Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library |
Bishop Alexander (Mileant) Toward understanding the Bible IntraText - Concordances (Hapax - words occurring once) |
Part, Chapter, Paragraph
5005 1,Add,1| Irenaeus, those who ~had kept unbending that .canon of truth. which 5006 2,5,2 | tongue. It is evident to the unbiased reader of the Apocalypse 5007 2,4,4 | haughty,~nor to trust in uncertain riches, but in the living 5008 2,4,4 | Therefore I run thus: not with uncertainty. Thus I fight: not as~one 5009 1,3,5 | illustrate a general and unchangeable spiri-~tual law: faith in 5010 2,4,4 | nor Jew, circumcised nor uncircumcised, barbarian,~Scythian, slave 5011 2,4,4 | neither circumcision~nor uncircumcision avails anything, but faith 5012 1,3,2 | fearlessly opposed idolatry and uncompro-~misingly kept and spread 5013 1,2,2 | Spirit was revealed by the unconsumed, burning bush in the wil-~ 5014 1,Add | human words can contain the ~uncontainable God. ~ All that is necessary 5015 2,4,2 | his Apostolic endeavors to uncover the~teachings of Christ. 5016 2,1 | freedom went on, led by his undaunted brothers. Jonathan,~youngest 5017 2,3,3 | 19-~22).~Piety: “Pure and undefiled religion before God and 5018 1,Add,9| precipitated by humanism (an undeniable fact) ~has been brought 5019 1,2,2 | extended to the needy and the under-privileged, to fugitive slaves, ~debtors, 5020 2,3,3 | incorrect view on prayers, underestimated the~meaning of good deeds, 5021 1,5,5 | Judaea were murdered or went underground. Saint Zephaniah probably 5022 2,4,3 | needed to continu-~ally underline in his Epistles that Christ 5023 1,2,4 | the same time, the Bible underlines man.s ~special position 5024 1,Add,1| denote as ipothesis, . the underlying .idea,. the true design, 5025 2,2,3 | contradictory~critics” have tried to undermine belief in the historical 5026 1,1,6 | of the Bible in the most understand-~able and acceptable format 5027 1,5,5 | glorieth glory in this, that he understandeth and knoweth me, that I am 5028 1,Add,4| and if neither the mind understands nor the heart feels, read 5029 2,1,1 | Christianity long commanded the undivided~support of only a small 5030 1,1,1 | as repeated readings will unearth new gems of God.s wisdom. ~ 5031 2,2,1 | gesture were permeated with unending compassion. He~was as a 5032 2,4,3 | Epistles are separated into two uneven groups: 1)~Epistles of a 5033 1,Add,1| kerygma. This kerygma was unfailingly kept alive in the Church, 5034 1,2,2 | chapters of the book of Genesis unfold a new theme; we can say ~ 5035 1,2,4 | him a tremendous panorama unfolded. Thousands of ~feet below 5036 2,2,6 | 23-35; the parable of the unforgiving servant).~Righteousness: “ 5037 2,2,1 | so many contradicting and~unfounded opinions, it would be wise 5038 2,1 | Later he suppressed the unfriendly activities of the tribes 5039 2,3,3 | will be neither barren nor unfruitful in the knowledge of our 5040 2,1,2 | and formal preaching was unheard of. The first central place~ 5041 1,2,4 | that we separate holy and unholy, unclean~and clean (Leviticus 5042 1,5,5 | But God kept His prophet unhurt (Chapter 6). Later on, Daniel 5043 1,Add,9| tradition of the Church Uni-~versal. I would not isolate 5044 2,5,4 | The reason for such a~unification of events consists in that 5045 1,1,2 | heaven and~earth should be unified in Christ,” (Eph. 1:10) 5046 1,Add,1| tradition our priests offer uniformly in every Catholic Church 5047 1,2,1 | documented in Gen. 1:1-2:3. The unifying principle of the universe 5048 2,1,1 | diminutive and its buildings unimpressive. Its art was not~distinguished. 