Beneath the high altar is a subterranean chapel containing the tomb of St Januarius (San Gennaro), the patron saint of the city; in the right aisle there is a chapel (Cappella del Tesoro) built between 1608 and 1637 in popular recognition of his having saved Naples in 1527 " from famine, war, plague and the fire of Vesuvius "; and in a silver tabernacle behind the high altar of this chapel are preserved the two phials partially filled with his blood, the periodical liquefaction of which forms a prominent feature in the religious life of the city.
But the authenticity of the passages describing the altar of incense in the tabernacle, and the historicity of the corresponding altar in Solomon's temple, are matters of keen dispute among critics.
Collected as The Tabernacle Pulpit, the sermons form some fifty volumes.
Could the glory of God descend and fill the tabernacle or temple and it not be known?
Further, the long passage in Hebrews says that Christ entered a perfect tabernacle, that is, in heaven.
God told him to build a copy on earth, called the tabernacle which later was replaced by the temple.
Had he known of its existence, he could hardly have failed to include it with the rest of the Tabernacle furniture in ch.
His appeal for "spade work" resulted in the formation of the Liberal League, inside the Liberal Opposition; and what Lord Rosebery himself described as his "definite separation" from Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman's "tabernacle" took place.
His books also have had large circulations; among them are The Almond Tree in Blossom (1870); Every Day Religion (1875); The Brooklyn Tabernacle (1884); From Manger to Throne (1895); and The Pathway of Life (1895).
His powers of organization were strongly exhibited in the Pastors' College, the Orphanage (at Stockwell), the Tabernacle Almshouses, the Colportage Association for selling religious books, and the gratuitous book fund which grew up under his care.
I breakfasted at Mrs. Overton 's, on whose ground Mr. Wheatley 's first tabernacle was built.
I breakfasted at Mrs. Overton's, on whose ground Mr. Wheatley's first tabernacle was built.
If he has to put off this earthly tabernacle, he knows there is a house not made with hands eternal in the heavens.
In 1859 he removed to Syracuse, N.Y.; in 1862 to Philadelphia, where he was pastor of the Second Reformed Dutch Church; and in 1869 to the Central Presbyterian Church in Brooklyn, where a large building known as the Tabernacle was erected for him in 1870.
In ecclesiastical usage it is the sacred vase or tabernacle in which the Host is reserved.
In practice, however, it is usual to have only one lamp lighted before the tabernacle in which the Host is reserved.
It is now generally recognized that the description of the tabernacle altar is intended to provide a precedent for this vast structure, which would otherwise be inconsistent with the traditional view of the simple Hebrew altars.
Near the "Elephant and Castle" is the Metropolitan Tabernacle, the original building of which, burnt down in 1898, became famous under the Baptist preacher, Charles Spurgeon.
On returning to London he found his congregation at the Tabernacle dispersed; and his circumstances were so depressed that he was obliged to sell his household furniture to pay his orphan-house debts.
On the altar are placed a cross and candlesticks - six in number, and seven when a bishop celebrates in his cathedral; and over it is suspended or fixed a tabernacle or receptacle for the reservation of the Sacrament.
One of them, Rev. Thomas Spurgeon, after some years of pastorate in New Zealand, succeeded his father as minister of the Tabernacle, but resigned in 1908 and became president of the Pastors' College.
Rather, the tabernacle account may reflect idealized versions of the later tent shrines at Shiloh or the tent of David.
Scott shows the significance of the tabernacle for modern day.
Sinai, nor of those which deal with the Tabernacle and its furniture.
Spurgeon preached habitually at the Tabernacle on Sundays and Thursdays.
St Mary's Roman Catholic cathedral is a beautiful building; but perhaps the most notable ecclesiastical building in Hobart is the great Baptist tabernacle in Upper Elizabeth Street.
Tabernacle Granite and Marble, Inc. has over 24 years in the industry and their residential service area extends all the way to North Carolina.
The college has about 70 acres of ground (and about 4000 acres of mountain land for forestry study), with a large recitation hall, a library, a chapel (seating 1400 persons), a science hall, an industrial hall, a brick-making plant, a woodwork building, a printing building, a tabernacle for commencement exercises and other buildings.
The elliptical Tabernacle (5870) has a rounded, turtle-shell shaped roof, unsupported by pillars or beams, seats nearly 10,000, and has a large pipe organ (5000 pipes).
The enlarged chapel at once proved too small for the crowds, and a huge tabernacle was projected in Newington Causeway.
The Metropolitan Tabernacle, with a platform for the preacher and accommodation for 6000 persons, was opened for service on the 25th of March 1861.
The most prominent buildings are those of the Church of LatterDay Saints, particularly, in Temple Square, the Temple, Tabernacle, and Assembly Hall.
The new covenant and the priesthood of Christ have to do with this the true tabernacle in heaven itself.
The Pastors' College in connexion with the Metropolitan Tabernacle was instituted in 1856, and in 1866 the present Baptist College at Manchester was instituted at Bury in the interests of the "Strict" Baptist views.
The second altar was the altar of incense, which was in the holy place of the tabernacle.
The story of the tabernacle door in the secret oratory is related in the pamphlet above.
The tabernacle of testimony and the priesthood complete the picture of God with them.
There can be no doubt, too, that the word rendered "tabernacle" (aKrlvii) with the corresponding verb "to tabernacle" (crKnvovv) has been chosen for use in St John i.
There is more than one meaning of Tabernacle discussed in the 1911 Encyclopedia.
Therefore will I offer in his tabernacle sacrifices of joy; I will sing, yea, I will sing praises unto the Lord.
Thereupon his friends built for him near Wesley's church a wooden structure, which was named the Moorfields Tabernacle.
These recognize two altars, which by the authors of this portion of the Pentateuch are placed from the first in the tabernacle in the wilderness - a theory which is inconsistent with the other evidences of the nature of the earlier Hebrew worship, to which we have just alluded.
These things are the burden of the sons of Kohath in the tabernacle of the congregation.
They are richly carved, and are frequently surmounted by canopies of tabernacle work.
They are to all appearance the work of a school of priests, who, after the destruction of the Temple in 586 B.C., began to write down and codify the ceremonial regulations of the pre-exilic times, combining them with an historical narrative extending from the Creation to the establishment of Israel in Canaan; and who completed their work during the century following the restoration in 537 B.C. The chief object of these sections is to describe in detail the leading institutions of the theocracy (Tabernacle, sacrifices, purifications, &c.), and to refer them to their traditional origin in the Mosaic age.
They had the tabernacle of God 's presence in the desert.
They had the tabernacle of God's presence in the desert.
This altar was in the centre of the court of the tabernacle, of acacia wood, 3 cubits high and 5 square.
Two fine silver candelabra, the tabernacle and the altar front are of the 17th century; and the treasury also contains some good silver work.
We are opposing the owners of the former Wesleyan ' tin tabernacle ' at Hebden Bridge who wish to demolish.