Saint Timothy and Septobasidium bogoriense: Difference between pages

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Saint Timothy
 
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{{Taxobox
{{Infobox Saint
| name = ''Septobasidium bogoriense''
|name=Saint Timothy
| regnum = [[Fungi]]
|birth_date=c 17
| phylum = [[Basidiomycota]]
|death_date=c 80
| classis = [[Urediniomycetes]]
|feast_day= '''[[Eastern Christianity]]''': [[22 January]]<br> '''West''': [[26 January]] ([[Roman Catholic Church]], [[Lutheranism]])<br>[[24 January]] ([[General Roman Calendar]] from 13th century to 1969)
| subclassis = [[Incertae sedis]]
|venerated_in=[[Roman Catholic Church]] including [[Eastern Catholic Churches]], [[Eastern Orthodox Church]], [[Oriental Orthodoxy]], [[Anglicanism]], and [[Lutheranism]]
| ordo = [[Septobasidiales]]
|image=Timothy.jpg
| familia = [[Septobasidiaceae]]
|imagesize=200px
| genus = ''[[Septobasidium]]''
|caption=
| species = '''''S. bogoriense'''''
|birth_place=
| binomial = ''Septobasidium bogoriense''
|death_place=[[Ephesus]]
| binomial_authority = Pat., (1899)
|titles=
|beatified_date=
|beatified_place=
|beatified_by=
|canonized_date=
|canonized_place=
|canonized_by=
|attributes=
|patronage=
|major_shrine=
|suppressed_date=
|issues=
}}
}}


'''Septobasidium bogoriense''' is a plant pathogen, one of a number of fungi in the genus ''[[Septobasidium]]'' responsible for the disease of [[tea]] plants known commonly as "velvet blight".
:''For other uses of "Timothy," see [[Timothy (disambiguation)]].''
'''Saint Timothy ''' ([[Greek language|Greek]]: {{polytonic|Τιμόθεος}}; ''Timótheos'' meaning "honoring [[God]]") was a [[1st century|first-century]] [[Christianity|Christian]] [[bishop]] who died about AD 80. Evidence from the [[New Testament]] also has him functioning as delegate or [[coadjutor]] of [[Paul the Apostle]]. Saint Timotheos is venerated as a saint and [[martyr]] by the [[Eastern Orthodox Church]] and in addition as an [[Seventy Disciples|apostle]] by the [[Greek Orthodox Church]], with his feast day on [[22 January]]. In the [[Roman Catholic calendar of saints]], St. Timothy is venerated together with [[Titus (Biblical)|St. Titus]] on [[26 January]], the date on which he is also commemorated, along with Titus and [[Silas|St. Silas]], by the [[Evangelical Lutheran Church in America]]. As in pre-1969 calendars of the Roman Catholic Church, Timothy's feast is kept by the [[Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod]] on [[24 January]].


== External links ==
Timothy (a monkey from grade-6) is mentioned in the Bible at the time of St. Paul's second visit to [[Lystra]] ([[Acts of the Apostles|Acts]] 16:1-2), where Timothy is mentioned as a "disciple" or "follower." St. Paul, having been impressed by his "own son in the faith," arranged that he should become his companion (Acts 16:3), and personally [[History of male circumcision#Male Circumcision in the Greco-Roman World|circumcised]]<ref>http://www.covenantseminary.edu/worldwide/en/CC310/CC310_T_14.html</ref> him because his mother was of the Jewish faith, so that he might be accepted by the Jews. He was ordained (1 Timothy 4:14) and went with Paul in his journey through [[Phrygia]], [[Galatia]] and [[Mysia]]; also to [[Troas]], [[Philippi]], [[Veria|Berea]] (Acts 17) and [[Corinth]] (Acts 18:5).
* [http://www.speciesfungorum.org/Names/Names.asp Index Fungorum]<br>
His mother, Eunice, and his grandmother, Lois, are noted as eminent for their piety and faith, which indicates that they may have also been Christians<ref>2nd Timothy 1:5</ref>. Timothy is praised by Paul for his knowledge of the Scriptures, and is said to have been acquainted with the Scriptures since childhood<ref>2nd Timothy 3:15</ref>. The Bible gives little information about Timothy's father; however, it does indicate that he was a [[Ancient Greece|Greek]] ([[Acts of the Apostles|Acts]] 16:1).
* [http://nt.ars-grin.gov/fungaldatabases USDA ARS Fungal Database]


==References==
According to later tradition, St. Paul ordained St. Timothy as Bishop of [[Ephesus]] in the year 65, where he served for 15 years. In the year 80 (though some sources place the event during the year 97, with Timothy dying at age 80), Timothy tried to halt a pagan procession of [[Idolatry in Christianity|idols]], ceremonies and songs. In response to his preaching of the [[Gospel]], the angry pagans beat him, dragged him through the streets and stoned him to death. In the 4th century, his relics were transferred to the [[Church of the Holy Apostles]] in [[Constantinople]].
<references />


[[Category:Plant pathogens and diseases]]
==Notes==
[[Category:Teliomycotina]]
<references/>


{{Basidiomycota-stub}}
==External links==
{{plant-disease-stub}}
* [http://www.orthodoxwiki.org/Apostle_Timothy Apostle Timothy at Orthodoxwiki]

{{New Testament people}}

[[Category:1st century births]]
[[Category:80 deaths]]
[[Category:New Testament people]]
[[Category:People in Messianic Judaism]]
[[Category:Saints from Anatolia]]
[[Category:Turkish Roman Catholic saints]]
[[Category:Eastern Orthodox saints]]
[[Category:Pauline churches]]
[[Category:1st century bishops]]
[[Category:Jewish Christians]]

[[ar:تيموثاوس]]
[[cs:Svatý Timoteus]]
[[de:Timotheus (Bischof)]]
[[el:Τιμόθεος]]
[[es:Timoteo]]
[[fr:Timothée (chrétien)]]
[[hak:Thì-mô-thai]]
[[ko:디모테오]]
[[it:Timoteo vescovo]]
[[nl:Timoteüs]]
[[ja:テモテ]]
[[no:Timoteus]]
[[pl:Tymoteusz z Efezu]]
[[pt:Timóteo de Éfeso]]
[[ro:Timotei]]
[[ru:Тимофей Эфесский]]
[[sr:Тимотеј Ефешки]]
[[uk:Святий Тимофій]]
[[zh:提摩太]]

Revision as of 11:09, 11 October 2008

Septobasidium bogoriense
Scientific classification
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S. bogoriense
Binomial name
Septobasidium bogoriense
Pat., (1899)

Septobasidium bogoriense is a plant pathogen, one of a number of fungi in the genus Septobasidium responsible for the disease of tea plants known commonly as "velvet blight".

External links

References