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Bishop Alexander (Mileant) Toward understanding the Bible IntraText - Concordances (Hapax - words occurring once) |
Part, Chapter, Paragraph
2502 1,3,5 | Hosea ~ ~Isaiah 730-690 ~Ìicah, Nahum ~ ~Zephaniah, Habakkuk ~ 2503 1,5,5 | the Samaritans ~and other ill-wishers, the construction was postponed 2504 2,4,4 | partakers, then you are illegitimate and not~sons. Furthermore, 2505 1,3,2 | shepherds and were almost illiterate, while others came from 2506 2,4,5 | truth that has not been illuminated~and elucidated by his works. 2507 1,Add,3| prayer. Pray to the Lord to illumine your mind . so that you 2508 1,2,2 | The dawn of hu-~manity is illumined by rays of the Sun of Grace 2509 2,5,4 | consists in that the first illustrates and explains the second. 2510 2,5,9 | Maccabees serve as a vivid illustration of the times before the 2511 2,1 | doubt,~Judas was the most illustrious figure in Jewish history 2512 1,Add,1| J., Die Stellung Christi im liturgischen Gebet~, 2. 2513 1,Add,0| more to the curiosity or imagination of individual scholars. 2514 2,5,0 | of~the “harlot,” St. John imagined rich Rome with its harbor 2515 2,3,3 | Gnostic heresies, which imbued into themselves elements 2516 2,3,3 | 2:29). “Beloved, do not~imitate what is evil, but what is 2517 1,2,4 | sees its emptiness ~and immateriality. Apparently, even the .quarks. 2518 1,2,2 | past is de-~picted on an immeasurably vast time scale; the appearance 2519 2,5,9 | God's foe from time immemorial.~Thus, having suffered defeat 2520 1,2,2 | water or a bird in the air, immersed in Him on all sides and 2521 1,Add,1| and his pomp, the triple immersion, in the rite of Bap-~tism. 2522 2,5,9 | become spiritual and become immune to the entrapments of the 2523 1,1,6 | translations that strive to impart the general meaning of the 2524 2,1,6 | certain secret knowledge was~imparted to them. In fact, in some 2525 1,2,2 | shame ~fell upon them. The impartial judge, the conscience, rose 2526 2,2,5 | inspiration given to the writers, imparting to them thoughts and words, 2527 1,Add,9| the only way out of that impasse into which the world ~has 2528 2,4,2 | dangers grew, instead of his impassioned zeal and energy~weakening, 2529 1,2,4 | 4:10). The Lord became impatient ~with him, and replied that 2530 1,5,2 | His prophets to Israel to impede the spiri-~tual decay and 2531 2,4,3 | Jewish rituals. This delusion impeded the spread of Christianity 2532 2,5,1 | Testament. It foretells the impending fate of mankind, the~end 2533 1,Add,1| of the Revelation. It was impera-~tive for the Orthodox to 2534 1,Add,1| authority.? Why was it imperative to invoke also the authority 2535 1,Add,4| but will gradually and imperceptibly pass into the nature of ~ 2536 2,5,4 | denotes~the clergy; a crown, imperial worthiness; and whiteness, 2537 2,4,4 | perishable crown, but~we for an imperishable crown. Therefore I run thus: 2538 1,2,2 | archs (chapter 5), increased impiety and sinfulness and selection 2539 2,2,6 | preaching of Thy Gospel. Implant also in us the fear of Thy 2540 1,2,1 | and teuchos, .a tool. or .implement.), were written by the Prophet 2541 1,Add,9| history. ~This is an immediate implication of the integral conception 2542 1,Add,0| election is here of basic impor-~tance. One people has been 2543 1,4,2 | wisdom, courage and, most importantly, strong faith in God. David 2544 1,Add,1| hands it might lead to the imposition of a strait-jacket upon 2545 2,4,3 | yet recognizing his own impotence for fulfilling this eminent~ 2546 1,2,2 | world ~and are in essence, impotent, b) who are replete with 2547 2,5,7 | talents, and he becomes impoverished in body and soul. Within 2548 2,5,7 | This internal and external impoverishment of~mankind is symbolized 2549 2,5,9 | regarding that person. Thus, the imprinting of~personal codes directly 2550 1,Add,1| Augustine felt that it was improper to set the ~Creed down on 2551 2,2,6 | This in turn would lead to improvement of all phases of community 2552 1,5,5 | but ~succeeded mainly in improving its external manifestations. 2553 2,5,4 | always pose a risk for imprudent interpreters in deviating~ 2554 1,5,5 | rebelled against me... they are impudent children and stiffhearted. 