Jeremiah 29:13
And unstressed aAs Christian we should not allow ourselves to be subjected to stress. We should allow ourselves to have everyday victory. Their us a saying everyday is not Sunday how if we live in a Sunday mindset it will and can be Sunday.
every day feels like Sunday.
the time following Coming or going after pursuing a lifestyle of change. To follow;in pursuit of being like Jesus. We must or proceed to the route. And the route is walking after Jesus.
He is the way truth and light. Walking in the direction of Christ,
The captain pursued the same course as former navigators have taken. A subsequent legislature pursued the course of their predecessors.To take and proceed in, without following another. Captain Cook pursued a new and unexplored course. New circumstances often compel us to pursue new expedients and untried course. What course shall we pursue? To follow with a view to overtake; to follow with haste; to chase; as, to pursue a hare; to pursue an enemy.To seek; to use measures to obtain; as, to pursue a remedy at law.To prosecute; to continue. A stream proceeds from a lake and pursues a southerly course to the ocean.He that pursueth evil, pursueth it to his own death. Prov.11.To follow as an example; to imitate.The fame of ancient matrons you pursue.To endeavor to attain to; to strive to reach or gain.We happiness pursue; we fly from pain.To follow with enmity; to persecute.This verb is frequently followed by after. Gen.35.PURSUE, v.i. To go on; to proceed; to continue; a Gallicism.I have, pursues Carneades, wondered chimists should not consider-attending; imitating; succeeding in time; resulting from as an effect or an inference; adhering to; obeying, observing; using, practicing; proceeding in the same course.Coming 1. Drawing nearer or nigh; approaching; moving towards; advancing
.Future; yet to come; as, in coming ages. Forward; ready to come.How coming to the poet every muse.
COMING, The act of coming; approach.The state of being come; arrival.The Lord hath blessed thee since my coming. Gen. 30.COMING, Entrance.know thy going-out and thy coming-in.
2 Kings 19.Beginning; commencement; as the coming-in of the year. 2 Kings 13. Income; money received, especially on a regular basis, for work or through investments.he has a nice home and an adequate income"
revenue.venio, to come In a general sense, the annual rents, profits, interest or issues of any species of property, real or personal, belonging to an individual or to the public. When used of individuals, it is equivalent to income.
In modern usage, income is applied more generally to the rents and profits of individuals, and revenue to those of the state. In the latter case, revenue isThe annual produce of taxes, excise, customs, duties, rents,which a nation or state collects and receives into the treasury for public use.Return; reward; as a rich revenue of praise.A fleshy lump on the head of a deer.
after or behind; pursuing; attending; imitating; succeeding in time; resulting from as an effect or an inference; adhering to; obeying, observing; using, practicing; proceeding in the same course.
an event or another period of time. after a while he returned" the time following (an event or another period of time). a homorganit
the expression or the ability to express thoughts and feelings by articulate of a person or a person's words having or showing the ability to speak fluently and coherently.
an articulate account sum stated on paper; a registry of a debt or credit; of debts and credits, or charges; an entry in a book or on paper of things bought or sold, of payments, services including the names of the parties to the transaction, date, and price or value of the thing.
Account signifies a single entry or charge, or a statement of a number of particular debts and credits, in a book or on a separate paper; and in the plural, is used for the books containing such entries.
A computation of debts and credits, or a general statement of particular sums; as, the account stands thus; let him exhibit his account.A computation or mode of reckoning; applied to other things, than money or trade; as the Julian account of time.
Narrative; relation; statement of facts; recital of particular transactions and events, verbal or written; as an account of the revolution in France. Hence,An assignment of reasons; explanation by a recital of particular transactions, given by a person in an employment, or to a superior, often implying responsibility.
Give an account of thy stewardship. Luke, 16.Without responsibility or obligation.He giveth not account of his matters.
Job, 33.Reason or consideration, as a motive; as on all accounts, on every account.Value; importance; estimation; that is, such a state of persons or things, as renders them worthy of more or less estimation; as men of account of him.
