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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
3502 1,Add,1| The heretics ignore this pat-~tern, or rather substitute 3503 1,2,2 | the longevity of the OT patri-~archs (chapter 5), increased 3504 2,1 | in spirit or as genuinely~patriotic as Mattathias and his sons. 3505 2,1 | leadership of the band of patriots passed to Judas,~his third 3506 1,Add,1| Chretien danr la litterature patristique~des troit premiers siecler ( 3507 1,5,5 | states and towns had their 'patron gods'. In a like way, some 3508 1,1,6 | unrest in Moravia) ~under the patronage of pious prince Kotsella. ~ 3509 2,3,3 | Christian freedom and began patronizing every type of immoral~profligacy ( 3510 2,4,3 | converted the proconsul~Sergius Paulus, he was already known as 3511 1,Add,5| all ~of us. But we must pause, and immerse ourselves in 3512 1,2,4 | into the Sinai desert. ~ Pausing to rest at a well, Moses 3513 2,5,9 | free-thinkers and populists paved the way for the~revolution, 3514 2,1,1 | Kingdoms, insignificant pawns in the contests among the 3515 1,5,2 | Hoshea was submissively paying the regular tribute to As-~ 3516 2,1 | the brothers,~and the more peace-loving, as high priest and ethnarch. 3517 2,4,4 | as~depends on you, live peaceably with all men” (Rom. 12:18). 3518 1,5,5 | by the vision of the .ap-~pearance of the likeness of the glory 3519 1,Add,0| is now recording, and re-~peating. Surely this response is 3520 1,Add,0| God.. God wants, and ex-~pects, and demands this answer 3521 1,5,5 | Savior.s life; it has the peculiari-~ties that cannot be found 3522 1,1,1 | context of the era and the peculiarities of the biblical language, 3523 1,Add,9| appeal of the .rival gos-~pel. in our days is that they 3524 1,Add,1| través de la controversia pelagiana~ (Madrid, 1942) (originally 3525 1,1,5 | nor all four of the Gos-~pels together were written to 3526 1,2,3 | to administer the ~death penalty]. ~He Shall be a prophet~ 3527 1,Add,1| to St. Vincent, an inde-~pendent instance, nor was it a complementary 3528 1,5,5 | reasons of what had hap-~pened and asked for sympathy. 3529 1,2,4 | Promised Land. Unable to penetrate Canaan from the south, the ~ 3530 2,2,5 | a~special love, St. John penetrated deeply into the mystery 3531 1,2,2 | one ~the possibility of penetrating more deeply into the meaning 3532 1,5,5 | captivity of the Jews; re-~pentance of the Jews and their return 3533 1,2,1 | Pentateuch (from the Greek word ~pente, .five,. and teuchos, .a 3534 1,2,1 | retained ever since. ~ ~The Penteteuchal account of the creation 3535 1,4,7 | the lips tendeth only to penury (Prov. 14:23). Even a fool,~ 3536 1,2,4 | Pharaoh agreed to let Moses's peo-~ple go, but changed his 3537 1,2,4 | local deity, the Baal of Peor. The Lord smote them with 3538 1,5,5 | inherent lyrical disposition, perceivable in his speech, made his ~ 3539 2,2,5 | 51-52). Ancient tradition perceives this youth~as St. Mark himself, 3540 1,Add,1| profession of faith. Indeed, as Pere Benoit Pruche has rightly 3541 1,Add,1| de la liturgie chéz les Péres, in .Re-~cherches de Theologie 3542 2,4,4 | among you, but that~you be perfectly joined together in the same 3543 1,4,2 | indicate the ~method of performing, e.g. psalm is to be accompanied 3544 1,Add,0| the-~ologia, i.e. logos peri Theou. Strictly speaking, 3545 1,Add,9| synthesis of Christian ex-~perience. ~ ~ 3546 2,5,5 | Hellenistic world there~arose a perilous threat of its interpretation 3547 2,1,1 | that its spread on the periphery of that realm seemed assured. 3548 2,4,4 | Now they do it to obtain a perishable crown, but~we for an imperishable 3549 2,3,3 | precious than~gold that perishes, though it is tested by 3550 1,Add,1| disciplina arcani see O. Perler, s.v. Arkandisciplin, in . 3551 1,Add,1| emphasis ~was here on the permanence of Christian teaching. St. 3552 1,Add,0| discussions. And ~yet it is hardly permissible to detect in the Bible ( 3553 2,2,5 | and~asked the Lord for permission to cast fire on the inhabitants 3554 1,Add,0| only transfigured. The .su-~pernatural. does not destroy what is . 3555 1,5,5 | the prophet's further perplexities (1:12-17) and the Lord's 3556 1,2,2 | wil-~derness. He asked in perplexity: Behold, I shall go forth 3557 2,5,3 | souls (9:1-12).~The dragon persecutes the~Woman- Church (12:3- 3558 2,1 | Testament~political leader, persisted as social customs until 3559 1,5,1 | of His justice to those persisting in their sins and cooperating 3560 2,5,4 | encompassed. Gog and Magog personify the union of all~forces 3561 1,5,5 | everything ~would go well. These persuasions lulled the conscience of 3562 2,3,3 | given to us all things that pertain to life and godlinessgiving 3563 1,Add,1| copiously are all things pertaining to truth (adv. hoeres., 3564 2,5,9 | computer that will contain all~pertinent personal and financial information 3565 1,5,5 | and poetic language. Ex-~perts in the Holy Scripture praise 3566 1,2,2 | judgment. You shall not pervert justice; you shall not~show 3567 2,3,2 | translation of the Bible known as “Peshito.”