoying the social milieu that accompanied concerts for the wealthy.
He wow gold, also enjoyed teaching, as this caused him less stress than performing. Chopin did not feel that his delicate technique and
intricate melodies were as suited to the grandiose hall as they were to smaller environments and audiences.
News of the war in Poland inspired Chopin to write many sad musical pieces expressing his grief for "his" Poland. Among these was the famous "Revolutionary Etude." Plagued by
poor wow gold, health as well as his homesickness, Chopin found solace in summer visits to the country. Here, his most complex yet harmonic
creations found their way to the brilliant composer's hand. The "Fantasia in F Minor," the "Barcarolle," the "Polonaise Fantasia," "Ballade in A Flat Major," "Ballade in F
Minor," and "Sonata in B Minor" were all products of the relaxed time Chopin enjoyed in the country.
As the war continued in Warsaw and then reached Paris, Chopin retired to Scotland with friends. Although he was far beyond the reach of the revolution, his melancholy attitude
did not WOW power leveling, improve and he sank deeper into a depression. Likewise, his health did not rejuvenate either. A window
in the fighting made it possible for Chopin to return to Paris as his health deteriorated further. Surrounded by those that he loved, Frederic Francois Chopin died at the age
of wow gold, 39. He was buried in Paris.
Chopin's wotlk gold, last request was that the Polish soil in the silver goblet be sprinkled over his grave.2
Frederic Francois Chopin
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guihuomao
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Posted: Mon 9 Mar - 03:15 Post subject: A Brief History of Him |
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Stephen William Hawking was born on 8 January 1942 (300 years after the death of Galileo) in Oxford, England. His parents' house was in north London, but during the second world
war wow power leveling, Oxford was considered a safer place to have babies. When he was eight, his family moved to St Albans, a
town about 20 miles north of London. At eleven Stephen went to St Albans School, and then on to University College, Oxford, his father's old college. Stephen wanted to do
Mathematics, although his father would have preferred medicine. Mathematics was not available at University College, so he did Physics instead. After three years and not very
much wow power leveling, work he was awarded a first class honours degree in Natural Science. Stephen then went on to Cambridge to do research in Cosmology, there being no-one working in that area in Oxford at the time. His supervisor was Denis Sciama, although he had
hoped to get Fred Hoyle who was working in Cambridge. After gaining his Ph.D. he became first a Research Fellow, and later on a Professorial Fellow at Gonville and Caius
College. After Stephen wow gold, Hawking has worked on the basic laws which govern the universe. With Roger Penrose he showed that Einstein's General
Theory of Relativity implied space and time would have a beginning in the Big Bang and an end in black holes. These results indicated it was necessary to unify General
Relativity with Quantum Theory, the other great Scientific development of the first half of the 20th Century. One consequence of such a unification that he discovered In flyff penya, my third year at Oxford, however, I noticed that I seemed to be getting more clumsy, and I fell over once or twice for no
apparent reason. But it was not until I was at Cambridge, in the following year, that my father noticed, and took me to the family doctor. He referred me to a specialist, and
shortly after my 21st birthday, I went into hospital for tests. I was in for two weeks, during which I had a wide variety of tests. They took a muscle sample from my arm, stuck
electrodes into me, and injected some radio opaque fluid into my spine, and watched it going up and down with x-rays, as they tilted the bed. After all that, they didn't tell
me wow gold, what I had, except that it was not multiple sclerosis, and that I was an a-typical case. I gathered, however, that they
expected it to continue to get worse, and that there was nothing they could do, except give me vitamins. I could see that they didn't expect them to have much effect. I didn't
feel like asking for more details, because they were obviously bad. Not knowing what was going to happen to me, or how rapidly the disease would progress, I was at a loose end. The doctors told me to go back to Cambridge and carry on with the research I had just started in general relativity and cosmology. But I was not making much
wow gold, progress, because I didn't have much mathematical background. And, anyway, I might not live long enough to finish my
PhD. I felt somewhat of a tragic character. I took to listening to Wagner, but reports in magazine articles that I drank heavily are an exaggeration. The trouble is once one
article said it, other articles copied it, because it made a good story. People believe that anything that has appeared in print so many times must be true Up to 1974, I was able to feed myself, and get in and out of bed. Jane managed to help me, and bring up the children, without outside help. However, things were getting more
difficult, wow gold, so we took to having one of my research students living with us. In return for free accommodation, and a lot of my
attention, they helped me get up and go to bed. In 1980, we I archlord money, have had motor neurone disease for practically all my adult life. Yet it has not prevented me from having a very
attractive family, and being successful in my work. This is thanks to the help I have received from Jane, my children, and a large number of other people and organisations. I
have flyff penya, been lucky, that my condition has progressed more slowly than is often the case. But it shows that one need not lose
hope.5
A Brief History of Him
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