Armed And Extremely Dangerous

Armed And Extremely Dangerous
"READY FOR THE BATTLE"

Putting Fuel On The Fire

Sunday, September 9, 2018

God is not a rest  stop from work it’s a rest in work. It’s partnering with God to do what He is calling you to do by His grace, and leaving the part you can’t do in His hands, trusting Him to do it.

Relax and give up your struggles and the the fight to be holy, and the Holy Spirit will give you the power to overcome, not in your own strength. At that point, you cease from your works, plots and schemes to exert your own ways. Never give in to the devil that’s what he desires you to do. You give way to accept the will of God in your life directed by the Holy Spirit. Then you listen to Him to direct you in wisdom in your daily life and destiny. Then you begin to relax and have peace. The Holy Spirit is the Third Person of the Trinity. The Holy Spirit is God living in you to enable the belie

It is to accept the “grace” given by God to live the Christian life and principles only through faith. It is not our righteousness. It is what Jesus did for us on the cross. When we believe it will achieve it. We become responsive  and the struggle that was there is easy. Take my yoke I will give you rest. My yoke is easy and my burdens are light. Every good and perfect gift comes from the Lord. 

Only what you do for Christ that matters. It is only when you believe God's word through faith, you enter into God's rest and you cease from your struggles from your will to His will and divine plan He has for you. 

Until you cease from your own works. Until you allow God to be God in your life. The things you labor for is not in vain.  The things God  labors for you is not in vvain. 

Allow God to ease your pain  allow the Holy Spirit to do the work in and through you. Never try to move befor God. Whatever He has for you is worth the wait. 

God wants to make a imprint in our hearts . Loyalty  is very impressive and important to God. Can God depend on you.  the activity of fruit display  🍉 becomes  faith driven by exercising when your faith becomes unquestionable. Once the transformation  appears by our appearance when being CONFORM into the fruitful image of Jesus. Grist. When we conform to Him we are transformed, 


Allow the Holy Spirit to live the Christian life in you, then the battle to be holy stops. Then your rest comes- you rest while the Holy Spirit fights for you. You only have to believe this in faith what the word of God says. 

Hebrews 4:3 says it this way: For we who have believed enter that rest… So we start by believing. 

God wants us to rest in God and to be satisfied  in Him, in our mind, body and soul. 


The key to having abundant life in Christ  while He livies in us. 

Gods Word, and God’s grace through faith. Because grace is power working in us, enabling us to do whatever we need to do in life. 

The key in having abundant life in Christ is living by Gods Word, and God’s grace through faith. Because grace is power working in us, anleing us to do exceedingly above all we can ask or think. 

whatever we need to do in life. Knowing God will do above all we can ask or think. God calls us to do when we don’t know how totally dependent on who He is. 


Hebrews 4:9-11 says, So then, there remains a Sabbath rest for the people of God, for whoever has entered God's rest has also rested from his ... for whoever has entered God’s rest has also rested from his works as God did from his. Let us therefore strive to enter that rest… 


When we don’t do the part we can do and we try to do His part instead, that’s when we live stressed-out with worry, fear, anxiety, frustration, no peace and no joy. 


Being  content satisfied of the veracity and  the conformity to its changes. All facts is not only accuracy but are able to conform reform and transform any doubts concerning the veracity of  the Bible and its pictorial stories. 


Your behavior in accordance with social network of friend changes advyoyr new one will be well accepted to your change. You will not hold back but willfully be loyal to the will of God the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Spirit. 


Everything will be a metamorphic at the time of change. 

Your fiorm and the shape  in the way you think what you eat and what you put in your body. Which means your old clothes have to come off. The things you use to do you have no desires to do anymore. 


Your whole life will change before your eyes. Your external will become eternal. Your external  appearance becomes eternally Change. 

 These  metamorphic  changes  will start to work its wsy from the inside out. You become in a  cocoon  being still and know I AM Gid. 

God is bringing something so beautiful. Someone is coming out of those grace clothes. Someone is coming out of prison. Someone is coming out of sickness. 
Then Jesus said, “Did I not tell you that if you believe, you will see the glory of God?”

So they took away the stone. Then Jesus looked up and said, “Father, I thank you that you have heard me. I knew that you always hear me, but I said this for the benefit of the people standing here, that they may believe that you sent me.”

When he had said this, Jesus called in a loud voice, “Lazarus, come out!” The dead man came out, his hands and feet wrapped with strips of linen, and a cloth around his face.

Jesus said to them, “Take off the grave clothes and let him go.”

There is transformation Gid is about to remove  that stoning heart that blood clot in that life eye. There is a moracious healing taken place. You feel pressure or heat over your eye. Someone is getting a hip replacement right where your standing God is healing you. 
 

sought to transform lead into gold.In theology, to change the natural disposition and temper of man from a state of enmity to God and his law, into the image of God, or into a disposition and temper conformed to the will of God.Be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind. 

Rom. 12.To change the elements, bread and wine, into the flesh and blood of Christ.Among the mystics, to change the contemplative soul into a divine substance, by which it is lost or swallowed up in the divine nature.In algebra, to change an equation into another of a different form, but of equal value.


TRANSFORM',  To be changed in form; to be metamorphosed.His hair transforms to down. transformationTRANSFORMATION, n. The act or operation of changing the form or external appearance.Metamorphosis; change of form in insects; as from a caterpillar to a butterfly.Transmutation; the change of one metal into another, as of copper or tin into gold. 

The change of the soul into a divine substance, as among the mystics. 

In theology, a change of heart in man, by which his disposition and temper are conformed to the divine image; a change from enmity to holiness and love.In algebra, the change of an equation into one of a different form, but of equal value. transformed TRANSFORM'ED, 

Changed in form or external appearance; metamorphosed; transmuted; renewed. transforming Changing the form or external appearance; metamorphosing; transmuting; renewing.


Effecting or able to effect a change of form or state; as the transforming power of true religion.

We will become a repicles of Jedus Christ the Son of God becoming in like manner as He is. of, relating to, or proceeding from a root: such as  
(1) of or growing from the root of a plant  
  • radicaltubers
 
(2) growing from the base of a stem, from a rootlike stem, or from a stem that does not rise above the ground  
  • radical leaves
b of, relating to, or constituting a linguistic root c of or relating to a mathematical root d designed to remove the root of a disease or all diseased and potentially diseased tissue 
favoring extreme changes in existing views, habits, conditions, or institutions with something else; with to; as, to conform any thing to a model.More generally, to reduce to a likeness or correspondence in manners, opinions or moral qualities.For whom he did foreknow, he also did predestinate to be conformed to the image of his son. Romans 8.Be not conformed to this world. Romans 7. To make agreeable to; to square with a rule or directory.Demand of them why they conform not themselves to the order of the church?

CONFORM, To comply with or yield to; to live or act according to; as, to conform to the fashion or to custom.To comply with; to obey; as, to conform to the laws of the state.conformable

CONFORMABLE, Correspondent; having the same or similar external form, or shape; like; resembling; as an edifice conformable to a model or draft.Having the same or similar manners, opinions or moral qualities.The Gentiles were not made conformable to the Jews, in that which was to cease at the coming of Christ.Agreeable; suitable; consistent; as, nature is conformable to herself.Compliant; ready to follow directions; submissive; obsequious; peaceable; disposed to obey.I have been to you a true and humble wife, At all time to your will conformable.It is generally followed by to, but good writers have used with. In its etymological sense, that may be conformed, capable of being conformed, it seems not to be used.

