Fondare 523 Risultati per: Divine Promise
It was a promise God made, when he said, When this season comes round again, I will visit thee, and Sara shall have a son. (Romans 9, 9)
And not only she, but Rebecca too received a promise, when she bore two sons to the same husband, our father Isaac. (Romans 9, 10)
And what does the divine revelation tell him? There are seven thousand men I have kept true to myself, with knees that never bowed to Baal.✻ (Romans 11, 4)
The God, who has called you into the fellowship of his Son, Jesus Christ our Lord, is faithful to his promise. (1 Corinthians 1, 9)
with those who keep the law, as one who keeps the law (though the law had no claim on me), to win those who kept the law; with those who are free of the law, like one free of the law (not that I disowned all divine law, but it was the law of Christ that bound me), to win those who were free of the law. (1 Corinthians 9, 21)
And this is my contention; the law, coming into being four hundred and thirty years afterwards, cannot unmake the disposition which God made so long ago, and cancel the promise. (Galatians 3, 17)
If our inheritance depends on observing the law, then it is not the inheritance secured to us by promise; that was promised to Abraham as a free gift. (Galatians 3, 18)
What, then, is the purpose of the law? It was brought in to make room for transgression, while we waited for the coming of that posterity, to whom the promise had been made. Its terms were dictated by angels, acting through a spokesman;✻ (Galatians 3, 19)
No longer, then, art thou a slave, thou art a son; and because thou art a son, thou hast, by divine appointment, the son’s right of inheritance. (Galatians 4, 7)
The child of the slave was born in the course of nature; the free woman’s, by the power of God’s promise. (Galatians 4, 23)
It is we, brethren, that are children of the promise, as Isaac was. (Galatians 4, 28)
In those days there was no Christ for you; you were outlaws from the commonwealth of Israel, strangers to every covenant, with no promise to hope for, with the world about you, and no God.✻ (Ephesians 2, 12)
