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The Blessed at the gate to heaven with St. Peter (1467–1471) by Hans Memling. Pearly gates is an informal name for the gateway to Heaven according to some Christian denominations. It is inspired by the description of the New Jerusalem in Revelation 21:21: "The twelve gates were twelve pearls, each gate made of a single pearl." [1]
Pearly Gates (singer), stage name of Viola Billups (born 1946), American disco and soul singer and member of girl group The Flirtations Pearlies , slang for members of the Pearly Kings and Queens charitable tradition
The keys of the kingdom is given to Peter, which is explicated to mean that Peter has the authority to bind and loose (cf. Matthew 18:18). [2] This is not to be understood as a statement about exorcism or the forgiveness of sins (cf. John 20:23 ), but Peter, being a sort of 'supreme rabbi of the kingdom', is given teaching authority, that 'his ...
He plays a fictionalized version of himself, as the father of Michaela Conlin's character, Angela Pearly Gates Montenegro. [22] He is never referred to by name on the show, though; every mention is limited to "Angela's father". Conlin's character's middle name is the same as Gibbons' Les Paul guitar.
The pearly gates are a conceptual entry to Heaven in Christian religions. Pearly Gates may also refer to: Pearly Gates, a 1999 album by Jughead's Revenge; Pearly Gates (guitar), a 1959 Gibson Les Paul owned by Billy Gibbons; Pearly Gates (record label) Pearly Gates (singer), an American soul singer and member of the Flirtations
"I'll Never Find Another You" Single by the Seekers; from the album The Best of the Seekers; B-side "Open Up Them Pearly Gates" Released: December 1964: Recorded: 4 November 1964: Studio ...
Viola Billups (born July 4, 1946), known by her stage name Pearly Gates, is an American disco and soul singer and member of girl group The Flirtations. Biography
The corolla of the flower of Ipomoea violacea is white, distinguishing this species from Ipomoea tricolor, commonly called Heavenly Blue.It is sometimes mistaken for the cultivar Pearly Gates, the corolla of which is also white, probably because of its misleading Latin binomial name, Ipomoea violacea, "violacea" meaning purple.