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  1. May 16, 2012 · Once they are alone, the first thing Jesus does is to put His fingers in the man's ears. They must be healed if the tongue is to work normally, since the man was mute because he could not hear. This symbolic action sends a clear message to the deaf man, helping to awaken his faith and to alert him to the expectation of healing.

  2. Jul 30, 2006 · A sermon on Mark 7:31–37. After Jesus touched a man who was mute, the tongue that had failed to speak was set free to declare the glory of God. In this sermon, R.C. Sproul continues his study in Mark’s gospel to show how this miracle points to an even greater reality in the life of every Christian.

  3. lay within the so-called deaf and dumb. The deaf-mute’s social identity also performed important symbolic work in late-eighteenth-century France, as representative of those exiled from power and citizenship who were being welcomed into the new national community. This blend of the theatrical,

  4. The Mute's Lament. I move—a silent exile on this earth;As in his dreary cell one doomed for life,My tongue is mute, and closed ear heedeth not;No gleam of hope this darken'd mind assuresThat the blest power of speech shall e'er be known.Murmuring gaily o'er their pebbly bedsThe limpid streamlets, as they onward flowThrough verdant meadows and ...

  5. Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet. Angeline Fuller Fischer (1841–1925) Scenes in the History of the Deaf and Dumb. To a Deaf-Mute Lady. Alice Cornelia Jennings (b. 1851) A Prayer in Signs. George M. Teegarden (1852–1936) The “Nad”. Gallaudet College.

  6. Apr 16, 2021 · Her father William Swett, was the co-publisher of the Boston-based Deaf periodical, the “Deaf-Mute’s Friend,” and founder of the Beverly School of the Deaf. Mr. Swett was a deaf man with a deaf daughter and saw a need for educational and vocational services for deaf children and young adults of Boston’s North Shore.

  7. Green Spirit. School fees. $8,000 (1982-1983) St. John's School for the Deaf was a Roman Catholic school for deaf children located in St. Francis, Wisconsin. Founded in 1876, the school served children from preschool through twelfth grade before closing in 1983. St.

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