NOUN
- (New Testament) disciple of Jesus; traditionally said to be the author of the 4th Gospel and three epistles and the book of Revelation
How To Use John the Evangelist In A Sentence
- The St. Katharinenthal novice Kathrin Brümsin was taught the text to all twenty-four verses of the sequence Verbum dei by Saint John the Evangelist in a dream-vision. Sensual Encounters: Monastic Women and Spirituality in Medieval Germany
- Mr Brett said he was upset with the damage to the west window, which depicts the life of St John the evangelist, because it was one of his favourites.
- The Sister-Books record some of the dreams and visions nuns had when sleeping there, like Kathrin Brümsin's mastery of the liturgy for Saint John the Evangelist. Sensual Encounters: Monastic Women and Spirituality in Medieval Germany
- Outside the lab, Ivins's neighbors, friends and pastor say, he played the piano every Sunday at what he jokingly called "the hippie Mass" in the school hall at St. John the Evangelist.
- Over the centuries, John the Baptist has been its patron saint, and St. John the Evangelist has also been associated with the basilica.
- Jesus is the word of God, according to John the evangelist in the prologue.
- It is certainly not John the Baptist, nor John the Evangelist, nor James the Greater, nor James the Less; he must inevitably be some witling of a Hun, to write such abominable impertinence, or some ill-conditioned, malicious A Philosophical Dictionary
- John the Evangelist celebrated Mass for the community and then taught her the twenty-four verses of his sequence Verbum dei deo natum out of a book with golden letters. Sensual Encounters: Monastic Women and Spirituality in Medieval Germany
- John the Evangelist thus becomes the perfect type of the mystic, and also the perfect mystagogue, teacher of the mystical path.
- Of the seventy-two miniatures and historiated initials in the manuscript, thirty-four contain John the Evangelist. Sensual Encounters: Monastic Women and Spirituality in Medieval Germany