What happens to those Christians who are merciful?
Jesus is quoted as saying, Blessed are the merciful, for they shall receive mercy, is the belief of the Christians.
What is merciful?Merciful refers to the people who are willing to be kind and humble to the other people, Christians people believe it is the sign of god or Jesus to be merciful.
As Jesus is a merciful god, and He wanted to be other people kind and so that they receive mercy.
Thus, Blessed are the merciful, for they shall receive mercy,
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The most important freedom fighter before the civil war was...
ANSWER: John Brown
Answer:
John Brown
Explanation:
Which of the following was made possible by the end of the Cold War?
A. the formation of NATO
B. the breakup of Hungary
C. the reunification of Germany
D. the election of George H. W. Bush
Answer:
C. the reunification of Germany.
Explanation:
The Berlin Wall was named by NATO as the symbol of the Cold War. With the fall of the USSR and the destruction of the Berlin Wall, it was the symbol of not only the Cold War ending, but also the reunification of Germany, something the Western Allies have been pushing for since the end of World War II.
~
Answer:
C
Explanation:
right on edge 2021
WILL GIVE BRAINLIEST. In four to five sentences, describe impact of early Greek culture on government and education.
Answer:
Greece is widely considered to be the cradle of Western culture[1] and democracy. Modern democracies owe a debt to Greek beliefs in government by the people, trial by jury, and equality under the law. ... In their pursuit of order and proportion, the Greeks created an ideal of beauty that strongly influenced Western art.
Explanation:
The Treaty of Versailles imposed very rigid restrictions against which European country?
a. Britain
b. France
c. Germany
d.Russia
What was transcription? why was it necessary during WW1?
Friedrich Karl Georg Rumpf (1888-1949), son of German artist Fritz Rumpf, was a German illustrator and ethnographer. When World War II broke out, the younger Fritz Rumpf was living in Japan and possibly wrote portions of at least one of the following notebooks while incarcerated. The notebooks would be particularly difficult to work with since they contain several notes in German and Japanese, as well as pencil, ink, and wash sketches made during his travels and studies in Japan. Join us as we transcribe these notebooks from the Freer Gallery of Art's Archives and the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery's Archives.
What efforts were taken to maintain peace in Europe during the 1920's
The idea of the League was grounded in the broad, international revulsion against the unprecedented destruction of the First World War and the contemporary understanding of its origins. This was reflected in all of Wilson’s Fourteen Points, which were themselves based on theories of collective security and international organization debated amongst academics, jurists, socialists and utopians before and during the war. After adopting many of these ideas, Wilson took up the cause with evangelical fervor, whipping up mass enthusiasm for the organization as he traveled to the Paris Peace Conference in January 1919, the first President to travel abroad in an official capacity.
Wilson used his tremendous influence to attach the Covenant of the League, its charter, to the Treaty of Versailles. An effective League, he believed, would mitigate any inequities in the peace terms. He and the other members of the “Big Three,” Georges Clemenceau of France and David Lloyd George of the United Kingdom, drafted the Covenant as Part I of the Treaty of Versailles. The League’s main organs were an Assembly of all members, a Council made up of five permanent members and four rotating members, and an International Court of Justice. Most important for Wilson, the League would guarantee the territorial integrity and political independence of member states, authorize the League to take “any action…to safeguard the peace,” establish procedures for arbitration, and create the mechanisms for economic and military sanctions.
Georges Clemenceau of France
The struggle to ratify the Treaty of Versailles and the Covenant in the U.S. Congress helped define the most important political division over the role of the United States in the world for a generation. A triumphant Wilson returned to the United States in February 1919 to submit the Treaty and Covenant to Congress for its consent and ratification. Unfortunately for the President, while popular support for the League was still strong, opposition within Congress and the press had begun building even before he had left for Paris. Spearheading the challenge was the Senate majority leader and chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee, Henry Cabot Lodge.