CONFORMATION, The manner in which a body is formed; the particular texture or structure of a body, or disposition of the parts which compose it; form; structure; often with relation to some other body, and with adaptation to some purpose or effect.Light of different colors is reflected from bodies, according to their different conformation. Varieties of sound depend on the conformation of the organs.The act of conforming; the act of producing suitableness, or conformity; with to; as the conformation of our hearts and lives to the duties of true religion.In medical science, the particular make or construction of the body peculiar to an individual; as a good or bad conformation. conformed CONFORMED, . Made to resemble; reduced to a likeness of; made agreeable to; suited. conformerCONFORMER, n. One who conforms; one who complies with established forms or doctrines.conformingCONFORMING, ppr. Reducing to a likeness; adapting; complying with.conformity

CONFORMITY,  Likeness; correspondence with a model in form or manner; resemblance; agreement; congruity with something else; followed by to or with.ship is constructed in conformity to a model, or in conformity with a model.True happiness consists in conformity of life to the divine law.Consistency; agreement.Many instances prove the conformity of the essay with the notions of Hippocrates.In theology, correspondence in manners and principles; compliance with customs.Live no in conformity with the 

integrity or ability of persons, or of the certainty of facts or of evidence; to have confidence in; to trust in; to depend; with on. We rely on the promise 
we rely on the mercy and promises of God.
jointly rely have developed a relationship with God someoneconsidered this together. 

 through meeting and spending time with them; be familiar or friendly with.he knew and respected Laura" to refer to himself or support, and on the strength of his army for success in war; above friend; a prince relies on the affections of his subjects for forming a distinctive or marked part of (the surface of something).a scratch on her arm"physically in contact with and supported by a surface.make sure the lid is on"indicating continuation of a movement or action.

all things, full conviction that satisfies the mind and leaves it at rest, or undisturbed by doubt.Because thou has relied  observation , inquiry, or information.most 
know that  can damage the ozone layer"at are to be taken. o refer to himself or herself.used to connectshall we have a drink?"used in formal contexts for a Royal person, or a man who is known to be upright; we rely on the veracity That which is the ground of confidence, is a certainty physically in contact with and supported by (a surface).on the table was a water 

 LOVE, v.t. luv. L. libeo, lubeo. See Lief. The sense is probably to be prompt, free, willing, from leaning, advancing, or drawing forward.and not relied on the Lord thy God - 2Chron. 16.desire of gratification. We love a friend, on account of some qualities which give us pleasure in his society. We love a man who has done us a favor; in which case, gratitude enters into the composition of our affection. We love our parents and our children, on account of their connection with us, and on account of many qualities which please us. We love to retire to a cool shade in summer. We love a warm room in winter. we love to hear an eloquent advocate. The christian loves his Bible. In short, we love whatever gives us pleasure and delight, whether animal or intellectual; and if our hearts are right, we love God above all things, as the sum of all excellence and all the attributes which can communicate happiness to intelligent beings. In other words, the christian loves God with the love of complacency in his attributes, the love of benevolence towards the interest of his kingdom, and the love of gratitude for favors received.Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind -Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself. Matt. 22.To have benevolence or good will for. John 3.LOVE, n.An affection of the mind excited by beauty and worth of any kind, or by the qualities of an object which communicate pleasure, sensual or intellectual. It is opposed to hatred. Love between the

Love is excited by pleasing qualities of any kind, as by kindness, benevolence, charity, and by the qualities which render social intercourse agreeable. In the latter case, love is ardent friendship, or a strong attachment springing from good will and esteem, and the pleasure derived 


John 4:16

1. 
 words of the same part of speech, clauses, or sentences th.
bread and butter we used by a speakererself and one or more people 



 by a writer or editor, t

know be aware of through 
 



or fidelity of a tried 




or on the king of Syria, 
the love 




In a general sense to be pleased with; to regard with affection, on account of some qualities which excite pleasing sensations or  sexes, is a compound affection, consisting of esteem, benevolence, and animal desire. from the company, civilities and kindness of others.Between certain natural relatives, love seems to be in some cases instinctive. Such is the love of a mother for her child, which manifests itself toward an infant, before any particular qualities in the child are unfolded. This affection is apparently as strong in irrational animals as in human beings.We speak of the love of amusements, the love of books, the love of money, and the love of whatever contributes to our pleasure or supposed profit.The love of God is the first duty of man, and this springs from just views of his attributes or excellencies of character, which afford the highest delight to the sanctified heart. Esteem and reverence constitute ingredients in this affection, and a fear of offending him is its inseparable effect.2. Courtship; chiefly in the phrase, to make love, that is, to court; to woo; to solicit union in marriage.Patriotism; the attachment one has to his native land; as the love of country.Benevolence; good will.God is love. 1John The object beloved.The lover and the love of human kind.6. A word of endearment.Trust me, love.Picturesque representation of love.Such was his form as painters, when they show their utmost art, on naked loves bestow.Lewdness.He is not lolling on a lewd love-bed.A thin silk stuff. Obs.Love in idleness, a kind of violet.Free of love, a plant of the genus Cercis.

God The Supreme Being; Jehovah; the eternal and infinite spirit, the creator,and the sovereign of the universe.God is a spirit; and they that worship him, must worship him in spirit and in truth. John A false god; a heathen deity; an idol.Fear not the gods of the Amorites. Judges 6.A prince; a ruler; a magistrate or judge; an angel. Thou shalt not revile the gods, nor curse the ruler of thy people.

Ex. 22. Ps.97.Gods here is a bad translation. Any person or thing exalted too much in estimation, or deified and honored as the chief good.Whose god is their belly. Phil.3.GOD, v.t. To deify. Not used.


has possess, own, or hold.he had a new car and a boat"experience; undergo us. God is love. 

Whoever the person or people who; any person who.whoever did it hated him"used for emphasis instead of “who” in questions, typically expressing surprise or confusion.

"whoever WHOSOEVER, pron. who, so, and ever. Any one; any person whatever.Whosoever will, let him take of the water of life freely. Revelations 22.would want toJohn 4»John 3:15-17 King James Version (KJV)

15 That whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have eternal life.

16 For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.

17 For God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world; but that the world through him might be saved. lives To abide; to dwell; to have settled residence in any place. Where do you live? I live in London. He lives in Philadelphia. He lives in a large house on Second street. The Swiss live on mountains. The Bedouin Arabs live in the dessert To continue; to be permanent; not to perish.Men's evil manners live in brass; their virtues we write in water.To be animated; to have the vital principle; to have the bodily functions in operation, or in a capacity to operate, as respiration, circulation of blood, secretions, &c.; applied to animals.I am Joseph; doth my father yet live? Gen. 45.To have the principles of vegetable life; to be in a state in which the organs do or may perform their functions in the circulation of sap and in growth; applied to plants. This tree will not live, unless watered; it will not live through the winter.To pass life or time in a particular manner, with regard to habits or condition. In what manner does your son live? Does he live according to the dictates of reason and the precepts of religion?If we act by several broken views, we shall live and die in misery.To continue in life. The way to live long is to be temperate.To live, emphatically; to enjoy life; to be in a state of happiness.What greater curse could envious fortune give, than just to die, when I began to live?To feed; to subsist; to be nourished and supported in life; as, horses live on grass or grain; fowls live on seeds or insects; some kinds of fish live on others; carnivorous animals live on flesh.To subsist; to be maintained in life; to be supported. Many of the clergy are obliged to live on small salaries. All men in health may live by industry with economy, yet some men live by robbery.To remain undestroyed; to float; not to sink or founder. It must be a good ship that lives at sea in a hurricane.Nor can our shaken vessels live at sea.To exist; to have being.As I live, saith the Lord - Ezek. 18. In Scripture, to be exempt from death, temporal or spiritual.Ye shall therefore keep my statutes and judgments, which if a man do, he shall live in them. Lev. 18.To recover from sickness; to have life prolonged.Thy son liveth. John 4.To be inwardly quickened, nourished and actuated by divine influence or faith. Gal. 2.To be greatly refreshed, comforted and animated.For now we live, if ye stand fast in the Lord. 1Thess. 3.To appear as in life or reality; to be manifest in real character.And all the writer lives in every line.To live with, to dwell or to be a lodger with.To cohabit; to have intercourse, as male and female.

