But "show your faith by your works" comes from James 2:18 "Show me thy faith without they works, and I will show thee my faith by my works."
Another involves the idea of thousands and tens of thouseands which come from "Saul hath slain his thousands and David his ten thousands.
President Kennedy, they charge, unnecessarily brought the crisis to the brink of nuclear war in order to appear tough on communism during mid-term elections. They are also quick to point out that the memoirs of those involved in the crisis are all biased accounts that tend to view the President more positively than objectively.
true
It does not appear that Thomas Jefferson had any nieces or nephews. He had a daughter, a son in law and two grandsons. He also had an aunt and a first cousin.
There does not appear to be any evidence available to show any president has the nickname "Long Tom." Thomas Jefferson did have the nickname "Mad Tom." Thomas Jefferson
He painted murals for public buildings and produced illustrations and cover designs for many black publications including The Crisis and Opportunity.
It is not biblical but from a poem by Edward Thomas.
Yes, Gabriel appeared to Joseph in the biblical story.
It doesn't say that. It cannot. The word - biblical - does not appear in the Bible.
Angels appeared to shepherds in the biblical story on the night Jesus was born in Bethlehem.
No, "Felah" is not a biblical name. It does not appear in any major biblical texts as a significant character or figure. It may have different associations or origins outside of biblical contexts.
Pink does not appear in biblical Scripture. As such, it can have no symbolic meaning. It can't represent anything.
Wel since the name Klaas doesnt appear in the bible, nor in Hebrew or Greek, there is no "Biblical" meaning to it.
The term Red Headed Woman does not appear on biblical texts (KJV)
It would appear that Thomas Carlyle did not have any children.
The name Desiree does not appear anywhere in the KJV bible.
No, Theodore is not a biblical name. It is of Greek origin and means "gift of God," but it does not appear in the Bible as a person's name.
No, Yolanda is not biblical but Greek in origin meaning violet flower.