2555 2,5,8 | just from the fate of the impure (Ezek. 9:4). At the~counting 2556 1,2,2 | Leviticus 8-10); laws about impurities ~(Leviticus 11-16); laws 2557 2,1,6 | despised them~because of the impurity of their race and because 2558 2,5,5 | Minor, b) a new and more in-depth interpretation of Old Testament 2559 1,1,3 | of the future, normally inaccessible to the human mind. ~That 2560 1,1,6 | acceptable format often suffer inaccuracies. The Russian Synodal translation 2561 1,Add,1| Holy Writ. It is obviously inaccurate to interpret the term skopos 2562 2,2,6 | Since only God knows all the inadequacies and weaknesses of the human 2563 1,Add,0| only discloses the utter inadequacy of .senses. in the knowledge 2564 1,1,3 | as an intermediary. Being inarticulate, Moses.s bafflement as to ~ 2565 1,2,2 | Let us not, beloved, inattentively pass over what is said by 2566 2,3,2 | Christ, and outline the inaugural establishment of Christ’ 2567 1,Add,0| Law and the prophets,” ~he inaugurates the new, and thereby becomes 2568 1,Add,9| the end of death and the inauguration of life everlasting for 2569 2,5,1 | that is only because of my incapability. I cannot be a judge of 2570 2,5,2 | Theologian was subjected to incarceration on this~island.~The proof 2571 1,Add,9| say, he does not take the Incarna-~tion in earnest. He does 2572 1,5,1 | result of a conjunction of incidental circumstances, or 'fate.' 2573 2,2,5 | Luke 1:3~and Acts 1:1-2). Incidentally, he not only made use of 2574 2,5,9 | the devil in his~pride, incited to rebellion against God, 2575 1,5,5 | Ezekiel severely denounced the inclination of the Israelites to pagan ~ 2576 2,2,6 | help man overcome his bad inclinations and resolve personal, family~ 2577 1,4,7 | of her God. For her house inclineth unto death, and her paths 2578 1,2,1 | Flood the Pentateuch is also incomparably superior to the crudities 2579 2,5,6 | encounter many things that are incomprehensible~to us. In the Apocalypse 2580 1,2,1 | superior to the crudities and ~inconsistencies of the polytheistic account 2581 2,5,9 | cognizant evil being in the incorporeal world, who in~desperation 2582 2,3,3 | from Abraham. They had an incorrect view on prayers, underestimated 2583 1,2,2 | For God created man for incorruption, and~made him to be the 2584 1,Add,0| stages in his revelation: per incrementa. This diversity and variety ~ 2585 1,5,5 | upper class was already incurable: “The sin of Judah is~written 2586 1,Add,1| apostolis ecclesiae successio), ,ind who display a sound and ~ 2587 1,Add,1| according to St. Vincent, an inde-~pendent instance, nor was 2588 2,1,9 | Both of these were deeply indebted to~Judaism, and Islam was 2589 2,5,9 | slyness, cruelty, and moral indecency.~The heads and the horns 2590 2,1,9 | be but a precursor to an~indefinitely expanding future. The faith 2591 1,Add | in this world. In it the Indescribable One has in a ~sense described 2592 2,5,8 | invasion of Jerusalem by an indeterminate number of regiments under 2593 1,Add,1| famous passage from the Indiculus de gratia~Dei, which was 2594 1,1,6 | been translated into many indige-~nous languages. Metropolitan 2595 2,1,1 | the globe. Hinduism was indigenous to India,~one of the major 2596 1,2,2 | questions. However, we do find indirect ~indications of a solution. 2597 1,Add | answer, either directly or indirectly in the Bible. ~ Men cannot 2598 1,2,4 | contours of ~the sun were indiscernible. ~ The increase of oxygen 2599 2,5,9 | cruelty and banality. Daily, indiscriminate watching of television kills 2600 1,Add,0| Jew and a Greek ~. all are indiscriminately in the same Christ. In other 2601 1,2,2 | strongest. And is it, indeed, indisputably a law of life? Do we not 2602 1,Add,1| Scripture and Tradition were indivisibly ~interwined for Tertullian. ~ . 2603 2,5,0 | itself~through wars and industrial waste. Increased suffering 2604 2,4,4 | 10:36, 12:1; Rom. 5:3).~Industriousness: “If anyone will not work, 2605 1,2,2 | the Egyptians from fam-~ine and bestowed great blessings 2606 1,Add,0| Word. So far it is always inescapably .situation-conditioned.. 2607 2,4,2 | astonished at the extraordinary, inexhaustible energy of this great~“Apostle 2608 1,4,4 | appreciated right away by a reader inexperienced with abstract ~concepts. ~ ~ 2609 1,2,4 | seems that matter is some inexplicable form of energy. ~ Returning 2610 2,2,3 | first century.~Through many inferences, one concludes that the 2611 2,1,1 | it occupied a small and infertile area in the Palestinian~ 2612 1,2,4 | passed through a region infested with venomous snakes and 2613 2,2,2 | and~errors could easily infiltrate the new copies. It is known 2614 1,5,3 | a man ~fully unselfish, infinitely devoted to God, fearless 2615 2,1,9 | coming of Christ are only an infinitesimal fraction of the time which 2616 2,1 | hardships~of the camp and the infirmities of age; and leadership of 2617 2,1,8 | The scribes could readily inform Herod that~the Christ would 2618 2,5,3 | beginning of the fourth century) informs us that pagan writers contemporary 2619 2,1,4 | sometimes called the Feast of Ingathering (Exod. 23:16; 34:22). To 2620 1,2,2 | ultimately the moral law is ~ingrained by God into the human soul, 2621 1,2,4 | Earth and everything that inhabits it. On the first .day,. . 