| C. E. B. Cranfield - 2002 - 412 páginas
...conduct' Paul means not just His atoning death but the obedience of His life as a whole, His loving God with all His heart and soul and mind and strength, and His neighbour with complete sincerity, which is the righteous conduct which God's law requires. By 'justification'... | |
| C. E. B. Cranfield - 1985 - 410 páginas
...conduct' Paul means not just His atoning death but the obedience of His life as a whole, His loving God with all His heart and soul and mind and strength, and His neighbour with complete sincerity, which is the righteous conduct which God's law requires. By 'justification'... | |
| Charles Wesley - 1989 - 529 páginas
...enjoyment of them was the end of our creation; for man was created to love God, and to this end alone, even to love the Lord his God with all his heart, and soul and mind, and strength. Love is the very image of God, it is the brightness of his glory. By love, man is not only rendered... | |
| Douglas M. Strong - 1997 - 172 páginas
...of divine knowledge his soul expands and becomes more capacious. With each expansion he still loves God with all his heart and soul, and mind and strength, and consequently his holy love is increased. Each increase of holy love, in its turn, lets in a new flood... | |
| Charles Wesley - 2001 - 422 páginas
...one end of our creation. For to this end was man created, to love God; and to this end alone, even to love the Lord his God with all his heart, and soul, and mind, and strength.32 But love is the very image of God: it is the brightness of his glory.33 By love man is... | |
| John Gill - 2001 - 736 páginas
...as the rule of his obedience, and had power and ability to keep it ; fiar as it was required of him to love the Lord his God with all his heart, and soul, and strength ; so he could, if he would, have performed the same ; and such strength and ability were due... | |
| Charles Grandison Finney - 2003 - 1234 páginas
...could no more than justify himself. It can never be imputed to us. He was bound for himself to love God with all his heart, and soul, and mind, and strength, and his neighbour as himself. He did no more than this. He could do no more. It was naturally impossible, then, for him to obey in... | |
| C. E. B. Cranfield - 2004 - 488 páginas
...SiKauo^a Paul means not just His atoning death but the obedience of His life as a whole. His loving God with all His heart and soul and mind and strength, and His neighbour with complete sincerity, which is the righteous conduct which God's law requires. et$ ftdvTou; dvOpcbnou;... | |
| C. E. B. Cranfield - 1975 - 484 páginas
...SiKaitap-a Paul means not just His atoning death but the obedience of His life as a whole. His loving God with all His heart and soul and mind and strength, and His neighbour with complete sincerity, which is the righteous conduct which God's law requires. el; JiAvreu; 6v6p<S>nouc;... | |
| Simon Blackburn - 2005 - 272 páginas
...question 'Does he 154 love truth?' is, Rorty claims, no more verifiable than 'Is he saved?' or 'Does he love the Lord his God with all his heart and soul and mind?' In the secular West we have lost interest in the last two questions. We have got bored with the theological... | |
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