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  2. The Heart Knows Its Own Bitterness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Heart_Knows_its_Own...

    The testimony of these people must be heeded. When a person declares on Yom Kippur that he needs to eat food, we listen to him. “Even if a hundred expert physicians say that he does not need it, we listen to him—as the scripture says ‘The heart knows its own bitterness.’ (Proverbs 14:10).” [13]

  3. Wormwood (Bible) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wormwood_(Bible)

    A number of Bible scholars consider the term Worm ' to be a purely symbolic representation of the bitterness that will fill the earth during troubled times, noting that the plant for which Wormwood is named, Artemisia absinthium, or Mugwort, Artemisia vulgaris, is a known biblical metaphor for things that are unpalatably bitter. [13] [14] [15] [16]

  4. Marah (Bible) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marah_(Bible)

    Marah - bitterness - a fountain at the sixth station of the Israelites (Ex. 15:23, 24; Num. 33:8) whose waters were so bitter that they could not drink them. On this account they murmured against Moses, who, under divine direction, cast into the fountain "a certain tree" which took away its bitterness, so that the people drank of it.

  5. Righteous indignation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Righteous_indignation

    The Forerunner Commentary on Psalms 137:2–6 argues that these psalms are about the "bitterness of exile into which God forced Judah", purportedly with the goal of turning grief into zeal, so that the "anger can be used to scour away sin" by becoming "righteously indignant". [4]

  6. Green's Literal Translation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green's_Literal_Translation

    `I say to you, even if he will not give to him, having risen, because of his being his friend, yet because of his importunity, having risen, he will give him as many as he doth need; Romans 10:3 For being ignorant of the righteousness of God, and seeking to establish their own righteousness, they did not submit to the righteousness of God.

  7. The Bible and violence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Bible_and_violence

    Warfare represents a special category of biblical violence and is a topic the Bible addresses, directly and indirectly, in four ways: there are verses that support pacifism, and verses that support non-resistance; 4th century theologian Augustine found the basis of just war in the Bible, and preventive war which is sometimes called crusade has also been supported using Bible texts.

  8. Shoulder wound of Jesus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shoulder_wound_of_Jesus

    According to pious legend, Saint Bernard asked Jesus which was his greatest unrecorded suffering and the wound that inflicted the most pain on him in Calvary. Jesus answered: "I had on my shoulder, while I bore my cross on the Way of Sorrows , a grievous wound which was more painful than the others and which is not recorded by men."

  9. Redemptive suffering - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Redemptive_suffering

    Redemptive suffering is the Christian belief that human suffering, when accepted and offered up in union with the Passion of Jesus, can remit the just punishment for one's sins or for the sins of another, or for the other physical or spiritual needs of oneself or another.

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