2622 1,5,5 | group of people. Whales inhale air and each has a 686 cubic 2623 1,Add,1| pointing to the reality of an inher-~ited or original sin. Indeed, 2624 1,5,3 | Jews the priesthood was inheritable, God called people for prophetic 2625 1,3,0 | kingdoms fought over the inheritance. In 203 B.C. ~Judea changed 2626 1,2,2 | accompanied with the terribly ~inhuman treatment of the vanquished. 2627 1,1,5 | Testament). But copies existed ini-~tially only in the local 2628 1,5,5 | their idolatry and pagan iniq-~uity. After the captivity, 2629 2,5,9 | will be the~introduction of initials designating a new global 2630 1,Add,1| integral part of the ~rite of initiation. .Credal summaries of faith, 2631 2,4,3 | Apostle Paul personally and injected disturbances~into the life 2632 1,2,3 | diligently and obey its injunc-~tions, they will direct 2633 1,2,3 | Torah and do not obey its injunctions, ~you will direct yourself 2634 1,5,5 | keeping back laborers' hire, injustice and bribery of judges, depravity 2635 1,1,4 | sharpened bamboo stick dipped in ink. In effect, ~what was being 2636 1,2,4 | flocks of quail ~were blown inland from the sea and piled up 2637 2,5,7 | personifies those good beginnings, innate and blessed, with~which 2638 1,5,5 | retaliation to this city for the innocently shed blood. Indeed, the 2639 2,5,3 | by~Saints (12:10-12). The~innocents (14:1-5).~Hymn of those 2640 1,Add,1| Fathers slew the baneful innovation . Let us regard the sacred 2641 2,2,5 | Appian Square and the Three Inns in Rome, all of which were 2642 2,5,1 | as well as that of simply inquisitive thinkers, striving to resolve 2643 2,1,2 | was a stone with a carved inscription warning all Gentiles, on 2644 1,5,5 | Having spent about three days inside the fish, Jonah deeply repented 2645 2,1,1 | make clear the relative insignificance, from the political and~ 2646 1,Add,1| kept in the Church. Origen insisted on catholic interpretation 2647 1,Add,1| exegesis sober, from a myopic insistence upon the grammatical letter 2648 2,1,5 | 19, 9:28-29). Moses was~insistent that the commandments and 2649 1,1,5 | The holy Apostle Paul insists upon the matter: “Therefore~ 2650 1,Add | God with the help of words insofar as human words can contain 2651 2,5,1 | the Apocalypse (see “The~insolvency of Chiliasm” in the booklet 2652 1,1,5 | which someone wrote, by the inspira-~tion of God, a work which 2653 1,1,3 | While believing in the inspirationally divine qualities of the 2654 2,1 | of the faithful ones and~inspire resistance at the first 2655 2,1,5 | authentic history and~portrays inspiring examples of courageous loyalty 2656 2,4,5 | s directive~grace, which inspirited him and gave him strength 2657 1,5,5 | Assyria added to the political instability in Israel and frequent coups 2658 1,2,4 | Deut. ~1:16-17). Having instigated this system of administration, 2659 2,2,5 | Passover with His disciples and instituted the Eucharist (Holy Communion) 2660 1,Add,1| once .char-~ismatic. and .institutional.. And .Tradition. was, in 2661 1,4,2 | instruments, and sometimes the instru-~ments are changed as the 2662 1,4,7 | wisdom (1). There are also instruc-~tions on various virtues: 2663 2,5,4 | Jesus Christ made manifest, instructing John~to write the Revelation 2664 1,1,6 | send him some competent instructors in ~the Christian faith. 2665 2,4,3 | Later in~his letter Paul instructs Titus on how to go about 2666 1,Add,4| love towards those who ~insult me!. ~ And when you have 2667 1,Add,4| virtue is forgiveness of insults. Let this be your daily ~ 2668 2,4,3 | Galatians (because of the insurgence of a faction of~Judaists 2669 1,1,7 | the facts with honesty and integrity, to one inescapable ~conclusion: 2670 2,2,5 | restrain their individual intellects or suppressed their personal 2671 1,2,2 | and pure. He was always intellectually superior to other ~creatures. 2672 1,Add,0| est non in legendo, sed in intelligendo. [Scrip-~ture is not in 2673 1,Add,2| angelic tenderness; if you are intelligent, it will teach you wisdom. ~ 2674 1,Add,1| understanding. ~. ecclesiasticae intelligentiae auctoritas? The reason was 2675 1,Add,1| docendo, scribendo,~credendo intendit). On the other hand, the 2676 1,5,1 | sets up, and what the Lord intends to do to help the faithful. 