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mals 1
malta 1
mammals 1
man 318
man- 3
manage 1
manageable 1
Frequency    [«  »]
340 you
335 have
318 an
318 man
317 had
316 or
315 2
Bishop Alexander (Mileant)
Toward understanding the Bible

IntraText - Concordances

man

    Part,  Chapter, Paragraph
1 1,1,1 | Bible had been given not by man, but by God. Therefore, 2 1,1,1 | spiritual rank and wisest man. The Lord bequeaths to Joshua, 3 1,1,1 | mind of God, the state of man, the doom of sinners, the 4 1,1,1 | The culture of Western man is derived in large measure 5 1,1,1 | message of the Bible. ~Western man.s views of reality, of nature 6 1,1,1 | of nature and destiny of man, of marriage and the family, 7 1,1,1 | value, we say, because of man.s having ~been created in 8 1,1,1 | of dignity and worth ~of man is rooted in the teaching 9 1,1,1 | teaching of the Bible that man has an immortal soul with 10 1,1,1 | society for which Western man strives comes essentially 11 1,1,1 | Biblical truth that individual man is of supreme worth, and 12 1,1,2 | record of God.s dealings with man. It reveals ~how God has 13 1,1,2 | how God has acted and how man has responded. It is a book 14 1,1,2 | He created ~life itself. Man, as he is seen in the pages 15 1,1,2 | the physical body. Let a man violate the laws of the 16 1,1,2 | the Bible is that since man by him-~self cannot lift 17 1,1,2 | Bible is also the story of man.s redemp-~tion. GodGave 18 1,1,2 | only Son,” because He loved man and wanted him to have the 19 1,1,2 | was. God did not cre-~ate man and then abandon him. God 20 1,1,2 | abandon him. God entered into man.s life. The life and death 21 1,1,2 | making Himself known to man and of ~man.s response to 22 1,1,2 | Himself known to man and of ~man.s response to God.s self-disclosure. 23 1,1,2 | history. Here is the Book of man in his pilgrimage through ~ 24 1,1,3 | never came by the~will of man, but holy men of God spoke 25 1,1,4 | par-~able about the Rich Man and Lazarus, the Saviour 26 1,1,4 | these words about the Rich Man's broth-~ers into the mouth 27 1,1,4 | replied, How can I except some~man should guide me? (Acts 8: 28 1,1,5 | appearances a very ordi-~nary man, the son of a carpenter. ~ 29 1,1,5 | grasp. When God spoke to man, the communication had to 30 1,1,5 | transfigures what is hu-~man. We must not think that 31 1,1,6 | the efforts of the Ger-~man missionaries, requested 32 1,2,1 | creation of the world and man stands unique in all ancient 33 1,2,2 | the will of the Creator. Man is ~not just an animal, 34 1,2,2 | in ~the likeness of God. Man was created for the highest 35 1,2,2 | par-~adise? What foolish man will say this? What then 36 1,2,2 | beginning, the Master created man and placed ~the conscience 37 1,2,2 | about God, the world, and man, are bound up with this 38 1,2,2 | bountifully ordered. ~. Man is an earthly being, made 39 1,2,2 | of ~earthly creation. ~. Man is made after the image 40 1,2,2 | conclusion follows that man is obliged to strive towards 41 1,2,2 | Persons. We read: Let us make~man according to our image; 42 1,2,2 | twice ~about the creation of man. It was necessary for him 43 1,2,2 | necessary for him to speak of man in the first chapter as 44 1,2,2 | the creation of the first ~man and of how woman was made 45 1,2,2 | called to be in submission to man. The head of the woman is 46 1,2,2 | head of the woman is the man; the head of every man is~ 47 1,2,2 | the man; the head of every man is~Christ ... ; for the 48 1,2,2 | is~Christ ... ; for the man is not of the woman, but 49 1,2,2 | woman, but the woman of the man (1 Cor. 11:3,8). But why ~ 50 1,2,2 | world of gods, the world of man and the world of ~animals 51 1,2,2 | It is not good that