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  2. Healing the centurion's servant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Healing_the_centurion's...

    Jesus healing the servant of a Centurion, by the Venetian artist Paolo Veronese, 16th century. Healing the centurion's servant is one of the miracles performed by Jesus of Nazareth as related in the Gospel of Matthew [1] and the Gospel of Luke [2] (both part of the Christian biblical canon). The story is not recounted in the Gospels of either ...

  3. Portrait of Madeleine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portrait_of_Madeleine

    Madeline was a servant, yet is depicted in a wealthy milieu, wearing jewellery and sitting on an expensive chair. Most paintings of the period that include black women show them as servants to a white woman; while Madeline sits alone, she is working as a model to the unseen Benoist.

  4. Clementine Hunter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clementine_Hunter

    Clementine Hunter (pronounced Clementeen; late December 1886 or early January 1887 – January 1, 1988) was a self-taught Black folk artist from the Cane River region of Louisiana, who lived and worked on Melrose Plantation.

  5. Miracles of Jesus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miracles_of_Jesus

    The miraculous healing of a centurion's servant is reported in Matthew 8:5–13 and Luke 7:1–10. These two Gospels narrate how Jesus healed the servant of a centurion in Capernaum. John 4:46–54 has a similar account at Capernaum but states that it was the son of a royal official who was healed. In both cases the healing took place at a ...

  6. Matthew 8:6 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matthew_8:6

    Luke has the servant near death from an unspecified malady. In Mark's Gospel the cleansing of the leper is immediately followed by the healing the paralytic at Capernaum, and the author of Matthew may attach the illness from the later to this narrative. [2] A servant would have been a slave, but slaves were a legal part of a Roman family.

  7. Matthew 8:13 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matthew_8:13

    Luke has the men return to find the servant healed while Matthew has Jesus performing the miracle itself. The verses are different enough that Davies and Allison believe there is no way to reconstruct what the original ending to the Centurion story would have been in Q. [1] The healing used similar language as Matthew 8:3 and Matthew 9:6. [2]

  8. Abused woman was forced to be ‘servant’ of her husband’s ...

    www.aol.com/news/abused-woman-forced-servant-her...

    In 2001, the woman’s marriage to her husband was arranged by Aman, who prosecutors said gave the woman an engagement ring, court documents show. By 2002, the couple were married following a year ...

  9. Exorcism of the Syrophoenician woman's daughter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exorcism_of_the...

    Christ and the Woman from Canaan by Pieter Lastman, 1617, Rijksmuseum. Charles Ellicott contrasts this miracle with the miraculous healing of the centurion's servant in Matthew 8:10. According to Ellicott, whilst both miracles showed Jesus's willingness to help gentiles, Jesus had a more favorable view of the centurion.