2677 1,5,1 | commandment of God, the intense struggle over human soul 2678 2,1,1 | people of our Lord’s day were intensely religious. Their history, 2679 2,3,3 | salvation” and alarm at the intensification of false teachings. In a 2680 2,1,9 | occurred with but little interaction of one upon~another. Only 2681 2,5,6 | the~temples, having two intercessors for each generation of the 2682 1,Add,0| presented in their mutual interdependence. Obviously, we need a system, 2683 1,2,4 | us. It uncovers new and interesting facts that ~help us to better 2684 2,2,6 | Therefore He avoided any interference in the political~administration 2685 2,1 | Mediterranean~Sea and far into the interior, bringing them under Roman 2686 2,5,4 | Apocalypse, the Seer sometimes~interjects some intermediate observations 2687 1,3,5 | to Israel. The Israelites intermarried with the Assyrians, and 2688 1,3,4 | to get closer to them, to intermarry and borrow their idolatry 2689 2,5,8 | communism appear to be an intermission, which is given to mankind 2690 1,1,7 | same Church which suffered intermittent persecution for three hundred 2691 1,Add,1| contended that the .correct. interpre-~tation of particular texts 2692 1,1,5 | translations of 70 Greek interpret-~ers (Septuagint). The Jewish 2693 2,1,1 | and the prophets and the interpretative comments of the scribes.~ 2694 1,Add,0| allegorist. the .images. he interprets are re-~flections of a pre-existing 2695 1,Add,1| summaries of faith, whether interrogatory or declaratory, were a ~ 2696 2,5,3 | whole world. With but a few interruptions, the bloody persecutions 2697 1,2,4 | wasteland of sand and gravel, intersected with limestone ridges ~and 2698 1,2,4 | relate to the moment when the interstellar dust and gases that formed 2699 1,2,2 | meaning, is so ~closely intertwined with the hidden, spiritual 2700 2,1 | Testament. An intertestamental interval~of more than 400 years came 2701 1,Add,9| the little ~ones.) as to intervene in person in the chaos and 2702 1,2,4 | in the sand. Next day he intervened in a fight between two Israel-~ 2703 1,Add,0| and revealing himself. God intervenes in human life. And the ~ 2704 1,Add,1| Tradition were indivisibly ~interwined for Tertullian. ~ .For only 2705 1,2,4 | lived. As each plague became intolerable Pharaoh agreed to let Moses' 2706 1,5,5 | Solomon. But due to the intrigues of the Samaritans ~and other 2707 1,5,5 | his prophecies, and by the intriguing of Amaziah the priest of 2708 1,Add,0| presupposes and implies intrinsi-~cally the reality of history, 2709 1,Add,0| human history. The Bible is intrinsically historical: it is a record 2710 1,Add,1| impression that St. Basil introduces ~here a double authority 2711 2,5,4 | following parts:~1. The introductory picture of the Lord Jesus 2712 1,5,5 | They always threatened to invade Judaea, and the Jews had 2713 2,1 | brothers~appealed to the invader for aid on his side of the 2714 1,2,2 | slavery, the yokes of foreign invaders, and the various kinds of 2715 2,1 | Maccabaean throne and with the invading Parthians, Herod was named 2716 2,3,3 | James’s Epistle contains invaluable instructions on~the essence 2717 1,1,5 | those people, the reader invariably feels that the author was 2718 1,Add,1| the tradition, without inventing anything extraneous to it. 2719 1,1,2 | times apart from Him, is invested by the God of the Bible 2720 1,Add,1| and methods of theological investigation. In his treatise ~St. Basil 2721 1,5,5 | Indeed, the previously ~invincible Nineveh was soon conquered 2722 1,Add,1| Aquitania: .These are the inviolable decrees of the Holy and 2723 2,2,5 | true man, Who accepts an invitation to a wedding feast,~speaks 2724 2,4,3 | letter to Timothy in~Ephesus, inviting him to Rome for a last meeting, 2725 1,2,4 | region seem to have been involved in this Israelite im-~morality. 2726 2,3,3 | casts out fear, because fear involves torment. But he who fears 2727 1,Add,1| Pope, but a private opin-~ion of an individual theologian, 2728 1,2,4 | father Jethro (or Reuel, Iothoros) about the helpful stranger 2729 1,1,4 | chanting of psalms. The Sav-~iour's words and examples are 2730 1,Add,1| received the Gospel itself: ipsi Evangelio catholicis praedicantibus 2731 1,Add,0| put it very ~clearly: “in ipso facto, non solum in dicto, 2732 1,5,2 | the territories of modern Iran, Iraq, ~Syria, Jordan and 2733 1,5,2 | territories of modern Iran, Iraq, ~Syria, Jordan and Israel. 2734 1,Add,1| Succession. . Einar Molland, Irenaeur of Lugdunum and the Apostolic 2735 1,1,4 | are covered with ice are iridescent ~with an the tints of color 2736 2,5,4 | divided into two opposing~and irreconcilable camps of good and evil. 2737 1,5,5 | Jews for mixed marriages, irregular tithing, offering ~animals 2738 1,5,5 | truthful words started to irritate the listeners and, from ~ 2739 1,Add,0| deeds are not disconnected irruptions of God into human life. 2740 1,5,5 | devastation of the kingdom of Is-~rael by the Assyrians in 2741 1,2,2 | at Calvary. The prophet Isaia wrote about this with much ~ 2742 2,3,3 | from the betrayer,~Judas Iscariot.~According to tradition, 2743 1,5,5 | follower of the prophet El-~isha. Jonah's tomb can be seen 2744 1,5,5 | precondition in averting God's pun-~ishment. He was persecuted for his 2745 2,2,2 | centuries such as Origen; Isihi, the Bishop of Egypt; and 2746 1,3,0 | the supporters of pagan-~ism, they were named Maccabees, 2747 1,Add,1| Irenaeus was at once .char-~ismatic. and .institutional.. And . 