User:Jwhitai/sandbox

1. The stub I choose was Africa Historian stub. I choose this one because it something I would like to learn more about. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Africa-historian-stub

2. I know that the topic I choose is a stub because it follows the identifications of a stub and the qualifications. The page that I went to was Wikistubs and there were different topics that were stubs as well.

3.There are some missing data and also missing information about this certain stub. In the other topic there are more missing information it isn't as much as the first stub I read about. Between both there is a lot of missing information in the stubs. There is not much read about in either.

4.I could not find the references section in the stubs so I assumed there were none in this certain stub.

5.Compared to the other articles it is lacking a lot. Mostly all that was read was the population.

June 25, 2020 The Stub chosen is African Historian

SECOND:The guides that were great to use were ones from the school's website. Gave more information on different sources.

THIRD: I cannot really find what is missing from the stub to give more information on other ones relating to it. Something missing is more information on what the stub covers.

FOURTH: Tsampiras, Carla. “Temporal Dissonance: South African Historians and the ‘Post-AIDS’ Dilemma.” The Journal of medical humanities 41.2 (2020): 153–169. Web

Locating Two Sources: Matthew Wilson. “The African American Historian: David Bradley’s The Chaneysville Incident.” African American Review 29.1 (1995): 97–107. Web Porter, Andrew. “The Southern African War and the Historians.” African Affairs 99.397 (2000): 633–648. Print

Assignment #21:The second Stub: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biblical_authority Nadar, Sarojini. “Engaging Biblical Authority: Perspectives on the Bible as Scripture.” Biblical Interpretation 16.4 (2008): 375–377. Web.

Jamie H. Ferguson. “Faith in the Language: Biblical Authority and the Meaning of English in More-Tyndale Polemics.” The Sixteenth Century Journal 43.4 (2012): 989–1011. Print.

The second source relates to the stub because it also relates to translating the biblical version into English. It gives the same information as the Wikipedia just more in depth.

Christian Ethics
As a Christian you must follow certain rules to obey by. Having morals that God allows and wants his followers to believe. The first book in the bible called, "Genesis" explains the main points that was made for the world God created. . The bible tells many stories of how people in the world learned about God and the different teachings Jesus taught to his disciples. In these stories God gave his people commandments to help guide them to what is morally right and wrong. In today's world there are many governments that are build on these commandments. As some are build on this foundation, some countries are guided by Christianity.