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Bishop Alexander (Mileant)
Toward understanding the Bible

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(Hapax - words occurring once)


1012-assen | asser-cohor | coile-discl | disco-ferre | ferve-idume | iicah-magni | maid-pastu | pat--remis | renam-stamp | stand-unbel | unben-zum

     Part,  Chapter, Paragraph
501 2,3,2 | Christ’s Church, having asserted itself among the Jews~in 502 1,1,5 | gifts” (2 Mac. 2:13). He assiduously examined ~all prior God-inspired 503 1,4,2 | This means that the Church assigns Christian mean-~ing to all 504 1,1,4 | preferring that we should assimilate the ~contents of the sacred 505 1,5,5 | Baruch was a fol-~lower and assistant to the prophet Jeremiah. 506 2,2,6 | the Heavenly~Kingdom and assists him in attaining it. That 507 2,3,3 | her and exhorting not to associate with false teachers.~The 508 2,1,0 | eye, partly because of its association with~their chronic rival, 509 2,1,1 | Christianity had no such potent~associations to commend it. Not until, 510 2,2,5 | Jews. There is a basis for~assuming that originally he wrote 511 2,2,6 | the name of a disciple, assuredly, I say to you, he shall 512 2,1,8 | the promise is clear and assuring.~A great many of the prophecies 513 1,5,2 | defeated the 185,000-strong Assyr-~ian army. Ashamed, Sennacherib 514 1,2,4 | formed comets, meteorites, aster-~oids, protoplanets, etc. 515 2,3,3 | failed to mention this most astonishing event. The similarity~of 516 1,2,4 | reached by contemporary astronomers, who have discovered that 517 1,5,5 | tradition, the prophet ~was sawn asunder with a wooden saw (Hebrews 518 1,Add,1| its purpose is; how it is at-~tained; ~ 5) what evil is; 519 1,Add,1| the usual method, of St. Atha-~nasius. The Arians quoted 520 1,Add,1| See Guido Müller, Lexicon Athanasianum, sub voce: id quod quis 521 1,5,5 | the countries of militant atheism, ~where the word of God 522 1,2,4 | Ignorant of ~this fact, atheists and materialists of the 523 2,5,9 | monasticism~overflowed into Athos, and from there into Russia, 524 1,2,2 | animals, prepared to show ~attachment and trust and, what is more 525 2,5,9 | of God and were~able to attain spiritual heights that modern 526 2,5,3 | heresy,~mental temptations.~Attainment of spiritual~maturity.~Outer 527 2,5,3 | pseudo-Christianity was~attempting to compete with the true 528 2,1,2 | was accustomed~to regular attendance at the Synagogue in Nazareth 529 2,1,4 | Tabernacles~which Jesus attended (ch. 7).~ 530 2,2,5 | contradictions. In reading~attentively, one easily finds clear 531 2,2,5 | only to Cleopas by name,~attest to his being one of the 532 2,5,2 | Especially~of great value is the attestation of Irenaeus of Lyons regarding 533 2,5,4 | of power or might. Long attire denotes~the clergy; a crown, 534 2,2,1 | His love for them, were attracted to Him~by the thousands. 535 2,4,1 | as the “second~Gospel,” attracting attention from both thinkers-philosophers 536 1,2,2 | as ~deprived of all the attractive and beautiful features with 537 1,1,5 | by various heretics, who attrib-~uted their forgeries to 538 1,2,2 | suggests that the original au-~thor had his roots in Egypt, 539 1,Add,1| offered in the Church: audiens in Ecclesia verhum Dei catholice 540 1,Add,1| liturgischen Gebet~, 2. Auflage (Münster i/W, 1962), ss. 541 1,Add,1| understanding;. ~[ad Constantium Aug., lib. II, cap. 9, ML X, 542 1,2,2 | diminished, nor was He ~augmented in creating the world. ~. 543 1,Add,1| Augustinus, Het Woord Gods bij Augurtinus); see also W. F. Dankbaar, 544 1,1,5 | apostles in an attempt to authenticate their heretical teachings . 545 1,1,4 | which is in Latin . were authored in Greek. ~ Books of the 546 1,2,3 | death. [Here the Jewish authori-~ties recognized that they 547 1,1,4 | Testament heritage quite authoritatively, in accordance with her 548 2,1,1 | produce beings who are not automata, but are~akin to Himself. 549 1,Add,1| IV; cf. Dom. B. Capelle, Autorité de la liturgie chéz les 550 2,3,4 | other salvation seekers, availing himself of assistance from 551 1,2,2 | insignificant, small ones. An avalanche in the mountains begins 552 1,5,7 | the venality of judges, avarice and brutality of princes, 553 2,4,4 | forgiveness: “Beloved, do not avenge yourselves, but rather give 554 1,5,4 | LORD: shall not my soul be avenged on such a nation as this? 555 1,Add,0| framed into the daily life of average men, and the whole story 556 1,5,5 | reproof of course was to avert the forthcoming disasters 557 1,5,5 | had mercy on Nineveh and averted His punishment. The lives 558 1,5,5 | the first precondition in averting God's pun-~ishment. He was 559 1,5,5 | of the Mesopotamian