Justin Martyr (Apol. i. 57) has what looks like a reminiscence of this verse; but we cannot rely on it to prove his acquaintance with the book, the same idea being found in Grecian philosophy. Pulpit CommentaryVerse 9. - The thing that hath been, it is that which shall be. The LXX...
Although he had a lot of heretical views,Justin Martyr(considered to be a saint by bothGreco-Roman CatholicsandProtestants, but not by those of us in the Church of God) in the second century wrote: “For I choose to follow not men or men’s doctrines, but God and the doctrines [deli...
Justin Justin I Justin II Justin Martyr Justin Martyr, Saint Justin Morgan Justin P. Wilson Cumberland Trail State Park Justinas Marcinkevicius Justinas Vinco Vienozinskis ▼ Full browser ? ▲ Just Wait A Second Just Wait and See Just Wait and See just wait and see! just wait! Just Waitin...
At some point in time, Christians changed their day of worship from Saturday to Sunday. Some clues to this change can be found in some early Christian writing such as Justin Martyr who was born in 100AD. In his work 'Apologies and Dialogue with Trypho' he writes about the need for a ...
God’s word does not change. Christians do not come together every four years to make adjustments to the word of God. The Bible we have today is the same one Martin Luther read. We study the same Scriptures that Francis of Assisi, Augustine, and Justin Martyr studied. The words Jesus re...
I see my father not as a martyr, but like seeing Christ walk. He went out and he give, and he give, and he give until there is nothing more to give. That type of work is endless; that’s one of the reasons why he’s so powerful because it is a God-given mission. Basically,...
replacement theology. Premillennialist Justin Martyr was the first to view “the Christian church as ‘the true spiritual Israel’ (Dial. 11)” 7 around A.D. 160. Justin’s views laid the groundwork for the growing belief that the church had superseded or replaced ...
This close relationship between Peter and Mark leads many scholars to agree that Mark’s gospel is an interpretation of Peter’s eyewitness account of Jesus’ ministry. Several first-century writers, Justin the Martyr (AD 150-160), Clement of Alexandria (AD 195), and Tertullian (AD 200), ...
Justin Martyr “We have been taught that Christ is the first-begotten of God, and we have declared him to be the Logos of which all mankind partakes [John 1:9]. Those, therefore, who lived according to reason [Greek, logos] were really Christians, even though they were thought to be...
This belief continued throughout the Ante-Nicene and Nicene Fathers periods (c. A.D. 150 – c. 350). Justin Martyr said of the Scriptures that “when you hear the utterances of the prophets spoken as it were personally, you must not suppose that they are spoken by the inspired themselves...