5049 1,Add,9| handed down to me by an uninterrupted tradition of the Church 5050 1,2,2 | goddesses and gods form unions with men and ani-~mals. 5051 1,Add,0| has been done away by the universality of sal-~vation. There is, 5052 1,1,1 | Braille. The Bible is the most universally available publication in 5053 1,Add,1| separated from each other. ~Universitas and antiquitas, as well 5054 2,1,8 | to~death, and thus they unknowingly fulfilled prophecies about 5055 1,Add,0| Heretics' appeal to them was unlawful. They had no right on ~foreign 5056 | unlikely 5057 2,3,3 | He~remained chaste and unmarried, and at the beginning of 5058 1,2,2 | of ancient notions, the unmasking of mythology, that it was 5059 1,1,5 | of Moses describe, with unmistakable clarity, the way of life 5060 1,2,4 | slave. Thinking himself unobserved, Moses slew the ~Egyptian 5061 1,5,5 | prophecy of the .Weeks. is unpleasant to those Jews who reject 5062 1,5,5 | disobedience was the cause of the unprece-~dented storm, and threw 5063 2,1,1 | The unpromising rootage of Christianity.~ 5064 1,Add,1| mystical tradition, from the unpublic and ineffable teaching. 5065 1,5,2 | around fifty years and caused unrecoverable harm to the faith. The few 5066 1,Add,0| fallen, sinful, lost and unredeemed world. All this is not the 5067 2,1,6 | seem to be arbitrary and unrelated to the evidence offered.~ 5068 1,1,6 | there (because of civil unrest in Moravia) ~under the patronage 5069 1,5,5 | Woe unto them that decree unrighteous decrees, and that write 5070 1,5,5 | that buildeth his house by unrighteousness, and his chambers by wrong; ~ 5071 2,4,4 | the earth: fornication, unseemliness, passion, evil desire, and 5072 1,3,5 | his deep faith in God, unshak-~able hope in God.s help, 5073 2,4,2 | as~strong, forthright and unshakeable in his beliefs, so was he 5074 1,Add,0| re-~mains, however, still unsolved: for what purpose do we 5075 1,Add,1| Gospels they explain in an unsound sense, as we may discover 5076 2,3,3 | trouble, and to keep oneself unspotted from the world” (James 1: 5077 2,5,9 | pseudo-prophets corrupt unsteady Christians into various 5078 1,1,4 | with them it remaineth untaken~away in the reading of the 5079 1,Add,1| theologiegerchichtliche Untersuchung ~(Freiburg in der Schweiz, 5080 2,2,2 | critical works, as well as the untiring efforts of the Church, filled~ 5081 2,1,0 | primitive” mankind, almost untouched by~Christianity until after 5082 1,4,1 | raculously recovered from untreatable leprosy, quickly grew wealthy 5083 2,2,5 | one of the seventy. His unusually dynamic narration of the 5084 2,3,1 | the Apostles’ Epistles unveil~the different aspects of 5085 2,2,5 | the true Son of God. For unveiling these most profound truths 5086 2,5,6 | obliged~to do so, and with unwillingness.~ 5087 1,5,1 | Some people are trying to ~unwrap the mystery of the future 5088 1,2,4 | Israelites swallow it. He upbraided Aaron, who ~tried to defend 5089 1,1,6 | in 1460, followed by an updated version by Martin Luther 5090 1,5,5 | writing .MENE, MENE, TEKEL, UPHARSIN. on the wall (thou art found ~ 5091 2,4,4 | comfort the fainthearted,~uphold the weak, be patient with 5092 2,1,1 | area in the Palestinian~uplands. Its cities were diminutive 5093 1,4,7 | buckler to them that walk~uprightly. He keepeth the paths of 5094 1,3,7 | to Jerusa-~lem again and uprooted various crimes among the 5095 2,3,3 | 67 AD, by being crucified upside down.