the man should be alone; let us 52 1,2,2 | account of the creation of man ~and of the origin of the 53 1,2,2 | cave discoveries, early man is usually depicted for 54 1,2,2 | tells us that, although man was in a childlike state 55 1,2,2 | although it stands lower than man, we observe many noble-featured, ~ 56 1,2,2 | necessary to conceive of early man alone as ~deprived of all 57 1,2,2 | Protopresbyter M. Pomazansky)~Man's blessedness and his nearness 58 1,2,2 | is dimmed only because of man's corruption. However, it 59 1,2,2 | with him face to face, as a man would speak with his friend ( 60 1,2,2 | lead to suffering and that man thus punishes himself. If 61 1,2,2 | recognized that the majority of man's suf-~ferings are created 62 1,2,2 | of suffering inflicted by man on man, which have accompanied 63 1,2,2 | suffering inflicted by man on man, which have accompanied 64 1,2,2 | expressed in the old proverb: man's worst enemy is ~man. ~ 65 1,2,2 | proverb: man's worst enemy is ~man. ~Would man have enjoyed 66 1,2,2 | worst enemy is ~man. ~Would man have enjoyed complete blessedness 67 1,2,2 | The Church teaches that man in paradise was created 68 1,2,2 | fruit of trees as food for man. Only after ~the flood does 69 1,2,2 | earth... For God created man for incorruption, and~made 70 1,2,2 | law is not destroyed by man's fall. It continues to 71 1,2,2 | good and evil is not lost. Man retains the possibility 72 1,2,2 | Talmud, which a ~learned man might study all his life 73 1,2,3 | lawful for ~us to put any man to death. [Here the Jewish 74 1,2,3 | command him. And whatever man shall ~not hearken unto 75 1,2,4 | Moses face to face, as a man speaks to his friend” (Exod. 76 1,2,4 | day ~Moses, now a grown man, went off alone to find 77 1,2,4 | from the dust and infected man and beast ~alike. There 78 1,2,4 | Moses welcomed ~the old man warmly, and they sat for 79 1,2,4 | judge righteously between a man and his brother or~the alien 80 1,2,4 | be afraid of the face of man, for the judgment is God' 81 1,2,4 | most awesome moments in hu-~man history: the handing down 82 1,2,4 | as for this Moses, the man~who brought us up out of 83 1,2,4 | illustrated ~by the case of the man who gathered sticks for 84 1,2,4 | opposite Beth-Peor; but no man knows the place of his burial 85 1,2,4 | s creation of Earth and man. Until recently, science 86 1,2,4 | last to be created was man. Current scientific thought ~ 87 1,2,4 | thought ~also agrees that man appeared relatively recently, 88 1,2,4 | question of the appearance of man, the main difference between 89 1,2,4 | the physical appearance of man . ~of the body, whereas 90 1,2,4 | whereas the Bible speaks of man in his complete form, having, 91 1,2,4 | Bible also confirms that man was made from .earth,. i.e. 92 1,2,4 | close rela-~tionship between man and the animal kingdom. 93 1,2,4 | time, the Bible underlines man.s ~special position among 94 1,2,4 | created in God.s image, man is capable of discerning 95 1,2,4 | pleasures alone cannot satisfy man.s spiritual thirst. These 96 1,2,4 | Bible.s statement ~that man is not merely the highest 97 1,2,4 | Understanding this mystery helps man to find his place in the 98 1,2,4 | Among the various gifts of man that distinguish him from 99 1,3,5 | resurrection of a young man, ~turning fresh the salty 100 1,3,5 | Elisha died a very old man in the city of Sa-~maria 101 1,3,5 | Being a highly educated man and a poet, the prophet 102 1,4,1 | was a quite rich and happy man who had ~many children. 103 1,4,1 | books of the Bible as a man of great righteousness. 104 1,4,2 | psalm: 104, .Blessed is the man:. 1, .Lord, I cry unto ~ 105 1,4,3 | world. ~ ~.Happy is the man that findeth wisdom, and 106 1,4,3 | findeth wisdom, and the man that getteth understanding. 