The Holy See
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Alphabetical    [«  »]
hukkok 1
hul 2
huldah 2
human 434
human-headed 1
humane 1
humanity 60
Frequency    [«  »]
436 might
435 coming
435 letter
434 human
434 rest
434 toward
432 38
New American Bible

2002 11 11
IntraText - Concordances
human
                                                                        bold = Main text
    Part, Book  Chapter:Verse                                           grey = Comment text
1 PreNAB | matter and the limitations of human knowledge permit" (A. G. 2 PreNAB | effected, with or without human cunning. The magnificent 3 PreNAB | Genesis 1:1; 2:4), of the human race, and, in particular, 4 Pent | effected, with or without human cunning. The magnificent 5 Pent, Gen 8: 21(3) | from the beginning of the human race or from the early years 6 Pent, Gen 9: 5 | demand an accounting for human life. ~ 7 Pent, Gen 16: 7(2) | manifestation of God in human form; therefore in Genesis 8 Pent, Gen 32: 25(2) | messenger of the Lord in human form, as is clear from Genesis 9 Pent, Gen 32: 29 | contended with divine and human beings and have prevailed." ~ 10 Pent, Gen 42: 9(1) | weakness of the land, like human nakedness, should not be 11 Pent, Exo 3: 8(4) | extraordinary divine intervention in human affairs. Cf Genesis 11:5, 7. 12 Pent, Lev 5: 3 | aware of it, touches some human uncleanness, whatever kind 13 Pent, Lev 7: 21 | whether the uncleanness be of human or of animal origin or from 14 Pent, Lev 13: 47(5) | fungus growth resembling human leprosy. ~ 15 Pent, Lev 14: 54 | the law for every kind of human leprosy and scall, ~ 16 Pent, Lev 24: 17 | Whoever takes the life of any human being shall be put to death; ~ 17 Pent, Lev 27: 28 | the LORD, whether it is a human being or an animal or a 18 Pent, Lev 27: 29 | 29 ~3 All human beings that are doomed lose 19 Pent, Lev 27: 29(3) | 29] All human beings that are doomed: 20 Pent, Num 9: 6 | were unclean because of a human corpse and so could not 21 Pent, Num 19: 11 | touches the dead body of any human being shall be unclean for 22 Pent, Num 19: 16 | naturally, or who touches a human bone or a grave, shall be 23 Pent, Num 23: 19 | should speak falsely, nor human, that he should change his 24 Pent, Num 31: 26 | houses, count up all the human captives and the beasts 25 Pent, Deu 5: 9(1) | because of the solidarity of human society, the good or evil 26 Pent, Deu 18: 10(1) | note on Lev 18:21. Such human sacrifices are classed here 27 Pent, Deu 21: 4(2) | thereby the removal of the human blood from the soil. This 28 Pent, Deu 21: 6(3) | one's own innocence when human blood is unjustly shed; 29 Pent, Jos 24: 19(4) | be ever vigilant against human weakness.~ 30 Pent, Jud 11: 30(2) | implies that Jephthah vowed a human sacrifice, according to 31 Pent, Jud 13: 18(2) | incomprehensible, above human understanding. Hence, the 32 His, 1Sam 14: 15 | that the panic was beyond human endurance. ~ 33 His, 1Sam 28: 12(1) | 12] Human beings cannot communicate 34 His, 2Sam 7: 14 | the rod of men and with human chastisements; ~ 35 His, 1Kin 13: 2 | upon you, and he shall burn human bones upon you.'" ~ 36 His, 2Kin 7: 10 | no one was there - not a human voice, only the horses and 37 His, 2Kin 19: 18 | not gods, but the work of human hands, wood and stone. ~ 38 His, 2Kin 23: 14 | where they had been with human bones. ~ 39 His, 2Kin 23: 20 | the shrines, and burned human bones upon them. Then he 40 His, 2Chr 32: 19 | of the earth, a work of human hands. ~ 41 His, Tob 8: 6 | and from these two the human race descended. You said, ' 42 His, Jdt 8: 12 | yourselves in the place of God in human affairs? ~ 43 His, Jdt 8: 14 | plumb the depths of the human heart or grasp the workings 44 His, Jdt 8: 14 | grasp the workings of the human mind; how then can you fathom 45 His, Jdt 8: 16 | be moved by threats, nor human, that he may be given an 46 His, 2Mac 7: 28 | and in the same way the human race came into existence. ~ 47 WisdB | aphoristic style, the results of human experience as an aid toward 48 WisdB | suffering, of good and evil in human conduct, of death, and the 49 WisdB | examines a wide range of human experience only to conclude 50 WisdB | latter remained profoundly human, universal, fundamentally 51 WisdB | crystalize the problems of human life and destiny, thus preparing 52 WisdB, Job 31: 33 | 33 ~6 Had I, out of human weakness, hidden my sins 53 WisdB, Job 35: 8 | your justice only a fellow human being. ~ 54 WisdB, Job 42: 16(7) | double the expected span of human life; cf Psalm 90:10.