~Apostle Peter’s First 5096 1,4,7 | right way, from my youth upsought I after her. I bowed down ~ 5097 2,4,3 | Corinthians (because of the upsurge of agitators and~also to 5098 1,4,3 | Proverbs directs his thought upwards to God Who is the source 5099 1,2,2 | laws of the ~Sumerian king Ur-Nammu (2050 BC), the Amorite king 5100 1,5,5 | However, the morality of the urban inhabitants degraded so ~ 5101 1,Add,1| Catechumens ~were strongly urged not to divulge the Creed 5102 1,Add,1| the Bible as a whole, he urges the need ~to take the general 5103 1,2,4 | name Bezaleel, the son of Uri, the son of ~Hur, of the 5104 1,5,5 | the prophecy about res-~urrection of the dead (37), apocalyptic 5105 1,5,5 | chambers by wrong; ~that useth his neighbour's service 5106 1,3,5 | been a Canaanite city of Ushalim, i.e. city founded by~god 5107 1,1,5 | various heretics, who attrib-~uted their forgeries to the apostles 5108 1,Add,1| the Church: andientibus utilis est [to those who hear the 5109 1,5,1 | prophecies provide ~the utmost clear manifestations of 5110 1,Add,1| And I see that in the utter-~ances of the Spirit it is 5111 1,Add,0| implied in these rigoristic utterances of the early Christian apologist. 5112 1,5,5 | reward; and the~great man, he uttereth his mischievous desire: 5113 1,2,4 | of the Ark under David, Uzzah was struck dead because 5114 1,2,1 | Israel was not formed in a vacuum, but amid the age old ~civilization 5115 1,Add,1| Catholic to the pretentious vagaries of Manichean exegesis. ~ 5116 1,5,5 | over all people, and the vail ~that is spread over all 5117 1,2,2 | idolatry which was so pre-~vailing among pagans. The first 5118 1,1,6 | French language by Peter Valde. The first transla-~tion 5119 2,5,5 | Gnosticism were the heretics Valentinus,~Marcio, and Basilides, 5120 1,4,7 | 23:29-35). Shew not thy valiantness in wine; for wine hath destroyed 5121 2,3,2 | they fearlessly, with great valor and self-sacrifice, preached 5122 1,2,4 | to them jewels and other valuables to speed their departure. ~ 5123 1,5,7 | death. Yet ordinary people valued and loved them and followed ~ 5124 1,Add,0| but rather a citadel, a vanguard of God. ~ There is a centre 5125 1,2,4 | early morning, when the dew vanished, the ground was strewn with 5126 2,2,5 | was demonstrated first by~vanquishing him in all his temptations ( 5127 2,2,2 | original text. The great variability among modern Bible versions~ 5128 2,2,4 | without contradictions or variances in essentials and fundamentals.~ 5129 2,2,5 | The Gospels, for all their variations, do not contain inherent 5130 1,Add,0| patristic use typology was variously contaminated by alle-~gorical 5131 1,Add,1| the actual phrasing could vary from place to place. ~It 5132 2,1 | Old. A political situation~vastly different from that described 5133 2,3,3 | After being thrown into a vat of boiling oil~and remaining 5134 1,Add,1| his usual sharpness and ve-~hemence of expression, St. 5135 1,5,5 | instructor to give them plain vege-~table food instead. The 5136 1,5,5 | permitted to continue eating vegetarian food. The lord ~rewarded 5137 2,5,8 | At first, a third of the vegetation~dies, then, a third of all 5138 2,4,3 | conversion to Christ, the vehemence of the Jews forced him to~ 5139 1,4,5 | fire, which hath a most ~vehement flame. Many waters cannot ~ 5140 1,Add,0| manners ~and under divers veils. The historical truth and 5141 1,2,4 | created in time and de-~veloped in an evolutionary manner. 