~The Book of Acts describes 3568 1,2,2 | could say, the plants com-~pete to be of service with their 3569 1,5,5 | called himself the son of Pethuel. Those were the years of 3570 2,3,3 | we know that we have the petitions that we have asked of Him” ( 3571 1,2,2 | oppressive slavery. The new Pharaohs while working ~the Jews 3572 2,4,3 | emerged as a strong zealot of pharisaic traditions and persecutor~ 3573 2,1,9 | that, as~a relatively late phenomenon, Christianity will be transient. 3574 1,2,2 | concludes with the pro-~phetic blessing of the sons of 3575 1,Add,0| prophetical or .typical,. a pro-~phetical sign hinting forward towards 3576 2,4,4 | 1:18-24, 2:2; Gal. 6:14; Phi.~3:18-19; Rom. 5_10; Col. 3577 2,5,3 | 18-29~Sardis~Rev. 3:7-13~Philadel~Rev.3:7~Praise~Worked fervently, 3578 2,5,5 | 18-29), Sardis (3:1-6), Philadelphia (3:7-13), and Laodicia ( 3579 1,1,6 | by orders of King Ptolemy Philadelphus. Renowned for his thirst 3580 1,1,6 | of Zadonsk, Metropolitan Philaret of Moscow and later, Bishop 3581 2,4,3 | founded congregations in Philippi, Thessalonica,~and Berea. 3582 1,3,5 | God.s assistance, killed a Philistine giant named Goliath (Ch. 3583 2,5,5 | amalgamation of~heterogeneous philosopho-religious schools still exists in 3584 1,2,4 | an outraged priest called Phinehas, son of Eleazar and grandson 3585 2,1,1 | same favored position, the~Phoenicians among them, and it was only 3586 1,1,4 | and Babylonian words and phraseologies, while .deutero-~canonical. 3587 2,2,5 | familiar with Syracuse, Phrygia, Puteoli in~Italy, the Appian 3588 1,Add,1| that this was the original pic-~ture, by the first master, 3589 2,1,8 | glorious visible Kingdom pictured in the other prophecies. 3590 1,4,7 | is like apples of gold in pictures of silver (Prov. 25:11). 3591 1,Add,1| St. Irenaeus introduced a picturesque ~simile. A skillful artist 3592 1,Add,7| sharper than any sword and pierces to the point of dividing 3593 1,4,7 | The~prayer of the humble pierceth the clouds (Sir. 35:17). ~ ~ 3594 1,4,7 | is that~speaketh like the piercings of a sword: but the tongue 3595 1,Add,1| II ~(1911), pp. 233-238; Pierre Battiffol, Le Catholicisme 3596 1,2,4 | inland from the sea and piled up all round the camp. For 3597 1,Add,1| first man . (quemadmodum a.s piratio plasmationis III. 24. 1). 3598 1,2,4 | Mount Nebo,~to the top of Pisgah, which is opposite Jericho” ( 3599 2,4,3 | the Asia Minor cities of Pisidian,~Antioch, Iconium, Lystra, 3600 1,Add,1| by the Apostles, and pistis [faith] . of the Catholic 3601 2,1,4 | last day of the feast a pitcher of water was brought from 3602 1,2,4 | of two treasure cities, Pithom and Rameses, “And made their~ 3603 1,4,1 | Lord; that the Lord is very pitiful, and of tender mercy”(James 3604 1,Add,1| voice of the Bible could be plainly heard ~only if its text 3605 1,2,4 | offer any convincing ex-~planation of the origins of the world. 3606 1,Add,0| comprehended within the earthly plane alone, there is another 3607 2,5,8 | tanks, cannons, fighter planes, and nuclear missiles. The 3608 2,5,9 | full of his own selfish plans: the devil~thirsts for obeisance 3609 1,Add,1| quemadmodum a.s piratio plasmationis III. 24. 1). Bishops or . 3610 2,5,9 | code imprinted not on a~plastic card as it is now, but directly 3611 1,Add,1| reflected its fixity or plasticity,. says J. N. D. Kelly [J. 3612 1,4,2 | Greek psalo which means to play a stringed musical ~instrument. 3613 1,2,2 | glance. This brevity dis-~plays profound wisdom, for what 3614 1,4,3 | honour. Her ways are ways of pleasantness, and all her paths are peace. 3615 2,4,4 | such sacrifices God is well pleased” (Heb. 13:16). See also: 3616 2,5,9 | and the gratification~of pleasure-loving flesh. The false prophet 3617 1,Add,1| gathered by the Apostles: plenissime in eam contulerint omnia 3618 2,5,6 | Spirits of Godrefer to the plenitude of God's~blessed gifts of 3619 1,4,7 | thy barns be filled with plenty, and thy presses shall burst 3620 1,1,5 | canonical. books had been com-~pleted by Ezra. These books were 3621 1,2,4 | indicates fullness, com-~pletion. ~ “In the beginning, God 3622 1,Add,0| Prophecy has been accom-~plished and law has been superseded 3623 1,3,0 | book describes Ptolemy.s plot to destroy the Jews by luring 3624 1,Add,5| will spur you to ~clear and plow the rocky and thorny areas 3625 1,4,7 | Sir. 10:9) The Lord hath plucked up the roots of~the proud 3626 1,2,2 | science. We have no need ~to plunge ourselves into geology and 3627 1,5,5 | days of Jerusalem (34-45), plus a historical summary (52). ~ 3628 1,Add,0| does not mean that we sim-~ply put arbitrarily a new meaning 3629 1,Add,0| is the true Israel, kata pneuma. In this sense ~already 3630 1,Add,1| Benedict von Nursia al s Pneusnatiker, in .Heilige Überlieferung. ( 3631 1,4,2 | something like ~the similars (podobny) in church services. ~ The 3632 1,3,0 | luring them to the Hip-~podrome and trampling them with 3633 1,3,5 | highly educated man and a poet, the prophet Isaiah wrote 3634 1,2,4 | alarmed when one of them said pointedly: “Who made you a prince 3635 1,1,7 | Scriptures. ~ Thus, it is pointless and misleading and even 3636 1,Add,1| phrase of St. Hilary of Poitiers, .For Scripture is not in 3637 1,Add,1| was a common device in the polemical ~literature of that time. 3638 1,Add,1| v (1933), 155-191; La polemique ~de Saint Irenee, ibidem, 3639 1,3,5 | to worship idols. These ~policies led to apostasy of the Israelite 3640 2,1,8 | self-righteous Pharisees and the politically-minded Sadducees did not recognize 3641 2,5,8 | mankind's own~refuse it pollutes the lakes, rivers, and seas. 3642 1,Add,0| and brought forward. A ty-~pologist looked not for the .parallels. 3643 1,3,5 | wise ruler was spoiled by polygamy ~and construction of pagan 3644 1,2,2 | thology. Mythology belongs to polytheism, which personifies as gods 3645 1,1,6 | suffers through the sheer ponderous and difficult understanding 3646 2,1 | sent directly from Rome. Pontius~Pilate, who gave the death 3647 2,3,3 | the pilgrims dispersed in Pontus,~Galatia, Cappadocia, Asia, 3648 2,1,4 | water was brought from the pool of Siloam by~the multitude 3649 2,4,2 | Himself (hence~the Roman Popes appropriated the title3650 1,Add | by Archimandrite Justin Popovich.~ ~The Bible is in a sense 3651 2,1,1 | India and early~won wide popularity in the land of its birch. 3652 1,1,6 | complete text of the Bible was popularly available in the Russian 3653 2,5,9 | Russian free-thinkers and populists paved the way for the~revolution, 3654 2,5,5 | of Ephesus was the most populous and had the status of being 3655 2,1,2 | immediately enclosed by these porches was called the Court of 3656 1,Add,0| di-~vine image. It is no portrait, but rather an ikon . but 3657 2,5,4 | their loyalty to Christ, portraying the complete defeat of the 3658 2,1,5 | forth authentic history and~portrays inspiring examples of courageous 3659 1,Add,0| situation-conditioned.. Is it ever pos-~sible for man to escape 3660 1,Add,1| opinions St. Vincent op-~poses the .common. mind of the 3661 1,Add,1| Lord have been deposited (posita sunt), there is it proper 3662 1,4,4 | because of the cycle of op-~posites. On this earth a person 3663 2,5,9 | computer. It appears that the positive aspects of this system of~ 3664 1,Add,1| was the only authentic de-~pository of Apostolic kerygma. This 3665 2,5,6 | is by the wise Creator, possessing an intellect~and a free 3666 2,3,3 | lacked; for all~who were possessors of lands or houses sold 3667 2,5,7 | innocence, his big potential possibilities, which are~obscured by a 3668 1,2,2 | Moses as the author. In the ~post-exilic writings the Law, or Torah, 3669 1,Add,0| revival of allegorism in post-Reformation ~times. It was a permanent 3670 1,2,4 | sister Miriam had ~been posted a little distance away to 3671 1,5,2 | of their preaching to the posterity, though the miracles they 3672 1,5,5 | ill-wishers, the construction was postponed by 15 years, until king 3673 1,2,3 | him. ~ ~Explanation: The postscript, made at the end of the 3674 1,2,2 | there are religions which postulate that there is a god of good 3675 1,2,4 | an article of Fr. Victor Potapov)~ The Second Commandment 3676 2,1,1 | Christianity had no such potent~associations to commend 3677 2,5,7 | purity and innocence, his big potential possibilities, which are~ 3678 1,2,4 | them away from the .flesh pots. (Exod. 16:3) of ~Egypt. 3679 1,2,1 | sheets, pieces of broken pottery, clay tablets, and stone. 3680 2,3,3 | of God. He~also censures power-loving Diotrephes, conveys some 3681 1,Add,1| kirigma and praedicatio (or praeconium), which was .deposited. ~ 3682 1,Add,1| ipsi Evangelio catholicis praedicantibus credidi. [I ~believed the 3683 1,Add,1| Apostles, their kirigma and praedicatio (or praeconium), which was . 3684 1,Add,1| or Virgilian verses (de praescr., XXXIX). Apparently, it 3685 1,Add,1| 212; J. K. Stirniman, Die Praescriptio Tertullians in~Lichte des 3686 1,Add,9| The age of a-dogmatism and pragmatism ~has closed. And therefore 3687 1,1,1 | This is because the ap-~praisal of events described in the 3688 2,4,4 | and if there is anything praiseworthymeditate on these things, 3689 1,Add,4| should read the Bible.