LIVE, v.t. liv.To continue in constantly or habitually; as, to live a life of ease To act habitually in conformity to.It is not enough to say prayers, unless they live them too.LIVE, a.Having life; having respiration and other organic functions in operation, or in a capacity to operate; not dead; as a live ox.Having vegetable life; as a live plant.Containing fire; ignited; not extinct; as a live coal.in expressing the situation of something that is or appears to be enclosed or surrounded by something else.living in Deep River"love lives in God, and God in them.1 Corinthians 15:50-55 KJV 

Now at the present time or moment.where are you living now?"this  used to identify a specific person or thing close at hand or being indicated or experienced.I say, 


brethren,  hat 


flesh FLESH, n. I know not the primary sense; it may be soft.A compound substance forming a large part of an animal, consisting of the softer solids, as distinguished from the bones and the fluids. Under the general appellation of flesh, we include the muscles, fat, glands &c., which invest the bones and are covered with the skin. It is sometimes restricted to the muscles.Animal food, in distinction from vegetable.Flesh without being qualified with acids, is too alkalescent a diet.The body of beasts and fowls used as food, distinct from fish. In Lent, the Catholics abstain from flesh, but eat fish.The body, as distinguished from the soul.As if this flesh, which walls about our life,Were brass impregnable.Animal nature; animals of all kinds.The end of all flesh is come before me. Gen. Men in general; mankind.My spirit shall not always strive with man, for that he also is flesh. Gen. 6.Human nature.The word was made flesh, and dwelt among us. John 1.Carnality; corporeal appetites.Fasting serves to mortify the flesh.The flesh lusteth against the spirit. Gal. 5.A carnal state; a state of unrenewed nature.They that are in the flesh cannot please God. Rom. 8.The corruptible body of man, or corrupt nature.Flesh and blood cannot inherit the kingdom of God.

1Cor. 15. 11. The present life; the state of existence in this world.To abide in the flesh is more needful for you. Phil. 1.Legal righteousness, and ceremonial services.What shall we then say that Abraham, our father as pertaining to the flesh, hath found? Rom. 4. Gal. 3.Kindred; stock; family.He is our brother, and our flesh. Gen. 37.In botany, the soft pulpy substance of fruit; also, that part of a root, fruit, &c., which is fit to be eaten.One flesh, denotes intimate relation. To be one flesh is to be closely united, as in marriage. Gen. 2. Eph. 5.After the flesh, according to outward appearances, John 8:according to the common powers of nature. Gal. 4.:Or according to sinful lusts and inclinations. Rom. 8.An arm of flesh, human strength or aid.

FLESH, v.t.1. To initiate; a sportsman's use of the word, from the practice of training hawks and dogs by feeding them with the first game they take or other flesh.To harden; to accustom; to establish in any practice, as dogs by often feeding on any thing. Men fleshed in cruelty; women fleshed in malice.To glut; to satiate.The wild dog Shall flesh his tooth on every innocent.

and blood The fluid which circulates through the arteries and veins of the human body, and of other animals,which is essential to the preservation of life. This fluid is generally red. If the blood of an animal is not red, such animal is called exsanguious, or white-blooded; the blood being white, or white tinged with blue.Kindred; relation by natural descent from a common ancestor; consanguinity. God hath made of one blood, all nations of the earth. Acts 17.Royal lineage; blood royal; as a prince of the blood.Honorable birth; high extraction; as a gentleman of blood.Life.Shall I not require his blood at your hands? 2 Sam.4.Slaughter; murder, or bloodshedding.will avenge the blood of Jezreel upon the house of Jehu. HoseaThe voice of thy brother's blood crieth to me from the ground. Gen.4.Guilt, and punishment.Your blood be upon your own heads. Acts.18.Fleshly nature;; the carnal part of man; as opposed to spiritual nature,or divine life Who were born, not of flesh and blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but of God. John 1.Man, or human wisdom, or reason.Flesh and blood hath not revealed it to thee,but my Father who is in heaven. Matt.16.10. A sacramental symbol of the blood of Christ.This is my blood of the New Testament, which is shed for the remission of sins. Matt.26.The death and sufferings of Christ.Being now justified by his blood, we shall be saved from wrath through him. Rom. 5.3. The price of blood; that which is obtained by shedding blood,and seizing goods.Wo to him that buildeth a town with blood. Hab.2. Acts.1.13. Temper of mind; state of the passions; but in this sense, accompanied with cold or warm, or other qualifying word. Thus to commit an act in cold blood, is to do it deliberately, and without sudden passion. Warm blood denotes a temper inflamed or irritated; to warm or head the blood, is to excite the passions.14. A hot spark; a man of fire or spirit; a rake.15. The juice of any thing, especially if red; as, "the blood of grapes." Gen.49.Whole blood. In law, a kinsman of the whole blood is one who descends from the same couple of ancestors; of the half blood, one who descends from either of them singly, by a second marriage.BLOOD, v.t. To let blood; to bleed by opening a vein.To stain with blood.To enter; to inure to blood; as a hound.To heat the blood; to

cannot to be unable to do otherwise tha
  • we cannot but wonder why
 
  • cannot help feeling sorry for the

inherit  receive (money, property, or a title) as an heir at the death of the previous holder. INHER'IT, v.t. L. hoeres, an heir. See Heir.To take by descent from an ancestor; to take by succession, as the representative of the former possessor; to receive, as a right or title descendible by law from an ancestor at his decease. The heir inherits the lands or real estate of his father; the eldest son of the nobleman inherits his father's title, and the eldest son of a king inherits the crown. To receive by nature from a progenitor. The son inherits the virtues of his father; the daughter inherits the temper of her mother, and children often inherit the constitutional infirmities of their parents.To possess; to enjoy; to take as a possession, by gift or divine appropriation; as, to inherit everlasting life; to inherit the promises.That thou mayest live, and inherit the land which Jehovah thy God giveth thee. Deut. 16.The meek shall inherit the earth. Matt.5.INHER'IT, v.i. To take or have possession or property.Thou shall not inherit in our father's house. Judges 11.