Motivated by Republican concerns that the League would commit the United States to an expensive organization that would reduce the United States’ ability to defend its own interests, Lodge led the opposition to joining the League. Where Wilson and the League’s supporters saw merit in an international body that would work for peace and collective security for its members, Lodge and his supporters feared the consequences of involvement in Europe’s tangled politics, now even more complex because of the 1919 peace settlement. They adhered to a vision of the United States returning to its traditional aversion to commitments outside the Western Hemisphere. Wilson and Lodge’s personal dislike of each other poisoned any hopes for a compromise, and in March 1920, the Treaty and Covenant were defeated by a 49-35 Senate vote. Nine months later, Warren Harding was elected President on a platform opposing the League.
Henry Cabot Lodge
The United States never joined the League. Most historians hold that the League operated much less effectively without U.S. participation than it would have otherwise. However, even while rejecting membership, the Republican Presidents of the period, and their foreign policy architects, agreed with many of its goals. To the extent that Congress allowed, the Harding, Coolidge, and Hoover administrations associated the United States with League efforts on several issues. Constant suspicion in Congress, however, that steady U.S. cooperation with the League would lead to de facto membership prevented a close relationship between Washington and Geneva. Additionally, growing disillusionment with the Treaty of Versailles diminished support for the League in the United States and the international community. Wilson’s insistence that the Covenant be linked to the Treaty was a blunder; over time, the Treaty was discredited as unenforceable, short-sighted, or too extreme in its provisions, and the League’s failure either to enforce or revise it only reinforced U.S. congressional opposition to working with the League under any circumstances. However, the coming of World War II once again demonstrated the need for an effective international organization to mediate disputes, and the United States public and the Roosevelt administration supported and became founding members of the new United Nations.
How did the United States handle the issue of creating the court system?
Answer:
they handled it in court
Why did the United States fight in the Persian Gulf War?
A. Iraq needed help resisting a communist revolution.
B. Iraq supplied weapons to al-Qaeda terrorists.
C. Iraq invaded and occupied Kuwait.
D. Iraq financed the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.
Answer:
C. Iraq invaded and occupied Kuwait.
Explanation:
Because it is the "Correct Answer"
Answer:
thank you...
the first choice is C) Iraq invaded and occupied Kuwait.
Explanation:
have a great day!
what are the various obstacle for the development works? make a list
7 Read these sentences from the text: "It took a long time and a lot of hard work
to extend the right to vote to every adult citizen in the United States. That's
why it is every eligible American citizen's civic responsibility to vote."
How could the second sentence be rewritten without changing its meaning?
A
Currently, it is every eligible American citizen's civic responsibility to vote.
B Specifically, it is every eligible American citizen's civic responsibility to
vote.
C
Instead, it is every eligible American citizen's civic responsibility to vote.
D
Therefore, it is every eligible American citizen's responsibility to vote.
Answer:
Therefore,it is every eligible American citizen's civic responsibility to vote(D)
help! easy question and brainlist answer
Answer:
B maybe
Explanation:
Answer:
b is the answer
Explanation:
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!!!NEED HELP ASAP!!!!
What does this image say about Andrew Jackson and his respect for the laws of the United States?
a
Laws are for the weak; authority is for the mighty.
b
As king, Jackson reminds his people that he is the absolute ruler.
c
For Jackson, the Constitution is nothing more than something to step all over.
d
The veto is the only law Jackson respects.
Answer:
c
For Jackson, the Constitution is nothing more than something to step all over.
The Great Compromise
created which part of our
national government?
A. Supreme Court
B. Pentagon
C. House of Representatives
WILL GIVE BRAINILEST
what services do you believe a city has today that it didn’t have back then?
Answer:
store services hopefully
second great awakening. what's the answer?
Answer:
A. Abolitionist movement grew in strength
Explanation:
The second great awakening was in the 1790`s when protestant religious revival in the Untied States from about 1794 - 1835.
I hope this helps you have a good day :)
How did opportunities change for women in the workplace?
O A. They were usually employed as household servants.
O B. They had more opportunities in white collar jobs.
O c. They could move up into management positions.
OD. They found more work in blue-collar jobs.
Answer:
O B. They had more opportunities in white collar jobs.
Explanation:
Answer:
The answer would be either B or D
Explanation:
Sometime during the Great World Wars, women had helped with jobs and made weapons for those at war. After the world wars ended, women had declared more independence. I'm not sure what white collar or blue collar jobs are but it seems like the best answer to this question.