Tel Aviv for 22 years, ~from 592 560 1,4,7 | attitude to women (9), avoiding pride, drunkenness etc. 561 1,1,6 | Russian Synodal translation avoids ~both these extremes, containing 562 1,2,2 | expectation of creation ~awaiteth the manifestation of the 563 1,5,5 | dust of the earth shall awake, some to everlasting life, 564 1,2,2 | afternoon? He wanted to ~awaken in them such a feeling ( 565 1,Add,0| thanksgiving and adoration, awe and love, sorrow and contrition, 566 1,2,4 | set for one of the most awesome moments in hu-~man history: 567 1,5,5 | together with him: Hananiah, Azariah and Mishael. ~They had to 568 1,3,5 | 836-796 ~Àmaziah 796-782 ~Àzariah 782-737 ~Jotham 737-735 ~ ~ 569 1,5,5 | made molten images for Baalim... and burnt ~his children 570 1,4,7 | hath contentions? who hath babbling?~who hath wounds without 571 1,2,4 | people to throw the male ~babies into the river, and drown 572 1,2,4 | fetch it. On opening it, the baby started crying and the princess 573 1,4,2 | Salvation out of Egypt and Baby-~lon is the salvation in 574 2,5,3 | 17:1-18).~Casting down of Babylo~Joy in Heaven (18:1-24~The 575 2,5,3 | beast~(16:10-12). Harlot of~Babylon- center of~universal evil ( 576 2,5,8 | Apocalypse is written against the backdrop of the cruel and bloody~ 577 2,1,2 | the east side~which was backed by the east wall of the 578 1,1,3 | Being inarticulate, Moses.s bafflement as to ~how he would expound 579 1,5,5 | wages to put it into a bag with holes. Thus saith the 580 1,Add,0| practice, of course, a true bal-~ance was never strictly 581 1,2,4 | universe is ~expanding like a balloon. Fifteen to twenty billion 582 1,1,4 | Israel) using a sharpened bamboo stick dipped in ink. In 583 2,5,9 | accustom people to~cruelty and banality. Daily, indiscriminate watching 584 2,1 | age; and leadership of the band of patriots passed to Judas,~ 585 1,Add,1| our holy Fathers slew the baneful innovation . Let us regard 586 2,3,3 | miraculously unscathed, he was banished from Ephesus by emperor 587 2,5,9 | would be similar to modern bank credit cards. This~state-of-the-art 588 1,2,4 | snake-like through lush green ~banks. And the Lord said: “I have 589 1,5,1 | and vain means, which are banned in the Holy Scripture (Lev. 590 1,3,8 | plan fell through. At a banquet, Esther boldly exposed ~ 591 1,Add,1| strongly the importance of the Baptis-~mal profession of faith, 592 2,4,4 | circumcised nor uncircumcised, barbarian,~Scythian, slave nor free, 593 1,5,1 | to the tiniest detail is bare before His all-seeing eyes: ~ 594 1,2,4 | hills, a land of wheat and barley, of vines and~fig trees 595 1,4,7 | thine increase:~So shall thy barns be filled with plenty, and 596 2,5,8 | where in~ancient times Barrack defeated the armies commanded 597 1,2,4 | dimensional depictions and bas-reliefs, but not to allow statues 598 1,2,4 | wilderness of Zin, with their base at the oasis. “So you remained~ 599 2,2,2 | Erasmus of Rotterdam in Basel. By the end of the last 600 1,Add,1| arcese monastique de Saint Basile, ~Editions de Maredsous ( 601 1,Add,1| Sancto, Der Beitrag des Basilius zum Abschluss~des trinitarischen 602 1,3,5 | sin with a married woman, Bath-sheba, and the resulting turmoil 603 1,2,4 | Pharaoh's daughter came to bathe at this spot and when she 604 1,Add,1| 1911), pp. 233-238; Pierre Battiffol, Le Catholicisme de Saint 605 1,Add,9| about as serviceable as a battle-ax or an arquebus in the hands 606 2,2,3 | a much later time (e.g. Bauer and~his school), the newest 607 1,5,5 | prophet found himself on a beach close to Beirut. Convinced 608 2,3,2 | Ignatius Theophorus (God Bearer),~St. Polycarp, and St. 609 1,4,7 | shall not die. Thou shalt beat him with the rod, and shalt~ 610 1,4,7 | from the child:~for if thou beatest him with the rod, he shall 611 2,2,6 | Matthew chs. 5-7) and the Beatitudes,~in which are traced the 612 2,4,4 | I fight: not as~one who beats the air. But I discipline 613 1,2,4 | your bedchamber~and on your bed, and into the house of your 614 1,2,4 | your house, and into your bedchamber~and on your bed, and into 615 1,1,6 | 32. ~In the 8th century, Bede the Venerable was the first 616 1,2,4 | dry watercourses, in the beds of which a little sparse 617 1,5,5 | prophet Hosea, the son of Beeri from the tribe of Issachar, 618 1,2,4 | some fifty miles south of Beersheba. They were now nearing the 619 2,5,4 | the~calamities which must befall mankind for its unbelief 620 1,5,5 | that the disasters that befell them did not mean fi-~nal 621 | beforehand 622 2,3,3 | Passions: “Beloved, I beg you as sojourners and pilgrims, 623 1,2,4 | for Moses and Aaron and begged them to leave at once ~with 624 1,3,1 | Kingdom of Judah and the begin-~ning of the