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Results from: Answered Bible Questions, Answers, Unanswered Bible Questions, Notes Ordered by Verse | ||||||
Results | Verse | Author | ID# | |||
1 | help | Luke 11:2 | kalos | 149331 | ||
Doc: I just read that you (Doc) wrote: "in these last days (God) has spoken unto us BY His Son". Well, now we know for certain who wrote the book of Hebrews. You did, Doc! :-) Kalos |
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2 | help | Luke 11:2 | DocTrinsograce | 149340 | ||
Dear Brother Kalos, The following observation is made with the utmost affection, respect, and deference for my elders: If I wrote Hebrews, we can speculate that you wrote Psalm 25, 49, 65, 67, 84, 85, 87, 114, 115, 116, 117, 118, and 119! :-) In Him, Doc PS With as well as you know Scripture, and the high view that you have of it, I am almost persuaded that you did, indeed, write Psalm 119! :-) |
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3 | help | Luke 11:2 | Hank | 149404 | ||
Doc, so you are almost persuaded that Kalos wrote Psalm 119? Well, perhaps so, but I bet you didn't know this: It was I who translated his twangy southern Illinois dialect, which nobody down here in the Ozarks understands, into scholarly Arkanese, which everybody here does understand. The beauty of Arkanese, by the way, has been compared to Elizabethan English. The comparison was made by Cousin Caleb who compared the speech patterns of Arkanese with those of his daughter, Elizabeth, who will be three years old next Friday. --Hank | ||||||
4 | help | Luke 11:2 | kalos | 149409 | ||
Hank: This I say unto thee, that Southern Illinois (south of I-64) gibberish, a mingling of the tongues of Kentucky, Tennessee, and rural Missouri, shall in no wise be exceeded by the indigenous utterances of Arkansans, Oklahomans, or Texans. (See "Places Where English Entirely Disappears" by Professor 'Enry 'Iggins, Pygmalion Press, 1956) --Kalos |
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