1 John 5:11 (NKJV) - And this is the testimony: that God has given us eternal life, and this life is in His Son.
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1 John 5:11 (NKJV) - And this is the testimony: that God has given us eternal life, and this life is in His Son.
I didn’t really get what the Testimony was all about, that’s my only nitpick with the episode. Can someone explain it to me properly?
One thing I loved about Twice Upon A Time was that conversation between Bill and the 1st Doctor, about how when he ran away from Gallifrey he was also looking for answers about how the universe hold together even though evil should be a more 'logical' choice. And Bill says she doesn't think even 12 has figured it out, but she gets it and 'everyone who meets [the Doctor]' gets it.
And one thing I love about that is, even if it was regular Bill, we'd all believe it because we've seen the same things Bill has. But at that point Bill is part of the Testimony. She says at the end of the episode "we are everyone." Which means it wasn't just Bill-who-was-the-Doctor's-companion-and-loves-him who was saying that. It was Bill-who-is-part-of-the-Testimony who said it, which means it really was everyone saying it. Everyone who meets the Doctor knows what's really holding the universe together, and thanks to the Testimony they were all there with Bill saying so.
The House That Will Not Stand playwright Marcus Gardley shares how the work of Spanish playwright Federico García Lorca inspired him.
(New York Theatre Workshop)
In an interview with NYTW Literary Associate Aaron Malkin, Nat Turner director Megan Sandberg-Zakian discusses the significance of Turner's story and why it matters today.
In an interview with NYTW Literary Associate Aaron Malkin, Nat Turner playwright Nathan Alan Davis explains why theatre offers a space for us to examine and engage with our history.
In an interview with NYTW Literary Associate Aaron Malkin, Nat Turner playwright Nathan Alan Davis talks about how Thomas Gray's document "The Confessions of Nat Turner" changed how he thought about Nat Turner.