~ Prayerfully and reverently, for in each 3690 1,4,7 | 5:2-3). ~ ~Before thou prayest, prepare thyself; and be 3691 1,3,1 | remember that it covers pre-Christian era. ~The noble Christian 3692 2,5,3 | spilled, including that of the pre-eminent Apostles Peter and Paul. 3693 2,5,9 | nothing to take. It will be~pre-eminently easier for the government 3694 1,Add,0| interprets are re-~flections of a pre-existing prototype, or even images 3695 1,Add,0| types. are anticipations, pre-figurations; their .prototype. is still 3696 2,5,9 | there into Russia, where in pre-Revolutionary time~there were many thousands 3697 2,3,3 | Undoubtedly, these false~preacher-gnostics, believing that the world 3698 2,1,2 | and groups would gather in prearranged~places for prayer meetings ( 3699 1,Add,0| partments is, strictly speaking, precarious. In any case, Israel was 3700 1,2,2 | to Sinai (chapters 12-18) precede the giving of the Law ~of 3701 1,5,5 | toward me is taught by the precept of men” (Isaiah 29:13). ~ 3702 1,Add,0| regulated by the divine precepts. And the division of life 3703 1,Add,9| reactions. The modern crisis precipitated by humanism (an undeniable 3704 1,2,4 | mountains, through ~the precipitous valley of Zered that divided 3705 1,5,5 | of justice as the first precondition in averting God's pun-~ishment. 3706 2,1,9 | Christianity to date may be but a precursor to an~indefinitely expanding 3707 1,5,5 | dangers, encourage them, ~predict the fate of the Jews and 3708 1,2,2 | responsibili-~ties. Moses predicts a dark future for the nation 3709 2,2,5 | why he wrote his Gospel preeminently for the Jews. There is a 3710 1,Add,0| rather kept its meaning as a prefigura-~tion only. Even the Decalogue 3711 1,Add,1| exact connotation of this pregnant phrase may be [It has been 3712 1,1,5 | would as-~sume, had he no prejudice to the contrary, all four 3713 1,2,2 | of the giving of the Law. Preliminaries to the departure from Egypt ( 3714 2,3,1 | Preliminary information.~Because of 3715 1,Add,0| On the other hand, it is premature to speak of a .realized 3716 1,Add,1| Scripture was sovereign and su-~preme. The Orthodox were bound 3717 1,Add,1| litterature patristique~des troit premiers siecler (Gembloux-Paris, 3718 1,Add,1| 386). ~ ~There is the same preoccupation with the true understanding 3719 2,1,6 | rule began to claim the prerogative of appointing the high priest3720 1,Add,1| scriptural principles. [G. L. Pres-~tige, Fathers and Heretics ( 3721 1,1,4 | the sacri-~fices, and the prescriptions for the Israelites' daily 3722 1,Add,0| interpretation in any Scriptural presen-~tation of the divine Word. 3723 2,4,1 | gifts (2 Pet. 3:15-16).~Presenting themselves as an important 3724 1,1,5 | Bible transmits to us and preserves for us the Word of God in 3725 1,4,7 | the paths of judgment, and preserveth the way of his saints. Then 3726 2,1,6 | influence, being ex-officio president of the Sanhedrin. Conse-~ 3727 2,1,7 | was always~one of its two presidents. The place of its meeting 3728 1,4,1 | himself, whose desire was ex-~pressed by him in verses 23 and 3729 1,4,7 | filled with plenty, and thy presses shall burst out with new 3730 1,Add,1| favorite Arian technique of pressing the grammatical meaning 3731 1,2,4 | Invisible God, in the ex-~pression of Metropolitan Macarius. ~ 3732 1,Add,0| than a philological one. It presupposes and implies intrinsi-~cally 3733 2,1,6 | course, the publicans did not~pretend to keep the Jewish law with 3734 1,Add,1| the Church Catholic to the pretentious vagaries of Manichean exegesis. ~ 3735 2,5,9 | temporary advantages at the~price of the renunciation of Christ.~ 3736 1,Add,1| hermeneutical question: What was the prin-~ciple of interpretation? 3737 1,Add,1| it was the indispensable princi-~ple of sound interpretation. 3738 1,4,5 | nor life, nor angels, nor principali-~ties, nor powers, nor things 3739 1,1,5 | universal accep-~tance) to print .the Holy Bible. as we now 3740 1,1,4 | the New. Before books were printed, that is to say, during 3741 1,Add,1| Tertullian insist on the priority of the ~.rule of faith,. 3742 2,2,5 | the Lord when He was taken prisoner in the garden of Gethsemane, 3743 2,1 | brother and his~two sons as prisoners, and making Judaea a Roman 3744 2,4,2 | stripes above measure, in prisons more frequently, in deaths 3745 2,1,2 | a man might~ask for the privilege of preaching. The benediction 3746 1,2,2 | Promised Land, he was not privileged to lead the nation across 3747 1,Add,1| neque juxta fidei veritatem pro f ert eloquia Dei, seminat 3748 2,4,3 | philosopher Seneka, brother of pro-consul Gallio (as mentioned in~ 3749 1,Add,1| faith. It is the same ap-~proach as in St. Basil. Again, 3750 1,2,2 | questions, that of the general prob-~lem of suffering in the 3751 2,2,5 | under his guidance. In~all probability, he was an eyewitness only 3752 2,1,3 | Sabbath. But it is very probable that during the Exile groups 3753 1,2,4 | deeper nuclear physics probes into the basis of matter, 3754 1,Add,1| enough to quote there the Procatechesis of St. Cyril of Jerusa-~ 3755 1,5,5 | the prophet ~obediently proceeded to Nineveh, preaching denouncement 3756 1,1,2 | Christ. The Old Testament proclaims salvation in the ~forms 3757 2,5,6 | should be~noted that the very proclamations and prayers heard by the 3758 1,Add,9| of my own time than ~the production of modern theologians. The 3759 1,Add,1| unwritten. in order to prevent profanation at the ~hands of the infidel. 