+MistaRichard0 I am assuming you can read Cyrillic so I will write these responses in Cyrillic; but, if you don't understand just let me know and I can send you the phonetic transcriptions.So, to my ear, the way she said this is a little funny. She said "Выходи за меня замуж" which is in the informal (presumably if you are marrying them you are using the informal) and a command. To translate this, she said "Marry me!" and the замуж implies that this was a boy saying this to a girl. Literally, "will you marry me" is translated as (Ты) выйдешь за меня замуж? as is written on the video, but not said. This sounds a little more like a question as opposed to a command. Imagine the different contexts in which you would say "Marry me" as opposed to "Will you marry me?"For reference, a boy cannot выйти замуж, only a woman can. To say I am married you would say "Я женат" and if you wanted to specify I am married to her, you would say "Я женат на ней." The Russian marriage verbs are gendered, and this must be taken into consideration when using them.Let me know if you have any more questions.
+Hunter Marshall I was wondering that too... and isn't the "ш" supposed to be pronouned "sh" instead of "z"? I don't trust this video. From the cyrillic I read it "Teh-Veyidesh-Za-Menya-Zamush". But please if someone knows, correct me if I'm wrong.
A Stupid Quote By Kim Kardashian!
Funny Celebrity Quotes - The only place on youtube to go for tons of hilarious, witty and downright shocking quotes by all of your favourite celebrities new and ...
happy birthday wishes text English latest pictures 2015 HD
happy birthday wishes text English latest pictures 2014 HD Beautiful happy birthday wishes message 2014 latest HD ... Video for happy birthday wishes text ...
I attended a Mennonite church a few years ago. I have never seen such a
content group of people who genuinely practice what they preach. They did
not judge me for my past nor pressure me to join. I still have friend's
from that church and I believe God placed them in my life when I needed
them most. I cannot speak for all groups but in this case they acted only
as true Christians and inspired me to live better.
+C Louise Oh yes, I agree. When I was widowed they were a great help in my grief, my worship, and just about everything. I go back to their church every chance I get.
It's a cult, based on a misunderstanding of the Sermon on the Mount.
Jesus said specifically that He was NOT doing away with Moses' Law, in this
Sermon. (until heaven and earth pass away.)
But the very foundation of the historical anabaptist position is the idea
that Jesus replaced the Old Law with a new, higher standard of loving God
with all the heart, soul, mind and strength, and to love one another as the
self.
Problem is, that's nothing new. It's straight from the Torah.
Conservative Mennonites hold to anti-war positions, and not allowing
remarriage after divorce,. These positions do away with the moral code that
revealed the heart of God, in the Old Testament.
Therefore, the conservative Mennonites fit precisely within the definition
of the pharisees, which substitute God's Law with man-made traditions. And
how serious is that?
Matthew 5:19 and 20 describes three groups of people. The first group are
great in the Kingdom of Heaven. The second group is the least in the
Kingdom. And the third group aren't even in the Kingdom.
It's a cult, folks. A very old cult, hundreds of years old... and it looks
so pretty from the outside. And it feels so safe to those who grew up in
it... but it's still a cult.
+polly jetix You may disagree. (But that's a human right, not scriptural, by the way.) But you seem not to know what a cult is. So You would do well not to go there. UNLIKE the LDS, JW & similar bodies, these folks are doing all they can to understand and obey scripture, and to live a Plain life. Not everyone does as well as some others, but for the most part, they can not be faulted.
+polly jetix Not the point. I am not trying to address anything other than your statement that it's a cult. You had a terrible experience and you hopefully are able to move on. Your experience is your own and no one else can understand it. Anecdotal points such as one person's bad personal experience and having seen it elsewhere does not make factual evidence to call something a cult, any more than being a military veteran makes one an expert on US foreign policy, or being a Roman Catholic makes one an expert on Renaissance art. Additionally, my being a man and my personal experience, or lack thereof, regarding divorce is irrelevant to your statement about an entire religion being a cult. It DOES mean I can't know what you went through. That's all I am addressing. Peace to you and I hope you find. or have found, the right place.
Sorry... I've seen too much, in too many congregations.As a man, you cannot possibly understand the position of a Mennonite woman, especially that of a divorcee.
+polly jetix Again-- read my previous comments. Because one has a bad experience with one's church does not make it a cult. Can happen with any church and means that particular congregation is wrong. Abuse is horrible but is not confined to the Mennonite denomination. Sorry your experience was so bad-- I do feel for you.
I was raised Mennonite. I know what they believe. Anabaptism is BASED on a faulty understanding of the sermon on the mount.Yes, Mennonites are anti-war. They don't go to war, and they do engage in sheltering the enemies of their earthly government, in times of war. This is not only anti-war activity, but also rebellion. But Mennonites don't see it that way. They split theological hairs to justify their stance.I see the Mennonites (especially some of the churches within the 'faith') as a cult. What else do you call it, when a 22-year-old girl wants to marry someone the church doesn't approve of, and the church intervenes to pressure her to cut off the relationship. I'm talking about sleep deprivation by non-stop "counseling" until she breaks. She no longer has a will of her own, but does meekly whatever she is told to do. Which is precisely what the church requires of the women.I grew up in that culture. And I know it was that culture that led me to marry the emotional abuser I married. He was schizophrenic like his father, and left after 18 years, overwhelmed with paranoia, blaming me for all kinds of evil which I never had committed. He divorced me.You claim, "We don't divorce." And therein lies a great problem. The world today is full of situations like my own. And the Mennonite church has no place for them... no wonder there are so few proselytes.I was suddenly suspect, as a divorcee. I was considered a danger to other marriages. Both women and men related to me differently, than when I was married. I was ostracized, because of circumstances beyond my control.The world is as full of divorce and remarriage today as the Roman and Greek cultures were in the first century. Yet, there is NO record of the church requiring separation of divorce-and-remarried unions! In fact, if such a thing HAD happened, you can be sure the pagans would have accused the Christians of destroying homes! And you can be sure the early church fathers (especially Justin Martyr) would have written a refutation against such accusations. But it simply didn't exist. Because there is no command within the New Testament to break up such unions. It is SILENT about that!I was left with 2 children to raise alone. The church was "there" for me, but there was a heavy pressure to not think for myself spiritually.There was no Sunday school for the women, and we were not allowed to speak in the mixed services. So I was shut down spiritually. You can't grow, if you can't discuss your faith or even ask questions! For my questions to get answered, I had to ask the minister's wife, who would ask her husband. He would give her the answer, which she would convey back to me within a couple of weeks, if ever. What kind of spiritual nurture is that? That is nothing but oppression!Yes, it was a cult. And I am glad God set me FREE.
+polly jetix Sorry but you're all over the map theologically and not even close to what Anabaptism is all about. Your whole first paragraph is just simply not true-- not even going to get into specific refutation because it's just not accurate. Secondly, we are not anti-war---we are nonresistant. Big difference. Next--we don't remarry after divorce because we don't do divorce in the first place. Finally, read up on the definition of the term"cult." Mennonites do not fit the classic sociological or theological meanings in any of the accepted defining points. I converted from Quakerism and have a mainstream (not Anabaptist) MDiv. and know whereof I speak. You're not even close but you're always welcome to come to a Mennonite church to visit and stay for lunch!
"xBartholisx" once again showing how stupid and simple you are. Didn't you
know United had a slooow start to the season last year? And we ended up
with the CL and a title. Our glory has just begun ;)