107 1,4,3 | puzzling to the Old Testament man, becomes clear in the light ~ 108 1,4,4 | riches does not depend ~on man, but on God in Whose hands 109 1,4,4 | well-being. Only then can man acquire peace. ~ Hence Ecclesiastes 110 1,4,4 | life after death, where a man.s happiness will be according 111 1,4,4 | purpose that God created man. ~ The book of Ecclesiastes 112 1,4,5 | the floods drown ~it: if a man would give all the substance 113 1,4,6 | its cause in human sin. Man was created incorruptible. ~ 114 1,4,7 | A thief is better than a man that is accustomed to lie: 115 1,4,7 | 7:35). Dishonour not a man in his old~age: for even 116 1,4,7 | shutteth his lips is esteemed a man of~understanding (Prov. 117 1,4,7 | Prov. 17:28). Seest thou a man that is hasty in his words? 118 1,4,7 | darkness (Eccl. 2:13). A~man's wisdom maketh his face 119 1,4,7 | fashion it at his pleasure: so man is in the hand of him that~ 120 1,4,7 | him best (Sir. 33:13). A man's heart deviseth his way: 121 1,4,7 | forgiveness: Wherewithal a man sinneth, by the same also 122 1,4,7 | Prov. 11:31) For a just man falleth seven times, and 123 1,4,7 | 7:36). ~ ~Reproach not a man that turneth from sin, but 124 1,4,7 | punishment ~(Sir. 8:5). A sinful man will not be reproved, but 125 1,4,7 | For there is not a just man upon earth, that doeth good, 126 1,4,7 | presently known: but a prudent man covereth~shame (Prov. 12: 127 1,4,7 | 16). The discretion of a man deferreth his anger; and 128 1,4,7 | destruction the heart of man is haughty, and before honour 129 1,5,1 | tragic moment when the first man listened to the tempter 130 1,5,1 | has been going on, and the man ~is in the very center of 131 1,5,3 | developed among the Jews: a man ~fully unselfish, infinitely 132 1,5,5 | 70 feet, also can hold a man without causing in-~jury). 133 1,5,5 | saith the LORD: but to this man will I look, even to ~him 134 1,5,5 | arrogant rich. “The good man is perished out of the earth: 135 1,5,5 | for blood; they hunt every man his brother with a net. 136 1,5,5 | a reward; and the~great man, he uttereth his mischievous 137 1,5,5 | the Lord expects from a man: “He hath shewed thee, O 138 1,5,5 | He hath shewed thee, O man, what is good; and~what 139 1,5,5 | said: “Let not the wise man glory in his wisdom, neither~ 140 1,5,5 | neither~let the mighty man glory in his might, let 141 1,5,5 | might, let not the rich man glory in his riches: But 142 1,5,5 | that thou hast borne me a man of strife and a man of contention~ 143 1,5,5 | me a man of strife and a man of contention~to the whole 144 1,5,5 | world: “Take heed that no man~deceive you. For many shall 145 1,5,5 | creatures with the faces of ~a man, a lion, an ox and an eagle 146 1,5,5 | he said unto me, Son of man, I send thee to the children 147 1,5,5 | among them. And thou, son of man, be not afraid of them... 148 1,5,5 | as a prophet: ~ ~.Son of man, I have made thee a watchman 149 1,5,5 | his life; the same wicked man shall die in his iniquity; 150 1,5,5 | Again, When a righteous man doth turn from his righteousness, 151 1,5,5 | thou warn the ~righteous man, that the righteous sin 152 1,5,5 | often called himself .son of man,. which implied his humble 153 1,5,5 | remained at the court as a man of high rank during the 154 1,5,5 | of days and the .Son of Man,. i.e. the Son of God Who 155 1,5,5 | called ~Himself the Son of Man to remind the Jews about 156 1,5,5 | heavenly glory of the Son of Man ~(Daniel, Chapter 7; Matthew 157 1,5,5 | awareness of all good works of a man, see Revelation 13:8, 20: 158 1,5,5 | waste, ~and ye run every man unto his own house. Therefore 159 1,5,5 | shall do; Speak ye every man the ~truth to his neighbour; 160 1,5,7 | old time by the will of man:~but holy men of God spake 161 1,Add | took on flesh and became man, and as man told men everything 162 1,Add | flesh and became man, and as man told men everything that 163 1,Add,1| it will ~end; ~ 2) what man is; where he comes from; 164 1,Add,1| how an ~arrogant righteous man becomes a sinner; how a 165 1,Add,1| becomes a sinner; how a man serves God and how he serves 166 1,Add,1| the beginning to the end; man.s entire path from the body 167 1,Add,2| The ~biography of every man . everyone without exception . 