3760 1,Add,1| Sancti Spiritus~sentential proferamus [we must be careful when 3761 1,Add,1| It seems, however, that Professor Turner exaggerated the danger. 3762 1,1,4 | inspiration of~ ~ 7~God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, 3763 2,3,3 | patronizing every type of immoral~profligacy (1 Peter 2:16, 2 Peter 1: 3764 1,Add,1| Reynders, Paradosis, Le progrès de l.dée tradi-~tion jusqu. 3765 2,1,0 | and its~culture have been progressively dominant throughout the 3766 2,2,5 | from Him. That is why he prohibited those who~did not follow 3767 1,2,4 | mind. ~Their cautions and prohibitions also fit their historic 3768 1,2,4 | Sacred Scripture strictly prohibits worship of idols, but it 3769 2,1 | Best~known of his building projects was the replacing of Zerubbabel3770 2,4,1 | stands out as being the most prolific in expounding instructions 3771 1,1,4 | a paper-reed that ~grew prolifically in Egypt and Israel) using 3772 1,3,5 | in God and godly living prolong the well-being of a nation, 3773 2,3,3 | children~“walking in truth,” promising to visit her and exhorting 3774 2,3,3 | began to cool. All this prompted St. James to~give them essential, 3775 1,1,1 | an eternal des-~tiny. The prompting to heal the sick, feed the 3776 2,4,2 | other Apostles, his humility prompts him to call himself as~the “ 3777 1,1,5 | Sixth Ecumenical Council) promulgated a list of the ~books of 3778 1,2,2 | personality. The first person pronoun used freely throughout its 3779 2,1,2 | benediction was usually pronounced by a priest if one~was present; 3780 1,2,4 | rolled forth, sol-~emnly pronouncing the Ten Commandments:~1. 3781 1,Add,1| the context in which their proof-~texts are set. The sense 3782 2,5,3 | Punishment o~the beast and false prop~(19:19-21).~Main theme.~ 3783 1,5,5 | quotations of the anti-religious ~propaganda. ~ Summarized content of 3784 2,2,6 | scientificmaterialism, are propagated.~There, instead of the promised 3785 2,5,4 | personification of all the propagators of false religions (Gnosticism, 3786 1,Add,0| had no right on ~foreign property. Such was his main argument 3787 1,5,7 | Index above for the list of prophe-~cies about the calling of 3788 2,1,1 | support of only a small proportion of Israel. The loyal minority 3789 2,5,0 | here it reaches global proportions and makes a horrifying~impression. 3790 1,1,6 | leaflets on the Bible, we propose to publish them in the following 3791 1,Add,1| core or ~complex of binding propositions, but rather an insight into 3792 1,Add,1| St. Irenaeus is peculiar: prosarmosas to tis alithias somatic~( 3793 2,2,5 | St. Luke was a gentile or proselyte — a gentile~converted to 3794 2,3,3 | preached also to the Jews and Proselytes (pagans that~have converted 3795 1,2,4 | reverence [Greek: timitiki proskynisis], not indeed that true worship 3796 1,2,4 | their descendants ~lived and prospered for four centuries, till “ 3797 1,1,5 | canonical. books. The main protagonist in this enormous effort 3798 1,2,2 | undoubtedly had ~the intention of protecting the minds of the Hebrews 3799 1,Add,9| fundamentalist.. And I Would protest that such a charge is gratuitous 3800 1,3,5 | on ~the people and caused protests. Solomon.s reputation of 3801 1,2,4 | the .quarks. that comprise protons are not basic and hard ~ 3802 1,2,4 | meteorites, aster-~oids, protoplanets, etc. This whole circulating 3803 2,3,2 | Christ’s~Resurrection is best proven through miracles performed 3804 1,Add,0| process of the redemptive Provid-~ence. In this manner .typology. 3805 1,2,1 | Mesopotamia and the Nile. God providentially lead the Hebrews into Egypt, 3806 2,3,3 | Cappadocia, Asia, and Bithynia” – provinces of Asia Minor. It must be 3807 2,1 | Jesus.~According to the provisions of Herod’s will, his kingdom 3808 2,2,6 | parable of the unjust judge).