~ 55 WisdB, Psa 6: 5(4) | affectionate fidelity to human beings, which is rooted 56 WisdB, Psa 6: 5(4) | rooted in divine and not human integrity.~ 57 WisdB, Psa 6: 6(5) | insubstantial souls of dead human beings dwelt. It was similar 58 WisdB, Psa 8: 1(1) | first by the smallness of human beings in creation (Psalm 59 WisdB, Psa 8: 5(4) | son of man (in sense of a human being, Hebrew 'adam)." The 60 WisdB, Psa 8: 5(4) | fragility and mortality of human beings to whom God has given 61 WisdB, Psa 8: 6(5) | seems to be that God created human beings almost at the level 62 WisdB, Psa 12: 2 | faithful have vanished from the human race ~ 63 WisdB, Psa 14: 2 | down from heaven upon the human race, To see if even one 64 WisdB, Psa 19: 1(1) | s wisdom is available to human beings in the law (Psalm 65 WisdB, Psa 21: 11 | their offspring from the human race. ~ 66 WisdB, Psa 22: 7 | But I am a worm, hardly human, scorned by everyone, despised 67 WisdB, Psa 22: 7(3) | 7] I am a worm, hardly human: the psalmist's sense of 68 WisdB, Psa 29: 9(6) | the king of the divine and human world.~ 69 WisdB, Psa 33: 1(1) | the earth (Psalm 33:6-9). Human words, in contrast, effect 70 WisdB, Psa 33: 1(1) | 10-11). The greatness of human beings consists in God's 71 WisdB, Psa 33: 13 | down and observes the whole human race, ~ 72 WisdB, Psa 40: 4(2) | Giving thanks is not purely a human response but is itself a 73 WisdB, Psa 45: 7(2) | called "god," i.e., more than human, representing God to the 74 WisdB, Psa 53: 3 | down from heaven upon the human race, To see if even one 75 WisdB, Psa 57: 5 | midst of lions hungry for human prey. Their teeth are spears 76 WisdB, Psa 58: 1(1) | popularly imagined to control human destinies (Psalm 58:2-3), 77 WisdB, Psa 58: 1(1) | then "the wicked," the human instruments of these forces ( 78 WisdB, Psa 58: 2(3) | injustice, permitting the human judges under their patronage 79 WisdB, Psa 59: 1(1) | that God's just rule over human affairs be recognized now.~ 80 WisdB, Psa 60: 1(1) | awareness of God's power and human limitation. ~ 81 WisdB, Psa 60: 13 | against the foe; worthless is human help. ~ 82 WisdB, Psa 68: 12(5) | source of Israel's success; human effort is not important.~ 83 WisdB, Psa 72: 2(1) | whole world. The king is human, giving only what he has 84 WisdB, Psa 81: 6(4) | authoritative and unlike merely human words (cf Numbers 24:4, 85 WisdB, Psa 90: 1(1) | eternity with the brevity of human life (Psalm 90:2-6) and 86 WisdB, Psa 90: 1(1) | Psalm 90:2-6) and sees in human suffering the punishment 87 WisdB, Psa 93: 1(1) | making it impossible for the human community to live. Sea, 88 WisdB, Psa 94: 11 | 11 ~The LORD does know human plans; they are only puffs 89 WisdB, Psa 99: 1(2) | composite beings with animal and human features, common in ancient 90 WisdB, Psa 103: 1(1) | well aware of the people's human fragility (Psalm 103:14- 91 WisdB, Psa 108: 13 | against the foe; worthless is human help. ~ 92 WisdB, Psa 109: 6(2) | God. Here the accuser is human.~ 93 WisdB, Psa 115: 4 | silver and gold, the work of human hands. ~ 94 WisdB, Psa 118: 22(3) | what is insignificant to human beings has become great 95 WisdB, Psa 119: 1(1) | word directing and guiding human life. The poem is an acrostic; 96 WisdB, Psa 119: 134 | 134 ~Free me from human oppression, that I may keep 97 WisdB, Psa 124: 1(1) | heightens the malice of human enemies by linking them 98 WisdB, Psa 127: 1(1) | families. The prosperity of human groups is not the work of 99 WisdB, Psa 135: 8 | down Egypt's firstborn, human and beast alike, ~ 100 WisdB, Psa 135: 15 | silver and gold, the work of human hands. ~ 101 WisdB, Psa 136: 1(1) | earth as the environment for human community, and then creates 102 WisdB, Psa 144: 1(1) | humble acknowledgment of human nothingness and a supplication 103 WisdB, Psa 144: 3 | mortals that you notice them; human beings, that you take thought 104 WisdB, Psa 145: 1(1) | make God present and invite human praise (Psalm 145:4-7); 105 WisdB, Pro Int | covers a wide field of human and divine activity, ranging 106 WisdB, Pro 8: 1(1) | her salutary influence in human society (Proverb 8:12-21), 107 WisdB, Pro 20: 5 | 5 ~The intention in the human heart is like water far 108 WisdB, Pro 25: 20 | wood, sorrow gnaws at the human heart. ~ 109 WisdB, Pro 27: 19 | from another, so does one human heart from another. ~ 110 WisdB, Pro 28: 17 | Though a man burdened with human blood were to flee to the 111 WisdB, Pro 30: 2 | of men, and have not even human intelligence; ~ 112 WisdB, Pro 30: 18(5) | marvelous procreation of human life, excite great wonderment.