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 (Manna 60: Money)
Facts, Stats and Syntax

M60 Facts, Stats and Syntax

Polls and Statistics

Religious demographics in major English-speaking countries where True Jesus Church is established:

Australia (2006 Census):

Catholic 25.8%
Anglican 18.7%
Uniting Church 5.7%
Presbyterian and Reformed 3%
Eastern Orthodox 2.7%
other Christian 7.9%
Buddhist 2.1%
Muslim 1.7%
other 2.4%
unspecified 11.3%
none 18.7%

Canada (2001 census):

Roman Catholic 42.6%
Protestant 23.3% (including United Church 9.5%, Anglican 6.8%, Baptist 2.4%, Lutheran 2%)
other Christian 4.4%
Muslim 1.9%
other and unspecified 11.8%
none 16%

Malaysia (2000 census):

Muslim 60.4%
Buddhist 19.2%
Christian 9.1%
Hindu 6.3%
Confucianism, Taoism, other traditional Chinese religions 2.6%
other or unknown 1.5%
none 0.8%

Singapore (2000 census):

Buddhist 42.5%
Muslim 14.9%
Taoist 8.5%
Hindu 4%
Catholic 4.8%
other Christian 9.8%
other 0.7%
none 14.8%

UK (2001 census):

Christian (Anglican, Roman Catholic, Presbyterian, Methodist) 71.6%
Muslim 2.7%
Hindu 1%
other 1.6%
unspecified or none 23.1%

US (2007 estimate):

Protestant 51.3%
Roman Catholic 23.9%
Mormon 1.7%
other Christian 1.6%
Jewish 1.7%
Buddhist 0.7%
Muslim 0.6%
other or unspecified 2.5%
unaffiliated 12.1%
none 4%

Taken from The World Factbook https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/

Word Study

Lo-Ruhamah and Lo-Ammi were the prophet Hosea’s younger two children (Hos 1:6, 8, 9). They were named to symbolize the Israelites’ continuing sin against God and His subsequent wrath and punishment during the decline and end of both Israel and Judah. Ruhamah means “mercy” and ammi means “my people,” and the prefix lo means “no or not.” So Lo-Ruhamah means “no mercy” and Lo-Ammi means “not my people,” showing that God would no longer protect and care for the Israelites as His own.

Did You Know?

What did people in biblical times write with and on?

They wrote with metal chisels (Job 19:24) on stone tablets (Ex 34:4), and sharpened reed and ink (Jer 36:18) on papyrus paper (Isa 8:1). The Hebrew word for ink is deyo (for its blackness) and it was made by mixing charcoal or soot with water. Papyrus paper was made by pounding strips of papyrus branches woven together and sewing sheets of it together to make scrolls.

 

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