the kingdom KING'DOM, n. king and dom, jurisdiction.The territory or country subject to a king; an undivided territory under the dominion of a king or monarch. The foreign possessions of a king are not usually included in the term kingdom. Thus we speak of the kingdom of England, of France or of Spain, without including the East or West Indies.The inhabitants or population subject to a king. The whole kingdom was alarmed. In natural history, a division; as the animal, vegetable and mineral kingdoms.A region; a tract; the place where any thing prevails and holds sway; as the watery kingdom.In Scripture, the government or universal dominion of God. 1 Chron.29. Ps.145.The power of supreme administration. 1 Sam.18. A princely nation or state.Ye shall be unto me a kingdom of priests. Ex.19.Heaven. Matt.26.State of glory in heaven. Matt.5.The reign of the Messiah. Matt.3. Government; rule; supreme administration.

of God;The Supreme Being; Jehovah; the eternal and infinite spirit, the creator,and the sovereign of the universe.God is a spirit; and they that worship him, must worship him in spirit and in truth. John 4. A false god; a heathen deity; an idol.Fear not the gods of the Amorites. Judges 6. A prince; a ruler; a magistrate or judge; an angel. Thou shalt not revile the gods, nor curse the ruler of thy people.Ex. 22. Ps.97.Gods here is a bad translation.Any person or thing exalted too much in estimation, or deified and honored as the chief good.Whose god is their belly. Phil.3.GOD, v.t. To deify. Not used.

neither not the one nor the other of two people or things; not either.neither side of the brain is dominant over the other"used before the first of two (or occasionally more) alternatives that are being specified (the others being introduced by “nor”) to indicate that they are each untrue or each do not happen."I am neither a liberal nor a conservative"used to introduce a further negative statement.

doth Lay not up for yourselves treasures upon earth, where moth and rust DOTH corrupt, and where thieves break through and steal: But lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust DOTHcorrupt, and where thieves do not break through nor steal. ( Matthew 6:19-20 )

CORRUPTION, The act of corrupting, or state of being corrupt or putrid; the destruction of the natural form of bodies, by the separation of the component parts, or by disorganization, in the process of putrefaction.Thou wilt not suffer thy holy One to see corruption. Psalm 16.Putrid matter; pus.Putrescence; a foul state occasioned by putrefaction.Depravity; wickedness; perversion or deterioration of moral principles; loss of purity or integrity Having escaped the corruption that is in the world through lust. 2 Peter 1 Corruption in elections is the great enemy of freedom.Debasement; taint; or tendency to a worse state.Keep my honor from corruption.Impurity; depravation; debasement; as a corruption of language.Bribery. He obtained his suit by corruption.In law, taint; impurity of blood, in consequence of an act of attainder of treason or felony, by which a person is disabled to inherit lands from an ancestor, nor can retain those in his possession, nor transmit them by descent to his heirs.Corruption of blood can be removed only by act of parliament.inherit incorruption. 


Behold BEHO'LD, v.t. pret. and pp. beheld' L.observo, from servo, to keep.To fix the eyes upon; to see with attention; to observe with care.Behold the lamb of God which taketh away the sin of the world. John 1.In a less intensive sense, to look upon; to see.When he beheld the serpent of brass, he lived. Num. 21.BEHO'LD, v.i. To look; to direct the eyes to an object.And I beheld, and lo, in the midst of the throne, a lamb,as it had been slain. Rev.5.To fix the attention upon an object; to attend; to direct or fix the mind.Behold, 

I stand KJV Dictionary Definition: standSTAND, v.i. pret. and pp. stood. This verb, if from the root of G., is a derivative from the noun, which is formed from the participle of the original verb. In this case, the noun should properly precede the verb. It may be here remarked that if stan is the radical word, stand and L. Sto cannot be from the same stock. But stand in the pret. is stood, and sto forms steti. This induces a suspicion that stan is not the root of stand, but that n is casual. I am inclined however to believe these words to be from different roots. The Russ. Stoyu, to stand, is the L. sto, but it signifies also to be, to exist, being the substantive verb.To be upon the feet, as an animal; not to sit, kneel or lie.The absolution to be pronounced by the priest alone, standing.And the king turned his face about and blessed all the congregation of Israel, and all the congregation of Israel stood. 1 Kings 8.To be erect, supported by the roots, as a tree or other plant. Notwithstanding the violence of the wind, the tree yet stands.To be on its foundation; not to be overthrown or demolished; as, an old castle is yet standing.To be placed or situated; to have a certain position or location. Paris stands on the Seine. London stands on the Thames.To remain upright, in a moral sense; not to fall.To stand or fall, free in thy own arbitrement it lies.To become erect.Mute and amazd, my hair with horror stood.To stop; to halt; not to proceed.I charge thee, stand, and tell thy name.To stop; to be at a stationary point.Say, at what part of nature will they stand?To be in a state of fixedness; hence, to continue; to endure. Our constitution has stood nearly forty years. It is hoped it will stand for ages.Commonwealth by virtue ever stood.To be fixed or steady; not to vacillate. His mind stands unmoved.To be in or to maintain a posture of resistance or defense. Approach with charged bayonets; the enemy will not stand.The king granted the Jews to stand for their life. Esther 8.To be placed with regard to order or rank. Note the letter that stands first in order. Gen. Washington stood highest in public estimation. Christian charity stands first in the rank of gracious affections.To be in particular state; to be, emphatically expressed, that is, to be fixed or set; the primary sense of the substantive verb. How does the value of wheat stand? God stands in no need of our services, but we always stand in need of his aid and his mercy.Accomplish what your signs foreshow; I stand resignd.To continue unchanged or valid; not to fail or become void.No condition of our peace can stand.My mercy will I keep for him, and my covenant shall stand fast with him. Psalm 89.To consist; to have its being and essence.Sacrifices--which stood only in meats and drinks. Hebrews 9.To have a place.This excellent man, who stood not on the advantage-ground before, provoked men of all qualities.To be in any state. Let us see how our matters stand.As things now stand with us--To be in particular respect or relation; as, to stand godfather to one. We ought to act according to the relation we stand in towards each other.To be, with regard to state of mind.Stand in awe, and sin not. Psalm 4.To succeed; to maintain ones ground; not to fail; to be acquitted; to be safe.Readers by whose judgment I would stand or fall--To hold a course at sea; as, to stand from the shore; to stand for the harbor.From the same parts of heavn his navy stands.To have a direction.The wand did not really stand to the metal, when placed under it.To offer ones self as a candidate.He stood to be elected one of the proctors of the university. To place ones self; to be placed.I stood between the Lord and you at that time-- Deuteronomy 5.To stagnate; not to flow.Or the black water of Pomptina stands.To be satisfied or convinced.Though Page be a secure fool, and stand so firmly on his wifes frailty-- To make delay. I cannot stand to examine every particular.To persist; to persevere.Never stand in a lie when thou art accused.To adhere; to abide.Despair would stand to the sword.To be permanent; to endure; not to vanish or fade ; as, the color will stand.To stand by,To be near; to be a spectator; to be present. I stood by when the operation was performed. This phrase generally implies that the person is inactive, or takes no part in what is done. In seamens language, to stand by is to attend and be ready. Stand by the haliards.To be aside; to be placed aside with disregard.In the mean time, we let the commands stand by neglected.To maintain; to defend; to support; not to desert. I will stand by my friend to the last. Let us stand by our country. To stand by the Arundelian marbles, in Pope, is to defend or support their genuineness.To rest on for support; to be supported.This reply standeth by conjecture.To stand for, To offer ones self as a candidate.How many stand for consulships?--Three.To side with; to support; to maintain, or to profess or attempt to maintain. We all stand for freedom, for our rights or claims.To be in the place of; to be the substitute or representative of. A cipher at the left hand of a figure stands for nothing.will not trouble myself, whether these names stand for the same thing, or really include one another.In seamens language, to direct the course towards.To stand from, to direct the course from.To stand one in, to cost. The coat stands him in twenty dollars.To stand in, or stand in for, in seamens language, is to direct a course towards land or a harbor.To stand off,To keep at a distance.Not to comply.To keep at a distance in friendship or social intercourse; to forbear intimacy.We stand off from an acquaintance with God.To appear prominent; to have relief.Picture is best when it standeth off, as if it were carved.To stand off, or off from, in seamens language, is to direct the course from land.To stand off and on, is to sail towards land and then from it.To stand out,To project; to be prominent.Their eyes stand out with fatness. Psalm 73.To persist in opposition or resistance; not to yield or comply; not to give way or recede.His spirit is come in, that so stood out against the holy church.With seamen, to direct the course from land or a harbor.To stand to,To ply; to urge efforts; to persevere.Stand to your tackles, mates, and stretch your oars.To remain fixed in a purpose or opinion.I still stand to it, that this is his sense.To abide by; to adhere; as to a contract, assertion, promise, &c.; as, to stand to an award; to stand to ones word.Not to yield; not to fly; to maintain the ground.Their lives and fortunes were put in safety, whether they stood to it or ran away.To stand to sea, to direct the course from land.stand under, to undergo; to sustain.To stand up,To rise from sitting; to be on the feet.To arise in order to gain notice.Against whom when the accusers stood up, they brought no accusation of such things as I supposed. Acts 25.To make a party.When we stood up about the corn--To stand up for, to defend; to justify; to support, or attempt to support; as, to stand up for the administration.To stand upon,1. To concern; to interest. Does it not stand upon them to examine the grounds of their opinion? This phrase is, I believe, obsolete; but we say, it stands us in hand, that is, it is our concern, it is for our interest.2. To value; to pride.We highly esteem and stand much upon our birth. To insist; as, to stand upon security.To stand with, to be consistent. The faithful servants of God will receive what they pray for, so far as stands with his purposes and glory.It stands with reason that they should be rewarded liberally.To stand together, is used, but the last two phrases are not in very general use, and are perhaps growing obsolete.To stand against, to oppose; to resist.To stand fast, to be fixed; to be unshaken or immovable.To stand in hand, to be important to ones interest; to be necessary or advantageous. It stands us in hand to be on good terms with our neighbors.STAND, v.t.To endure; to sustain; to bear. I cannot stand the cold or the heat.To endure; to resist without yielding or receding.So had I stood the shock of angry fat.He stood the furious foe.To await; to suffer; to abide by.Bid him disband the legions--and stand the judgment of a Roman senate.To stand ones ground, to deep the ground or station one has taken; to maintain ones position; in a literal or figurative sense; as, an army stands its ground, when it is not compelled to retreat. A man stands his ground in an argument, when he is able to maintain it, or is not refuted.To stand it, to bear; to be able to endure; or to maintain ones ground or state; a popular phrase.To stand trial, is to sustain the trial or examination of a cause; not to give up without trial.