168 1,Add,2| and the entire path from man to God and from man to satan. 169 1,Add,2| from man to God and from man to satan. You will find 170 1,Add,2| if you hate your fel-~low man . love. ~ In it you will 171 1,Add,4| the Savior said about the man who “Casts seed on~the ground, 172 1,Add,4| sprouts and grows, while the man~does not know it” (Mark 173 1,Add,4| lest you become like a man who sows today, but tomorrow 174 1,Add,5| God. ~ Do you know when a man is wise in the sight of 175 1,Add,6| Word became flesh, became man (John 1:14), and mute, stuttering 176 1,Add,6| 14), and mute, stuttering man began to ~proclaim the words 177 1,Add,7| sheds grace on the soul of man when the word of Christ 178 1,Add,7| life-giving ef-~fect on a man, so long as he hears it 179 1,Add,7| everything . all creation from man on down to a worm (I Tim 180 1,Add,8| regenerate men. And when a man is born of the Word, he 181 1,Add,9| the Word of God. ~ ~Modern Man and Scripture.~ But it is 182 1,Add,9| are retained. The modern ~man often complains that the 183 1,Add,9| the idiom of the Bible? No man can receive the gospel unless 184 1,Add,9| a profound change ~of man's mental and emotional attitude, 185 1,Add,9| an integral renewal of man's self, which begins in 186 1,Add,9| disintegration. Possibly modern man ~has not yet made up his 187 1,Add,9| diffi-~cult for the modern man. ~ Thus we face the same 188 1,Add,9| be ~built only by a new man. ~ ~What Chalcedon Meant.~ . 189 1,Add,9| Chalcedon Meant.~ .And was made man.. What is the ultimate connotation 190 1,Add,9| same Jesus was .perfect man. and .perfect God,. yet 191 1,Add,9| unique personality? .Modern man. is usually very critical 192 1,Add,9| faith. Our Redeemer is not a man, but God himself. Here lies 193 1,Add,9| and who, by .being made man,. identi-~fied himself with 194 1,Add,9| concerned with the destiny of man (and precisely with the 195 1,Add,9| tionship between God and man. ~ ~Tragedy in a New Light.~ 196 1,Add,9| identification with lost man. And the climax ~of Incarnation 197 1,Add,9| of life everlasting for man. ~ There is an amazing coherence 198 1,Add,9| spiritual outlook of modern man. It brings him a true freedom. ~ 199 1,Add,9| brings him a true freedom. ~Man is not alone in this world, 200 1,Add,9| controversies of our own age. Modern man, deliberately or ~subconsciously, 201 1,Add,9| He wants to have a hu-~man redeemer, only assisted 202 1,Add,9| cally in the dignity of man ~ ~A New Monophysitism.~ 203 1,Add,9| theology ~and religion, when man is reduced to complete passivity 204 1,Add,9| taken for reality. Modern man has been too much concerned 205 1,Add,9| concerned not so much with what man can believe as with what ~ 206 1,Add,9| with what ~God had done for man. We have, .in a time such 207 1,Add,0| God. For God is meeting ~man in history, i.e. in the 208 1,Add,0| element, in the midst of man's daily existence. History 209 1,Add,0| historical mediation. “No man hath seen God at any time; 210 1,Add,0| intimate relation of God to man and of man to God. It is ~ 211 1,Add,0| relation of God to man and of man to God. It is ~an intimacy 212 1,Add,0| we see not only God, but man too. It is the revelation 213 1,Add,0| vealed is God's concern about man. God reveals himself to 214 1,Add,0| God reveals himself to man, .appears. before him, . 