Babylonian captivity 625 2,3,3 | everyone~who loves Him who begot also loves Him who is begotten 626 1,Add,1| Deneffe, S.J., Dogma. Wort and Begriff, in the .Scholastik,. Jg. 627 2,4,4 | not puffed up; does not behave rudely, does not seek its 628 1,2,3 | Jesus to His disciples:] I beheld Satan ~as lightning fall 629 1,2,4 | save them. At the ~Lord's behest, Moses stretched out his 630 2,5,9 | also see Mk. 9:29). It behooves us to recall~that many zealous 631 1,Add,1| veritatis and der Episcopat bei Irenaeus, in .Zeitschrift 632 1,5,5 | himself on a beach close to Beirut. Convinced by these events, 633 1,Add,1| See Karl Müller, Kleine Beiträge zur alien~Kirchengerchichte, 634 1,Add,1| De Spiritu Sancto, Der Beitrag des Basilius zum Abschluss~ 635 1,4,7 | is fainthearted! for he believeth~not; therefore shall he 636 1,Add,0| idiom does not betray or belittle the splendour of revelation, 637 1,5,5 | they were renamed into Belteshazzar, Shadrach, ~Meshach and 638 1,Add,9| Would it not be safer to bend our thought to the mental 639 1,Add,1| Cf. Dom Odo Casey O.S.B., Benedict von Nursia al s Pneusnatiker, 640 1,Add,1| Senzipelagiens, in .Révue Bénédictine,. t. 41 ~(1929), pp. 156- 641 2,1,2 | seems to have been eulogies, benedictions, reading and~interpretation 642 1,5,5 | for he saw a flying roll bent in the shape ~of a sickle ( 643 1,1,1 | and wisest man. The Lord bequeaths to Joshua, leader of the 644 1,2,4 | were attacked and a num-~ber of them killed and captured 645 2,4,3 | Philippi, Thessalonica,~and Berea. In Lystra, Saint Paul gained 646 1,5,5 | 1-4). Zechariah, son of Berechiah and grand son of Iddo, was 647 | beside 648 1,1,1 | years the Bible has been the best-selling book in the world. An ~unknown 649 2,4,4 | am nothing. And though I bestow all~my goods to feed the 650 1,5,7 | have already fulfilled, may bet-~ter comprehend what is still 651 1,2,4 | the land of~Moab, opposite Beth-Peor; but no man knows the place 652 1,5,5 | 15). Amos prophesied in Bethel and other towns of the kingdom 653 1,2,3 | 2 When Jesus was born in Bethle-~hem of Judaea in the days 654 2,3,3 | fisherman named Jonah from~Bethsaida in Galilee (John 1:42-45) 655 1,Add,0| The hu-~man idiom does not betray or belittle the splendour 656 2,5,9 | fidelity to Christ or our betrayal of him! Throughout the~history 657 2,3,3 | distinguish him from the betrayer,~Judas Iscariot.~According 658 1,5,5 | encloses the prophet's bewilderment about the success of the 659 1,2,4 | Lord hath called by name Bezaleel, the son of Uri, the son 660 2,4,3 | after going to Jerusalem.~Bidding farewell to the Ephesian 661 1,5,1 | because their books are bigger in size than the books of ~ 662 1,2,2 | 2050 BC), the Amorite king Bilalam, the Sumer-Akkadian ruler ~ 663 1,2,4 | soul. And truly, the capa-~bility of art is a gift from God. ~ 664 1,2,4 | balloon. Fifteen to twenty billion years ago, the entire universe 665 1,Add,0| revelation, it does not bind the power of ~God's Word. 666 2,3,3 | and contain hardly any~biographical data.~Epistle of St. Apostle 667 2,1,1 | popularity in the land of its birch. Both Hinduism and Buddhism 668 1,2,2 | fish lives in water or a bird in the air, immersed in 669 1,Add,8| The birth-giving word.~ Because every word 670 2,2,2 | region~of Thessalonica, the birthplace of the brothers. The oldest 671 2,2,3 | especially the epistles of the Bishop-martyr Ignatius Theophorus (the 672 2,5,8 | As if having~taken “the bit in their mouths,” people 673 1,4,7 | itself aright. At the last it biteth like a serpent, and stingeth 674 2,3,3 | Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia, and Bithynia” – provinces of Asia Minor. 675 1,2,4 | snakes and some of ~them were bitten. Moses stuck a brass serpent 676 1,5,4 | people.s hearts, the prophet bitterly mourned their perdition 677 1,2,2 | Father. (Against Heresies, bk. ~5, ch. 6). ~It is essential 678 1,Add,1| who display a sound and ~blameless conduct and an unadulterated 679 2,3,3 | you. On their part He is~blasphemed, but on your part He is 680 1,2,4 | sacred images and ~idols blasphemes and defiles the icons. He 681 1,Add,1| without danger, neither blaspheming God, nor dishonoring the 682 2,4,4 | these: anger, wrath, malice, blasphemy, filthy language out of~ 683 1,2,4 | lightning and the loud blasts of a trumpet. “And Mount 684 1,1,1 | unbelief that has always trou-~bled the human society. ~ The 685 2,4,1 | create his own expressions by blending existing words to give them 686 1,5,4 | Sabbaths, the calling of assem-~blies, I cannot away with; it 687 1,2,1 | Ancient Mesopotamian writers blindly groped after this principle. 