STAND, n.A stop; a halt; as, to make a stand; to come to a stand, either in walking or in any progressive business.The horse made a stand, when he charged them and routed them.station; a place or post where one stands; or a place convenient for persons to remain for any purpose. The sellers of fruit have their several stands in the market.I took my stand upon an eminence.Rank; post; station.Father, since your fortune did attain so high a stand, I mean not to descend.In lieu of this, standing is now used. He is a man of high standing in his own country.The act of opposing.We have come off like Romans; neither foolish in our stands, nor cowardly in retire.The highest point; or the ultimate point of progression, where a stop is made, and regressive motion commences. The population of the world will not come to a stand, while the means of subsistence can be obtained. The prosperity of the Roman empire came to a stand in the reign of Augustus; after which it declined.Vice is at stand, and at the highest flow.A young tree, usually reserved when the other trees are cut. English.small table; as a candle-stand; or any frame on which vessels and utensils may be laid.In commerce, a weight of from two hundred and a half to three hundred of pitch.Something on which a thing rests or is laid; as a hay-stand.Stand of arms, in military affairs, a musket with its usual appendages, as a bayonet, cartridge box, &c.To be at a stand, to stop on account of some doubt or difficulty; hence, to be perplexed; to be embarrassed; to hesitate what to determine, or what to do.

at expressing location or arrival in a particular place or position.they live at Conway House"expressing the time when an event takes place.

the door An opening or passage into a house, or other building, or into any room, apartment or closet, by which persons enter. Such a passage is seldom or never called a gate.The frame of boards, or any piece of board or plank that shuts the opening of a house or closes the entrance into an apartment or any inclosure, and usually turning on hinges.In familiar language, a house; often in the plural, doors. My house is the first door from the corner. We have also the phrases, within doors, in the house; without doors, out of the house, abroad.Entrance; as the door of life.Avenue; passage; means of approach or access. An unforgiving temper shuts the door against reconciliation, or the door of reconciliation.I am the door; by me if any man enter in, he shall be saved. John 10.A door was opened to me of the Lord. 

2 Corinthians 2.To lie at the door, in a figurative sense, is to be imputable or chargeable to one. If the thing is wrong, the fault lies at my door.Next door to, near to; bordering on.A riot unpunished is but next door to a tumult.Out of door or doors, quite gone; no more to be found. Not now used.In doors, within the house; at hom

and knock. KNOCK, v.i. nok.To strike or beat with something thick or heavy; as, to knock with a club or with the fist; to knock at the door. We never use this word to express beating with a small stick or whip.To drive or be driven against; to strike against; to clash; as when one heavy body knocks against another.To knock under, to yield; to submit; to acknowledge to be conquered; an expression borrowed from the practice of knocking under the table, when conquered.KNOCK, v.t. nok. To strike; to drive against; as, to knock the head against a post.To strike a door for admittance; to rap.To knock down, to strike down; to fell; to prostrate by a blow or by blows; as, to knock down an ox.To knock out, to force out by a blow or by blows; as, to knock out the brains.To knock up, to arouse by knocking. In popular use, to beat out; to fatigue till unable to do more.To knock off, to force off by beating. At auctions, to assign to a bidder by a blow on the counter.To knock on the head, to kill by a blow or by blows.KNOCK, n. nok. A blow; a stroke with something thick or heavy.A stroke on a door, intended as a request for admittance; a rap.

Rev.3. word wordWORD, n. G., L., to speak. A word is that which is uttered or thrown out.An articulate or vocal sound, or a combination of articulate and vocal sounds, uttered by the human voice, and by custom expressing an idea or ideas; a single component part of human speech or language. 

Thus a in English is a word; but few words consist of one letter only. Most words consist of two or more letters, as go, do, shall, called monosyllables, or of two or more syllables, as honor, goodness, amiable.The letter or letters, written or printed, which represent a sound or combination of sounds.A short discourse.Shall I vouchsafe your worship a word or two?4. Talk; discourse.Why should calamity be full of words?Be thy words severe.Dispute; verbal contention; as, some words grew between us. Language; living speech; oral expression. The message was delivered by word of mouth.Promise. He gave me his word he would pay me.Obey they parents; keep thy word justly.Signal; order; command.Give the word through.Account; tidings; message. Bring me word what is the issue of the contest. Declaration; purpose expressed.I know you brave, and take you at your word. Declaration; affirmation.I desire not the reader should take my word.The Scripture; divine revelation, or any part of it. This is called the word of God. Christ. John 1.A motto; a short sentence; a proverb.A good word, commendation; favorable account.And gave the harmless fellow a good word.In word, in declaration only.Let us not love in word only, neither in tongue; but in deed and in truth. 1 John 3.WORD, v.i. To dispute. Little used.WORD, v.t. To express in words. Take care to word ideas with propriety.The apology of the king is the same, but worded with greater deference to that great prince.



is much used in this manner for exciting attention, or admiration. It is in the imperative mode, expressing command, or exhortation; and by no means a mere exclamation.


