There is no verse in The Bible that says that. those vows were written by someone who summarized what they thought a christian marriage should be. it became so popular that its now used everywhere
Paul is talking about marriages between Christian and non-Christian partners, at a time when there were few Christians among the Gentiles and these marriages were common.In 1 Corinthians 7:15, "But if the unbelieving depart, let him depart. A brother or a sister is not under bondage in such cases: but God hath called us to peace," he says that if the non-Christian husband or wife wishes to leave the marriage, this should not be resisted. The marriage vows can be broken in such a case, and there should be no ill-feeling.
Ezekiel. See Ezekiel chapter 10.
Yes
to depart = salir salgo = I depart sale = you depart/he departs salimos = we depart salen = they depart/you (more than one) depart
The words depart and remain are antonyms. They have opposite meaning. If you depart, you did not remain. If you remain, you did not depart.
Will depart.
Arrive is an antonym for depart.
No, depart is a verb
We are about to depart Flights A26 and B39. We will depart to Florida soon.
Detest: adore :: depart is to what?
A homophone for depart is "debt." Both words have different meanings and spellings but sound the same when pronounced.
The chairman of the department was very verbose. The government department had a lot of red tape to work through. The hardware department of the store did not have anyone to help customers.