688 1,2,2 | take a bribe, for a bribe blinds the eyes of the wise, and 689 2,5,4 | spiritually and are already blissful~in Heaven. Here, beginning 690 2,5,8 | throughout the Roman Empire. This~blood-letting Judeo-Roman war became the 691 1,3,5 | Israelite ~king Ahab. Ahab.s blood-thirsty wife, Jezebel, who was a 692 1,2,2 | serve that the ferocious, bloodthirsty, and formidably strong representatives 693 1,5,2 | of Israel. These were the blooming days of arts and commerce. 694 1,Add,1| Kirche von Anfang an nicht bloss ein Weitergeben~von Doktrinen 695 1,2,4 | Huge flocks of quail ~were blown inland from the sea and 696 1,2,4 | the wilderness. ~ Pharaoh bluntly rejected the request. He 697 2,5,3 | 8th-6th cent. B.C.)~Babylonian bo~Extreme weake~Emergence 698 1,5,5 | Israel under the king Jero-~boam II. He was a contemporary 699 1,5,5 | where God had sent him, and boarded a ship in Joppa to sail 700 1,4,7 | thy paths (Prov. 3:5-8). Boast not thyself~of tomorrow; 701 2,3,3 | tongue is a little member and boasts great~things. See how great 702 2,5,6 | world is extremely vast. The~bodiless spirits, the angels, are 703 1,Add,0| the fulness of the Godhead bodily” (Col. 2:9). This mystery 704 1,2,4 | open to us, without getting bogged down in complicated details: 705 1,2,4 | disease; an epidemic of boils; a fierce hailstorm that ~ 706 1,2,4 | the need of some act to bolster ~the status of Aaron and 707 2,4,4 | put on love, which is the~bond of perfection. And let the 708 1,2,4 | of the ~craven and unruly bondsmen that had emerged from Egypt, 709 1,1,1 | of this and the following booklets about the Bible is to provide 710 2,1,4 | week the~people dwelt in booths in imitation of their fathers 711 1,3,4 | them, to intermarry and borrow their idolatry and disgusting 712 1,3,8 | book of Esther.~The book borrows its title from its main 713 1,5,2 | Ammonites and ~Edomites did not bother the Jews. Peace and prosperity 714 2,1,2 | torn in two from top to bottom at the time of the death 715 1,5,2 | Judean cities. Hezekiah bought out with a large tribute. 716 2,5,8 | river Euphrates denotes the boundary beyond which the nations 717 1,4,7 | upsought I after her. I bowed down ~mine ear a little, 718 1,2,4 | they reached a spring of brack-~ish water at Marah (which 719 1,1,1 | blind may read Bible in Braille. The Bible is the most universally 720 2,1,9 | the~past. A being with a brain about the size of modern 721 1,5,5 | which smote the image... and brake them to pieces... and became 722 2,5,9 | voluntarily or by force, were~branded with the seal of their master' 723 2,1 | to the hills around the~brave old priest, with thousands 724 2,1 | Greeks, both through his bravery in battle and by his wise 725 1,5,4 | piety. They understood that breach of ~the law by a minority 726 2,5,8 | disarmament resulting from the break-up of~communism appear to be 727 2,5,7 | lead to a weakening and a breakdown of the community and to 728 2,4,4 | with truth, having put on a breastplate of righteousness, and having~ 729 1,2,2 | rest in Him, finding in Him breathing room,. writes ~Saint John 730 1,2,4 | and Moses himself. A new breed of Israelites had grown 731 1,5,5 | laborers' hire, injustice and bribery of judges, depravity of 732 1,5,2 | poor, judges acquitted ~for bribes, depravity was rampant among 733 1,2,4 | hard service, in mortar and brick, and in all kinds of work 734 1,2,4 | supplied with straw for making bricks. They would have ~to seek 735 1,4,5 | often hear the same image of bridegroom ~and bride in the hymns 736 2,1,1 | peoples and was on the land bridge between the great civilizations~ 737 1,5,5 | The best of them is as a brier:~the most upright is sharper 738 2,5,7 | seal, the Seer shows the brighter side of mankind's~calamities. 739 2,5,8 | with the exception of the~brightest, the stars are hardly visible.)~ 740 1,4,7 | For there is a shame that bringeth sin; and there is a shame 741 2,3,3 | Rome, Spain, Carthage, and Brittany. Toward the close of his 742 1,5,5 | in the second part of the bro-~chure .The Old Testament 743 1,2,2 | touched upon one of the very broadest questions, that of the general 744 1,Add,1| its text were interpreted broadly and rationally, in accordance 745 1,5,1 | devil. ~ The aim of our two brochures, dedicated to the prophetic 746 1,2,4 | workman, and of the em-~broiderer. (Exodus 35:30-35). ~ ~Skilled 747 1,3,5 | state. David was especially broken-hearted over the rebellion of his 748 1,2,4 | picked it near Hebron at the brook of ~Eshcol, a name which 749 1,2,4 | into a good land, a land of brooks of water, of~fountains and 750 1,1,4 | words about the Rich Man's broth-~ers into the mouth of Abraham: 751 1,3,2 | spiritual labors. Prophetic brother-~hoods became especially 752 1,2,4 | traditionally Moses's ~brother-in-law); and from here they witnessed 753 2,5,8 | Spirit” is conferred~upon the brow of the newly baptized. It 754 2,5,4 | will receive upon their brows (the forehead)~a blessed 755 1,5,4 | soundness in it; but wounds, and bruises, and putrefying sores: they 756 1,2,2 | fear of the strong, ~and brute force should triumph in 757 1,4,7 | for the righteous: he is a buckler to them that walk~uprightly. 