I shew you a mystery; MYSTE'RIOUS, a. See Mystery. Obscure; hid from the understanding; not clearly understood. The birth and connections of the man with the iron mask in France are mysterious, and have never been explained. In religion, obscure; secret; not revealed or explained; hidden from human understanding, or unintelligible; beyond human comprehension. Applied to the divine counsels and government, the word often implies something awfully obscure; as, the ways of God are often mysterious.



We used by a speaker to refer to himself or herself and one or more other people considered together.shall we have a drink?"used in formal contexts for or by a royal person, or by a writer or editor, to refer to himself or herself.

shall (in the first person) expressing the future tense.this time next week I shall be in Scotland" expressing a strong assertion or intention.they shall succeed"

not used with an auxiliary verb or “be” to form the negative.he would not say"used as a short substitute for a negative clause.maybe I'll regret it, but I hope not"

all used to refer to the whole quantity or extent of a particular group or thing

sleep   SLEEP, v.i. pret. and pp. slept.To take rest by a suspension of the voluntary exercise of the powers of the body and mind. The proper time to sleep in during the darkness of night. To rest; to be unemployed; to be inactive or motionless; as, the sword sleeps in its sheath.To rest; to lie or be still; not to be noticed or agitated. The question sleeps for the present.To live thoughtlessly. We sleep over our happiness.To be dead; to rest in the grave for a time. I Thess. 4.To be careless, inattentive or unconcerned; not be vigilant.

SLEEP, n. That state of an animal in which the voluntary exertion of his mental and corporeal powers is suspended, and he rests unconscious of what passes around him, and not affected by the ordinary impressions of external objects. Sleep is generally attended with a relaxation of the muscles, but the involuntary motions, as respiration and the circulation of the blood, are continued. The mind is often very active in sleep; but its powers not being under the control of reason, its exercises are very irregular. Sleep is the natural rest or repose intended by the Creator to restore the powers of the body and mind, when exhausted or fatigued condition of body and mind such as that which typically recurs for several hours every night, in which the nervous system is relatively inactive, the eyes closed, the postural muscles relaxed, and consciousness practically suspended. but used to introduce something contrasting with what has already been mentioned.

we used by a speaker to refer to himself or herself and one or more other people considered together.

shall Shall is primarily in the present, and in our mother tongue was followed by a verb in the infinitive, like other verbs. "Ic sceal fram the beon gefullod." I have need to be baptized of thee. "Ic nu sceal singan sar-cwidas." I must now sing mornful songs.We still use shall and should before another verb in the infinitive, without the sign to; but significance of shall is considerably deflected from its primitive sense. It is now treated as a mere auxiliary to other verbs, serving to form some of the tenses. In the present tense, shall, before a verb in the infinitive, forms the future tense; but its force and effect are different with different persons or personal pronouns. Thus in the first person, shall simply foretells or declares what will take place; as, I or we shall ride to town on Monday. This declaration simply informs another of a fact that is to take place. The sense of shall here is changed from an expression of need or duty, to that of previous statement or information, grounded on intention or resolution. When uttered with emphasis, "I shall go," it expresses firm determination, but not a promise.

2. In the second and third persons, shall implies a promise, command or determination. "You shall receive your wages," "he shall receive his wages," imply that you or he ought to receive them; but usage gives these phrases the force of a promise in the person uttering them.When shall is uttered with emphasis in such phrases, it expresses determination in the speaker, and implies an authority to enforce the act. "Do you refuse to go? Does he refuse to go? But you or he shall go."Shall I go, shall he go, interrogatively, asks, for permission or direction. But shall you go, asks for information of another's intention.But after another verb, shall, in the third person, simply foretells. He says that he shall leave town to-morrow. So also in the second person; you say that you shall ride to-morrow.

5. After if, and some verbs which expresscondition or supposition, shall, in all the persons, simply foretells; as,If I shall say, or we shall say,Thou shalt say, ye or you shall say,

all Every one, or the whole number of particulars.The whole quantity, extent, duration, amount, quality, or degree; as, all the wheat; all the land; all the year; all the strength. This word signifies then, the whole or entire thing, or all the parts or particulars which compose it. It always precedes the definitive adjectives, the, my, thy, his, our, your, their; as, all the cattle; all my labor; all thy goods; all his wealth; all our families; all your citizens; all their property.This word, not only in popular language, but in the scriptures, often signifies, indefinitely, a large portion or number, or a great part. Thus, all the cattle in Egypt died; all Judea and all the region round about Jordan; all men held John as a prophet; are not to be understood in a literal sense, but as including a large part or very great numbers.This word is prefixed to many other words, to enlarge their signification; as already, always, all-prevailing.ALL, adv. Wholly; completely; entirely; as all along; all bedewed; all over; my friend is all for amusement; I love my father all. In the ancient phrases, all too dear, all so long, this word retains its appropriate sense; as,"he thought them six-pence all too dear," that is, he thought them too dear by the sum of sixpence. In the sense of although, as, "all were it as the rest," and in the sense of just, or at the moment, as "all as his straying flock he fed," it is obsolete, or restricted to poetry.It is all one is a phrase equivalent to the same thing in effect; that is, it is wholly the same thing.All the better is equivalent to wholly the better; that is, better by the whole difference.ALL, n. The whole number; as, all have not the same disposition; that is, all men.The whole; the entire thing; the aggregate amount; as, our all is at stake.And Laban said, all that thou seest is mine. Gen. 31.This adjective is much used as a noun, and applied to persons or things.All in all is a phrase which signifies, all things to a person, or every thing desired.Thou shalt be all in all, and I in thee, Forever.When the words, and all close an enumeration of particulars, the word all is either intensive, or is added as a general term to express what is not enumerated; as a tree fell, nest, eagles and all.At all is a phrase much used by way of enforcement or emphasis, usually in negative or interrogative sentences. He has no ambition at all; that is, not in the least degree. Has he any property at all?All and some, in Spenser, Mason interprets, one and all. But from Lye's Saxon Dictionary, it appears that the phrase is a corruption of the Sax. ealle at somne, all together, all at once, from somne, together, at once. See Lye under Somne.All in the wind, in seamen's language, is a phrase denoting that the sails are parallel with the course of the wind, so as to shake.All is well is a watchman's phrase, expressing a state of safety.All, in composition, enlarges the meaning, or adds force to a word; and it is generally more emphatical than most. In some instances, all is incorporated into words, as in almighty, already, always; but in most instances, it is an adjective prefixed to other words, but separated by a hyphen.

