Gospel Library On Mac

Gospel Library for PC – Get the last version of Gospel Library 2019 for Windows 10, 8, 7, Vista & XP PC 32-bit/64-bit and MAC directly from this site for free now.

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Gain spiritual insight, biblical wisdom, and theological knowledge from beloved pastor and teacher John MacArthur—with more than 3,000 of his sermons. Search within the John MacArthur Sermon Archive to locate his teaching on thousands of specific biblical passages. Examine modern culture from a biblical perspective, and learn how to apply sound doctrinal teaching to contemporary life. Discover how to download and also Install Gospel Library on PC (Windows) that is certainly designed by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Having great features. We should understand the specifications in order to download Gospel Library PC on MAC.

SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS. 1.2 GB free disk space, 4 GB RAM (8 GB or more recommended). A working EZbass 1.0.8 (or above) installation. For MacOSX users: copy the EZB-Gospel folder from the Contents folder to the directory with the rest of the EZbass libraries (default: / Library / Application Support / EZbass /). Musica Gospel free download - Gospel Library, Gerson Rufino Gospel Musica Letras, Daniel e Samuel Musica Gospel Antigas, and many more programs. This item: Evangelism: How to Share the Gospel Faithfully (MacArthur Pastor's Library) by John F. MacArthur Hardcover $25.70 Only 9 left in stock - order soon. Ships from and sold by lionandlambohio.

Get Gospel Library App for Windows

Download last version of Gospel Library App for PC Windows from the button link on below.

App NameGospel Library
Version5.2.2 (52081.35)
Update2019-07-12
RequirementWindows 7, Windows 8, Windows 10

How To Install Gospel Library on Windows 10

This app is made for Android. So, if you wanna install Gospel Library on PC Windows, first you will need Android Emulator like NOX App or Bluestacks. With this emulator app you will be able to running Gospel Library into your Windows 7, 8, 10 Laptop. And even install android app on your MAC OSx PC

  1. Go to this Bluestacks download page or NOX App Download Page to get the emulator that compatible with your Operating System.
  2. Click the icon on Desktop to run the Bluestacks Emulator app on Windows.
  3. Login with your Google Play Store account.
  4. Then, open Google Play Store and search for ” Gospel Library “
  5. Choose one of the app from the search result list. Click the Install button.
  6. Or you can import the Gospel Library.apk file that you’ve downloaded from the link on above this article with Bluestacks File Explorer. Right-Click then install it.
  7. Now you can play Gospel Library app for PC.
  8. Enjoy the app!
  9. Installing NOX it’s almost the same with step on above

Install Gospel Library on MAC PC

This Gospel Library is a great fit for Mac OS as well. To download it in your Mac Book, first you’ll need to download the .dmg file of BlueStacks Emulator for MAC. After you have finished installing BlueStacks emulator, the process of installation for Mac OS is exactly the same as Windows. Follow the above steps and you will successfully download the Gospel Library App. on your Mac Book PC.

How to completely uninstall (remove) Gospel Library?

Because this app is installed on PC with Bluestacks, So just follow these instructions on bellow To uninstall (remove) app:

  • On the BlueStacks window, click on the Blue colored “Home” button as shown in the picture below
  • Once you click on the “Home” button, you will be able to see the option “Installed apps” on the Home screen
  • Hover the mouse near “Installed apps” and it will then show further options “Install apk” and “Delete apps” as shown in the picture below. Left click on “Delete apps” once
  • Once we click that option, the screen option will appeared
  • All the installed apps will have a small Red “X” marked on the top left. Left click once on the small Red “X” associated with the icon of the app you are intending to uninstall or delete
  • Click on Yes to Uninstall/Delete the app
  • Repeat the procedure in case you have more than one app to be uninstalled or deleted from BlueStacks.

Alternatively, you may also left-click and hold the app icon you want to uninstall or delete and then click once on (cross button) next to the app icon to uninstall it.

Gospel Library for Windows Reviews

Gospel Library App Preview

Gospel Library is the gospel study app of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. The library includes the scriptures, general conference addresses, music, learning and teaching manuals, Church magazines, videos, audio recordings, gospel art, and more. Study, search, mark, and share this vast collection.