~Prudence: “Take heed that no one 3809 1,2,2 | thought. Thus, in quoting the ~Psalmic text, Thy hands have made 3810 1,4,2 | book derives from the Greek psalo which means to play a stringed 3811 1,Add,0| interpreta-~tions, from Philo and Pseudo-Barnabas to the new revival of allegorism 3812 1,Add,1| obstinate and narrow-minded pseudo-biblicism of his Arian opponents. ~ 3813 1,Add,1| L’origine des Capitula Pseudo-Celesliniens contre les Senzipelagiens, 3814 2,5,3 | of purity and truth, and pseudo-Christianity was~attempting to compete 3815 1,2,3 | on the Cross. ~ ~Targum Pseudo-Jonathan on Genesis 3:15 (ancient 3816 2,5,9 | revolution, and contemporary pseudo-prophets corrupt unsteady Christians 3817 1,4,4 | indicates, Ecclesiastes is a pseudonym taken by the son of ~David 3818 1,Add,9| more interested in human psychology of the Re-~deemer than in 3819 2,1 | known in history as~the Ptolemies. Their rule was sometimes 3820 1,2,2 | to strive towards moral pu-~rity and excellence, so 3821 1,Add,1| silence. and kerygmata are .publicized.. But their intent is iden-~ 3822 1,5,5 | he married Gomer ~who was publicly unfaithful to him and adulterous. 3823 1,1,6 | the Bible, we propose to publish them in the following order: ~ ~ 3824 2,4,4 | not parade~itself, is not puffed up; does not behave rudely, 3825 1,5,5 | kingdoms, to root out, and to pull down, and to destroy, and 3826 1,3,1 | and ~cruel Gentile customs pulled the Jews down a path of 3827 1,Add,9| opinions, at least from the pulpit. ~Ministers are commissioned 3828 1,2,4 | them battle and was re-~pulsed. Thus ended the first phase 3829 1,5,5 | precondition in averting God's pun-~ishment. He was persecuted 3830 1,2,2 | suffering and that man thus punishes himself. If death and many 3831 1,5,5 | Ethiopians in the south. These punishments were not ~needed to exterminate 3832 1,Add,1| he is made of; what his pur-~pose is how he will end; ~ 3833 1,2,4 | Moses felt a drastic purge was needed. He rallied round 3834 1,4,7 | mercy and truth iniquity is purged:~and by the fear of the 3835 1,2,2 | grief which leads to moral purification and rebirth, through the 3836 1,5,5 | of the end. Many shall be purified, and ~made white, and tried; 3837 1,Add,1| according to its own basic purport,. which is dis-~closed in 3838 1,1,2 | perfect creation which He had purposed before time was. God did 3839 2,5,8 | 7), the tribe of Dan was purposely~omitted. Some see in this 3840 2,2,5 | with Syracuse, Phrygia, Puteoli in~Italy, the Appian Square 3841 1,5,4 | wounds, and bruises, and putrefying sores: they have not been ~ 3842 2,5,9 | for the solution to the puzzle in the area of method, although 3843 1,4,3 | personification of Wisdom, puzzling to the Old Testament man, 3844 1,Add,1| cit., s. 59 ff.; F. De Pzuw, La justification~des traditions 3845 1,Add,0| Hebrew origin: ~the Church is qahal and Christ means Messiah). 3846 1,2,4 | a lesson. Huge flocks of quail ~were blown inland from 3847 1,2,4 | 8). Flocks of migrating quails sank ~down to rest among 3848 1,2,4 | and the whole mountain quaked greatly” (Exod. 19:18). 3849 2,4,4 | 9:11-28, 10:5, 10:14-22.~Qualifications and responsibilities of 3850 1,4,4 | do does ~not change the quantity of matter nor the quality 3851 1,5,5 | punishment. The lives of over a quar-~ter of a million people 3852 1,2,4 | immateriality. Apparently, even the .quarks. that comprise protons are 3853 2,2,2 | manuscripts. During the first quarter of the 16th century there 3854 2,1,6 | them lived in groups or quarters to themselves in many of~ 3855 1,Add,1| liturgie-gerchichtliche Quelle (Miinchen, 1930); see also 3856 1,Add,1| bestowed ~upon the first man . (quemadmodum a.s piratio plasmationis 3857 1,1,6 | Holy Scripture. As a conse-~quence, in 1815, by order of Emperor 3858 1,4,7 | spit upon it,~it shall be quenched: and both these come out 3859 2,3,1 | Unable to attend to these queries personally, at the point 3860 1,Add,1| voluntas of the Scripture: qui enim neque juxta~voluntatem 3861 1,Add,1| ever abiding power of the quickening Spirit. Apart ~from the 3862 2,3,3 | incorruptible beauty of a gentle and quiet spirit, which is~very precious 3863 2,5,6 | Apostle in Heaven express the~quintessence of the exclamations and 3864 1,4,4 | achieve this, Ecclesiastes ac-~quired wealth and indulged in sensual 3865 1,Add,1| Athanasianum, sub voce: id quod quis docendo, scribendo,~credendo 3866 1,Add,1| Athanasianum, sub voce: id quod quis docendo, scribendo,~ 3867 1,Add,1| from the Apostles ~(apud quos est ea quae e.rt ab apostolis 3868 1,Add,1| Apostolic. ~origin. He quotes at this point St. Paul.s 3869 1,2,2 | of the thought. Thus, in quoting the ~Psalmic text, Thy hands 3870 1,4,1 | had taken away. Job mi-~raculously recovered from untreatable 3871 2,5,9 | considered~to be the Church. The radiance of the sun surrounding the 3872 1,Add,9| suggested that we should radically .demythologize. Scripture, 3873 1,5,5 | devastation of the kingdom of Is-~rael by the Assyrians in 722 3874 1,2,4 | eyes, he was seized with rage and dashed ~the two stone 3875 2,5,9 | the dragon with all its raging fury arms itself~against 3876 1,5,5 | righteousness are as filthy rags; and we all ~do