Muahahahaaa! My very first MINION!!!

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241 votes
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A woman is selling her soul on eBay, listing her non-corporeal person for a mere two large in an auction that is almost sure to be pulled if it hasn't been already.

Read More: http://www.inquisitr.com/269762/woman-selling-soul...
Unless your brother was able to finance 24 years of high living with the cash.
Henry published Tyndale's translation after the latter's death, so Henry was not averse to the concept of having an English translation of the Bible (which in any case had already existed for hundreds of years before Tyndale), but liked making the money from its publication.
Follow the money, hh.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
BTW, hh, I have often seen the "outrage to common sense" quote, but never have I seen it properly referenced.
In what chapter and on what page of "Of Wisdom" (Stanhope translation) does it appear? I'd like to read it in context.
It is no wonder that those who profited from the former (the Al Sharptons of their day) were outraged.
For some reason, hh, known best to yourself (hah!), you only quote what Charron says about Supersttion, not what he says about True Piety.
Charron a "deist"? I don't think so, hh.
Of course they were alarmed; his critique was close to being Protestant. But that didn't make him a deist.
And who said that? Surely not Charron.
I prefer to read what Charron wrote himself, and leave the "Oh, he was just pretending" argument to the propagandists. (I'm reminded of what you disingenuously claimed about Lincoln's 2nd inaugural)
Is published in quotes by whom? Sounds like hearsay, so it's important to know who claimed Charron said this.
"Come now, and let us reason together, saith the Lord: though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be as white as snow; though they be red like crimson, they shall be as wool."
You certainly manage to find some real ignoramuses to quote, hh.
You sure can pick 'em, hh.