Content included: Scriptures, Bible, Old Testament, New Testament, Book of Mormon, Doctrine and Covenants, Pearl of Great Price, Guide to the Scriptures, Joseph Smith Translation, Articles of Faith, General Conference, Teachings of Presidents of the Church, Hymns, Liahona, Ensign, New Era, Friend, Gospel Principles, Preach My Gospel, Relief Society, Young Women, Primary, Sunday School, Seminary, Institute, and Come, Follow Me.
• Improved how videos are displayed at the top of a general conference talk.
• Bug Fixes

Disclaimer

Gospel Library is an App that build by their Developer. This website is not directly affiliated with them. All trademarks, registered trademarks, product names and company names or logos mentioned it in here is the property of their respective owners.

Gospel Library installer file is not hosted on our server. When visitor click “Download” button, installation files will downloading directly from the Official Site.

Mac Durnan Gospels
London, Lambeth Palace MS 1370
Also known asBook of Mac Durnan
TypeGospels
Datelate 9th century (or early 10th)
Place of originIreland
Scribe(s)unknown, possibly Máel Brigte mac Tornáin
MaterialParchment
Size15.8cm x 11.1cm
ScriptIrish minuscule script
Illumination(s)portraits of the Evangelists
Additionsf. 3v: metrical inscription in square capitals
Mac

The Mac Durnan Gospels or Book of Mac Durnan (London, Lambeth Palace MS 1370) is an illuminated manuscript Gospel book made in Ireland in the 9th or 10th century, a rather late example of Insular art.[1] Unusually,[citation needed] it was in Anglo-Saxon England soon after it was written, and is now in the collection of Lambeth Palace Library in London.[2]

It contains the four gospels of Matthew, Mark, Luke and John, without the usual prefatory matter, and has a full-page evangelist portrait of each. There is an opening quasi-carpet page with the four evangelists' symbols in panels around a cross, and some elaborately decorated incipit pages.

Gospel Library On Mac

Manuscript history[edit]

Information concerning the provenance and history of the manuscript comes from an alliterative Latin inscription which was added on folio 3v, possibly by Koenwald (d. 957/8), later bishop of Worcester.[3] It suggests that the manuscript was written or commissioned by Máel Brigte mac Tornáin (d. 927), known as Mac Durnan, abbot of Armagh since 888, who is said to have dedicated the book to God.[4][5] Rearranged in regular metre, the inscription reads:

MæielbriðusMacDurnani
istum textumper triquadrum
Deo dignedogmatizat
ast
ÆthelstanusAnglosæxna
rex et rectorDoruernensi
metropolidat per æuum[6]

The manuscript must have left the scriptorium of Armagh soon after for England, since it passed into the possession of Æthelstan (r. 924–939), presumably as a diplomatic gift. According to the same inscription, Æthelstan presented the book to Christ Church, Canterbury.[7] The Mac Durnan Gospels offer a unique glimpse on the Irish connections of Æthelstan's court, which is known to have been attended by at least one Irish abbot, Dubinsi, abbot of Bangor.[8]

During the 11th century, six Anglo-Saxon charters were copied into the gospel-book, including writs and records of agreements, the latest being no later than AD 1050.[citation needed]

By 1574 it was owned by the Archbishop of Canterbury, Matthew Parker. It was probably Parker who had folios decorated with miniatures taken from a 13th-century Psalter and gave the work its current binding. After his death, Parker bequeathed all his manuscripts, save the Mac Durnan Gospels, to Corpus Christi College, Cambridge. The reason for this is unknown though he may have gifted to a friend while he was alive. The only known owner thereafter is Brother Howel, a manufacturer of measuring instruments in London, who showed the work to antiquarian and poet Lewis Morris. The manuscript probably entered the library of Lambeth Palace on the initiative of its director, Andrew Coltee Ducarel, who assumed the post in 1757. However, the work isn't listed in any library records from the time and doesn't make its first appearance in the catalogues until 1932.[9]

Contents[edit]

Text[edit]

The manuscript contains the four Gospels of the Latin Vulgate written in Irish minuscule script and without their usual prologues.[9] The text is very close to that found in the Echternach Gospels, the Book of Armagh, or that of the Gospels of Máel Brigte.[10]
Contents:

  • F.5-69: Gospel of Matthew
  • f.69-70: Four charters and two texts on the heritage of Canterbury Cathedral dating from before 1050
  • f.72-115: Gospel of Mark
  • f.117-170: Gospel of Luke
  • f.172-216: Gospel of John

Decoration[edit]

The manuscript's introductory page is decorated with a cross that frames the symbols of the Four Evangelists, an angel, an eagle, a bull, and a lion, each surrounded by a yellow or green frame, along with the four portraits of the evangelists, and the initials introducing each gospel. The interior of the cross is decorated with black and white Celtic knot patterns. Along its length are frames decorated with the same knots alternating with red, yellow and green diamonds. The top of the page on the left has been torn and then glued.[11]