~ 113 WisdB, Ecc Int | the purpose and value of human life. While admitting the 114 WisdB, Ecc Int | then, is an enigma beyond human ability to solve.~While 115 WisdB, Ecc 2: 8 | and female singers and all human luxuries. ~ 116 WisdB, Ecc 11: 5 | breath of life fashions the human frame in the mother's womb, 117 WisdB, Son Int | relationship in terms of human love, the author simply 118 WisdB, Son Int | inspired portrayal of ideal human love. Here we would have 119 WisdB, Son 8: 6(2) | Stern . . . relentless: in human experience, death and the 120 WisdB, Wisd 8: 19(4) | harmonious development of the human person, he then reverses 121 WisdB, Wisd 12: 5 | 5 ~1 a cannibal feast of human flesh and of blood, from 122 WisdB, Wisd 13: 10 | termed gods things made by human hands: Gold and silver, 123 WisdB, Sir 1: 1(2) | God's law; sometimes it is human. But the author makes clear 124 WisdB, Sir 1: 1(2) | author makes clear that even human wisdom, properly understood, 125 WisdB, Sir 3: 22 | when shown things beyond human understanding. ~ 126 WisdB, Sir 4: 20(3) | and justice, namely evil, human respect (Sirach 4:20, 21), 127 WisdB, Sir 7: 1(1) | 5, 15-17), ambition and human respect (Sirach 7:4, 6), 128 WisdB, Sir 18: 1(1) | boundless and surpasses all human compassion (Sirach 18:6- 129 WisdB, Sir 20: 17(5) | repulsive (Sirach 20:17-19); human respect exposes one to intimidation, 130 WisdB, Sir 25: 23(4) | in woman: Eve, the first human being to sin, induced Adam 131 WisdB, Sir 26: 18(5) | signaling for battle: Any human being who answers that challenge 132 WisdB, Sir 30: 17(3) | illness: the true value of human suffering was revealed through 133 WisdB, Sir 33: 30 | But never lord it over any human being, and do nothing unjust. ~ 134 WisdB, Sir 39: 26 | Chief of all needs for human life are water and fire, 135 WisdB, Sir 40: 28(5) | considered degrading to human dignity; it was agreeable 136 WisdB, Sir 41: 1(1) | Sirach 41:1-4). As the human body passes away (Sirach 137 WisdB, Sir 42: 1 | ashamed, lest you sin through human respect: ~ 138 WisdB, Sir 50: 27(6) | wisdom as applying to all of human life, integrating it under 139 ProphB, Isa Int | gained a new awareness of human pettiness and sinfulness. 140 ProphB, Isa 2: 17 | 17 ~Human pride will be abased, the 141 ProphB, Isa 28: 15(5) | place: this confidence in human aid proves to be false and 142 ProphB, Isa 37: 19 | not gods but the work of human hands, wood and stone. ~ 143 ProphB, Isa 51: 12 | fear mortal man, who is human only, to be looked upon 144 ProphB, Jer 1: 6(4) | God will supply for his human defects (cf Jeremiah 1:7, 8).~ 145 ProphB, Jer 17: 5 | is the man who trusts in human beings, who seeks his strength 146 ProphB, Jer 17: 9 | tortuous than all else is the human heart, beyond remedy; who 147 ProphB, Jer 32: 35(7) | Molech: the god to whom human sacrifice was offered in 148 ProphB, Jer 49: 33 | Where no man lives, no human being stays. ~ 149 ProphB, Jer 50: 40 | man shall dwell there, no human being shall tarry there. ~ 150 ProphB, Bar 6: 13 | has a scepter, like the human ruler of a district; but 151 ProphB, Bar 6: 50 | that they are not gods, but human handiwork; and that God' 152 ProphB, Eze 1: 5 | like this: their form was human, ~ 153 ProphB, Eze 1: 8 | 8 ~Human hands were under their wings, 154 ProphB, Eze 1: 26(7) | a man: God appearing in human form (Ezekiel 1:28); cf 155 ProphB, Eze 2: 1(1) | separation of the divine and the human. ~ 156 ProphB, Eze 4: 12 | bake barley loaves over human excrement in their sight, 157 ProphB, Eze 4: 15 | you cow's dung in place of human excrement; bake your bread 158 ProphB, Eze 10: 21 | four wings; something like human hands were under their wings. ~ 159 ProphB, Eze 10: 8 | 8 ~(Something like human hands could be seen under 160 ProphB, Eze 16: 20(4) | 20-21] Human sacrifice was introduced 161 ProphB, Eze 39: 15 | through, should they see a human bone, let them put up a 162 ProphB, Dan 4: 13 | mind be changed from the human; let him be