2748 1,2,4 | appearance of other living organ-~isms. In the question of the 2749 1,2,4 | recovered after seven days of isolation in the ~desert outside the 2750 1,2,4 | universe has not always ex-~isted . has been reached by contemporary 2751 1,5,3 | people for prophetic min-~istry individually. Prophets were 2752 2,5,6 | golden chalice, etc. (These items were shown to~Moses on Mount 2753 2,1 | and one Philip~tetrarch in Itruraea and Trachonitis, a region 2754 1,2,4 | Levite Korah the son of Izhar, together with two Reubenite 2755 1,Add,1| Vollmacht~in den ersten drei jahrhudderten (Tiibingen, 1953), ss. 185 2756 2,2,5 | resurrection of the daughter of Jairus, seeing the Lord’s transfiguration 2757 1,Add,1| principle had to ~be raised. Jamblichos was, for one, quite formal 2758 1,1,4 | time of their Council in Jamnia in 90 A.D., the Jews ceased ~ 2759 2,1,9 | moved into Annam, Korea, and Japan many centuries ago, and 2760 1,2,4 | grandson of Aaron. He seized a javelin, ~rushed into a tent where 2761 1,2,4 | of whom ~they had become jealous. The Lord was angry at this 2762 2,1 | function. There were~ ~4~family jealousies and murder in the scramble 2763 1,3,5 | 1100 B.C) to the release of Jeconiah king of Judah from prison 2764 1,5,5 | that the Jews would be re-~jected, and the Gentiles called 2765 1,2,4 | others sacred material ob-~jects were revered as exceptional 2766 1,3,5 | 843-842 ~Athaliah 842-836 ~Jehoash 836-796 ~Àmaziah 796-782 ~ 2767 1,5,5 | fifth year of the reign of Jehoia-~chin, and since then he 2768 2,5,8 | seas. With oil spills it jeopardizes vast expanses of~shoreline. 2769 1,Add,1| ss. 671-676,. Joachim Jeremias, Die Abendmahlsworte Jesu ( 2770 1,5,5 | of Israel under the king Jero-~boam II. He was a contemporary 2771 1,3,6 | Zerubbabel and the ~high priest Jeshua. It was then that the rebuilding 2772 1,4,2 | of a poor shepherd named Jesse. Having become the king 2773 1,Add,1| Jeremias, Die Abendmahlsworte Jesu (Göttingen, 1949), ss. ~ 2774 1,4,7 | marital faithfulness): As a jewel of gold in a swine's snout, 2775 1,Add,1| Begriff, in the .Scholastik,. Jg. VI (1931), ss. 381-400 2776 1,2,2 | death and burial of Jacob, Jo-~seph.s faith in eventual 2777 1,Add,1| Stuttgart, 1950), ss. 671-676,. Joachim Jeremias, Die Abendmahlsworte 2778 1,5,5 | Babylon, and then sent it to Joakim the high ~priest in Judaea. ~ 2779 1,2,4 | drown them. ~ Amram and Jochebed, the parents of Moses, were 2780 1,Add,1| Spiritu S. by C. F. ~H. Johnson (Oxford, 1892) and by Benoit 2781 2,5,3 | heaven and calls~to us to join them. Although believers 2782 2,5,9 | acceptance of Islam,~the joining of a godless or an anti-Christian 2783 1,Add,7| dividing soul and spirit, joints and marrow, ~and discerns 2784 1,3,0 | sons of Mattathias, Juda, Jona-~than and Simon became particularly 2785 1,5,5 | him, and boarded a ship in Joppa to sail to Tarshish (Spain). 2786 1,1,3 | and earth pass away,~one jot or one tittle will by no 2787 1,4,7 | relatively recent past a biblical jour-~nal reported the discovery 2788 1,2,1 | history and the Egyptian so-~journ, the Exodus, and the conquest 2789 1,Add,1| Apostolic Succession, in the .Journal of ~Ecclesiastical History,. 2790 2,4,2 | have been in the deep; in~journeys often, in perils of waters, 2791 2,5,4 | saved. These are the most joyous and glorious chapters of~ 2792 1,2,2 | other nation. The Year of Jubilee legislation (Lev. 25:8-17) 2793 1,5,5 | world after the general judg-~ment. This is the vision 2794 2,3,3 | manifestations of God’s judgements,~St. Jude would not have 2795 2,2,5 | also sit on twelve thrones, judging the twelve~tribes of Israel” ( 2796 2,5,4 | as well as all separate judgments of God over different nations 2797 1,2,2 | constitutes a very unique judicial code --- much more noble 2798 2,5,0 | five~Roman emperors, from Julius Caesar to Claudius. The 2799 2,5,8 | It destroys forests and jungles, and it annihilates many 2800 1,Add,1| Göttingen, 1956); J. A. Jungmann, S.J., Die Stellung Christi 2801 2,5,9 | Jews bow to the statue of Jupiter that he had~erected in the 2802 1,5,5 | man without causing in-~jury). Having spent about three 2803 1,Add,1| progrès de l.dée tradi-~tion jusqu. à Saint Irénée, in the . 2804 1,Add,9| God cannot be easily ad-~justed or accommodated to the fleeting 2805 1,2,4 | Deut. 34:1). On a height jutting out from the ~great escarpment, 2806 1,5,1 | yet akin in ~spirit. Such juxtaposition of different events in one 2807 1,2,4 | northward, and came to rest at Kadesh-barnea, a green ~and well-watered 2808 1,4,4 | is called Koheleth, from kahal.congregation. Thus the book 2809 1,Add,1| was .the rule of truth,. ~kanon tis alithias, regula veritatis. 