be exist.there are no easy answers"


changed  To cause to turn or pass from one state to another; to alter, or make different; to vary in external form, or in essence; as, to change the color or shape of a thing; to change the countenance; to change the heart or life.To put one thing in the place of another; to shift; as, to change the clothesBe clean and change your garments. Gen. 35.To quit one thing or state for another; followed by for; as, persons educated in a particular religion do not readily change it for another.To give and take reciprocally; as, will you change conditions with me?To barter; to exchange goods; as, to change a coach for a chariot.To quit, as one place for another; as, to change lodgings.To give one kind of money for another; to alter the form or kind of money, by receiving the value in a different kind, as to change bank notes for silver; or to give pieces of a larger denomination for an equivalent in pieces of smaller denomination, as to change an eagle for dollars, or a sovereign for sixpences, or to change a dollar into cents; or on the other hand, to change dollars for or into eagles, giving money of smaller denomination for larger.To become acid or tainted; to turn from a natural state of sweetness and purity; as, the wine is changed; thunder and lightning are said to change milk.To change a horse, or to change hand, is to turn or bear the horses head from one hand to the other, from the left to the right, or from the right to the left.CHANGE, v.i.To be altered; to undergo variation; as, men sometimes change for the better, often for the worse.I am Jehovah; I change not. Mal. 3.To pass the sun, as the moon in its orbit; as, the moon will change the 14th of this month.CHANGE, n.Any variation or alteration in form, state, quality, or essence; or a passing from one state or form to another; as a change of countenance; a change of habits or principles.A succession of one thing in the place of another; vicissitude; as a change of seasons; a change of objects on a journey; a change of scenes.A revolution; as a change of government.A passing by the sun, and the beginning of a new monthly revolution; as a change of the moon.A different state by removal; novelty; variety.Our fathers did, for change, to France repair.Alteration in the order of ringing bells; variety of sounds.Four bells admit twenty-four changes in ringing.That which makes a variety, or may be substituted for another.Thirty changes of raiment. Judges 14.Small coins of money, which may be given for larger pieces.The balance of money paid beyond the price of goods purchased.I give the clerk a bank note for his cloth, and he gave me the change. The dissolution of the body; death.All the days of my appointed time will I wait, till my change come. Job Change for exchange, a place where merchants and others meet to transact business; a building appropriated for mercantile transactions.In arithmetic, permutation; variation of numbers. Thirteen numbers admit of 6,227, 020, 800 changes, or different positions.


In preposition used to indicate inclusion within space,a place, or limits):

moment,very brief period of time.she was silent for a moment before replying"in the twinkling shining with a gleam that changes from bright to faint.Thinking  harbor lights"of a person's eyes) sparkling, especially with amusement.

of an eye 1.each of a pair of globular organs in the head through which people and vertebrate animals see, the visible part typically appearing almond-shaped in animals with eyelids.my cat is blind in one eye"

at the last coming after all others in time or order; final. they caught the last bus

trump 1. A trumpet; a wind instrument of music; a poetical word used for trumpet. It is seldom used in prose, in common discourse; but is used in Scripture, where it seems peculiarly appropriate to the grandeur of the subject.At the last trump; for the trumpet shall sound, and the dead shall be raised. 1 Cor.15. 1 Thess contracted from triumph. A winning card; one of the suit of cards which takes any of the other suits.An old game with cares.To put to the trumps,

To put on the trumps, to reduce to the last expedient, or to the utmost exertion of power.TRUMP, v.i. To take with a trump card.To obtrude; also, to deceive. Not in use.trump up, to devise; to seek and collect from every quarter., v.i. To blow a trumpet


for the trumpet TRUMP'ET, n.1. A wind instrument of music, used chiefly in war and military exercises. It is very useful also at sea, in speaking with ships. There is a speaking trumpet, and a hearing trumpet. They both consist of long tubular bodies, nearly in the form of a parabolic conoid, with wide mouths.The trumpet's loud clangorExcites us to arms.In the military style, a trumpeter.He wisely desired that a trumpet might be first sent for a pass.One who praises or propagates praise, or is the instrument or propagating it. A great politician was pleased to be the trumpet of his praises.

TRUMP'ET, v.t. To publish by sound of trumpet; also, to proclaim; as, to trumpet good tidings.They did nothing but publish and trumpet all the reproaches they could devise against the Irish.

shall Shall is primarily in the present, and in our mother tongue was followed by a verb in the infinitive, like other verbs. "Ic sceal fram the beon gefullod." I have need to be baptized of thee. "Ic nu sceal singan sar-cwidas." I must now sing mornful songs.We still use shall and should before another verb in the infinitive, without the sign to; but significance of shall is considerably deflected from its primitive sense. It is now treated as a mere auxiliary to other verbs, serving to form some of the tenses. In the present tense, shall, before a verb in the infinitive, forms the future tense; but its force and effect are different with different persons or personal pronouns. Thus in the first person, shall simply foretells or declares what will take place; as, I or we shall ride to town on Monday. This declaration simply informs another of a fact that is to take place. The sense of shall here is changed from an expression of need or duty, to that of previous statement or information, grounded on intention or resolution. When uttered with emphasis, "I shall go," it expresses firm determination, but not a promise.In the second and third persons, shall implies a promise, command or determination. "You shall receive your wages," "he shall receive his wages," imply that you or he ought to receive them; but usage gives these phrases the force of a promise in the person uttering them.When shall is uttered with emphasis in such phrases, it expresses determination in the speaker, and implies an authority to enforce the act. "Do you refuse to go? Does he refuse to go? But you or he shall go."Shall I go, shall he go, interrogatively, asks, for permission or direction. But shall you go, asks for information of another's intention.But after another verb, shall, in the third person, simply foretells. He says that he shall leave town to-morrow. So also in the second person; you say that you shall ride to-morrow.After if, and some verbs which expresscondition or supposition, shall, in all the persons, simply foretells; as,If I shall say, or we shall say,Thou shalt say, ye or you shall say,



sound 1. Entire; unbroken; not shaky, split or defective; as sound timber.Undecayed; whole; perfect, or not defective; as sound fruit; a sound apple or melon.Unbroken; not bruised or defective; not lacerated or decayed; as a sound limb.Not carious; not decaying; as a sound tooth.Not broken or decayed; not defective; as a sound ship.Whole; entire; unhurt; unmutilated; as a sound body.Healthy; not diseased; not being in a morbid state; having all the organs complete and in perfect action; as a sound body; sound health; a sound constitution; a sound man; a sound horse.Founded in truth; firm; strong; valid; solid; that cannot be overthrown or refuted; as sound reasoning; a sound argument; a sound objection; sound doctrine; sound principles.Right; correct; well founded; free form error; orthodox. II Tim 1. Let my heart be sound in thy statutes. Ps. 119.Heavy; laid on with force; as sound strokes; a sound beating.Founded in right and law; legal; valid; not defective; that cannot be overthrown; as a sound title to land; sound justice.Fast; profound; undisturbed; as sound sleep.Perfect, as intellect; not broken or defective; not enfeebled by age or accident; not wild or wandering; not deranged; as a sound mind; a sound understanding or reason.

SOUND, adv. Soundly; heartily. So sound he slept that nought might him awake.SOUND, n. The air bladder of a fish.and the  


shall

Faith Without Works Is Dead

14 What does it profit, my brethren, if someone says he has faith but does not have works? Can faith save him? 15 If a brother or sister is naked and destitute of daily food, 16 and one of you says to them, “Depart in peace, be warmed and filled,” but you do not give them the things which are needed for the body, what does it profit? 17 Thus also faith by itself, if it does not have works, is dead.

