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[1] A New Concordance of the Bible (full title A New Concordance of the Bible: Thesaurus of the Language of the Bible, Hebrew and Aramaic, Roots, Words, Proper Names Phrases and Synonyms) by Avraham Even-Shoshan is a concordance of the Hebrew text of the Hebrew Bible, first published in 1977. The source text used is that of the Koren edition of ...
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Unnamed people of the Bible (3 C, 50 P) V. Vulgate Latin words and phrases (1 C, ...
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; Appearance. move to sidebar hide ... YouVersion (also known as Bible.com or the Bible App) ...
Quod scripsi, scripsi (Latin for "What I have written, I have written") is a Latin phrase. It was most famously used by Pontius Pilate in the Bible in response to the Jewish priests who objected to his writing "King of the Jews" on the sign that was hung above Jesus at his Crucifixion. It is mostly found in the Latin Vulgate Bible. [1]
Version 1.0: First non-beta release, Clipboard Monitor feature introduced; Version 1.1: Ability to print Bible texts and personal notes, and export personal notes in various formats; Version 1.2: Improved Greek support in non-Greek environments; Version 2.0: Multiple Bible windows, Bible text formatting, dockable windows and layouts
But he did all this under the guiding light of the faith, since it is the Bible that describes God as HE WHO IS (Exodus, 3): he saw that God is the fullness of being, the very Act of Being, the perfection of being, the subsistent act of being; and everything else is a participation in the act of being, which must be created by God "out of ...
(Reuters) -Payments firm PayPal said on Thursday it had resolved an issue that led to a global outage affecting thousands of users for nearly two hours.
In the New Testament the phrase reoccurs in the First Epistle of Peter (see 1 Peter 1:24; Greek: πᾶσα σὰρξ ὡς χόρτος, pasa sarx hōs chortos [4]). It was a commonly used epitaph, frequently found for example on old ledger stones and monuments in churches in 17th century England. The phrase is interpreted to mean that human ...