758 1,5,5 | maketh it bring forth and bud, that it ~may give seed 759 2,1,9 | old as Confucius and the Buddha and he may have been~older 760 1,5,5 | cooled ~down the zeal of the builders. So, in order to encourage 761 1,5,5 | power: ~ ~.Woe unto him that buildeth his house by unrighteousness, 762 2,1,1 | were diminutive and its buildings unimpressive. Its art was 763 1,1,6 | Saints stayed for a time in Bulgaria, not only continuing their 764 2,2,2 | people. This language, a Bulgaro-Macedonian dialect, was more~or less 765 1,2,2 | depictions of lions and bulls with human heads, which 766 1,Add,0| that is “the pillar and bulwark~of the truth” (1 Tim. 3: 767 1,2,4 | figs, pomegranates and a bunch of grapes so large that 768 1,2,4 | sage advice. It was too burden-~some for Moses to deal personally 769 2,4,4 | tempted. Bear one another’s burdens, and so fulfill the law 770 2,3,3 | His commandments are not burdensome” (1 John 5:2-3).~“This is 771 1,2,4 | golden calf. The people made burnt-offerings to it, ~and they sang, feasted 772 1,Add,1| and verses [Cf. F. Katten-~busch, Das Apostolische Symbol, 773 1,4,7 | through the multitude of business; and a fool's voice is known 774 2,3,3 | thief,~an evildoer, or as a busybody in other people’s matters. 775 1,3,7 | occupied the high post of the butler at the Persian court. In 776 2,5,9 | no one shall be able to buy or sell,~except those who 777 1,5,5 | Ezekiel the priest, the son of Buzi, was born in Judaea. Together 778 1,Add,1| or declaratory, were a ~by-product of the liturgy and reflected 779 1,2,4 | Moses thought it prudent to ~bypass Edom from the west, traveling 780 2,1,5 | settlement in the land~of Caanan these books of Moses were 781 2,5,5 | in our time in theosophy, cabala,~freemasonry, contemporary 782 1,2,4 | Canaan. The party reached Cadet safely after a forty-day 783 2,2,5 | ancient historian, Eusebius of Caesarea, states that St. Luke came 784 2,5,9 | this is the~name of Nero Caesarius written in Hebrew. In that 785 2,4,3 | Jerusalem, visiting Ephesus~and Caeseria on the way and from Jerusalem, 786 1,3,8 | conspired to kill him. Morde-~cai.s service to the king was 787 1,2,2 | described . the crime of Cain and ~his impious descendants ( 788 1,2,4 | They eat .matzoth. (flat cakes of unleavened bread) to 789 1,2,4 | pitch darkness. ~ The tenth calamity was the most dreadful of 790 2,5,9 | antichrist~were known, then calculating his numerical meaning would 791 1,5,5 | And there is none ~that calleth upon thy name, that stirreth 792 1,5,5 | prophet ~accused them of callousness and hypocrisy: .Wherefore 793 2,5,8 | Rev. 8:1). This is the calm before the storm that will 794 1,2,2 | of our Lord and Savior at Calvary. The prophet Isaia wrote 795 2,2,2 | undertake the work at Oxford, Cambridge and Westminster.~Their translation, 796 1,2,4 | trans-~fixed them both. ~ The camel-riding Midianites in the region 797 1,5,5 | knew thee; and before thou camest forth out of~the womb I 798 1,2,4 | around them. The Israelites camped on the open ~ground before 799 1,Add,1| 97-98; Hans Freiherr von Campenhausen, Kirchliches Amt and geistliche 800 1,2,1 | was sung beside the desert campfires, it was commemorated in 801 1,2,4 | them died. ~ At their next camping place Aaron and Miriam started 802 1,2,4 | through which ~the Suez Canal now passes.). When the Israelites “ 803 1,1,4 | Philip met one of ~Queen Candace's eunuchs on the road and 804 2,1,4 | 43; Neh. 8:14-15). Great candelabra with many lights were erected 805 2,5,6 | Holies, the seven-branched candelabrum,~the censer with smoking 806 1,Add,1| Creed was ~reserved for the candidates for Baptism, at the last 807 2,5,8 | mass extermination, tanks, cannons, fighter planes, and nuclear 808 1,4,3 | and all the things thou canst desire are not to be ~compared 809 1,2,4 | thousand feet, with deep canyons around them. The Israelites 810 1,5,5 | free His people from the cap-~tivity, and the glorious 811 1,2,4 | the soul. And truly, the capa-~bility of art is a gift 812 2,4,5 | missionary activity was his~capability to concentrate his enormous 813 1,5,5 | punishment of Nineveh, the capi-~tal of the Assyrian kingdom. 814 1,Add,1| Capuyns, L’origine des Capitula Pseudo-Celesliniens contre 815 2,3,3 | dispersed in Pontus,~Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia, and Bithynia” – provinces 816 1,Add,1| St. Athana-~sius and the Cappadocians used the same argument. 