given the sense 163 ProphB, Dan 5: 5 | lampstand, the fingers of a human hand appeared, writing on 164 ProphB, Dan 7: 4 | like a man, and given a human mind. ~ 165 ProphB, Dan 7: 4(3) | feet like a man . . . a human mind: contrasts with what 166 ProphB, Dan 7: 13(8) | earth is represented in human form (Daniel 7:18). Just 167 ProphB, Dan 8: 16 | and on the Ulai I heard a human voice that cried out, "Gabriel, 168 ProphB, Dan 10: 13(5) | angels to various groups of human society, often as little 169 ProphB, Hos 1: 7(5) | of the Lord, who needs no human agents to fulfill his will. 170 ProphB, Hos 11: 4 | 4 ~2 I drew them with human cords, with bands of love; 171 ProphB, Amo Int | men. The perversity of the human will may retard, but it 172 ProphB, Amo 5: 18(3) | special intervention in human affairs. Through it his 173 ProphB, Mic 6: 7(3) | the abominable practice of human sacrifice had been introduced 174 ProphB, Mic 7: 5(1) | the breakdown of normal human and family relations. ~ 175 Gosp, Mat Int | given such authority to human beings" (Matthew 9:8). The 176 Gosp, Mat Int | prerogative of Jesus alone but of "human beings," that is, of the 177 Gosp, Mat 1: 20(9) | in communication with a human being. In a dream: see Matthew 178 Gosp, Mat 2: 1(2) | regarded as having more than human knowledge. Matthew's magi 179 Gosp, Mat 3: 2(3) | fullness it includes not only human obedience to God's word, 180 Gosp, Mat 3: 14(11)| for the salvation of the human race. This involves Jesus' 181 Gosp, Mat 5: 37(24)| a sinful weakness of the human race, namely, the tendency 182 Gosp, Mat 6: 9(6) | reverence done to God by human praise and by obedience 183 Gosp, Mat 6: 10(7) | toward divine rather than human action in the petitions 184 Gosp, Mat 6: 14(11)| Principles of Holy Law." Human action now will be met by 185 Gosp, Mat 6: 25(16)| not deny the reality of human needs (Matthew 6:32), but 186 Gosp, Mat 8: 29(22)| allowed by God to afflict human beings until the time of 187 Gosp, Mat 9: 8 | given such authority to human beings. ~ 188 Gosp, Mat 9: 8(4) | given such authority to human beings: a significant difference 189 Gosp, Mat 9: 8(4) | Matthew's extension to human beings of the authority 190 Gosp, Mat 13: 11(4) | to God. The question of human responsibility for the obtuseness 191 Gosp, Mat 15: 9 | me, teaching as doctrines human precepts.'" ~ 192 Gosp, Mat 16: 17(12)| a Semitic expression for human beings, especially in their 193 Gosp, Mat 16: 17(12)| of as coming not through human means but through a revelation 194 Gosp, Mat 16: 23 | not as God does, but as human beings do." ~ 195 Gosp, Mat 18: 10(9) | who present the prayers of human beings to God, see Tobit 196 Gosp, Mat 19: 4(5) | of the Creator in making human beings male and female ( 197 Gosp, Mat 19: 4(5) | not be separated by any human being. (The NAB translation 198 Gosp, Mat 19: 6 | has joined together, no human being must separate." ~ 199 Gosp, Mat 19: 9(7) | 9] Moses' concession to human sinfulness (the hardness 200 Gosp, Mat 19: 23(17)| that cannot be overcome by human power. The comparison with 201 Gosp, Mat 19: 26 | looked at them and said, "For human beings this is impossible, 202 Gosp, Mat 20: 20(8) | for the deliverance of the human race from sin.~ 203 Gosp, Mat 21: 25 | Was it of heavenly or of human origin?" They discussed 204 Gosp, Mat 21: 26 | 26 ~21 But if we say, 'Of human origin,' we fear the crowd, 205 Gosp, Mat 22: 31(18)| that conception; for it human immortality was connected 206 Gosp, Mat 23: 13 | kingdom of heaven 8 before human beings. You do not enter 207 Gosp, Mat 24: 34(20)| history, much less the entire human race. Perhaps for Matthew 208 Gosp, Mat 26: 15(8) | 22; 20:18; 26:2) and the human malice that hands him over. 209 Gosp, Mar Int | of God now breaking into human life as good news (Mark 210 Gosp, Mar Int | reign is now breaking into human life with its reversal of 211 Gosp, Mar Int | life with its reversal of human values. There is a related 212 Gosp, Mar Int | to events with authentic human emotion: pity (Mark 1:44), 213 Gosp, Mar 4: 26(6) | to grow of itself without human intervention (Mark 4:27). 