2810 1,Add,0| She is the true Israel, kata pneuma. In this sense ~already 2811 1,4,2 | divided into 20 parts called kathismas (kathizo is the Greek for 2812 1,4,2 | parts called kathismas (kathizo is the Greek for sit). ~ 2813 1,Add,1| gems and verses [Cf. F. Katten-~busch, Das Apostolische 2814 1,1,6 | while the Acad-~emy of Kazan translated it into many 2815 1,Add,1| Scripture, but rather the keeper and guardian of that Divine 2816 1,4,7 | that walk~uprightly. He keepeth the paths of judgment, and 2817 2,2,2 | of a single translator, Kenneth L. Taylor. The New~American 2818 1,Add,9| di-~vine majesty, but a kenosis, a .self-humiliation. of 2819 1,Add,1| Dankbaar, Schriftgezag en Kerkgezag~bij Augustinus, in the Wederlands 2820 2,5,3 | was there~thrown into a kettle of boiling oil and remained 2821 1,4 | Daniel) books are known as ~Ketubim (or Hagiographa in Greek), 2822 2,5,3 | during the time of~Jezebel (3 Kgs.16: 31,~21: 21-26)~God’s 2823 2,3,3 | Lord punished the Jews for killing James the Just. Tradition 2824 2,5,9 | indiscriminate watching of television kills the goodness and~holiness 2825 1,2,4 | went up like the smoke of a kiln,~and the whole mountain 2826 1,5,5 | was born in Anathoth, four kilometers northwest of Jerusalem. 2827 1,4,7 | woman; for herewith love is kindled as a fire (Prov. 22:14). 2828 2,3,3 | great a forest a little fire kindles” (James 3:5). “He who would 2829 1,Add,0| nationes or gentes ~. these kindred terms were used in the Bible ( 2830 2,2,5 | special emphasis to our Lord’s kingly relations and~activities. 2831 1,Add,1| Überlieferung i.rt daher in der Kirche von Anfang an nicht bloss 2832 1,Add,1| Kleine Beiträge zur alien~Kirchengerchichte, 3. Das Charisma veritatis 2833 1,Add,1| Freiherr von Campenhausen, Kirchliches Amt and geistliche Vollmacht~ 2834 1,Add,1| bishops. See Karl Müller, Kleine Beiträge zur alien~Kirchengerchichte, 2835 1,2,4 | into your~ovens and your kneading bowls” (Exod. 8:3). ~ The 2836 2,4,4 | hang down, and the feeble~knees, and make straight paths 2837 2,2,6 | seek and you will find; knock and it will be~opened to 2838 1,4,7 | thyself~of tomorrow; for thou knowest not what a day may bring 2839 1,4,7 | from Jerusalem. He ~was knowledgeable about the Law, the Prophets 2840 1,Add,9| does not mean merely ac-~knowledgment of and contrition for sins, 2841 1,4,4 | Hebrew this book is called Koheleth, from kahal.congregation. 2842 2,2,2 | Alexandrian dialect, called koine. This language was spoken, 2843 2,1,9 | since~it moved into Annam, Korea, and Japan many centuries 2844 1,1,6 | patronage of pious prince Kotsella. ~ In 988, Russia embraced 2845 1,Add,1| pp. ~5-46. Cf. also Georg Kretschmar, Studien zur frühchrirtlichen 2846 1,2,2 | departure from Egypt (Ex. 1:l-~4:28), where the providential 2847 1,Add,1| contra epist. Manichaei, L1. ~ ~St. Vincent of Lerins 2848 2,1,3 | matter of burden bearing and laboring on the Sabbath,~and had 2849 2,3,3 | there anyone among them who lacked; for all~who were possessors 2850 2,3,3 | hearts, you double-minded. Lament and mourn and weep! Let 2851 2,5,3 | comes~“I shall remove your~lamp stand” (I shall~reject).~— — —~— — —~— — —~ 2852 2,1,2 | the golden candlestick (or lampstand), and the golden altar of 2853 1,1,5 | however, the Council of Laodicea (the ~canons of which were 2854 2,5,5 | Philadelphia (3:7-13), and Laodicia (3:14-22) — were~located 2855 1,5,5 | were turned to the col-~lapse of the kingdom of Israel 2856 2,1 | permitted to go because of their lapses into idolatry, and withal 2857 2,5,8 | describe the increasingly larger wars of recent~times (Rev. 2858 2,1,1 | supported by one of the~three largest and strongest empires of 2859 1,Add,9| faith alone makes formu-~las live. .It seems paradoxical, 2860 1,Add,9| days has been aptly formu-~lated by an English theologian, . 2861 2,1,9 | Christianity is next to the latest to come to birth.~Animism 2862 1,2,4 | worship of ~faith [Greek: latreia] which pertains alone to 2863 2,1,2 | Burnt Offerings and the laver, the ritual of~animal sacrifices 2864 2,5,0 | B.C.) In describing the lavish extravagance of~the “harlot,” 2865 1,5,5 | taught that the wicked and lawless would perish, and the righteous ~ 2866 2,1,6 | among their number~came the lawyers and the professional rabbis. 2867 2,1,3 | Babylonian Exile people were lax, if not negligent, in observance 2868 1,4,7 | knowledge and~understanding. He layeth up sound wisdom for the 2869 1,1,1 | theologian; not only for the layman or the newly converted but 2870 1,Add,9| Tradition, not because of a lazy and credulous .conservatism. ~ 2871 1,5,5 | and we all ~do fade as a leaf; and our iniquities, like 2872 1,1,6 | reasons. ~ ~In our missionary leaflets on the Bible, we propose 2873 2,1 | those, joined in a loose~league known as Decapolis. All 2874 1,4,7 | with all thine heart; and lean not unto thine own understanding.