In Plessy vs. Ferguson, the Supreme Court ruled that segregation was allowed in America so long as “seperate but equal” facilities were built for people of different races. What does “seperate but equal mean?” Show you understand this phrase and give an example of how “separate but equal” was carried out in the United States.
HURRY PLEASE WILL GIVE BRAINLIEST
“Separate but equal” means that they were not all together they were in separate places or in certain groups.
How would you describe the Involvement in Iran & Guatemala event
Answer:
The 1954 Guatemalan coup d'état, code-named Operation PBSuccess, was a covert operation carried out by the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) that deposed the democratically elected Guatemalan President Jacobo Árbenz and ended the Guatemalan Revolution of 1944–1954.
Since Hitler had his sights set on ruling Germany, why did he concentrate on the Youth Party and other organizations during the late 1920s?
Answer:
The Youth Party was going to be the future soldiers of ww2
Explanation
Plz I need help ASAP
Analyze the response of the League of Nations to German aggression from 1933-39.
Answer: There wasn't much of a response toward Germany due to the nations of the world wanting to avoid another war.
Explanation:
Germany pulled out of the League of Nations due to Hitler's goals for Germany and him not wanting to cooperate with the members of this league. Because no members wanted to start a war, no nation was able to do something. This can be shown later on during the annexation of Austria and Czechoslovakia after what the UK and France called 'Appeasement', which was basically giving Hitler whatever he wanted to avoid another war, hoping that eventually he would stop. During this time nations were also still feeling the impact of The Great Depression so many nations were focused on their economy rather than Hitler going against the Treaty of Versailles.
Hope this helps.
What impacts did the Columbian Exchange have on the Old World?
Who influenced Pocahontas’s decision to convert to christianity
Answer:
English colonists - Sir Thomas Dale, Reverend Alexander Whitaker, and John Rolfe.
Explanation:
Pocahontas did not convert to Christianity of her free will. Her life is much, much more tragic than the Disney movie will tell you. She submitted to the English settlers as a means of survival, cooperating with what they wanted of her to do in order to get by. The colonists, in very basic terms, tried to brainwash Pocahontas into their faith. It's actually unknown if she ever truly accepted it or not.
What type of economy is this?
Traditional economy, market economy, command economy, or mixed economy.
Answer:
hi hello and how do you do this is so so soooooo hard for meee
Answer:
An economy encompasses all activity related to production, consumption, and trade of goods and services in an area. These decisions are made through some combination of market transactions and collective or hierarchical decision making
Explanation:
i got 100%
In which sense was the attack on Pearl Harbor part of the greater Japanese operation?
A. The Japanese simultaneously attacked Guam and other foreign holdings in the Pacific.
B. The Japanese used Pearl Harbor as a stepping stone in their invasion of the Americas.
C. The Japanese created mass chaos, which allowed them to intercept Allied messages.
D. The Japanese sought to neutralize U.S. oil sanctions by acquiring the large Pacific oil fields.
Answer:
A. The Japanese simultaneously attacked Guam and other foreign holdings in the Pacific
Which of the following is true of John F. Kennedy?
He was the youngest man to be elected president of the Untied States.
He was decorated for bravery in the service.
His program was called the New Deal.
He ran for president twice before he was elected.
One of his successful programs was the Peace Corps.
Please help me it is very important
Answer:
a person under arrest refusing to talk to the police
Please help 1. Who were the two candidates in the election of 1800?
Answer:
"Democratic-Republican Thomas Jefferson defeated Federalist John Adams by a margin of seventy-three to sixty-five electoral votes in the presidential election of 1800. When presidential electors cast their votes, however, they failed to distinguish between the office of president and vice president on their ballots
PLSS HELP ME ASAP!! WILL GIVE YOU BRAINLYEST!!
what were a disadvantage of buffalo chips
Answer:
Well, Not sure if this is a disadvantage, but they were kind of disgusting.
(Seriously I am not sure if there are any other bad tings)
Answer:
they didn't burn when wet
Explanation:
Which physical feature did the U.S.A. believe was the border between the U.S. (state of Texas) and Mexico?
Group of answer choices
A: Mississippi
B: Missouri
C: Nueces
D: Rio Grande