5142 1,5,7 | required them to expose ~the venality of judges, avarice and brutality 5143 1,1,7 | Church which teaches us to venerate the saints and their relics. 5144 1,2,4 | through a region infested with venomous snakes and some of ~them 5145 1,2,4 | same type as the planet Venus now has. This is why Moses 5146 1,2,2 | It does not require great verbal means to express a ~thought. 5147 2,3,3 | by applying them nearly verbatim.~The General Epistle of 5148 1,Add,1| Church: audiens in Ecclesia verhum Dei catholice tractari [ 5149 2,2,5 | which he had heard. St. John verified the truth of all that was~ 5150 2,3,3 | aim of the~Epistle is to verify the faith in Jesus Christ 5151 1,Add,1| of the rule of faith. The veritas~fidei [the truth of faith] 5152 1,5,5 | cedar, and painted with vermilion. Shalt thou reign, because 5153 2,2,2 | Testament were written in the vernacular Greek, an~Alexandrian dialect, 5154 1,Add,9| tradition of the Church Uni-~versal. I would not isolate myself 5155 2,5,4 | of~that great war of good versus evil, which is ongoing simultaneously 5156 2,5,0 | Nero and the seventh is~Vespasian. “And the beast which was 5157 1,4,2 | Hour: ~84, 85, 86. ~During Vespers: The beginning psalm: 104, . 5158 1,Add,0| destruc-~tion of the old. Vetus Testamentuni in Novo patet. [ 5159 1,4,4 | he acquired resulted in vexation of spirit, for knowledge 5160 1,Add,1| translation as corpusculum veyitatis). But the mean-~ing of the 5161 1,Add,1| in the .Scholastik,. Jg. VI (1931), ss. 381-400 and 5162 2,4,2 | appropriated the title “vicar of the Son of God”). Being 5163 2,2,5 | 11) and second by coming victoriously alive~from the dead (ch. 5164 1,2,2 | concept. The book can be di-~vided into three broad sections: 5165 2,1,1 | altogether from a religious viewpoint. Their~most brilliant heroes 5166 2,4,4 | earnestly in prayer, being vigilant in it with thanksgiving” ( 5167 1,Add,1| de Saint Irenee, ibidem, vii (1935), 5-27; Henri Holstein, 5168 2,1,6 | in many of~the cities and villages of the land, but those about 5169 1,2,2 | and the various kinds of vio-~lence, which are caused 5170 1,1,2 | physical body. Let a man violate the laws of the moral universe 5171 1,2,4 | the birds until they fell violently ill and a number of them 5172 2,5,8 | a serpent on the way, a viper by the path” (Gen. 49:17).~ 5173 1,Add,1| centones, made of Homeric ~or Virgilian verses (de praescr., XXXIX). 5174 1,2,4 | and later. However, the virtually universal tradition of the 5175 1,Add,1| This has been taken as a virtul abandon-~ment of the appeal 5176 1,2,2 | perfect himself through~virtuosity. ~ The devil is sinfully 5177 2,5,9 | need for money, passports, visas,~tickets, checks, credit 5178 1,Add,0| The old Israel was a pro-~visional Church, but she was not 5179 1,Add,0| she missed the day of her visitation. The only true continuation 5180 1,1,7 | subsequent ones ~as well) is of vital importance to their understanding. ~ 5181 1,Add,0| to detect in the Bible (viz. in the Old Testament) any 5182 1,1,6 | Christianity under the rule of St. Vladimir, and the Slavonic ver-~sion 5183 1,1,6 | Church-Slavonic version. Vocal supporters of the Russian 5184 1,4,2 | psalterion, song is sung ~vocally, some psalms are accompanied 5185 1,Add,0| man. But prayers and in-~vocations of the worshipping psalmist 5186 1,Add,1| great man of Scripture, has voiced the same view: ~ ~Marcion 5187 1,2,2 | from a slight ~tremor. The Volga originates from a little 5188 1,Add,1| Kirchliches Amt and geistliche Vollmacht~in den ersten drei jahrhudderten ( 5189 1,2,2 | nearly forty times in the volume, and the book ~clearly reflects 5190 2,2,2 | published in 1611 in large folio volumes.