~ 2875 1,2,1 | including papyrus and ~leather scrolls or sheets, pieces 2876 2,1,4 | After making sure that no leaven was in the house~where they 2877 1,Add,1| Art geweren, sondern ein lebendiges Weiterblühen des göttlichen~ 2878 1,Add,1| Weiterblühen des göttlichen~Lebens. In a footnote Dom Casel 2879 1,Add,1| were operating with se-~lected proof-texts, without much 2880 1,2,1 | constituted a single col-~lection of God.s revelations and 2881 1,2,4 | cucumbers, the melons, the leeks, the onions,~and the garlic” ( 2882 1,5,5 | a feast of wines on the lees... ~And he will destroy 2883 1,Add,1| faith. .What they now al-~lege from the Gospels they explain 2884 1,Add,1| express the principle: ut legem credendi statuat lex orandi. [ 2885 2,2,5 | to embalm Christ’s body. Legend has it~that she was the 2886 1,Add,0| emphatically: Scriptura est non in legendo, sed in intelligendo. [Scrip-~ 2887 2,5,8 | Cestius headed four Roman legions (four angels by the~Euphrates 2888 1,2,2 | nation. The Year of Jubilee legislation (Lev. 25:8-17) is unique ~ 2889 1,Add,0| collection of all historical, legislative ~and devotional writings 2890 1,Add,1| endeavored to prove the legitimacy of an appeal to Tradition. 2891 1,Add,1| Apostolische Symbol, Bd. II (Leipzig, 1900), ss. 30 ff., and 2892 1,2,2 | the various kinds of vio-~lence, which are caused not only 2893 2,1,9 | of thirteen centuries may lend support. The~grouping of 2894 1,4,7 | hath pity upon the poor~lendeth unto the LORD; and that 2895 1,2,2 | dwell with the lamb, and the leopard shall lie down together 2896 1,2,4 | Miriam was stricken with lep-~rosy. Moses prayed that 2897 2,2,6 | The story of the ten lepers, Luke 17:11-19).~Tongue: “ 2898 1,Add,0| however, be only a historical les-~son, not a theological one. 2899 1,Add,1| Scripture was just a dead let-~ter, or an array of disconnected 2900 2,3,1 | responded to them through letters-epistles. Consequently, while the~ 2901 1,3,5 | city of Jerusa-~lem were leveled with the ground. Numerous 2902 1,1,1 | both personal and societal levels. By ~familiarizing oneself 2903 1,2,4 | duties. It was led by ~the Levite Korah the son of Izhar, 2904 2,2,5 | and created hardships by levying taxes, frequently~overcharging 2905 1,Add,1| ad Constantium Aug., lib. II, cap. 9, ML X, 570; 2906 1,Add,9| present tension between .liberalism. and .neo-orthodoxy. is 2907 2,4,4 | enriched in everything for~all liberality, which causes thanksgiving 2908 2,3,3 | of God, Who gives to all liberally and~without reproach, and 2909 1,2,4 | convinced that God was about to liberate them and ~sank down in worship. ~ 2910 1,1,6 | this end, directed his ~librarian Demetrius to obtain and 2911 1,2,4 | third plague was one of lice which sprang from the dust 2912 1,Add,1| Praescriptio Tertullians in~Lichte des romirchen Rechts and 2913 1,Add,0| elsewhere. Why are not the ear-~lier stages of the revelation 2914 1,1,2 | flesh.” We revere and be-~lieve in the Book, but we worship 2915 2,2,6 | all-holy, and good, and lifecreating~Spirit, now and ever, and 2916 1,2,4 | imaginary thing by worship of lifeless objects of ~wood, gold, 2917 1,5,5 | how the glory of God pro-~liferated among the Jews and the Gentiles 2918 1,4,7 | criest after~knowledge, and liftest up thy voice for understanding; 2919 1,Add,0| This light, how-~ever, “lighteth every man that cometh into 2920 2,3,3 | and treated iniquities lightly, contending that knowledge 2921 1,1,7 | Bible at all. And it is like-~wise to the Church that 2922 2,4,4 | fulfill my joy by being likeminded, having the same~love, being 2923 1,5,5 | degraded so ~that the prophet likened them to the Gentiles, exterminated 2924 1,4,7 | him, to render to them as liketh him best (Sir. 33:13). A 2925 1,4,4 | everything in this life is lim-~ited in time and, like in 2926 1,2,4 | gravel, intersected with limestone ridges ~and dry watercourses, 2927 2,4,4 | time and space, we will limit ourselves to citing extracts~ 2928 2,3,3 | did not eat meat, wore linen clothing, strictly~observed 2929 2,5,3 | place of exile.~In the first lines of the Apocalypse, St. John 2930 1,3,5 | defenders of true faith and god-~liness (Ch. 17-21). Grieving over 2931 1,2,4 | was to be daubed on the lintel and door posts so that the 2932 2,1,4 | blood on the door posts and~lintels seems to have been discontinued; 2933 1,5,5 | whelps, and strangled for his lionesses, and filled~his holes with 2934 1,2,2 | the Sumer-Akkadian ruler ~Lirit-Ishtar, the Babylonian king Hammurabi ( 2935 2,2,5 | not have been a constant listener and travel~companion to 2936 1,Add,5| Christ the Lord? . when he listens to His ~word and carries 2937 1,2,1 | phases of ~creation that it lists is amazing in that it is 2938 1,2,3 | Genesis 3:15 (ancient rabbinic lit-~erature): .And it shall 2939 2,4,4 | Heb. 9:14, 10:22.