Found 4188 Results for: God
but those who were recognised as important people -- whether they actually were important or not: There is no favouritism with God -those recognised leaders, I am saying, had nothing to add to my message. (Galatians 2, 6)
In fact, through the Law I am dead to the Law so that I can be alive to God. I have been crucified with Christ (Galatians 2, 19)
and yet I am alive; yet it is no longer I, but Christ living in me. The life that I am now living, subject to the limitation of human nature, I am living in faith, faith in the Son of God who loved me and gave himself for me. (Galatians 2, 20)
I am not setting aside God's grace as of no value; it is merely that if saving justice comes through the Law, Christ died needlessly. (Galatians 2, 21)
Abraham, you remember, put his faith in God, and this was reckoned to him as uprightness. (Galatians 3, 6)
And it was because scripture foresaw that God would give saving justice to the gentiles through faith, that it announced the future gospel to Abraham in the words: All nations will be blessed in you. (Galatians 3, 8)
Now it is obvious that nobody is reckoned as upright in God's sight by the Law, since the upright will live through faith; (Galatians 3, 11)
What I am saying is this: once a will had been long ago ratified by God, the Law, coming four hundred and thirty years later, could not abolish it and so nullify its promise. (Galatians 3, 17)
You see, if the inheritance comes by the Law, it no longer comes through a promise; but it was by a promise that God made his gift to Abraham. (Galatians 3, 18)
Now there can be an intermediary only between two parties, yet God is one. (Galatians 3, 20)
Is the Law contrary, then, to God's promises? Out of the question! If the Law that was given had been capable of giving life, then certainly saving justice would have come from the Law. (Galatians 3, 21)
for all of you are the children of God, through faith, in Christ Jesus, (Galatians 3, 26)