~This translation, known 5191 2,1,5 | much other material into a voluminous work known as the Talmud, 5192 2,5,9 | commander, and slaves, either voluntarily or by force, were~branded 5193 1,Add,1| true .intention. or the voluntas of the Scripture: qui enim 5194 1,Add,1| Scripture: qui enim neque juxta~voluntatem Scripturarum neque juxta 5195 2,1 | apostate younger priest who volunteered~to officiate. Then Mattathias 5196 2,3,3 | A dog returns~to its own vomit,” and, “a sow, having washed, 5197 1,3,0 | disease and died, being de-~voured alive by worms. ~ The 1st 5198 1,3,5 | and, in fulfillment of her vow, consecrated him to God. 5199 1,1,4 | language did not employ vowels but only consonants. ~ In 5200 1,2,2 | 26); and rules governing vows (Leviticus ~27). ~ All this 5201 1,Add,1| the Word of God. And viva vox Evangelii [the living voice 5202 1,2,4 | traveling up the great rift of Wadi Araba towards the Dead Sea. 5203 1,2,4 | the taste of it was like wafers made with honey” (Exod. ~ 5204 2,4,4 | therefore,~having girded your waist with truth, having put on 5205 1,5,5 | Let the heathen be wakened, and come up to the valley 5206 1,2,2 | heard Thy voice, as Thou walkedst in the garden, and I feared, 5207 2,3,3 | sow, having washed, to her wallowing in the mire’” (2 Peter 2: 5208 1,5,5 | the LORD: And they shall wander from sea to sea, and from 5209 2,3,3 | Brethren, if anyone among you wanders from the truth, and~someone 5210 2,5,6 | faithful will~sometimes wane and sometimes flourish during 5211 2,1,9 | even Christianity, are a waning force in the life of mankind.~ 5212 1,5,5 | the king of ~Syria made a ware against him. Ahaz sent rich 5213 1,5,5 | clothe you, but there is none warm; and he that earneth wages 5214 1,2,4 | Moses welcomed ~the old man warmly, and they sat for a long 5215 1,5,2 | Babylonian subject. Despite the warnings of ~Jeremiah, Jehoiakim' 5216 1,1,4 | should, as the Apostle Paul warns. Concerning the Jews he 5217 1,2,4 | 13:21). ~ Their haste was warranted. Pharaoh's courtiers said 5218 2,5,9 | customs, according to which warriors burned upon their arms or~ 5219 1,2,2 | earth, out of which thou wast taken...~Eating the forbidden 5220 1,2,4 | the Sinai peninsula . a wasteland of sand and gravel, intersected 5221 1,5,5 | more be heard in thy land, wasting nor destruction within thy 5222 1,5,5 | Manasseh. In distress Zephania watched the people running spiritu-~ 5223 1,2,2 | travels over the earth, and watches over everything that is 5224 1,2,2 | of His servants who are watchful and attentive to themselves 5225 2,5,9 | banality. Daily, indiscriminate watching of television kills the 5226 1,5,5 | man, I have made thee a watchman unto the house of Israel: 5227 1,2,4 | The first green plants, water-borne microorganisms, and later 5228 1,2,4 | limestone ridges ~and dry watercourses, in the beds of which a 5229 1,5,5 | returneth not thither, but watereth the earth, and