shakespeare
First take the verse into context and decide what the author was talking about. It could mean that we are destend to be gold but we (God and you and i) have to work hard to "burn" away the dross. God bless you.
No apparently it's in America the Beautiful, but i thought it was in the Bible. So please someone look deeper into this. Thanks you are right it is from America the Beautiful. The quote from the will, "May God thy gold refine," comes from: Choose one answer.a. "The Star-Spangled Banner" b. "America the Beautiful" c. "Amazing Grace" d. "God Bless the U.S.A"
Authors may compare themselves to an Omnipotent God to stat that they are better than everyone else.
Shakespeare may have died on his birthday. His wife was eight years older than he was. We have nothing in his handwriting apart from his signature.
shakespeare
the bible
I Cor 3:11
ur moms house
First take the verse into context and decide what the author was talking about. It could mean that we are destend to be gold but we (God and you and i) have to work hard to "burn" away the dross. God bless you.
in the song America the beautiful. Paragraph 3
that is part of the song America the Beautiful!
Theo discovered that the verse "May God thy gold refine" came from the hymn "God of our Fathers" during a church service where the hymn was being sung. He was struck by the meaning of the words and later reflected on them during a moment of introspection.
Jkk
Yes, the quote "May God thy gold refine" is also found in the American patriotic song "God Bless America." The lyrics emphasize the importance of relying on divine guidance and wisdom in times of prosperity and hardship.
No apparently it's in America the Beautiful, but i thought it was in the Bible. So please someone look deeper into this. Thanks you are right it is from America the Beautiful. The quote from the will, "May God thy gold refine," comes from: Choose one answer.a. "The Star-Spangled Banner" b. "America the Beautiful" c. "Amazing Grace" d. "God Bless the U.S.A"
This phrase is from the poem "The Ballad of East and West" by Rudyard Kipling, which is referenced in the book "The Westing Game" by Ellen Raskin. It symbolizes the idea of different people coming together despite their differences and finding common ground.