214 Gosp, Mar 7: 5(3) | of detailed, unwritten, human laws regarded by the scribes 215 Gosp, Mar 7: 7 | me, teaching as doctrines human precepts.' ~ 216 Gosp, Mar 7: 8 | commandment but cling to human tradition." ~ 217 Gosp, Mar 8: 11(3) | that a sign originating in human demand will not be provided; 218 Gosp, Mar 8: 31(7) | They are represented by a human figure that contrasts with 219 Gosp, Mar 8: 31(7) | expression means simply a human being, or, indefinitely, 220 Gosp, Mar 8: 31(7) | himself in that way, "a human being," and the later church' 221 Gosp, Mar 8: 33 | not as God does, but as human beings do." ~ 222 Gosp, Mar 10: 2(1) | the beginning concerning human marriage (Mark 10:6-8). 223 Gosp, Mar 10: 2(1) | has joined together, no human being must separate (Mark 224 Gosp, Mar 10: 9 | has joined together, no human being must separate." ~ 225 Gosp, Mar 10: 23(4) | Achievement of salvation is beyond human capability and depends solely 226 Gosp, Mar 10: 27 | looked at them and said, "For human beings it is impossible, 227 Gosp, Mar 10: 38(5) | for the salvation of the human race; cf Luke 12:50. The 228 Gosp, Mar 10: 42(6) | death for the sins of the human race (Mark 10:45); cf Mark 229 Gosp, Mar 11: 30 | baptism of heavenly or of human origin? Answer me." ~ 230 Gosp, Mar 11: 32 | 32 ~But shall we say, 'Of human origin'?" - they feared 231 Gosp, Mar 14: 36(12)| obedient surrender of the human will of Jesus to the divine 232 Gosp, Luk Int | history. God's divine plan for human salvation was accomplished 233 Gosp, Luk Int | moreover, is a part of human history. Luke relates the 234 Gosp, Luk 1: 46(16)| s favor; the reversal of human fortunes; the fulfillment 235 Gosp, Luk 6: 1(1) | Jesus argues that satisfying human needs such as hunger and 236 Gosp, Luk 11: 44(11)| contact with the dead or with human bones or graves (see Numbers 237 Gosp, Luk 16: 15 | your hearts; for what is of human esteem is an abomination 238 Gosp, Luk 18: 2 | feared God nor respected any human being. ~ 239 Gosp, Luk 18: 4 | fear God nor respect any human being, ~ 240 Gosp, Luk 18: 27 | What is impossible for human beings is possible for God." ~ 241 Gosp, Luk 20: 4 | baptism of heavenly or of human origin?" ~ 242 Gosp, Luk 20: 6 | 6 ~But if we say, 'Of human origin,' then all the people 243 Gosp, Joh 1: 4 | life was the light of the human race; ~ 244 Gosp, Joh 1: 13 | natural generation nor by human choice nor by a man's decision 245 Gosp, Joh 2: 1(1) | signify: God's intervention in human history in a new way through 246 Gosp, Joh 2: 25 | anyone to testify about human nature. He himself understood 247 Gosp, Joh 4: 11(7) | respectful mode of address for a human being or a deity; cf John 248 Gosp, Joh 5: 34 | accept testimony from a human being, but I say this so 249 Gosp, Joh 5: 41 | 41 ~"I do not accept human praise; 15 ~ 250 Gosp, Joh 6: 54(19)| classical Greek verb used of human eating, but that of animal 251 Gosp, Joh 12: 43 | 43 ~For they preferred human praise to the glory of God. ~ 252 Gosp, Act 1: 7(5) | parousia is not revealed to human beings; cf Mark 13:32; 1 253 Gosp, Act 3: 1(1) | be abandoned to satisfy human objections, the court nevertheless 254 Gosp, Act 4: 12 | under heaven given to the human race by which we are to 255 Gosp, Act 5: 4 | deed? You have lied not to human beings, but to God." ~ 256 Gosp, Act 5: 38 | endeavor or this activity is of human origin, it will destroy 257 Gosp, Act 7: 48 | dwell in houses made by human hands. As the prophet says: ~ 258 Gosp, Act 10: 26 | Get up. I myself am also a human being." ~ 259 Gosp, Act 14: 8(1) | appearance of gods among human beings leads the people 260 Gosp, Act 14: 11 | have come down to us in human form." ~ 261 Gosp, Act 14: 15 | the same nature as you, human beings. We proclaim to you 262 Gosp, Act 17: 22(6) | to find God is a constant human endeavor. It declares, further, 263 Gosp, Act 17: 22(6) | God is the judge of the human race, that the time of the 264 Gosp, Act 17: 24 | dwell in sanctuaries made by human hands, ~ 265 Gosp, Act 17: 25 | 25 ~nor is he served by human hands because he needs anything. 