maketh it 5230 2,3,3 | he who doubts is like a wave of the sea~driven and tossed 5231 2,3,3 | many became dispirited and wavered in their faith. Some complained 5232 1,4,7 | age: for even some of us wax old (Sir. 8:6). See also: 5233 1,1,4 | that which decayeth and waxeth~old is ready to vanish away, 5234 1,5,4 | wilderness a ~lodging place of wayfaring men; that I might leave 5235 2,1 | which they~were held for waywardness from the high standards 5236 1,3,5 | whole family of kind, yet weak-willed, high priest Eli was rejected 5237 2,5,3 | B.C.)~Babylonian bo~Extreme weake~Emergence fro~dage. Restorati~ 5238 2,5,7 | persecutions. The Church weakens and retreats into the catacombs, 5239 2,3,3 | honor to the~wife, as to the weaker vessel, and as being heirs 5240 2,1 | of king.~Archelaus was a weakling, as cruel as his father, 5241 2,5,3 | cent.)~Pressure from~Church weakn~conversion of J~(20th cent.)~ 5242 1,2,4 | when his arms dropped from weari-~ness. His two companions 5243 2,4,2 | among false brethren; in weariness and toil, in sleeplessness 5244 2,3,3 | outward – arranging the hair, wearing gold, or putting on fine 5245 1,Add,0| into the living historical web. Revelation is not a system 5246 1,2,1 | history. It is history ~wedded to prophecy, a Messiah-centered 5247 1,Add,1| Kerkgezag~bij Augustinus, in the Wederlands Theologisch Tijdschrift,. 5248 2,1,3 | Testament days were the weekly~Sabbath and the annual feasts~ 5249 2,2,5 | with Martha and Mary and weeps at the grave of His friend 5250 1,Add,1| sondern ein lebendiges Weiterblühen des göttlichen~Lebens. In 5251 1,Add,1| Anfang an nicht bloss ein Weitergeben~von Doktrinen nach spätjudischen ( 5252 1,2,4 | visit to her family. Moses welcomed ~the old man warmly, and 5253 2,1,0 | formed, China was being welded into a political and cultural 5254 1,3,5 | reached the peak of its well-~being and glory (Ch. 1-11). 5255 1,1,5 | of the Church was already well-defined ~and so similar to that 5256 1,Add,1| according to St. Irenaeus, a .well-grounded system,. a corpus (adv.~ 5257 2,2,6 | thinking and doing all things well-pleasing unto Thee. For Thou art 5258 1,2,4 | caravans. But that direct and well-traveled route was the most dangerous 5259 1,2,4 | Kadesh-barnea, a green ~and well-watered oasis some fifty miles south 5260 1,2,4 | days the Children of Israel wept and mourned for the great ~ 5261 2,2,2 | at Oxford, Cambridge and Westminster.~Their translation, dedicated 5262 2,5,6 | words “Judah is a lion's whelp” refer to the Lord Jesus 5263 1,5,5 | in pieces enough for his whelps, and strangled for his lionesses, 5264 | whence 5265 1,5,5 | callousness and hypocrisy: .Wherefore the Lord said, Forasmuch 5266 1,Add,0| eye-witness (Acts 2:32: “whereof we are all witnesses,” martyres) 5267 1,5,5 | shall prosper in the thing whereto I sent it. (Isaiah 55:8- 5268 | wherever 5269 1,4,7 | Repentance and forgiveness: Wherewithal a man sinneth, by the same 5270 1,5,5 | LORD hath his way in the whirlwind and in the storm, and the~ 5271 2,5,4 | imperial worthiness; and whiteness, cleanliness or purity. 