Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Unis is a Canadian French language specialty channel. The channel broadcasts general entertainment programming, with a particular focus on highlighting francophone communities outside Quebec . The channel shares a broadcasting licence with its sister channel, TV5 Québec Canada (TV5), which focuses on international and Quebec francophone ...
In 1942, during the German occupation of France, some students began to meet in Aix-en-Provence in order to pray and study the Bible together. [1] They were encouraged [2]: 172, 343 by M. René Pache, the founder of the Swiss GBU in 1932 [3] and vice-president of IFES in 1947, who was the speaker at the first GBU camp in Anduze in 1943.
It does not include programs which first appeared on a different network. Pages in category "Unis (TV channel) original programming" The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total.
UNIS or Unis may refer to: Union of Nigerien Independents and Sympathisers, a defunct political party in Niger; Unis, a new religious movement founded in the 1960s, based on the teachings of George Gurdjieff; UniS, the corporate logo of the University of Surrey from 1998 to 2007; Unis (TV channel), a Canadian French-language television channel
The first audio Bible (KJV in English language) was recorded and narrated by Alexander Scourby in the 1950s for the American Foundation of the Blind. [1] It was first recorded on long play records, then 8-track player, and then cassette tape. The Bible in cassette tape was 72-hours long, and it took 72 cassette tapes to record the entire audio ...
Administers French-speaking digital campuses and institutes in four-year cycles. Evaluates relations between the association and the French-speaking scientific community in the fields of the environment, water, energy, climate, sustainable development and well-being of populations; supports research.
In Christian communities, Bible study is the study of the Bible by people as a personal religious or spiritual practice. In many Christian traditions, Bible study, coupled with Christian prayer, is known as doing devotions or devotional acts. Many Christian churches schedule time to engage in Bible study collectively. [1]
To these aims the Society was the original publisher of translations the Bible into several contemporary languages, among which Louis Segond's French Bible (1910) and L. L. Zamenhof's Bible in Esperanto (1926). [14] The Bible Society has by far the largest collection of Bibles in the world, with about 39,000 items.