Results 341 - 344 of 344
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Results from: Answers On or After: Thu 12/31/70 Author: Lionstrong Ordered by Date |
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Results | Verse | Author | ID# | |||
341 | Are Catholics saved because of religion? | Eph 2:8 | Lionstrong | 3210 | ||
Thank God, because we're saved by His grace through faith, Yes, some Catholics are saved, and some Protestants are still lost. Jesus did not speak against being very religious, He spoke against hypocricy and practicing your religion to be seen by men (Matt 6. The Bible dosen't teach that when one is saved that he necessarily knows it, but God does command us to "make our calling and election sure" which means an ignorant or disobediant believer may be unsure of his salvation.(II Pet 1:10) |
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342 | lets stick to original text! | Luke 24:1 | Lionstrong | 3139 | ||
In my Greek-Enlish New Testament it has the literal translation as "But on the one of the week..." Three questions followed for me: What do the other Gospel accounts say, and is "mia" ever translated "first" in any other portion of the NT, and does the word "first" make sence in the context of the sentence? According to the Greek Dictionary in the NASB Exhaustive Concordnace mia (reference number 3391) is the feminine form of "eis heis" (reference number 1520) which is translated "first" nine times in the NASB: Matt. 28:1, Mk 16:2, Jn 20:1, Jn 20:19, Acts. 20:, ICor 16:2, Titus 3:10, and Rev 9:12. So "one of the week" must be a Greek idiom whch does not translate smoothly into English, just as some American English idioms would not translate well into other languages if it were translated word for word. I suppose it could have been translated, "on the first of the week" leaving the word "day" to be understood. So Jesus died and was buried on the sixth of the week, remained dead on the seventh, and rose on the first of the week. | ||||||
343 | What was the total number of animals, | Genesis | Lionstrong | 3125 | ||
Gen. 7: 1-16. There is no way anyone can give you an exact number, Poppop, because God doesn't tell us that exact number anywhere in His word. We can only make an educated guess. | ||||||
344 | Greek has no "first day" in its text? | Luke 24:1 | Lionstrong | 3005 | ||
In my Greek-Enlish New Testament it has the literal translation as "But on the one of the week..." Three questions followed for me: What do the other Gospel accounts say, and is "mia" ever translated "first" in any other portion of the NT, and does the word "first" make sence in the context of the sentence? According to the Greek Dictionary in the NASB Exhaustive Concordnace mia (reference number 3391) is the feminine form of "eis heis" (reference number 1520) which is translated "first" nine times in the NASB: Matt. 28:1, Mk 16:2, Jn 20:1, Jn 20:19, Acts. 20:, ICor 16:2, Titus 3:10, and Rev 9:12. So "one of the week" must be a Greek idiom whch does not translate smoothly into English, just as some American English idioms would not translate well into other languages if it were translated word for word. |
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