The actual phrase "There but for the grace of God go I..." means, "I too, like someone seen to have suffered misfortune, might have suffered a similar fate, but for God's mercy." The phrase, when used in prayer, is often concluded with "Thank you, God, for blessing me."
this means that if it weren't for Gods help in any situation or just in your life saving you in general you would be lost or in deep trouble
this means that if it weren't for Gods help in any situation or just in your life saving you in general you would be lost or in deep trouble
Theatre veteran "Noel Coward" coined the phrase in the early 1950's. He wrote a song with the title "Why Must the Show Go On?"
This expression is NOT in the Bible.
Maybe you are remembering it a bit incorrectly? I am familiar with something that sounds similar - "There, but by the grace of God, go I" or "There, but by the grace of God, go you." This means that I would be in this terrible place (or someone else's undesirable situation) if God had not stepped in and changed things to steer me away. You often hear one say this if they learn of someone in a very bad situation. It's giving God the credit for helping keep you safer than you would have been otherwise.
Illuc irem nisi gratiam Dei haberem.
The Polish phrase "go with God" is pronounced as "idź z Bogiem" in Polish, which is pronounced as "idsh z Bo-giem."
That phrase is often quoted as "Let My people go", but that is incomplete. The actual wording is "Let My people go, that they may serve Me (God).
The phrase vios con dios is a popular Spanish saying. The phrase means go with god in the English language.
That phrase is a saying, and doesn't specifically appear in the Bible.
I'm a fun girl who loves God and just love to put my hair down. I go to Stockdale Christian I am writing this for Grace im not actually her but I know her very well.
Not Charles Darwin, but infact a man called Herbert Spencer. Darwin himself merely highlighted Spencer's coinage "Survival of the Fittest" in his edition of the "Evolution of Species", giving specific reference to him, however, it has become a misconception that Darwin himself coined the phrase. However, he did indeed devise the evolutionary theory, and go on his travels around the world looking for fossil records.