Photos for Volume 5
 
 
Gavin at statue of Huss of Bohemia, at Beroun, Bohemia, Czech, April 2004.

 

  Statue of John Huss at Huss Square, Beroun, Bohemia, Czech, April 2004.
 
Old Town Hall Square, Prague, Czech. Left: Old Town Hall; Past Town Hall, turn left to John Huss Statue; Centre: The Twin Towers of the Teynkirche where Huss sometimes preached; Turn right via Husova (Huss) Street to get to Wenceslas Square; Far top right goes to Prague (/ Charles) University where both Huss of Bohemia and Jerome of Prague
were teachers. April 2004.

 

  Husova (Huss) Street, Prague, honours the name and memory of John Huss. April 2004. Gavin’s Volume 5 Textual Commentaries on Mark 1-3 is dedicated to God in 2015 which is the 600th anniversary of proto-Protestant John Huss’ martyrdom by Romanists at Constance in Germany in 1415.
 
Gavin next to blacksmiths in front of Huss statue, Old Town Hall Square, Prague, Czech, April 2004.
 
  The John Huss statue in Old Town Hall Square, Prague, in which Huss looks over at the twin towered Teynkirche where he sometimes preached. April 2004.

 

 
Charles / Prague University, April 2004. Both Huss of Bohemia (martyred 1415) and Jerome of Prague (martyred 1416) were teachers here.

 

  The “I[nformation] Tourist Centre” in Prague is housed in a building that was a part of the old Prague University. April 2004.
 
 
John Huss was free to preach here without the same immediate constraints from Rome as Bethlehem Chapel in Prague was an independent chapel, & not a Romanist parish church.

 

  The pulpit Huss preached from at Bethlehem Chapel; & above the pulpit, a picture of Huss preaching at Constance in Germany. Prague, Czech, April 2004.
 
Gavin in Bethlehem Chapel, in front of Huss’s pulpit. Prague, April 2004.

 

  Plaque to Mr. John (Jan) Huss (Hus) in Bethlehem Chapel, Prague, April 2004.
 
 
16th century picture at Bethlehem Chapel showing Huss before the Council of Constance in 1414-1415. Prague, Czech, April 2004.   Picture in Bethlehem Chapel of Huss being burnt at the stake by the Church of Rome at Constance, Germany, 8 July, 1415. Prague, April 2004.

 

 
The teachings of the proto-Protestants, John Wycliffe, The Morning Star of the Reformation, Huss of Bohemia, and Jerome of Prague, were picked up and manifested in their fullness with the Protestant Reformation. A Lutheran Church, Prague.

 

  Symbolizing this Protestant triumph, St. Michael’s Lutheran Protestant Church, Prague (left photo); and a sign (above photo) advertizing e.g., the “English-speaking Lutheran Church” Service on “Sunday” at “11.00 am.” Prague, Czech, April 2004.
 
Huss of Bohemia’s House, Constance, Germany, April 2004. This is where Huss lived before his arrest and trial by the Roman Church in 1415.
 
  Huss’s house (“Hus-Haus”) is now the John Huss Museum. Gavin in Huss’s house, where his left hand is on a glass cabinet containing e.g., the original metallic parts of the front door.

 

 
In the same glass cabinet, a book published in 1517 showing Huss’s martyrdom in 1415. Constance, Germany, April 2004.   Book in glass cabinet showing Huss’s martyrdom, published in 1517, the year Luther nailed his 95 Theses to the door of Wittenberg Castle and the Reformation was ignited.

 

 
Bust of John Huss, John Huss Museum, Constance, Germany, April 2004.   Building where the Romanist Council of Constance (1414-1418) sat, and wickedly condemned the proto-Protestants: Wycliffe, Huss of Bohemia, and Jerome of Prague.

 

 
Right: Romanist Dominican Monastery where Huss was imprisoned during his trial; & left: Hall of the Papist Cathedral which was used as the court house where Huss was tried by the Church of Rome before he was executed as a Christian martyr.

 

  Roman Catholic Cathedral used as a court house for the trial John Huss. Constance,
Germany, 2004.
 