817 1,Add,9| initiative ~was divine, but the Captain of Salvation was a divine 818 2,1 | standards they had learned, the captivities into~which they were permitted 819 1,2,4 | thoughts nor our realism can capture. Two-dimensional icons, ~ 820 1,5,5 | siege of Jerusalem (4:1-17), capturing of king ~Zedekiah, destruction 821 1,Add,1| controversy [See Dom M. ~Capuyns, L’origine des Capitula 822 1,2,4 | Transjordan lay along the ancient caravan route known as the King' 823 1,2,4 | march for armies or ~trading caravans. But that direct and well-traveled 824 2,5,9 | imprinted not on a~plastic card as it is now, but directly 825 2,4,3 | preparing for a rabbinical career, since directly after finishing~ 826 1,1,4 | the trees will no longer caress our eyes, although they ~ 827 2,4,4 | of the Spirit. For to be carnally minded is death,~but to 828 2,4,3 | Tim. 4:13) with a certain Carpus, and then left for Macedonia. 829 2,1,2 | gates~was a stone with a carved inscription warning all 830 1,2,4 | stones, to ~set them, and in carving of wood, to make any manner 831 1,Add,1| Lebens. In a footnote Dom Casel sends the reader back to 832 1,Add,1| the ~truth [Cf. Dom Odo Casey O.S.B., Benedict von Nursia 833 2,5,8 | land of Magog (south of the Caspian sea; Ezek. chs. 38 and 39;~ 834 1,4,7 | and laziness: Slothfulness casteth into a deep sleep; and an 835 1,2,1 | character, the Pentateuch catalogs the events concerning the 836 1,5,7 | great disasters and national catastrophes the prophets were the only 837 1,4,7 | dreams is like him that catcheth at a shadow, and followeth~ 838 1,Add,1| to the institution of the Cate-~chumenate and had primarily 839 1,Add,0| importance is that in the catechetical tradition of the Early Church, 840 1,Add,1| profession of ~belief which every catechumen recited before his baptism 841 1,3,2 | families and were highly edu-~cated. The main task of the prophets 842 2,5,4 | these interpretations can be categorized into four~classes. The first 843 1,Add,1| and the preaching ~of the Catholica belong together. St. Augustine 844 1,Add,1| audiens in Ecclesia verhum Dei catholice tractari [hearing in the 845 1,Add,1| Gospel itself: ipsi Evangelio catholicis praedicantibus credidi. [ 846 1,Add,1| 238; Pierre Battiffol, Le Catholicisme de Saint Augustin, 5th ed. ( 847 1,Add,1| the Church, ~to her sensus catholicus, to the fronima ekklisiatikon [ 848 1,2,4 | of nomad shepherds ~and cattle-herders roaming the wilderness of 849 1,2,1 | the first principles of causation. ~The discovery of secondary 850 2,5,9 | of temptations. In remote caves, in~hermitages and monasteries, 851 1,Add,0| theme of the whole ~Bible is Cbrist and his Church, not nations 852 1,Add,5| once did, the Lord even now ceaselessly says His words to you, to 853 2,5,8 | the~image of God, mankind ceases to value and love God's 854 2,4,4 | Rejoice always, pray without~ceasing, in everything give thanks; 855 1,Add,9| The .definition. of Chal-~cedon is not a metaphysical statement, 856 1,2,3 | Whom the heaven must re-~ceive until the times of restitution 857 1,1,7 | the Church learned how to celebrate the holy Liturgy, the Lord. 858 2,1,4 | Christian Pascha, which celebrates the resurrection, come at 859 1,2,2 | plagues of Egypt and the celebrating of the first Passover (4: 860 2,1,4 | after the Passover. The celebration was at the tabernacle or 861 1,4,2 | often in charge of religious celebrations, offering sacrifices to 862 1,Add,1| mistakenly attributed to Pope Celestine and was in fact composed 863 2,4,4 | 1-3; 2 Thes. 1:6-10.~On celibacy and marriage: 1 Cor. 7:1- 864 2,2,3 | works of the pagan author Celsus, written in the middle of 865 1,Add,1| quote the text of the Ni-~cene Creed, .which only the initiated 866 2,3,3 | the Word of God. He~also censures power-loving Diotrephes, 867 1,2,4 | for the priesthood. ~ A census was taken and showed that 868 2,5,1 | between the past and future centers of the~world's evil. The 869 1,Add,9| spontaneously. It has re-~cently been suggested that we should 870 1,Add,1| refers to these curious centones, made of Homeric ~or Virgilian 871 1,3,1 | The power soon was con-~centrated in the hands of a crafty 872 1,1,5 | to that which we now ac-~cept. For 336 years the Church 873 1,1,6 | unadulterated clarity and ex-~ceptional conformity to the holy text. 874 2,1,2 | designed for sacrificial ceremonies. Only during~the feast seasons 875 2,2,5 | Gnostics, and the heretic~Cerinthus — had emerged and denounced 876 1,1,5 | portions of the Church con-~cerning the Epistle to the Hebrews, 877 1,2,4 | therefore . . . define with all certitude and accuracy ~that just 878 2,5,8 | which the Syrian governor Cestius headed four Roman legions ( 879 1,2,4 | had passed since their an-~cestor Jacob had first come to 880 1,5,5 | Rawlinson and others. These ar-~chaeological findings confirmed the truth 881 1,3,3 | now being excavated by ar-~chaeologists. These excavations shed 882 1,5,5 | pieces... and became like the chaff ~of the summer threshing 883 1,Add,9| wrong. The .definition. of Chal-~cedon is not a metaphysical 884 1,5,2 | rebelled against Babylon (Chaldea) ~again. In 586 Jerusalem 885 1,2,2 | which are so ~widespread in Chaldeo-Mesopotamian and Egyptian art.' The Biblical 886 2,5,6 | smoking incense, the golden chalice, etc. (These items were 887 2,5,4 | The visions of the seven chalices (chs. 15-17) paint a dire 888 2,1 | them all. Immediately the challenge went forth to all who~were 889 1,5,5 | has a 686 cubic feet air ~chamber in the head. Sometimes animals 890 1,5,7 | good or bad would happen by chance. Good things are the ~reward 891 1,1,4 | Mystical Supper, when they chanted a hymn, they went out into 892 1,1,4 | Matthew. This refers to the chanting of psalms. The Sav-~iour' 893 1,5,5 | Prophecies of the last 14 Chap-~ters of Ezekiel, referring 894 1,Add,1| St. Irenaeus was at once .char-~ismatic. and .institutional.. 895 2,5,5 | various Gnostic systems, which characteristically taught that everything~in 896 2,5,7 | who symbolize~four factors characterizing the complete history of 897 2,4,4 | touches upon~private matters, charges persons with commissions, 898 2,3,3 | number of his~renunciations, charging him to “feed my lambs” and “ 899 1,Add,1| Where, ~therefore, the charismata of the Lord have been deposited ( 900 2,2,6 | strengthened family unity, formed charitable organizations, and brought 901 2,2,6 | Teachings of the Savior.~Charity: “Come you blessed of My 902 2,5,9 | the dragon~tries to use to charm her. The two wings of the 903 2,1,6 | At first they~were called Chasidim (Separatists) because of 904 2,4,4 | there whom a father does not chasten? But if you~are without 905 2,4,4 | they~indeed for a few days chastened us as seemed best to them, 906 1,4,3 | whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth, and scourgeth every son 907 2,4,4 | for whom the Lord loves He chastens, and~scourges every son 908 1,2,2 | hardships of ~life constitute a chastisement from God, still it must 909 1,5,7 | should not be viewed as chauvinism. The prophets ~understood 910 1,1,2 | laws of ~nature. To lie, to cheat, to lust is to destroy personality 911 1,Add,0| selection. was guided and checked. ~“And many other signs 912 1,Add,9| own stature, ~instead of checking our mind by the stature 913 2,5,9 | passports, visas,~tickets, checks, credit cards and other 914 1,1,1 | support you, and comfort to cheer you. Christ is its grand 915 1,Add,1| Pruche, O.P. (in the .Sources Chéktiennes,. Paris, 1945) are highly 916 1,2,4 | in the realm of physics, ~chemistry, geology, cosmology, etc., 917 2,1,1 | sufficiently numerous to~cherish and hand down the writings 918 2,1,8 | the fulfillment of their cherished messianic prophecies. Accordingly, 919 2,2,5 | words, he rested on Jesuschest (John 13:23-25), and from 920 1,5,6 | Zephaniah 3:1-5, Mala-~chi 1:6. Call for Repentance: 921 1,1,7 | riddle .Which came first, the chicken or the egg?. is very much 922 2,1 | Antipater, a crafty Idumaean chieftain who never~lost an opportunity 923 1,3,5 | of Sam-~uel. Godly, yet childless, Hannah prayed God to give 924 1,2,2 | that, although man was in a childlike state in the spiritual sense, 925 1,5,5 | of the reign of Jehoia-~chin, and since then he prophesied 926 1,1,2 | Bible with freedom of moral choice. He may ~do right or he 927 2,5,6 | which the clergy and the choir recite during the~main part 928 1,5,3 | Habakkuk. The Lord did not choose the prophets by their ~social 929 1,1,4 | edification in them, she chooses such pas-~sages as are written, 930 1,2,2 | directly to Moses (Neh. 8:1; 2 Chr. 25:4; 35:12). Also ~Apostles 931 1,Add,1| Normes de l’Enseignment Chretien danr la litterature patristique~ 932 1,Add,1| praescriptione, in the .Sources Chretiennes,. 46 (Paris, 1957)]. ~ ~ 933 1,Add,1| Spirilu Sancto in .Sources Chrétiennes,. (Paris, 1945), pp. 28 934 1,Add,1| Jungmann, S.J., Die Stellung Christi im liturgischen Gebet~, 935 2,5,3 | 7~cent.).~Iconomachism.~Christianization of new~peoples (Slavs) “ 936 1,4,2 | Now the Psalter is fully christianized. This means that the Church 937 1,Add,0| Christian nation, genus Christianum . in the ~ancient phrase, 938 1,Add,0| even for the new Israel of Christnot to be left out or ignored. 