Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Matthew 13 is the thirteenth chapter in the Gospel of Matthew in the New Testament section of the Christian Bible. This chapter contains the third of the five Discourses of Matthew, called the Parabolic Discourse, based on the parables of the Kingdom. [1] At the end of the chapter, Jesus is rejected by the people of his hometown, Nazareth.
The epigraph cites Matthew 13 directly. [15] Pearl is a late Middle English poem often attributed to the Gawain poet by scholars. The narrator mourns the loss of his daughter, called Pearl. Pearl presents her father with a vision of the New Jerusalem. By the end of the poem, Pearl reveals that she wears the pearl from Christ's parable around ...
The Parable of the Hidden Treasure is a well known parable of Jesus, which appears in Matthew 13:44, and illustrates the great value of the Kingdom of Heaven. It immediately precedes the parable of the Pearl, which has a similar theme. The parable has been depicted by artists such as Rembrandt.
The parable of drawing in the net, also known as the parable of the dragnet, is a Christian parable that appears in the Gospel of Matthew, chapter 13, verses 47–52. [1] The parable refers to the Last Judgment. [2] This parable is the seventh and last in Matthew 13, which began with the parable of the Sower. [3]
While Mark 4:33–34 [23] and Matthew 13:34–35 [24] may suggest that Jesus would only speak to the "crowds" in parables, while in private explaining everything to his disciples, some modern scholars do not support the private explanations argument and surmise that Jesus used parables as a teaching method. [25]
Matthew 13:45. ανθρωπω εμπορω (merchant man) – א c C D L W Θ 0106 0233 0242 0250 ƒ 1 ƒ 13 𝔐 εμπορω (merchant) – א* B Γ 1424. Matthew 13:46. ος ευρων (who, upon finding) – C W 0106 0250 ƒ 13 𝔐 syr h ευρων δε (Then, upon finding) – א B D L Θ 0233 0242 ƒ 1 33 892 syr p cop. Matthew 13:51
The last image we have of Patrick Cagey is of his first moments as a free man. He has just walked out of a 30-day drug treatment center in Georgetown, Kentucky, dressed in gym clothes and carrying a Nike duffel bag.
The writing extends the Parable of the Pearl from Matthew 13:45–46. [8] [9] In the text, Peter the Apostle meets a pearl merchant named Lithargoel, who is later revealed to be Jesus. [10] Jesus commands the apostles to care for the poor. [11]