fade as 3877 1,2,4 | Amalekites, fierce desert raid-~ers. The Israelites were 3878 1,2,4 | they ran out of ~food and railed at Moses and Aaron for taking 3879 1,1,4 | with all the colors of the rainbow ~when the sunlight falls 3880 1,3,5 | can see the importance of rais-~ing children: the whole 3881 1,2,3 | prophet and lawgiver. ~ Ralbag (Gersonides, ancient rabbinic 3882 1,2,4 | drastic purge was needed. He rallied round him the men from the 3883 2,1 | the worship of Yahweh to rally to the hills around the~ 3884 1,5,5 | the images of a goat and a ram, put ~down in the third 3885 1,5,2 | for bribes, depravity was rampant among the superstitious 3886 1,Add,1| to St. Augustine ~(Grand Rapids, Michigan, 1961), pp. 198- 3887 2,5,9 | Head of the Church. The “rapture” of the child obviously 3888 1,4,7 | 20:6. ~ ~Prayer: Be not rash with thy mouth, and let 3889 1,Add,1| interpreted broadly and rationally, in accordance with the 3890 1,3,5 | creek, where he was fed by a raven that ~brought him food daily. 3891 1,5,5 | prey, and his dens with ravin. Behold, I am against thee, 3892 2,1 | the cities which had been ravished in the wars. Best~known 3893 1,5,5 | during the excavations by Rawlinson and others. These ar-~chaeological 3894 1,2,2 | hu-~manity is illumined by rays of the Sun of Grace in Moses' 3895 1,Add,1| and out of context, and re-arranged in arbitrary manner. All 3896 1,Add,1| fabricated by the means of re-arrangement, was not Ho-~meric at all. 3897 1,Add,1| this mosaic image apart, re-arranges the stones in another pattern 3898 1,Add,0| Moreover, this message is ever re-enacted in the life of the Church. 3899 1,Add,9| neo-orthodoxy. is in fact a re-enactment of the ~old Christological 3900 1,Add,1| before going into the actual re-examination of the alleged proof-texts, 3901 1,Add,0| should be ~re-thought and re-examined in this eschatological perspective. 3902 1,1,5 | practice by the ancient Jews of re-examining the text of the Holy Writings 3903 1,Add,0| and .rules. should be ~re-thought and re-examined in this 3904 1,2,4 | details: in this case the rea-~sons for evil, sickness, 3905 2,5,9 | simultaneously watch how the people react to it. In any case, at the 3906 1,Add,9| his own attitudes and reactions. The modern crisis precipitated 3907 2,2,2 | while others are much more readable and understandable, but 3908 2,1,6 | race and because of the readiness with which they made~religious 3909 1,2,4 | princess felt pity for it, realizing that it ~was one of the 3910 1,Add,1| s.v. Arkandisciplin, in .Reallexikon für Antike and Chris-~tentum,. 3911 1,Add,1| faith, have sown wheat and reaped thorns (in~ferem. hom., 3912 1,2,4 | faith when Moses failed to reappear. They came in ~a body to 3913 2,1,8 | Old Testament prophet, the reappearance of Elijah,~and the appearance 3914 2,4,4 | acceptable to God,~which is your reasonable service. And do not be conformed 3915 1,1,3 | souls, enlightened their reasoning and ~revealed to them mysteries 3916 1,2,4 | Egypt?”~(Exod. 3:11) To reassure him, the name of the Lord (. 3917 2,1,1 | have held, persistently~rebels against God and becomes 3918 2,5,2 | pertains to those~spiritually reborn: “The time is high and has 3919 1,5,5 | Messiah. Malachi does not rebuke ~the Jews for the sin of 3920 1,4,3 | scourgeth every son whom he~receiveth” (Prov. 3:11-12, Heb. 12: 3921 2,3,4 | the blessed community~and receiving the necessary directions 3922 2,2,2 | presently as~the Textus Receptus or Received Text.~There 3923 1,Add,1| in~Lichte des romirchen Rechts and der Theologie (Freiburg, 3924 1,Add,1| was indeed not just ~a recitation of the words of the Scripture. 3925 1,Add,1| belief which every catechumen recited before his baptism did embody 3926 1,1,6 | later, Bishop Theophan ~the Recluse, Patriarch Tikhon and many 3927 1,5,2 | it dearly. Eventually he recog-~nized his guilt before God 3928 1,Add,9| has been enormous. ~The recognition of human dignity, mercy 3929 2,5,6 | Apocalypse. An Orthodox Christian recognizes here the familiar traits 3930 1,Add,3| Gospel. ~ The holy Fathers recommend serious preparation before 3931 1,2,3 | according to your law. The ~sus reconciled us with God. Jews therefore 3932 1,Add,0| new, the covenant has been reconstituted, and the old Israel was 3933 1,Add,0| whole Bible would be then reconstructed into a book of edifying 3934 2,1,2 | for certain, though many reconstructions~of it have been drawn from 3935 1,Add,0| words he has kept and is now recording, and re-~peating. Surely 3936 1,3,0 | they describe. The books recount the ~events that took place 3937 1,3,5 | Here are the main events recounted in the books of the Kingdoms. ~ 3938 1,Add,1| be recognized by a double recourse . to Scripture and Tradition: ~. 