enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  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. Duḥkha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Duḥkha

    This is expressed as saṃsāra, an ongoing process of death and rebirth, [note 9] but also more pointly and non-metaphysically in the process-formula of the five skandhas: Birth is duḥkha, maturation is duḥkha, aging is duḥkha, illness is duḥkha, death is duḥkha; Sorrow, lamentation, pain, grief, and despair are duḥkha;

  6. Ordeal of the bitter water - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ordeal_of_the_bitter_water

    The account of the ordeal of bitter water is given in the Book of Numbers: Then Yahweh spoke to Moses, saying, “Speak to the sons of Israel and say to them, ‘If any man’s wife goes astray and is unfaithful to him, and a man lies sexually with her, and it is hidden from the eyes of her husband, and she is undetected; but she has defiled herself, and there is no witness against her, and ...

  7. Irenaean theodicy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irenaean_theodicy

    In his introduction to process theology, C. Robert Melse argued that, although suffering does sometimes bring about good, not all suffering is valuable and that most does more harm than good. [40] Process theologian David Griffin contested "the utility of soul making". He argued that the Irenaean theodicy supposes that God inflicts pain for his ...

  8. Psalm 38 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psalm_38

    Psalm 38 is the 38th psalm of the Book of Psalms, entitled "A psalm of David to bring to remembrance", [1] is one of the 7 Penitential Psalms. [2] In the slightly different numbering system used in the Greek Septuagint version of the Bible, and in the Latin Vulgate, this psalm is Psalm 37.

  9. Soul in the Bible - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soul_in_the_Bible

    And the Lord God created man in two formations; and took dust from the place of the house of the sanctuary, and from the four winds of the world, and mixed from all the waters of the world, and created him red, black, and white; and breathed into his nostrils the inspiration of life, and there was in the body of Adam the inspiration of a ...