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NASB | Numbers 12:7 "Not so, with My servant Moses, He is faithful in all My household; |
AMPLIFIED 2015 | Numbers 12:7 "But it is not so with My servant Moses; He is entrusted and faithful in all My house. [Heb 3:2, 5, 6] |
Subject: Integrity |
Bible Note: How about mary and apostle paul, apostle paul are the most hardworking apostle of all times, because of him the Christianity possibly reach the place its such as yours and mine, did you consider that. Apostle paul exchange his riches and education to burden, he evangelize the word of God as no one can do. He has a good life and respected and highly educated, but he rejected that enable to served Christ. I am not degrading what moses did to his people, moses died and god buried him, paul was put behind bars because of his testimony of Christ, he was tutured, beheaded which was a very painful death. Paul This first imprisonment came at length to a close, Paul having been acquitted, probably because no witnesses appeared against him. Once more he set out on his missionary labours, probably visiting western and eastern Europe and Asia Minor. During this period of freedom he wrote his First Epistle to Timothy and his Epistle to Titus. The year of his release was signalized by the burning of Rome, which Nero saw fit to attribute to the Christians. A fierce persecution now broke out against the Christians. Paul was siezed, and once more conveyed to Rome a prisoner. During this imprisonment he probably wrote the Second Epistle to Timothy, the last he ever wrote. "There can be little doubt that he appered again at Nero's bar, and this time the charge did not break down. In all history there is not a more startling illustration of the irony of human life than this scene of Paul at the bar of Nero. On the judgment-seat, clad in the imperial purple, sat a man who, in a bad world, had attained the eminence of being the very worst and meanest being in it, a man stained with every crime, a man whose whole being was so steeped in every nameable and unnameable vice, that body and soul of him were, as some one said at the time, nothing but a compound of mud and blood; and in the prisoner's dock stood the best man the world possessed, his hair whitened with labours for the good of men and the glory of God. The trial ended: Paul was condemned, and delivered over to the executioner. He was led out of the city, with a crowd of the lowest rabble at his heels. The fatal spot was reached; he knelt beside the block; the headsman's axe gleamed in the sun and fell; and the head of the apostle of the world rolled down in the dust" (probably A.D. 66), four years before the fall of Jerusalem. |