266 Gosp, Act 17: 26 | made from one 8 the whole human race to dwell on the entire 267 Gosp, Act 17: 29 | gold, silver, or stone by human art and imagination. ~ 268 NTLet, Rom Int | religious system to which a human culture is heir. Romans 269 NTLet, Rom 1: 18(14)| of God: God's reaction to human sinfulness, an Old Testament 270 NTLet, Rom 2: 1(1) | 3:1-8). With the entire human race now declared guilty 271 NTLet, Rom 2: 9 | distress will come upon every human being who does evil, Jew 272 NTLet, Rom 2: 29 | his praise is not from human beings but from God. ~ ~ ~ 273 NTLet, Rom 3: 4 | must be true, though every human being is a liar, 2 as it 274 NTLet, Rom 3: 4(2) | 4] Though every human being is a liar: these words 275 NTLet, Rom 3: 9(3) | These texts show that all human beings share the common 276 NTLet, Rom 3: 20 | 20 ~since no human being will be justified 277 NTLet, Rom 3: 20(5) | 20] No human being will be justified 278 NTLet, Rom 3: 20(5) | person," Paul substitutes "no human being" (literally "no flesh," 279 NTLet, Rom 3: 21(6) | because of any merit in human beings but through forgiveness 280 NTLet, Rom 3: 21(6) | inaugurates a new era in human history.~ 281 NTLet, Rom 5: 1(1) | of pardon to the entire human race. Through faith one 282 NTLet, Rom 6: 19 | 19 ~I am speaking in human terms because of the weakness 283 NTLet, Rom 7: 7(3) | not exist in law but in human beings, whose sinful inclinations 284 NTLet, Rom 9: 19(8) | analysis a manifestation of human insolence, and his "answer" 285 NTLet, Rom 9: 20 | But who indeed are you, a human being, to talk back to God? 286 NTLet, Rom 11: 33(6) | outreach to the world stagger human comprehension but are at 287 NTLet, 1Cor 1: 17 | and not with the wisdom of human eloquence, so that the cross 288 NTLet, 1Cor 1: 17(8) | Not with the wisdom of human eloquence: both of the nouns 289 NTLet, 1Cor 1: 17(8) | may intend to exclude both human ways of reasoning or thinking 290 NTLet, 1Cor 1: 17(8) | thinking about things and human rhetorical technique. Human: 291 NTLet, 1Cor 1: 17(8) | human rhetorical technique. Human: this adjective does not 292 NTLet, 1Cor 1: 21(9) | their apparent negation. To human eyes the crucified Christ 293 NTLet, 1Cor 1: 25 | foolishness of God is wiser than human wisdom, and the weakness 294 NTLet, 1Cor 1: 25 | of God is stronger than human strength. ~ 295 NTLet, 1Cor 1: 26 | many of you were wise by human standards, not many were 296 NTLet, 1Cor 1: 29 | 29 ~so that no human being might boast 11 before 297 NTLet, 1Cor 2: 4(3) | accepted, the inefficacy of human wisdom for salvation is 298 NTLet, 1Cor 2: 5 | faith might rest not on human wisdom but on the power 299 NTLet, 1Cor 2: 9 | what has not entered the human heart, what God has prepared 300 NTLet, 1Cor 2: 11 | 11 ~Among human beings, who knows what pertains 301 NTLet, 1Cor 2: 13 | not with words taught by human wisdom, but with words taught 302 NTLet, 1Cor 3: 1(2) | they remain on a purely human level (anthropoi, 1 Cor 303 NTLet, 1Cor 3: 3 | behaving in an ordinary human way? ~ 304 NTLet, 1Cor 3: 4 | Apollos," are you not merely human? ~ 305 NTLet, 1Cor 3: 5(4) | leaders by the criteria of human wisdom and to exaggerate 306 NTLet, 1Cor 3: 21 | So let no one boast about human beings, for everything belongs 307 NTLet, 1Cor 4: 3 | be judged by you or any human tribunal; I do not even 308 NTLet, 1Cor 4: 9 | the world, to angels and human beings alike. ~ 309 NTLet, 1Cor 4: 14(5) | quite different from the human ways along which the Corinthians 310 NTLet, 1Cor 6: 15(6) | is applied positively to human marriage in Matthew and 311 NTLet, 1Cor 7: 17(10)| the ground that distinct human conditions are less significant 312 NTLet, 1Cor 7: 23 | Do not become slaves to human beings. ~ 313 NTLet, 1Cor 9: 8 | 8 ~Am I saying this on human authority, or does not the 314 NTLet, 1Cor 10: 13 | come to you but what is human. God is faithful and will 315 NTLet, 1Cor 13: 1 | 1 ~1 If I speak in human and angelic tongues 2 but 316 NTLet, 1Cor 14: 2 | tongue does not speak to human beings but to God, for no 317 NTLet, 1Cor 14: 3 | prophesies does speak to human beings, for their building 318 NTLet, 1Cor 14: 6(4) | 14:7-8) and from ordinary human speech (1 Cor 14:10-11); 319 NTLet, 1Cor 15: 20(8) | soteriological event of both human (1 Cor 15:20-23) and cosmic ( 320 NTLet, 1Cor 15: 21 | since death came through a human being, the resurrection 321 NTLet, 1Cor 15: 21 | dead came also through a human being. ~ 322 NTLet, 1Cor 15: 21(9) | 21-22] Our human existence, both natural 323 NTLet, 1Cor 15: 39 | but there is one kind for human beings, another kind of 324 NTLet, 1Cor 15: 42(20)| are now applied to the human body. Before: a body animated 325 NTLet, 2Cor 1: 12 | sincerity of God, (and) not by human wisdom but by the grace 326 NTLet, 2Cor 1: 17 | make my plans according to human considerations, so that 327 NTLet, 2Cor 1: 17(10)| and inconsistent or that human considerations keep dictating 328 NTLet, 2Cor 3: 2(2) | Spirit on the tablets of human hearts (2 Cor 3:3b). One 329 NTLet, 2Cor 4: 7(6) | instruments God uses are human and fragile; some imagine 330 NTLet, 2Cor 11: 16(11)| it concerned merely with human distinctions (2 Cor 11:18). 