postID: 6948; title: The Twentieth Sunday After Pentecost
groupKey: secondary
groupKey: other
The Twentieth Sunday After Pentecost
Almighty and everlasting God, who art always more ready to hear than we to pray, and art wont to give more than either we desire or deserve: Pour down upon us the abundance of thy mercy, forgiving us those things whereof our conscience is afraid, and giving us those good things which we are not worthy to ask, but through the merits and mediation of Jesus Christ thy Son our Lord; who liveth and reigneth with thee and the Holy Spirit, one God, for ever and ever. Amen. (Proper 22)
Array ( [date] => Sunday, October 2, 2016 [scope] => [year] => [month] => [post_id] => 94859 [series_id] => [day_titles_only] => [exclusive] => 1 [return] => formatted [formatted] => [show_date] => [show_meta] => [show_content] => 1 [admin] => [debug] => 1 [filter_types] => Array ( [0] => primary [1] => secondary ) [type_labels] => Array ( [primary] => Primary [secondary] => Secondary [other] => Other ) [the_date] => Sunday, October 2, 2016 )2 post(s) found for dateStr : 2016-10-02
postID: 231839 (Holy Guardian Angels)
--- getDisplayDates ---
litdate post_id: 231839; date_type: fixed; year: 2016
fixed_date_str: October 2
fixed_date_str (mod): October 2 2016
formattedFixedDateStr: 2016-10-02
=> check date_assignments.
dateAssigned: 2020-10-02 (2020)
yearAssigned (2020) does NOT match year (2016)
displayDates for postID: 231839/year: 2016
Array ( [0] => 2016-10-02 )postPriority: 999
postID: 6948 (The Twentieth Sunday After Pentecost)
--- getDisplayDates ---
litdate post_id: 6948; date_type: variable; year: 2016
Variable date => check date_calculations.
=> check date_assignments.
=> NO date_assignments found for postID: 6948
displayDates for postID: 6948/year: 2016
Array ( [0] => 2016-10-02 )postPriority: 3
primaryPost found for date: 2016-10-02 with ID: 6948 (The Twentieth Sunday After Pentecost)
The Revelation of Saint John the Divine is one of the most peculiar and controversial books of the Bible. Also called by its anglicized Greek name, the Apocalypse, the book’s imagery, language, and claims about heaven, earth, and the relationship between them, have captivated Christians for millennia. This class will look closely at the book, guided by several recent Anglican commentaries.
“My wrestling with the Apocalypse has convinced me of this: it is the one great poem which the first Christian age produced, it is a single and living unity from end to end, and it contains a whole world of spiritual imagery to be entered into and possessed.” – Austin Farrer (Oxford, 1948)