5272 2,5,6 | the Eucharistic Canon. The whitening of the garments of the~pious 5273 1,Add,9| are still many who would wholeheart-~edly make this vigorous 5274 2,2,5 | become clear and assume their wholeness only in the light~of Christ’ 5275 1,1,5 | not be confused with the wholly in-~authentic books written 5276 1,5,5 | follows: unfaithful wife and whoredom ~of Israel (1-2), God's 5277 1,5,5 | must say that the spiritual wick-~edness of Jeremiah's contemporaries, 5278 1,5,5 | but the wicked shall do wickedly: and none of the wicked 5279 1,2,2 | unconsumed, burning bush in the wil-~derness. He asked in perplexity: 5280 2,4,4 | able to stand~against the wiles of the devil. For we do 5281 2,2,2 | begins. The New Testament of William Tyndale,~published in 1525- 5282 2,4,4 | each one individually~as He wills” (1 Cor. 12:4-11). “For 5283 1,5,5 | our iniquities; and thou wilt cast all~their sins into 5284 1,3,1 | Antipater who managed to win the trust ~of the Romans. 5285 1,5,5 | of fat things, a feast of wines on the lees... ~And he will 5286 2,4,3 | Paul intended to spend that winter of 64 in Nicopolis (Titus 5287 1,5,5 | victory; and the Lord GOD will wipe ~away tears from off all 5288 1,2,4 | men from each tribe. ~They wiped out the Midianite encampments 5289 1,5,5 | Babylonian king ~found them to be wiser than his Babylonian magicians. ~ 5290 1,1,1 | clesiastical spiritual rank and wisest man. The Lord bequeaths 5291 1,5,5 | on be-~half of Jerusalem, wishing that they escaped such a 5292 1,Add,1| in .Zeitschrift f. neut. Wissenschaft,. ~Bd. xxiii (1924), ss. 5293 1,2,2 | waiting for adoption, to wit, the redemption of our body ( 5294 1,5,1 | horoscopes, fortune-telling, witchcraft, superstitious ~tokens and 5295 2,1 | lapses into idolatry, and withal the way in~which the Jewish 5296 1,4,7 | increaseth; and there is that withholdeth more~than is meet, but it 5297 2,4,4 | that~you may be able to withstand in the evil day, and having 5298 1,2,4 | brother-in-law); and from here they witnessed the battle. While Moses 5299 1,5,7 | only comfort-~ers of the woeful. The prophets also revealed 5300 1,2,2 | this sinful world) when the wolf~shall dwell with the lamb, 5301 1,5,5 | her judges are evening wolves; they gnaw not the ~bones 5302 2,5,3 | The dragon persecutes the~Woman- Church (12:3-4)~Plants seeds 5303 2,5,2 | regarding the pursuit of the Woman-Church by the~dragon. The first 5304 1,Add,7| power, the word of God has a wonder-working and life-giving ef-~fect 5305 1,2,2 | Jacob, a small tribe of wondering shepherds, became a ~God 5306 1,5,5 | spirit. And I will shew wonders in the heav-~ens and in 5307 1,2,4 | tent talking about all the wondrous things ~that had happened 5308 1,5,5 | crimson, ~they shall be as wool. If ye be willing and obedient, 5309 1,Add,1| Theologie van Augustinus, Het Woord Gods bij Augurtinus); see 5310 1,2,4 | of the outward forms of wor-~ship of God and the veneration 5311 1,2,4 | engraver, and of the cunning workman, and of the em-~broiderer. ( 5312 2,1,0 | Christianity has had its world-wide spread, we are inclined 5313 1,2,4 | a representative of two worlds: ~the physical and spiritual. 5314 1,Add,7| creation from man on down to a worm (I Tim 4:5). ~ By the Truth 5315 1,2,4 | for all the gold earrings worn by the men ~and women, melted 5316 1,2,2 | Would he be free from worries, annoyances, sadness, accidents? 5317 1,2,4 | incapable of answering these worrisome questions; indeed, they 5318 1,1,1 | religious-moral questions worrying the reader and ~modern society 5319 1,4,6 | Jews who, being righteous worshippers of the true God, suffered 5320 1,2,2 | in the old proverb: man's worst enemy is ~man. ~Would man 5321 1,Add,1| August ~Deneffe, S.J., Dogma. Wort and Begriff, in the .Scholastik,. 