331 NTLet, 2Cor 13: 5(4) | distinction between present human judgment and final divine 332 NTLet, Gal 1: 1 | Paul, an apostle not from human beings nor through a human 333 NTLet, Gal 1: 1 | human beings nor through a human being but through Jesus 334 NTLet, Gal 1: 10 | now currying favor with human beings or God? Or am I seeking 335 NTLet, Gal 1: 11 | preached by me is not of human origin. ~ 336 NTLet, Gal 1: 11(9) | that his gospel is not a human invention (Gal 1:11) but 337 NTLet, Gal 1: 12 | did not receive it from a human being, nor was I taught 338 NTLet, Gal 1: 16(12)| 16] Flesh and blood: human authorities (cf Matthew 339 NTLet, Gal 3: 15 | 15 ~9 Brothers, in human terms I say that no one 340 NTLet, Gal 3: 15 | can annul or amend even a human will once ratified. ~ 341 NTLet, Gal 3: 15(9) | history. A legal agreement or human will, duly ratified, is 342 NTLet, Gal 3: 18(12)| fulfilled only as a reward for human observance of the law.~ 343 NTLet, Gal 3: 19(13)| faith and promise, not by human works of the law.~ 344 NTLet, Eph Int | lacking either; all aspects of human life and relationships are 345 NTLet, Eph 2: 1(2) | between God in heaven and human beings on earth. Both Jew 346 NTLet, Eph 2: 11 | is done in the flesh by human hands, ~ 347 NTLet, Eph 3: 5 | which was not made known to human beings in other generations 348 NTLet, Eph 4: 14 | of teaching arising from human trickery, from their cunning 349 NTLet, Eph 6: 5 | Slaves, be obedient to your human masters with fear and trembling, 350 NTLet, Eph 6: 7 | serving the Lord and not human beings, ~ 351 NTLet, Eph 6: 10(1) | is not directed against human beings but against the spiritual 352 NTLet, Phi Int | Philippians, Paul reveals his human sensitivity and tenderness, 353 NTLet, Phi 2: 6(4) | up in order to serve in human form, or to what the man 354 NTLet, Phi 2: 7 | form of a slave, coming in human likeness; 5 and found human 355 NTLet, Phi 2: 7 | human likeness; 5 and found human in appearance, ~ 356 NTLet, Phi 2: 7(5) | form of a slave, coming in human likeness: or ". . . taking 357 NTLet, Phi 2: 7(5) | form of a slave. Coming in human likeness, and found human 358 NTLet, Phi 2: 7(5) | human likeness, and found human in appearance." While it 359 NTLet, Phi 2: 7(5) | parallel stanzas about Jesus' human state (Philippians 2:6-7b; 360 NTLet, Phi 2: 7(5) | latter alternative, coming in human likeness begins the second 361 NTLet, Col Int | spiritual renewal of the human person occurs through contact 362 NTLet, Col 1: 21(12)| cross in the redemption of human beings, not of cosmic powers 363 NTLet, Col 2: 4(2) | the law (cf Eph 2:15) that human beings could not observe - 364 NTLet, Col 2: 8 | philosophy according to human tradition, according to 365 NTLet, Col 2: 22 | with use; they accord with human precepts and teachings. ~ 366 NTLet, Col 3: 22 | 22 ~Slaves, 9 obey your human masters in everything, not 367 NTLet, 1The 2: 4 | not as trying to please human beings,but rather God, who 368 NTLet, 1The 2: 6 | did we seek praise from human beings, either from you 369 NTLet, 1The 2: 13 | hearing us, you received not a human word but, as it truly is, 370 NTLet, 1The 4: 8 | disregards this, disregards not a human being but God, who (also) 371 NTLet, 1The 5: 23(4) | philosophical analysis of human nature. Rather, he looks 372 NTLet, 2The 2: 3(3) | 36-37 and related verses, human self-assertiveness against 373 NTLet, 1Tim 2: 5 | mediator between God and the human race, Christ Jesus, himself 374 NTLet, 1Tim 2: 5 | race, Christ Jesus, himself human, ~ 375 NTLet, 1Tim 3: 14(6) | in Christ, appearing in human flesh, vindicated by the 376 NTLet, 1Tim 6: 16 | unapproachable light, and whom no human being has seen or can see. 377 NTLet, 2Tim Int | looking to God, not to human beings, for his deliverance ( 378 NTLet, 2Tim 3: 16(4) | with the writer as the human collaborator. Thus the scriptures 379 NTLet, 2Tim 3: 16(4) | scriptures are the word of God in human language. See also 2 Peter 380 NTLet, Phl | institution of antiquity, human slavery. But Paul breathes 381 NTLet, Heb Int | 3). The difficulties of