Psalms 144:3 In-Context 1 (143-1) Blessed be the Lord my God, who teacheth my hands to fight, and my fingers to war. 2 (143-2) My mercy, and my refuge: my support, and my deliverer: My protector, and I have hoped in him: who subdueth my people under me. 3 (143-3)...
You can do the math for yourself using the lifespans of the patriarchs in Genesis, and it does. For another example of Methuselah being used to mean “his death shall bring” see Psalm 43:3 in a concordance that gives you the actual Hebrew words, like BlueletterBible.com Lamech is the...
15 but, speaking the truth in love, may grow up in all things into Him who is the head--Christ-- 16 from whom the whole body, joined and knit together by what every joint supplies, according to the effective working by which every part does its share, causes growth of the body for ...
Life in God’s kingdom will also mean life for those who await in death, Psalms calls them, residents of the dust. At John 5:28-29 it says,”Do not marvel at this, because the hour is coming in which all those in the memorial tombs will hear his voice and come out, those who ...
You can do the math for yourself using the lifespans of the patriarchs in Genesis, and it does. For another example of Methuselah being used to mean “his death shall bring” seePsalm 43:3in a concordance that gives you the actual Hebrew words, like BlueletterBible.com ...
But Selah does not mean pause. Diapsalma means "apart from psalm". Selah does not mean the same. The Assyrian word "Selah" doesn't belong in scripture. Bottom line: What should we say? When reading the book of Psalms and we come across the word "selah", we should not say anything ...
Tribulation begins in 1988; J R Church (Book: Hidden Prophecies in the Psalms, clearly hints that 1988 will be the year.) "Psalms 88-94 seem to describe the future seven years of Jacob's Trouble in chronological order. This is not to say that the Tribulation Period will begin in 1988"...
A while ago, I read Jen Wilkin’s bookNone Like Himabout the attributes of God. One is His incomprehensibility. In it, she says, “God is incomprehensible. This does not mean that he is unknowable, but that he is unable to be fully known.” ...
Essential Bible Companion to the Psalms Plus 19 entries Essential Bible Companion Plus 1 entry Expositor's Bible Commentary (Abridged Edition): Old Testament Plus 184 entries Halley's Bible Handbook Notes Plus 14 entries How to Read the Bible Book by Book...
Selah(Psalms4:5) (1:59, 139‒40).The silence in this passageisnot onlysilence in external but also in inner speech:neither affirmative nor negative privative attributions express truths, hence, praiseSee1:58, 134‒35;1:59, 137‒39;1:60, 143‒44.WhatisMaimonideanScepticism?