Ps. 144.Profit; advantage; that is, a result or production worthy of estimation. To find our account in a pursuit; to turn to account.Regard; behalf; sake; a sense deduced from charges on book; as on account of public affairs.Put that to mine account. Philem. 18.To make account, that is, to have a pervious opinion or expectation, is a sense now obsolete.writ of account, in law, is a writ which the plaintiff brings demanding that the defendant should render his just account, or show good cause to the contrary; call also an action of
account.their experiences"sounds.he was born deaf and without the power of speech sounds)having the same place of articulation, as p, b, and m, which are all bilabial.The nominative: marking typically the subject a person or thing that is being discussed
, described, or dealt with.of a verb especially in languages that have relatively full inflection is Jesus Christ of which God thou is the singular.
But the two words have no radical connection they are connected meaning the one relating to or denoting a case of nouns, pronouns, and adjectives (as in Latin and other inflected languages) used for the subject of a verb of or appointed by nomination as distinct from election.
Ye is now used only in the sacred and solemn style. In common discourse and writing, you is exclusively used.
shall Shall is primarily in the present, and in our mother tongue was followed by a verb in the infinitive, like other verbs. "
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, SEEK, v.t. pret and pp. sought, pronounced sawt. L. sequor, to follow; for to seek is to go after, and the primary sense is to advance, to press, to drive forward, as in the L.
To go in search or quest of; to look for; to search for by going from place to place.The man asked him, saying, what seekest thou? And he said, I seek my brethen.. 37.
To inquire for; to ask for; to solicit; to endeavor to find or gain by any means.The young lions roar after their prey, and seek their meat from God.
Ps. 104.He found no place for repentance, though he sought it carefully with tears. Heb. 12
The heart is deceitful above all things. Every imagination of the thoughts of the heart is evil continually. We read of an honest and good heart, and an evil heart of unbelief, a willing heart, a heavy heart, sorrow of heart, a hard heart, a proud heart, a pure heart. The heart faints in adversity, or under discouragement, that is, courage fails; the heart is deceived, enlarged, reproved, lifted up, fixed, established, moved, &c.By a metonymy, heart is used for an affection or passion, and particularly for love.The king's heart was towards Absalom. 2 Sam. 14.The seat of the understanding; as an understanding heart. We read of men wise in heart, and slow of heart.The seat of the will; hence, secret purposes, intentions or designs. There are many devices in a man's heart. The heart of kings is unsearchable. The Lord tries and searches the heart. David had it in his heart to build a house of rest for the ark.Sometimes heart is used for the will, or determined purpose.The heart of the sons of men is fully set in them to do evil. Eccles.8.Person; character; used with respect to courage or kindess.Cheerly, my hearts. Courage; spirit; as, to take heart; to give heart; to recover heart.Secret thoughts; recesses of the mind.Michal saw king David leaping and dancing before the Lord, and she despised him in her heart. 2 Sam.6.Disposition of mind.He had a heart to do well.Secret meaning; real intention.And then show you the heart of my message.Conscience, or sense of good or ill.Every man's heart and conscience--doth either like or disallow it. Strength; power of producing; vigor; fertility. Keep the land in heart.That the spent earth may gather heart again.The utmost degree.This gay charm--hath beguiled meTo the very heart of loss.To get or learn by heart, to commit to memory; to learn so perfectly as to be able to repeat without a copy.To take to heart, to be much affected; also, to be zealous, ardent or solicitous about a thing; to have concern.To lay to heart, is used nearly in the sense of the foregoing set the heart on, to fix the desires on; to be very desirous of obtaining or keeping; to be very fond of.To set the heart at rest, to make one's self quiet; to be tranquil or easy in mind.find in the heart, to be willing or disposed.I find it in my heart to ask your pardon.For my heart, for tenderness or affection.I could not for my heart refuse his requestthis phrase may signify, for my life; if my life was at stake.I could not get him for my heart to do it.To speak to one's heart,in Scripture, to speak kindly to; to comfort; to encourage.To have in the heart, to purpose; to have design or intention.A hard heart, cruelty; want of sensibility.
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