The portraits of the evangelists are decorated with the same colors and similar motifs. Matthew holds in his hands a stick and a book in a frame made of interlacing panels and knots (f.4v.). Saint Mark only holds a book and is surrounded by crawling lions symbolizing a throne on which he is seated (f.70v.). Mark's head is surmounted by an animal which exceeds the frame and which looks more like a bull than a lion, thus corresponding to the ancient symbols of the evangelists as seen in the Book of Durrow. Saint Luke, with the geometric head, holds a stick on the ground and a book (f.115v.). Saint John holds in one hand a quill dipped in an inkwell and in the other a book with another quill (f.170v). All the Evangelists are all framed by various motifs of Celtic knots and diamonds, with Saint Luke and Saint John's frames being near-identical. The initials placed at the start of the Gospels have the same register of decoration made of frets and interlacing.[11] Three Gospels are introduced by Evangelist portraits at their opening pages.[4]

Four miniatures taken from a thirteenth-century English Psalter have been placed in the incipit of the Gospels; the Crucifixion at the beginning of Matthew, the Flagellation of Christ at the start of Mark, The Betrayal of Judas at the beginning of Luke, and The Entombment of Christ at the Beginning of John.[11]

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  • Portrait of Saint Matthew, f.4v.

  • Portrait of Saint Mark, f.70v.

  • Portrait of Saint Luke, f.115v.

  • Portrait of Saint John, f.170v.

References[edit]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^Stalley, Roger; Ryan, Michael; Brown, Michelle P. (2003). 'Insular art'. Grove Art Online. doi:10.1093/gao/9781884446054.article.T041391. ISBN9781884446054. Retrieved 16 March 2021.
  2. ^Keynes, 'King Athelstan's books', p. 153.
  3. ^Simon Keynes, 'Koenwald.' In Blackwell Encyclopedia of Anglo-Saxon England, ed. Michael Lapidge et al. 1999.
  4. ^ abDodwell, Pictorial arts, p. 92.
  5. ^Keynes, 'King Athelstan's books', p. 154.
  6. ^Keynes, 'King Athelstan's books', p. 156.
  7. ^Dodwell, Pictorial arts, p. 92. The inscription on f. 3v translates as 'Maeilbrithus mac Durnan teaches this Gospel [istum textum, lit. 'this text'] through the tripartite world in a manner worthy of God. But Aethelstan Anglo-Saxon king and ruler gives it to the metropolitan church of Canterbury for ever.' McNamara, 'The Echternach and Mac Durnan Gospels', p. 218.
  8. ^Ó Cróinín, Early medieval Ireland, p. 229.
  9. ^ ab'CalmView: Overview'. archives.lambethpalacelibrary.org.uk. Retrieved 15 March 2021.
  10. ^McNamara, Martin (January 1987). 'The Echternach and Mac Durnan gospels: some common readings and their significance'. Peritia. 6–7: 217–222. doi:10.1484/J.Peri.3.163.
  11. ^ abcAlexander, J. J. G. (1978). Insular manuscripts, 6th to the 9th century. London: H. Miller. pp. 86–87. ISBN9780905203010.

Secondary sources[edit]

  • Dodwell, C.R. The Pictorial Arts of the West 800-1200. New Haven: Yale UP, 1993.
  • Keynes, Simon (1985). 'King Athelstan's Books'. In Michael Lapidge and Helmut Gneuss (ed.). Learning and Literature in Anglo-Saxon England: Studies presented to Peter Clemoes on the occasion of his sixty-fifth birthday. Cambridge. pp. 143–201.
  • Ó Cróinín, Dáibhí. Early Medieval Ireland, 400-1200. Longman History of Ireland. London, 1995.

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Further reading[edit]

  • Alexander, J.J.G. Insular manuscripts 6th to the 9th century. Survey of manuscripts illuminated in the British Isles 1. London, 1978. No. 70, plate 325.
  • McNamara, Martin. 'The Echternach and Mac Durnan Gospels: some common readings and their significance.' Peritia 6-7 (1987–88): 217–22.
  • Robinson, J. Armitage. The Times of St. Dunstan. Oxford, 1933. 55–9.

External links[edit]

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mac Durnan Gospels.
  • Images from Lambeth Palace Library
  • Anglo-Saxon charters[permanent dead link]

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