5322 2,4,4 | See also: 1 Cor. 16:13.~On worthlessness of those who live idle lives: 5323 2,5,9 | revelation of the mortal wounding of~one of the heads of the 5324 1,5,5 | mischievous desire: so they wrap it up. The best of them 5325 1,2,4 | trumpet. “And Mount Sinai was wrapped in smoke, because~the Lord 5326 1,Add,9| accidental and external wrapping ~out of which some .eternal 5327 1,2,4 | take them back to Egypt. A wrathful Lord decreed that ~for their 5328 2,4,4 | the devil. For we do not wrestle against flesh and blood, 5329 1,1,5 | that the very style of the writ-~ings stamps them as being 5330 1,Add,1| meaning of what they ~had wrongly interpreted. (c. Arian. 5331 1,5,5 | work of thy ~hand. Be not wroth very sore, O LORD, neither 5332 2,1,1 | His mercy and love, has wrought for~man's redemption. This 5333 1,Add,1| I, 1940, and II, 1942); Wunibald Roetzer, ~Des heiligen Augustinus 5334 1,5,5 | Herodotus, ~Dioscorus of Sicily, Xenophon and other Greek authors, 5335 1,Add,1| Theologisch Tijdschrift,. XI (1956-1957), ss. 37-59 ( 5336 1,Add,1| philosophie réligieuses,. xL (1960), 32-43; ~Saint Irénée, 5337 1,Add,1| ancienne et medievale,. t. XXI (1954), pp. 5-22]. Yet, 5338 1,Add,1| Galat., I, 1. II; M. L. XXVI, c. 386). ~ ~There is the 5339 1,Add,1| philosophie réligieuses,. xxxiv.c, 1954, pp. 1-29. See, 5340 1,Add,1| Virgilian verses (de praescr., XXXIX). Apparently, it was a common 5341 1,Add,1| de Science religieuse,. xxxvi (1949), 229-270; La Tradition 5342 1,Add,1| den Eynde, pp. 183-187; Y. M: J. Congar, O.P., La 5343 1,2,4 | land of Gilead, up to the ~Yarmuk river. Og, the giant king 5344 1,3,0 | Antiochus Epiphanes, a 90-year-old priest Eleazar, the seven 5345 1,Add,5| the Bible you are adding yeast to the dough of your soul 5346 | yes 5347 1,2,1 | particularly the Flood, yield-~ing amazing parallels of 5348 2,5,5 | contemporary Hinduism, yoga, and various other cults.~ 5349 1,2,2 | of history: slavery, the yokes of foreign invaders, and 5350 2,5,7 | obscured by a tempestuous youthfulness in which a man dissipates 5351 1,Add,1| pp. 101-102. See also ~Yves M. J. Cougar, O.P., La Tradition 5352 2,2,5 | chief of the publicans, Zacchaeus, and other sections,~as 5353 2,1,8 | of God’s people; notably Zacharias, father of John the Baptist, 5354 2,1,6 | They took their name from Zadok, the priest who was faithful 5355 1,1,6 | naries as St. Tikhon of Zadonsk, Metropolitan Philaret of 5356 1,5,5 | invasion of Nebuchadrez-~zar into Egypt. Alexander the 5357 2,1,9 | placed in the same centuries. Zarathustra, or, to give him the name 5358 1,3,5 | the house of a widow ~in Zarephath. The prophet prayed, and 5359 2,4,3 | training he emerged as a strong zealot of pharisaic traditions 5360 1,5,2 | people's ~belief in God, he zealously undertook a religious reform, 5361 1,5,5 | descended from the tribe of Zebulun. As he was the last of the 5362 2,5,4 | 5-6, 33:6-11; Hab. 2:14; Zeph. 3:9-20). The Old Testament 5363 1,5,5 | by Manasseh. In distress Zephania watched the people running 5364 1,2,4 | the precipitous valley of Zered that divided Edom from Moab. 5365 1,2,4 | roaming the wilderness of Zin, with their base at the 5366 2,1,9 | readers generally know him, Zoroaster, the major creator of the 5367 2,1,1 | powerful cultures and states. Zoroastrianism was associated with Persia,~ 5368 1,Add,1| Der Beitrag des Basilius zum Abschluss~des trinitarischen