939 1,Add,9| perspective of an integral Christology; that is, only ~if we believe 940 1,Add,0| a different meaning post Christum natum. ~The tension between 941 1,Add,1| faith. It was by faith that Christuszeugniss~ could be discerned in the 942 2,1,0 | its association with~their chronic rival, and fought its entrance 943 1,Add,0| and the Apostles were no chroniclers. It ~was not their mission 944 1,Add,0| seen” (Heb. 11:1: St. John Chrysostorn explains el-~enchos precisely 945 1,Add,1| institution of the Cate-~chumenate and had primarily an educational 946 1,1,6 | preferring the original ~Church-Slavonic version. Vocal supporters 947 1,5,5 | second part of the bro-~chure .The Old Testament Regarding 948 1,5,2 | of the Babylonian monar-~chy. Joined armies of Nabopellessar 949 1,5,5 | him out windows; and it is cieled ~with cedar, and painted 950 1,5,7 | for the list of prophe-~cies about the calling of the 951 2,4,3 | Benjamin and~was born in the Cilician town of Tarsus (in Asia 952 1,Add,1| question: What was the prin-~ciple of interpretation? Now, 953 2,3,3 | it was designed for those circles of individuals that~have 954 2,3,3 | Catholic” in a sense meaning~“circular,” because they are not directed 955 1,2,4 | protoplanets, etc. This whole circulating and rushing mass of gases, 956 2,5,3 | Loyalty to God~difficult circum~Table 2. Plan of the Apocalypse.~ 957 1,5,2 | are aware of the spiritual circum-~stances under which they 958 2,4,4 | is neither Greek nor Jew, circumcised nor uncircumcised, barbarian,~ 959 2,1,0 | as~normal. In view of the circumstance that during its first five 960 2,4,3 | devoured by animals in the circus (1 Tim. 4:16-17,), he was~ 961 1,Add,0| For that reason it is pre-~cisely in the Old Testament that 962 1,Add,0| shel-~ter only, but rather a citadel, a vanguard of God. ~ There 963 2,3,2 | By the Actsauthor’s own citation (Acts 1:1-3), this is his 964 2,3,1 | the conclusion, we shall cite some~selected teachings 965 2,2,5 | meaning of our Lord’s life and cites only His most elevated discourses.~ 966 2,4,4 | will limit ourselves to citing extracts~from his Epistles, 967 2,5,9 | from the sea symbolizes the civilian godless authorities and 968 2,5,6 | holy martyrs. The elders clad in white garments with golden 969 1,2,4 | settled as a pas-~toral clan in the land of Goshen in 970 2,4,4 | become sounding brass or a clanging cymbal. And though I have 971 1,3,1 | Herod the Great, who de-~clared himself the king of the 972 2,2,5 | Luke to~make geographic clarifications, e.g., that mount Olivet 973 2,2,5 | to especially expound and clarify the teachings regarding 974 2,2,4 | Mutually supplementing and clarifying each other, they~represent 975 2,1,6 | exactness, and they were usually classed~with the sinners. Jesus 976 1,Add,9| When I read the ancient classics of Christian theology, the 977 2,5,0 | emperors, from Julius Caesar to Claudius. The sixth head is Nero 978 1,2,2 | holiness of the taberna-~cle is central, as is the important 979 2,5,4 | worthiness; and whiteness, cleanliness or purity. The city of~Jerusalem, 980 2,3,3 | of Jesus Christ His Son~cleanses us from all sin” (1 John 981 2,5,3 | innocence; then- a~cooling.~Cleansing through~mourning and~sorrow.~ 982 1,5,5 | discussion of the prophetic books clearer, we will order it chronologically. 983 2,1 | appeared the jealousy and the cleavage between the Jews and Samaritans. 984 2,2,5 | where he refers only to Cleopas by name,~attest to his being 985 1,1,1 | but for the highest ec-~clesiastical spiritual rank and wisest 986 1,2,4 | defenders. Moses ~himself climbed to the top of a hill together 987 2,1,6 | separate class during the closing years of~the Greek period. 988 2,5,6 | the antimins, the special cloth placed in the middle of 989 2,1,1 | religions arose. All of these, clouded by man's sin,~were imperfect 990 1,1,5 | not become tarnished or ~cloudy when it is expressed in 991 1,Add,1| alithias somatic~(which is clumsily rendered in the old Latin 992 1,Add,1| And in ~this sense it was co-extensive with Scripture. Tradition 993 1,5,5 | in Hebrew) was a younger co-laborer to Ezra and Nehemiah; ~he 994 1,5,5 | made his son Belshazzar his co-ruler. In the first year of ~Belshazzar 995 1,5,2 | Sargon ~Hezekiah joined the coalition of the neighboring countries, 996 1,2,4 | along the Mediterranean coast of ~the Sinai desert. From 997 2,5,9 | describes the existence of a cognizant evil being in the incorporeal 998 1,2,4 | The Israelites started to cohabit with Moabite women, and 999 1,Add,9| man. ~ There is an amazing coherence in the body of the traditional 1000 2,5,4 | Judgment. The devil and~his cohorts will be condemned to eternal


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