human life have meaning when they 382 NTLet, Heb 1: 1(1) | God's revelation to the human race in his Son. The divine 383 NTLet, Heb 2: 5(2) | christologically: Jesus lived a truly human existence, lower than the 384 NTLet, Heb 2: 5(2) | If Jesus is able to help human beings, it is because he 385 NTLet, Heb 2: 5(2) | solidarity with Jesus. By sharing human nature, including the ban 386 NTLet, Heb 5: 1(1) | God, he was destined as a human being to learn obedience 387 NTLet, Heb 5: 1(1) | through this experience of human suffering, he is the cause 388 NTLet, Heb 5: 6(4) | the trials and weakness of human nature, especially fear 389 NTLet, Heb 6: 16 | 16 ~Human beings swear by someone 390 NTLet, Heb 7: 26(19)| the high priest whom the human race requires, holy and 391 NTLet, Heb 7: 26(19)| appoint high priests with human limitations, but the fulfillment 392 NTLet, Heb 9: 11(9) | of heaven that is not of human making (Hebrews 9:11). His 393 NTLet, Heb 9: 11(9) | offered himself to purge the human race of sin and render it 394 NTLet, Heb 9: 15(13)| of his work follows the human pattern by which a last 395 NTLet, Heb 9: 27 | as it is appointed that human beings die once, and after 396 NTLet, Heb 10: 1(1) | reasonable to suppose that human sins could be removed by 397 NTLet, Heb 11: 6(5) | that he is concerned about human conduct; the Old Testament 398 NTLet, Heb 12: 24(7) | blood of Abel, the first human blood to be shed, is contrasted 399 CathL, Jam 1: 13(7) | God to be the author of human temptation (James 1:13). 400 CathL, Jam 3: 7 | and has been tamed by the human species, ~ 401 CathL, Jam 3: 8 | 8 ~but no human being can tame the tongue. 402 CathL, Jam 3: 9 | Father, and with it we curse human beings who are made in the 403 CathL, Jam 5: 7(3) | bearing the sufferings of human life (James 5:9) and in 404 CathL, Jam 5: 17 | 17 ~Elijah was a human being like us; yet he prayed 405 CathL, 1Pet 2: 4 | living stone, 3 rejected by human beings but chosen and precious 406 CathL, 1Pet 2: 11(6) | Peter 2:11-12); respect for human authority (1 Peter 2:13- 407 CathL, 1Pet 2: 13 | 13 ~8 Be subject to every human institution for the Lord' 408 CathL, 1Pet 2: 13(8) | threaten, subjection to human government as urged (1 Peter 409 CathL, 1Pet 3: 18(5) | that Jesus truly died as a human being. Brought to life in 410 CathL, 1Pet 3: 18(5) | and weaknesses of natural human life (cf 1 Cor 15:45).~ 411 CathL, 1Pet 4: 2 | one's life in the flesh on human desires, but on the will 412 CathL, 1Pet 4: 6 | condemned in the flesh in human estimation, they might live 413 CathL, 2Pet 1: 13(8) | biblical image for transitory human life (Isaiah 38:12), here 414 CathL, 2Pet 1: 20(12)| comes admittedly through human beings (2 Peter 1:21), but 415 CathL, 2Pet 1: 21 | prophecy ever came through human will; but rather human beings 416 CathL, 2Pet 1: 21 | through human will; but rather human beings moved by the holy 417 CathL, 2Pet 2: 16 | mute beast spoke with a human voice and restrained the 418 CathL, 1Joh 5: 6(2) | the two legally required human witnesses (Deut 17:6). To 419 CathL, 1Joh 5: 9 | 9 ~If we accept human testimony, the testimony 420 CathL, Jude 0: 7(6) | desire for intimacies by human beings with angels (the 421 CathL, Jude 0: 9(8) | how wrong it is for mere human beings to revile glorious 422 CathL, Rev 1: 17(16)| Testament belief that for sinful human beings to see God was to 423 CathL, Rev 4: 7 | had a face like that of a human being, and the fourth looked 424 CathL, Rev 4: 7(7) | 7] Lion . . . calf . . . human being . . . eagle: these 425 CathL, Rev 9: 7 | gold; their faces were like human faces, ~ 426 CathL, Rev 9: 15 | year to kill a third of the human race. ~ 427 CathL, Rev 9: 18 | their mouths a third of the human race was killed. ~ 428 CathL, Rev 9: 20 | 20 ~The rest of the human race, who were not killed 429 CathL, Rev 12: 9(9) | Genesis 3:1-6), mother of the human race; cf Rev 20:2; Eph 6: 430 CathL, Rev 14: 4 | as the firstfruits of the human race for God and the Lamb. ~ 431 CathL, Rev 16: 18 | been one like it since the human race began on earth. ~ 432 CathL, Rev 18: 13 | chariots, and slaves, that is, human beings. ~ 433 CathL, Rev 21: 3 | God's dwelling is with the human race. He will dwell with 434 CathL, Rev 21: 17(14)| angel used: literally, "by a human measure, i.e., an angel'


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