3939 1,2,4 | with the other planets, was red-hot. Evaporating water ~from 3940 1,Add,1| ceremony of traditio and redditio~symboli. [Transmission and 3941 1,5,5 | power of the grave; I will redeem~them from death: O death, 3942 2,3,3 | knowing that you were not redeemed with corruptible things, 3943 1,Add,9| which we do believe. The redis-~covery of the church is 3944 1,4,7 | without cause? who hath redness of eyes? They that tarry 3945 1,2,4 | 1:14). When this did not reduce their numbers, Pharaoh ordered 3946 1,2,4 | time at the edge of the Reed Sea (in-~correctly translated 3947 1,2,4 | concealed him among the reeds at the river's edge. ~ Pharaoh' 3948 2,1,3 | the reforms under Nehemiah reemphasized the Sabbath as a day of 3949 1,2,2 | the ~nation (4:44-26:19), reestablishes the covenant (chapters 27- 3950 2,2,3 | and other Sacred Books, referencing their origin to a much later 3951 1,1,7 | years ~which was required to refine and define the exact contents 3952 1,2,2 | and sages discussed and refined the Laws of ~Moses. Their 3953 1,5,5 | appeareth? for~he is like a refiner's fire, and like fullers' 3954 2,4,3 | his Epistles, being a full reflection of his life,~carry this 3955 2,3,3 | and~see good days, let him refrain his tongue from evil, and 3956 1,2,4 | monotonous diet of manna. As refugees are apt to do, they be-~ 3957 1,Add,0| obvious to need an extensive refutation. But the only ~real remedy 3958 1,Add,9| generation like ours to regain Christian courage and vision. ~ ~ 3959 2,4,3 | the baptismal water, he~regained his sight. From that point 3960 1,4,7 | About dreams: Whoso regardeth dreams is like him that 3961 1,5,1 | controlled by the Maker. As regards the acts of men, God has 3962 1,Add,8| power to give birth and regenerate men. And when a man is born 3963 2,5,3 | Heaven (18:1-24~The nether regions-~devil and demons.~— — —~ 3964 2,1,9 | have important gains been registered by Buddhism and during that 3965 1,Add,1| whole chapter I, L.Eglise régle de foi); and especially 3966 1,3,5 | David expressed his deep regret over his ~sin of adultery 3967 2,1,7 | execution of the sentence. Regularly~there were no sessions at 3968 1,2,2 | conscience would be sufficient to regulate our personal and social 3969 1,Add,0| human existence had to ~be regulated by the divine precepts. 3970 1,2,4 | gained an audience with the reigning Pharaoh (probably the succes-~ 3971 1,5,5 | his ~prophecies during the reigns of Josiah (2-6) and Jehoiakim ( 3972 2,3,3 | His~Resurrection, Christ reinstated his apostolic standing thrice, 3973 1,Add,9| process of continuous ~.reinterpretation.. But how can we interpret 3974 2,4,3 | from this that Apostle Paul rejects any~significance of good 3975 2,4,4 | rejoice in iniquity, but rejoices in the truth; bears all 3976 2,5,3 | of the righteous in the rejuvenated~world, where God will dry 3977 2,5,6 | martyrs served as a~moral rejuvenation of the apathetic pagan world. 3978 1,2,2 | Israel from Egypt. ~ The book relates how the sons of Jacob, a 3979 1,Add,0| of a general historical relativity as in a ~deeper providential 3980 1,2,4 | pleaded for them, and the Lord relented. But when ~Moses came down 3981 1,5,4 | strongest of ~words and with relentless sincerity they rebuked the 3982 1,3,6 | rebuilding the city and providing reli-~gious education to the Jewish 3983 1,Add,9| Irenaeus. The creed is not a relic of ~the past, but rather 3984 1,Add,1| It was the heretics that relied on isolated ~texts, and 3985 1,Add,1| Re-~cherches de Science religieuse,. xxxvi (1949), 229-270; 3986 1,Add,1| the .Recherches de Science réligieuse,. t. II ~(1911), pp. 233- 3987 1,5,5 | taught freely. The public religiosity was predomi-~nantly expressed 3988 1,1,1 | reader. At the same time, religious-moral questions worrying the reader 3989 2,5,5 | teachings into one of~the religious-philosophical Gnostic thought systems. 3990 2,1,0 | was but little affected religiously by the~Occident. China had 3991 1,2,4 | statues in the round. The reluctance ~seems to lie in the inevitably 3992 1,2,4 | water into blood. Still reluctant, Moses ~pointed out that “ 3993 1,2,2 | humanity itself not ~to rely on the principles of force? 3994 1,1,4 | their hearts: with them it remaineth untaken~away in the reading 3995 1,3,5 | the prophet Isaiah wrote a remark-~able book full of prophesies 3996 2,4,1 | are outstanding in their remarkably elevated religious thoughts, 3997 1,Add,1| other hand, the critical remarks ~of Arnold Ehrhardt, The 3998 2,2,5 | just mentioned, one also remembers the parables of the lost 3999 1,3,7 | 22-27). ~ As a historical reminder about God.s mercy to the 4000 1,Add,0| to the past, not merely a reminiscence, but ~rather a continuous 4001 2,2,5 | blood was poured out for the remission of sins (ch. 26:28).~His


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