for, if the scholar will take no pains, the master must take the more; the sluggard is not willing to come to school to him (dreaming scholars will never love wakeful teachers) and therefore he has found him out another school, as low...
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Matthew Henry’s Concise Bible Commentary: Over 1,000 Pages of In-depth commentary on the entire Bible from Genesis to Revelation by a noted scholar.Ratings and Reviews 5.0 out of 5 1 RatingApp Privacy See Details The developer, Vision for Maximum Impact, LLC, has not provided details ...
and there is no reason to believe that the book of Acts suggests otherwise. Just because Luke says that Judas fell headlong and burst open in the middle doesn’t mean that was how Judas died. The initial Bible scholar consensus was
Moore and Sherwood (The Invention of the BiblicalScholar, xii) put the matter in this way: “What other discipline in the humanities has striven more determinedly to perform the separation of the properly critical subject from the properly studies object? What other discipline has been more anxi...
Matthew Henry's Concise Commentary7:21-29 Christ here shows that it will not be enough to own him for our Master, only in word and tongue. It is necessary to our happiness that we believe in Christ, that we repent of sin, that we live a holy life, that we love one another. This...
"Inherit the Wind" (1960)Henry Drummond Questions Matthew Brady on the Scientific Authority of the BibleAudio mp3 delivered by Spencer Tracy and Frederic MarchDrummond: I call to the stand one of the world's foremost experts on the Bible and its teachings: Matthew Harrison Brady....
To a reasonable observer who did not happen to be a biblical scholar, it seems to me, "In God we trust" and "With God All Things Are Possible" would appear remarkably similar.1 A person exceptionally well versed in the bible, on the other hand, might be aware that the declaration abou...
Accustomed to regarding Max’s stories as a delicate weave of memory, history, and fiction, it came as something of a shock to recognize the unmistakable ties between Roderick Usher’s dwelling, and that of Dr Henry Selwyn. How had I missed them? By concentrating on the tale’s ...
many of which were imitated and appropriated by Renaissance writers, comes Leviticus, which one scholar has compared to an "unappetizing vein of gristle in the midst of the Pentateuch" 1 Suddenly in 1532 Leviticus was very much on the menu, for Leviticus 20 held the key to Henry's freedom...