215 1,Add,0| with him so as to reveal to man the hidden meaning of his 216 1,Add,0| coming to reveal himself to man, and we see ~man meeting 217 1,Add,0| himself to man, and we see ~man meeting God, and not only 218 1,Add,0| God, but also the voice of man answering him . in words 219 1,Add,0| in the Covenant, God and man, and both belong together, 220 1,Add,0| both are speaking, God and man. But prayers and in-~vocations 221 1,Add,0| this answer and response of man. It is for this that he 222 1,Add,0| that he reveals himself to man ~and speaks to him. He is, 223 1,Add,0| as it were, waiting for man to converse with him. He 224 1,Add,0| how-~ever, “lighteth every man that cometh into the world” ( 225 1,Add,0| was incarnate and .made man.. On the other hand, the 226 1,Add,0| fall and salvation of ~man. It is the story of salvation, 227 1,Add,0| salvation, and therefore man organically belongs to the 228 1,Add,0| the story. It shows us ~man in his obedience and in 229 1,Add,0| this came for the sake of man, “for us men and for our 230 1,Add,0| rather more real. “And~yet no man can say that Jesus is the 231 1,Add,0| some .secret words that man may not repeat.. On ~the 232 1,Add,0| appeared to be an ordinary man. ~ The Scriptures are .inspired,. 233 1,Add,0| precisely ~in the idiom of man. God spoke to man indeed, 234 1,Add,0| idiom of man. God spoke to man indeed, but there was man 235 1,Add,0| man indeed, but there was man to attend and to perceive. . 236 1,Add,0| mean para physin. The hu-~man idiom does not betray or 237 1,Add,0| sounds in the tongue of man. For man is created in the ~ 238 1,Add,0| in the tongue of man. For man is created in the ~image 239 1,Add,0| God deigned to speak to man, the human word itself acquires 240 1,Add,0| it becomes ~possible for man to utter words of God, to 241 1,Add,0| has spoken first. It is man's witness to God who has ~ 242 1,Add,0| the ~faithful response of man. There is always some human 243 1,Add,0| Is it ever pos-~sible for man to escape his human situation? ~ 244 1,Add,1| precious jewels. ~Now, another man takes this mosaic image 245 1,Add,1| bestowed ~upon the first man . (quemadmodum a.s piratio 246 1,Add,1| St. Jerome, this great man of Scripture, has voiced 247 1,Add,1| Gospel of Christ, a gospel of man is ~made (in Galat., I, 248 2,1,2 | if one was present. Any man might be called on~to read 249 2,1,2 | sermon or exhortation, or a man might~ask for the privilege 250 2,1,9 | ago. No one knows how old man is. That is because we cannot~ 251 2,1,9 | presence of what may be called man about 1,200,000 years in 252 2,1,9 | about the size of modern man may have lived approximately~ 253 2,1,1 | everywhere God has been seeking man and has been confronting 254 2,1,1 | and has been confronting man with~Himself and with the 255 2,1,1 | standard which He has set for man. Yet man, so they have held, 256 2,1,1 | He has set for man. Yet man, so they have held, persistently~ 257 2,1,1 | and love, has wrought for~man's redemption. This He has 258 2,1,1 | chose as His channel for man's salvation a~small, insignificant 259 2,1,1 | Himself and His redemption of man,~He sent His son, who, the 260 2,1,1 | likeness. He has respected man's free will and has~not 261 2,1,1 | has~not forced Himself on man. Only thus could He produce 262 2,1,1 | All of these, clouded by man's sin,~were imperfect and 263 2,1,1 | imperfect and could not meet man's need or fulfil God's purpose. 264 2,1,1 | possible the salvation of man.