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Download entire journal document - John Brown University

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Gollinger Fall (Click to open in web page)<br />

1/60 sec at f / 3.5<br />

ISO 200<br />

Gollinger Fall<br />

Golling, Austria<br />

July 27, 2007 - 4:59PM<br />

Pentax K100D<br />

Neuschwanstein (Click to open in web page)<br />

1/1500 sec at f / 4.5<br />

ISO 200<br />

Neuschwanstein<br />

Near Munich, Germany<br />

July 31, 2007 - 2:34PM<br />

Pentax K100D<br />

Hallstattsee Nord (Click to open in web page)<br />

1/180 sec at f / 9.5<br />

ISO 200<br />

Hallstattsee Nord<br />

Hallstatt, Austria<br />

August 6, 2007 - 12:52PM<br />

Pentax K100D<br />

Division of Humanities and Social Sciences<br />

Caleb Barnet<br />

Sponsor: Trisha Posey<br />

The Spread and Appeal of Arianism (Click to open in web page)<br />

Arianism, an early fourth-century Trinitarian heresy that affirmed the Son Jesus Christ’s<br />

subordination to the Father, embodied, in many ways, the archetypal heterodoxy. It emerged at a<br />

rather unfortunate time in Christian history and precipitated substantial upheaval in its day.<br />

Nevertheless, Arianism, unlike most similar heresies, actually constituted the Christian orthodox<br />

belief at one time (A.D. 326-381). This paper will therefore address the period after the heresy’s<br />

official denunciation at Nicaea in 325—a period distinctively marked by its prominence in<br />

political spheres and among a substantial percentage of believers—and the principal factors that<br />

made such an ascension to power possible.<br />

9

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