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My review said this article reads like an essay instead of an article Wikipedia talk:Articles for creation/shared atonement the jesus manifold. The primary works cited which were the book by D. Jeremiah, and the law suit filings by Massengale, with the book S. Unwin being the outline for the way the probability function is used. I have reviewed other wikipedia articles on other atonement theories such as penal substitution, and do not see the difference other than that this theory is new, but is being used by pastors, theologians and scientists. Hugh Ross for example in Beyond the cosmos uses a version of this theory with a multidimensional universe which would require an essay just to get to how the theory applies, and the criticism there from William Craig is too focused on the reality of the physics to criticize the logic of the atonement. To put it another way in every case I've written what is the common use by all, the probability and how it's applied to the evidence by the authors. What am I doing wrong?Jamey314 (talk) 04:33, 15 March 2013 (UTC)
Please be patient with my article, i am a newcomer an hav pubkished my article in Geman 2012. Now i have to improve it in english and must link the pictures with wikimedia and the german kinks. Thanks--Bregant1 (talk) 11:44, 15 March 2013 (UTC)
Hi, I just submitted a page for creation (Alain Kirili) a couple of minutes ago. I received the note that the page was submitted, but I couldn't see the page any more. I believe the page was not correctly saved and submitted blanc. How can I reinsert the text? Thank you in advance for your help.Annaluka (talk) 16:09, 15 March 2013 (UTC)
{{subst:submit}}
to the very top, but there's no reason to submit both copies of the draft for review. Huon (talk) 09:29, 16 March 2013 (UTC)Greetings,
I recently created two web pages for a notable musician/group/album (decade of record experience, recent recognition by prominent awards body, etc): Wikipedia talk: Articles for creation/LightningCloud and Wikipedia talk: Articles for creation/RedCloud (MC).
I saved the page and submitted for review, then received a message that told me it might take several weeks before the page was posted pending review.
My question: is it possible to post the page to the internet before review? Then have the record stricken, if denied?
I ask because, like many of your users, I desire the information to see light of day ASAP.
The artist/musician/album fits several categories under the "notability" requirement. These articles also link nicely into other existing Wikipedia entries. Also, I am a credentialed academic that has written encyclopedic entries for print publication, so the narrative--though brief and not yet perfect--is still competitive with substantial quality of the entries I have used as reference on Wikipedia. I hope that they will see the light of day, soon.
Is there any other way to get these articles to "press" (that is, posted to the internet for general reference)? Or, is enduring a few weeks for the review acceptance the only course of action for now?
Many thanks!SoCalSpit (talk) 16:39, 15 March 2013 (UTC)
The problem here is that there are only two reliable sources for this article. Me and my experience and real interviews, and the label on the bottles. I have interviewed across South Texas and Northeastern Mexico, and no one who fits your definition of "reliable" exists, besides those two sources. Too much time has gone by. I am reliable. I am a professional research scholar, familiar with the requirements of refereed scholarly publication. I have brought decades of experience to this article. The suggested places to look all turn up nothing. Nothing matches the search criteria or keywords. The only thing that arises is references to a mixed drink that has nothing to do with this rum. So, tell me where to go when there are only these two reliable sources in existence. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Resplendant Quetzal (talk • contribs) 17:16, 15 March 2013 (UTC)
Hi, I had resubmitted my article with the reference: London, Jack (2006). "Baseball's best Groundball pitchers", p. 18. Street & Smith's Baseball 2006. ISBN 070992371273
But, it was declined and when I went to check up on the article, it did not appear, how can it appear? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 1remains (talk • contribs) 22:53, 15 March 2013 (UTC)
Your rationale for rejecting this article is idiotic. By your criteria, almost all articles and books by field anthropologists, archaeologists, and sociologists would have to be rejected, because there were no sources to support their totally new, previously undiscovered knowledge.
In field anthropology, we on occasion find totally new (to us) people, cultures, and places. By definition, it is impossible to cite sources to back up our discoveries, because we are the discoverers! Our work in the field is unique (I will avoid the silly redundancy "totally unique"), and because we follow a set of methodological rules regarding the reporting of unique discoveries, our work is accepted as the best, and only, research in that specific area. You really need to learn something about research methodology and sourcing from us. Right now, your sourcing requirements are just stupid. And lead to continuing ignorance. Is that your goal--continue the ignorance? Pack of fools. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Resplendant Quetzal (talk • contribs) 23:16, 15 March 2013 (UTC)
Why was the submission rejected? On what grounds do you disagree with the item? I understand it may seem fanciful, but that doesn't mean the item isn't correct to the best of my knowledge. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Spaceman09 (talk • contribs) 23:26, 15 March 2013 (UTC)