When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Matthew 5:4 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matthew_5:4

    The word mourn does not refer to mourning for the dead, the most common English use of the term. Most scholars feel mourners should be read as "the oppressed." Schweizer notes that the view that it refers to those mourning their sinfulness is wrong. The theology of the period, and in the Gospel of Matthew, is that sins must be hated, not mourned.

  3. 35 Bible Verses About Grief to Help You Mourn the Loss of a ...

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/35-bible-verses-grief-help...

    These Bible verses for a grieving heart can provide comfort and strength to help you, a family member, or a friend mourn and cope with the death of a loved one.

  4. Matthew 9:15 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matthew_9:15

    The completion of his marriage is spoken of in Rev 19:7, with "the endless marriage-feast of the Lamb." The word "mourn" is said to mean "fast" by Lapide. The sense he gives is that, "at a wedding, modest banquets are becoming, fasting is unbecoming." However, when Christ dies then his disciples will mourn and fast.

  5. Matthew 5:5 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matthew_5:5

    Augustine: Let the unyielding then wrangle and quarrel about earthly and temporal things, the meek are blessed, for they shall inherit the earth, and not be rooted out of it; that earth of which it is said in the Psalms, Thy lot is in the land of the living, (Ps. 142:5.) meaning the fixedness of a perpetual inheritance, in which the soul that ...

  6. Matthew 5:3 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matthew_5:3

    This verse opens the first of nine statements of who is blessed. Each, except for the last, follows the same pattern of naming a group of people and the reward they will receive. Hans Dieter Betz notes that in Jesus' time blessed was a common way of describing someone who is wealthy.

  7. Matthew 5:8 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matthew_5:8

    The Greek word makarios cannot adequately be rendered as "blessed" nor "happy", as it is rather 'a term of congratulation and recommendation', [3] that can also mean "satisfied" (as in Psalm 1:1). [4] The word purity is not believed to refer to one who was ritually cleansed, but rather to internal spiritual purity as noted by the "in heart ...

  8. Matthew 5:6 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matthew_5:6

    Albright and Mann note that fasting was a common sign of righteousness, and one that Jesus has already endured at Matthew 4:2.The metaphor of God or the messiah as a feast ending a fast occurs several times in the scripture including Isaiah 55:1, Jeremiah 31:25, and Psalm 107:9.

  9. Matthew 5:10 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Matthew_5:10

    As with 5:3 this verse cites the Kingdom of Heaven as the reward, also like that first verse the reward is in the present tense, the other six have it in the future. Kodjak believes that this parallelism with the first verse is to emphasize that this one is the conclusion of the Beatitudes and 5:11-12 should not be considered part of the group. [1]