~Do not litigate or altercate: 1 Cor. 6:1- 2940 1,Add,1| Enseignment Chretien danr la litterature patristique~des troit premiers 2941 1,Add,1| Augustinus Schriften als liturgie-gerchichtliche Quelle (Miinchen, 1930); 2942 1,Add,1| Die Stellung Christi im liturgischen Gebet~, 2. Auflage (Münster 2943 1,4,3 | contain a lot of imagery, liveliness and intellectual acuity. ~ 2944 1,2,4 | division of the captured livestock: half to the fighting men 2945 1,4,1 | I know that my redeemer liveth, and that he shall stand~ 2946 1,5,5 | with account to their heavy load of ~symbolism. ~ ~Book of 2947 1,2,2 | we ~observe a number of loan-words from Egyptian that are found 2948 2,2,5 | the Lord’s mercy in not loathing him, in spite of the scorn 2949 1,2,2 | account of our infirmity (loc. cit., pp. 120-1). ~ ~The 2950 1,1,4 | verses, the reading and locat-~ing of specific passages 2951 1,5,5 | thousand years, the very location of Nineveh had been forgotten 2952 1,Add,0| theological instances (loci theologici), nor into a 2953 2,5,8 | mark suffer harm from the~“locust” that has emanated from 2954 1,Add,1| omnia quae sunt veritatis ~[lodged in her hands most copiously 2955 1,5,4 | had in the wilderness a ~lodging place of wayfaring men; 2956 1,2,4 | call on ~him to fulfill a loftier purpose. The stage was set 2957 1,2,2 | 3:13-14). ~Such is the lofty conception of God that Moses 2958 1,1,5 | Nazianzus (called .the Theo-~logian.), St. Basil the Great, 2959 1,2,3 | from his loins, until Shi-~loh comes [He, to Whom it is 2960 1,4,2 | Salvation out of Egypt and Baby-~lon is the salvation in Christ. 2961 1,Add,1| Pattern of Christian Truth (Lon-~don, 1954), pp. 193-1944). ~ ~ 2962 1,5,1 | world; His infinite love and long-suffering for those ~who seek good, 2963 1,2,4 | right, the Jordan River looped snake-like through lush 2964 2,1 | ten of those, joined in a loose~league known as Decapolis. 2965 1,2,2 | profound wisdom, for what loquacity could embrace the greatness 2966 2,5,8 | due to air pollution in Los Angeles, the~sky appears 2967 2,2,6 | gains the whole world, and loses his own soul? Or what will~ 2968 1,3,8 | Purim is Hebrew for casting~lots). ~ ~ 2969 1,2,4 | without water, and complained loudly. Moses was told by the Lord 2970 1,Add,1| strictly reciprocal [Cf. Louis de ~Montadon, Bible et Eglise 2971 1,3,5 | remarkable was the miracu-~lous defeat, by an angel, of 2972 1,Add,1| Ephemerides Theologicae Lovanienses,. t. XIX, 1/2, 1942, pp. ~ 2973 2,4,4 | pure, whatever things are lovely, whatever things are of 2974 2,2,6 | our hearts, O Master who lovest mankind, the incorrupt light~ 2975 1,5,5 | the LORD which exercise~lovingkindness, judgment, and righteousness, 2976 1,2,4 | their own straw, without lowering their daily output. The 2977 1,5,3 | of Christ. The first fol-~lowers of Christ had been the followers 2978 1,2,4 | glittered the Dead Sea, the lowest body of water on the earth' 2979 1,2,3 | the world; he that fol-~loweth me shall not walk in darkness, 2980 2,5,4 | Christians, interpreting~the lucidity of the Apocalypse while 2981 2,1,6 | Ordinarily, tax collecting was a lucrative employment, because~the 2982 1,Add,1| Einar Molland, Irenaeur of Lugdunum and the Apostolic Succession, 2983 2,2,2 | the Bishop of Egypt; and Lukian the priest of~Antioch, labored 2984 1,5,5 | well. These persuasions lulled the conscience of the people 2985 1,1,6 | version included such notable lumi-~naries as St. Tikhon of 2986 1,Add,9| reconciliation. ~Probably the only luminous signpost we have to guide 2987 1,3,0 | plot to destroy the Jews by luring them to the Hip-~podrome 2988 1,2,4 | looped snake-like through lush green ~banks. And the Lord 2989 1,Add,2| tranquility; if you are lustful . continence; if you are 2990 1,4,4 | wisdom, wealth, glory and ~luxurious life (see. Eccl. 1:12-18 2991 1,2,2 | words in Saint Irenaeus of Ly-~ons: .The Son and the Holy 2992 1,3,9 | during the reign of the king Ma-~nasseh. The book is named 2993 1,1,5 | concerning the holy gifts” (2 Mac. 2:13). He assiduously examined ~ 2994 1,2,4 | pression of Metropolitan Macarius. ~ The Old Testament Temple 2995 2,1,6 | priestly families. During the Maccabean epoch the high~priest had 2996 1,3,0 | became later known as the Maccabeean Martyrs and are remembered 2997 1,Add,1| controversia pelagiana~ (Madrid, 1942) (originally in .Revista 2998 1,1,6 | increasing frequency in spiritual magazines so that by 1877, the ~complete 2999 1,5,5 | wiser than his Babylonian magicians. ~ After the completion 3000 2,5,9 | read by an~electronic or a magnetic “eye,” will be transmitted 3001 2,4,3 | to their significance~and magnitude of their circulation, and