~ 265 2,2,2 | never came by the will of man, but holy men of God spoke 266 2,2,4 | likenesses were reminiscent of a man, a lion, an ox and an~eagle, 267 2,2,4 | represents Matthew~with a man or angel, Mark with a lion, 268 2,2,5 | the synoptics, the Son of Man is also~the Son of God, 269 2,2,5 | St. John, is also a true man, Who accepts an invitation 270 2,2,5 | perfect God and a perfect Man.~The Orthodox teaching has 271 2,2,5 | the request of a~prominent man, the most excellent Theophilus, 272 2,2,5 | of the gentiles, and of man’s acquittal before God not 273 2,2,5 | of Him as just the Son of Man. This~was particularly necessary 274 2,2,5 | somewhere between God and man. Obviously such~teaching 275 2,2,6 | by sin, only He can help man overcome his bad inclinations 276 2,2,6 | the soul. It teaches that man was created for eternal 277 2,2,6 | the flesh of the Son of Man and drink His blood~you 278 2,2,6 | the parable of the rich man and~Lazarus).~Prayer: “Ask 279 2,2,6 | the things which defile a man”~(Matthew 15:19-20); “…Those 280 2,2,6 | must come, but woe to that man by whom the offense~comes!” ( 281 2,2,6 | the mouth speaks. A good man out of the treasure of his 282 2,2,6 | good~things, and an evil man out of the evil treasure 283 2,2,6 | 18:27); “For the Son of Man has come to seek~and to 284 2,2,6 | comprises the original wealth of~man; that is why it is said 285 2,2,6 | 19-34); “~For what is a man profited if he gains the 286 2,2,6 | own soul? Or what will~a man give in exchange for his 287 2,3,2 | sermons are not the work of man, but the work of God. (Let 288 2,3,3 | Shortly after, having cured a manlame from his mother’s 289 2,3,3 | the wind. For let not that man suppose that he will receive 290 2,3,3 | fervent prayer of a righteous man avails much” (James 5:16). “ 291 2,3,3 | lacking nothing…Blessed is the man who endures temptation;~ 292 2,3,3 | in word, he is a perfect man, able also to~bridle the 293 2,3,3 | Wrath: “For the wrath of man does not produce the righteousness 294 2,3,4 | Comforter. In order to~be saved, man must follow the path shown 295 2,4,3 | very fundamental thought: man is justified by faith, independent 296 2,4,4 | you have put off the old man with his deeds, and~have 297 2,4,4 | and~have put on the new man who is renewed in knowledge 298 2,4,4 | 13:15.~God’s wisdom in man’s salvation: 1 Cor. 2:4- 299 2,4,4 | another: “Brethren, if a man is overtaken in any trespass, 300 2,4,4 | Thes. 3:13). “But~you, O man of God, flee these things 301 2,5,4 | Apocalypse.~Contemporary man's total devotion to sinful 302 2,5,4 | be-~gins in the soul of man and spreads to all aspects 303 2,5,4 | spreads to all aspects of man's life, becomes greater~ 304 2,5,6 | God. These images are of a man, a lion, a calf, and an 305 2,5,6 | the angels, are created as man is by the wise Creator, 306 2,5,7 | individualtalents”~with which man is born, as well as the 307 2,5,7 | of the Holy Spirit which man~receives in the Church. 308 2,5,7 | However, already in~Eden, man had fallen prey to the Tempter. 309 2,5,7 | tendencies are reinforced. Thus, man, instead of growing spiritually~ 310 2,5,7 | the internal strife within man (violence, war, and every 311 2,5,7 | who~tookpeace away from man.” Succumbing to his disorderly 312 2,5,7 | disorderly sinful desires, man squanders all~his God-given 313 2,5,7 | path of the life of~each man: his childhood purity and 314 2,5,7 | youthfulness in which a man dissipates his vigor and 315 2,5,8 | To the degree to which man~by his non-belief and sins 316 2,5,9 | goodness and~holiness in man. Is television not the forerunner 317 2,5,3 | Passions~at war within man.~Hence enmity,~poverty, & 318 2,5,3 | emanate due to~discords within man~(6:1-8).~Angels at the river~


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