18 But someone will say, “You have faith, and I have works.” Show me your faith without [a]your works, and I will show you my faith by [b]my works. 19 You believe that there is one God. You do well. Even the demons believe—and tremble! 20 But do you want to know, O foolish man, that faith without works is [c]dead? 21 Was not Abraham our father justified by works when he offered Isaac his son on the altar? 22 Do you see that faith was working together with his works, and by works faith was made [d]perfect? 23 And the Scripture was fulfilled which says, “Abraham believed God, and it was [e]accounted to him for righteousness.” And he was called the friend of God. 24 You see then that a man is justified by works, and not by faith only.

25 Likewise, was not Rahab the harlot also justified by works when she received the messengers and sent them out another way?

26 For as the body without the spirit is dead, so faith without works is dead also.


be  RAISE, v.t. raze. This word occurs often in the Gothic version of the gospels, Luke 3:8John 6:4044. These verbs appear to be the L. gradior, gressus, without the prefix. L. to go to walk, to pass.To lift; to take up; to heave; to lift from a low or reclining posture; as, to raise a stone or weight; to raise the body in bed.The angel smote Peter on the side and raised him up.Acts 12.To set upright; as, to raise a mast.To set up; to erect; to set on its foundations and put together; as, to raise the frame of a house.To build; as, to raise a city, a fort, a wall, &c.will raise forts against thee. Is. 29. amos 9.To rebuild.They shall raise up the former desolations. Is. 61.To form to some height by accumulation; as, to raise a heap of stones. Josh. 8.To make; to produce; to amass; as, to raise a great estate out of small profits.To enlarge; to amplify.To exalt; to elevate in condition; as, to raise one from a low estate.To exalt; to advance; to promote in rank or honor; as, to raise one to an office of distinction. gentleman came to be raised to great titles.To enhance; to increase; as, to raise the value of coin; to raise the price of goods.To increase in current value.the plate pieces of eight were raised three pence in the piece.To excite; to put in motion or action; as, to raise a tempest or tumult.He commandeth and raiseth the stormy wind. Ps. 107.To excite to sedition, insurrection, war or tumult; to stir up. Act. 14.Aeneas then employs his pains in parts remote to raise the Tuscan swains.To rouse; to awake; to stir up.They shall not awake, not be raised out of their sleep. Job. 14.To increase in strength; to excite from languor or weakness. The pulse is raised by stimulants, sometimes by venesection.To give beginning of importance to; to elevate into reputation; as, to raise a family.To bring into being.God vouchsafes to raise another word for him.To bring from a state of death to life.He was delivered for our offenses, and raised again for our justification. Rom. 4. 1Cor. 15.To call into view from the state of separate spirits; as, to raise a spirit by spells and incantations.To invent and propagate; to originate; to occasion; as, to raise a report or story.To set up; to excite; to begin by loud utterance; as, to raise a shout or cry.To utter loudly; to begin to sound or clamor. He raised his voice against the measures of administration.To utter with more strength or elevation; to swell. Let the speaker raise his voice. To collect; to obtain; to bring into a sum or fund. Government raises money by taxes, excise and imposts. Private persons and companies raise money for their enterprises.To levy; to collect; to bring into service; as, to raise troops; to raise an army.To give rise to.To cause to grow; to procure to be produced, bred or propagated; as, to raise wheat, barley, hops, &c.; to raise horses, oxen or sheep.The English now use grow in regard to crops; as, to grow wheat. This verb intransitive has never been used in New England in a transitive sense, until recently some persons have adopted it from the English books. We always use raise, but in New England it is never applied to the breeding of the human race, as it is in the southern states.To cause to swell, heave and become light; as, to raise dough or paste by yeast or leaven.Miss Liddy can dance a jig and raise paste.To excite; to animate with fresh vigor; as, to raise the spirits or courage.To ordain; to appoint; or to call to and prepare; to furnish with gifts and qualification suited to a purpose; a Scriptural sense.will raise them up a prophet from among their brethren. Deut. 18.For this cause have I raised thee up, to show in thee my power. Ex. 9. Judg. 2.To keep in remembrance. Ruth 4.To cause to exist by propagation. Matt. 22.To incite; to prompt. Ezra 1.35. To increase in intensity or strength; as, to raise the heat of a furnace.In seamen's language, to elevate, as an object by a gradual approach to it; to bring to be seen at a greater angle; opposed to laying; as, to raise the land; to raise a point.To raise a purchase, in seamen's language, is to dispose instruments or machines in such a manner as to exert any mechanical force required.To raise a siege, is to remove a besieging army and relinquish an attempt to take the place by that mode of attack, or to cause the attempt to be relinquished.

INCORRUPT'IBLE, That cannot corrupt or decay; not admitting of corruption. Thus gold, glass, mercury, &c., are incorruptible. Spirits are supposed to be incorruptible.Our bodies shall be changed into incorruptible and immortal substances.That cannot be bribed; inflexibly just and upright.
 

past participle of know.recognized, familiar, or within the scope of knowledge.bivalved crustaceans little k, and we shall   

be  CHANGE, To cause to turn or pass from one state to another; to alter, or make different; to vary in external form, or in essence; as, to change the color or shape of a thing; to change the countenance; to change the heart or life.To put one thing in the place of another; to shift; as, to change the clothesBe clean and change your garments. Gen. 35.To quit one thing or state for another; followed by for; as, persons educated in a particular religion do not readily change it for another.To give and take reciprocally; as, will you change conditions with me?To barter; to exchange goods; as, to change a coach for a chariotTo quit, as one place for another; as, to change lodgings To give one kind of money for another; to alter the form or kind of money, by receiving the value in a different kind, as to change bank notes for silver; or to give pieces of a larger denomination for an equivalent in pieces of smaller denomination, as to change an eagle for dollars, or a sovereign for sixpences, or to change a dollar into cents; or on the other hand, to change dollars for or into eagles, giving money of smaller denomination for larger.To become acid or tainted; to turn from a natural state of sweetness and purity; as, the wine is changed; thunder and lightning are said to change milk.To change a horse, or to change hand, is to turn or bear the horses head from one hand to the other, from the left to the right, or from the right to the left.CHANGE, To be altered; to undergo variation; as, men sometimes change for the better, often for the worseI am Jehovah; I change not. Mal. 3 pass the sun, as the moon in its orbit; as, the moon will change the 14th of this month.

CHANGE, n.1. Any variation or alteration in form, state, quality, or essence; or a passing from one state or form to another; as a change of countenance; a change of habits or principles.succession of one thing in the place of another; vicissitude; as a change of seasons; a change of objects on a journey; a change of scenes.; as a change of government.passing by the sun, and the beginning of a new monthly revolution; as a change of the moon.A different state by removal; novelty; variety.Our fathers did, for change, to France repair.Alteration in the order of ringing bells; variety of soundsFour bells admit twenty-four changes in ringing.That which makes a variety, or may be substituted for another.Thirty changes of raiment. Judges 14.Small coins of money, which may be given for larger pieces.The balance of money paid beyond the price of goods purchased I give the clerk a bank note for his cloth, and he gave me the change.The dissolution of the body; death.All the days of my appointed time will I wait, till my change come. Job 14.Change for exchange, a place where merchants and others meet to transact business; a building appropriated for mercantile transactions.In arithmetic, permutation; variation of numbers. Thirteen numbers admit of 6,227, 020, 800 changes, or different positions.



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