Block of stone at Constance, marking the spot where Huss of Bohemia was martyred on 8 July 1415. Germany, April 2004.

 

  The spot where Huss was martyred (opposite side of stone marks where Jerome of Prague was martyred 1416).
 
The teachings of the proto-Protestants, e.g., Huss, were picked up and manifested in their fullness with the Protestant Reformation. A Lutheran Church in “Lutherplatz” (German, “Luther’s Square”), Constance. April 2004.

 

  Symbolizing this Protestant triumph, the front of this Lutheran Protestant Church in Constance whose foundation stone was laid in 1865 to mark 450 years from Huss’s martyrdom in 1415. Constance, Germany. April 2004.
 
St. John’s Wood Road Baptist Church, London, 5 Nov. 2005, for 400th anniversary (1605-2005) of Gunpowder Treason Day, with the speaker, the Right Honourable, the Reverend Dr. Ian Paisley, Member of Westminster Parliament, Privy Counsellor, and Moderator of the Free Presbyterian Church of Ulster, Northern Ireland, UK.

 

  Gavin at St. John’s Wood Road Baptist Church, London, UK, with the United Protestant Council Autumn Conference’s speaker Ian Paisley, who later became in 2010, Baron Bannside of North Antrim in County Antrim, Northern Ireland, UK, and his wife. Papists’ Conspiracy Day, Saturday, 5 November, 2005.
 
The Merton Council adverts at Wimbledon for Bonfire Night 2008 show two traditions of keeping it either on the nearest Saturday Night (Morden Park, Saturday 1 Nov. 2008), or on 5 Nov. (Wimbledon Park, Wed. 5 Nov. 2008).

 

  Fireworks go on sale for the Bonfire Night period, Wimbledon – a suburb of London, England, UK, 2008.
 
The Merton Council adverts at Wimbledon for Bonfire Night 2012 show two traditions of keeping it either on the nearest Saturday Night (Morden Park, Saturday 3 Nov. 2012), or on 5 Nov. (Wimbledon Park, Mon. 5 Nov. 2012).

 

  Bonfire Night Fireworks’ advert uses an effigy of Guy Fawkes, the chief Romanist local organizer of the 1605 Papists’ Conspiracy to blow up the Protestant King James of the King James Bible and Protestant Parliament. Wimbledon, London, England, UK, 2012.
 
Fireworks on sale for Gunpowder Treason Day, Wimbledon, England, UK, 2012.

 

  Fireworks on sale for Papists’ Conspiracy Day, Wimbledon, England, UK, 2012.
 
Wimbledon Park - an adjoining London suburb of Wimbledon, Bonfire Night, Monday 5 Nov. 2012.   “The Guy” on top of the bonfire. In the crowd, Gavin hears a boy ask his father, “Is that Guy Fawkes?” to which the father replies, “Yes.” Wimbledon Park, 5 Nov. 2012.

 

 
The Bonfire is lit, with “The Guy” on top. Wimbledon Park, London, England, UK, 5 Nov. 2012.   Gavin at the 2012 Wimbledon Park bonfire with an orange tie for the Protestant King William of Orange whose coming on 5 Nov. 1688 is also remembered on this day.

 

 
“The Guy” on top of the bonfire collapses, as this effigy of a chief Popish conspirator of 1605, Guy Fawkes, burns in the flames. Wimbledon Park, 5 Nov. 2012.

 

  Up go the bonfire flames, Bonfire Night, Wimbledon Park, England, UK, Monday 5 November 2012.
 
Sky rockets shoot out in a “V” shape for “Victory” over the Guy Fawkes Papists’ Conspiracy, Wimbledon Park, 5 Nov. 2012.

 

  Fireworks are exploded in the night-sky, Bonfire Night, Wimbledon Park, London, England, UK, 5 Nov. 2012.
 
Bonfire Night fireworks, Wimbledon Park, London, UK, Mon. 5 Nov. 2012.   Bonfire Night fireworks, Wimbledon Park, London, UK, Mon. 5 Nov. 2012.