ii corinthians การใช้
- _II Corinthians, 4 : 18 _ Bill White's favorite Bible passage
- He quoted II Corinthians 6 : " Do not be yoked together with unbelievers . . ."
- The blind covering Synagoga's eyes derived from the letter of Saint Paul at II Corinthians 3 : 13-16:
- This edition had many misprints, including the notable substitution of " fornications " for " fortifications " in II Corinthians 10 : 4.
- A favorite verse among them was II Corinthians 6 : 17 " Come out from among them, and be ye separate . " This led to them being called " Separate ".
- The Biblical story of the fall of man tells of how Adam and Eve were deceived into disobeying God by a snake ( identified as Satan by both John in II Corinthians and Revelation, respectively ).
- His motto is taken from II Corinthians, I2, 15 : " Libentissime impendam et super impendar " ( " Most gladly I will spend myself and be spent for your sakes " ).
- It takes its name from II Corinthians 6 : 14, a passage that warns believers not to unite with unbelievers, thus becoming " unequally yoked " _ similar to oxen of different sizes pulling a single wagon.
- The phrase was derived from the Bible verse, II Corinthians 6 : 17 which read " Wherefore come out from among them, and be ye separate, said the Lord, and touch not the unclean thing; and I will receive you ."
- In support of this search for purity, he often cited St . Paul's letter in II Corinthians 6 : 17 : " Wherefore come out from them, and ye be separate, saith the Lord, and touch not the unclean thing ."
- There is also a magazine called Quit You Like Men ( from II Corinthians, " Watch ye, stand fast, quit you like men, be strong " ), which has articles on " True Christian Manliness " and also articles on Pastured Poultry and Non-Disclosure agreements.
- In other words, by appealing to the Platonic distinction between the material and the ideal, Paul showed how the spirit of Christ could provide " all " people a way to worship God the God who had previously been worshiped only by Jews, and Jewish Proselytes, although Jews claimed that He was the one and only God of all ( see, for example, Romans 8 : 1 4; II Corinthians 3 : 3; Galatians 3 : 14; Philippians 3 : 3 ).