Psalm 119 is the longest chapter of the Bible.
r/Christianity. How many words of Jesus are recorded in the Bible? I have only found two sources, one claiming 1026 words and the other 2024. That seems remarkably few words actually ascribed to Jesus in a book of over 800 000 words.
The
word count – 788,280 is based on the KJV and seems to be almost exactly as we'd expect (see our page on How
Many Words in the
Bible for more information on this).
How Many Words in Each Book of the Bible.
| Book | Deuteronomy |
|---|
| Chapters | 34 |
|---|
| Verses | 959 |
|---|
| Words | 28352 |
|---|
| Author | Moses |
|---|
There are four major engravers of the plates. Mormon engraved 174610 words or 65.1% of the book, Nephi 54688 words (20.4%), Moroni 26270 words (9.8%) and Jacob 9103 words (3.4%).
Hey Greek learner!
- Use repetition: reading, writing and speaking words over and over again.
- Associate words with drawings, pictures and funny scenes.
- Try to use the language routinely in the context of daily life.
- Reading as much as possible, especially the newspaper, helps you to remember words.
The name Maher-shalal-hash-baz is a reference to the impending plunder of Samaria and Damascus by the king of Assyria, Tiglath-Pileser III (734–732 BCE).
1) The Old Testament is foundational, the New Testament builds on that foundation with further revelation from God. 2) The Old Testament established principles that are demonstrated as New Testament truths. 3) The Old Testament contains many prophecies that are fulfilled in the New Testament.
What does Google know about me? A standard Bible without Apocrypha has at the center Psalms 118, and depending on what translation one is using will be one of its verses, in most cases: "It is better to trust in the Lord than to put confidence in man."
"In Search of Lost Time", is as per the Guinness book of records, holder of the longest novels. The word count is 12200000 in 7 volumes. "Zettels Traum" is in second place with an estimated word count of 1000000 in 1 volume.
The "middle verses" are Psalm 103:1-2, with 15,550 verses before and after. Psalms 103: 1-2: A Psalm of David. Bless the LORD, O my soul: and all that is within me, bless his holy name.
The word “but” in Scripture often introduces the message of the gracious and compassionate intervention of God. This simple term captures the nature of our God. He redeems, resurrects, and makes all things new. All seems lost and then we hear, “but God.” He intervenes. He saves.
Compiling the entire Bible took approximately 1300 years. The second chapter of Genesis was in place by 900 BC (although some of the stories in it go back to before 2000 BC from other cultures). The first chapter of Genesis was written some 400 years later.
What Are The 7 Types of Love?
- Eros: Love of the body. This type of love illustrates sexual attraction, physical desire towards others, and a lack of control.
- Philia: Affectionate love.
- Storge: Love of the Child.
- Agape: Selfless Love.
- Ludus: Playful Love.
- Pragma: Long-lasting Love.
- Philautia: Love of the Self.
3 Types of Love: Eros, Agape, and Philos
- Eros. Eros is the type of love that most closely resembles what Western cultures now view as romantic love.
- Philia. While many Greeks viewed eros as dangerous, they viewed philia as the ideal love.
- Agape. Agape is a bit more abstract than the other two types of love, but stay with me.
Check the 7 Greek words for love—and identify which speaks to you most.
- Eros: romantic, passionate love.
- Philia: intimate, authentic friendship.
- Ludus: playful, flirtatious love.
- Storge: unconditional, familial love.
- Philautia: self-love.
- Pragma: committed, companionate love.
- Agápe: empathetic, universal love.
Meet the 8 Different Types of Love
- Philia — Affectionate Love. Philia is love without romantic attraction and occurs between friends or family members.
- Pragma — Enduring Love.
- Storge — Familiar Love.
- Eros — Romantic Love.
- Ludus — Playful Love.
- Mania — Obsessive Love.
- Philautia — Self Love.
- Agape — Selfless Love.
The four loves
- Storge – empathy bond.
- Philia – friend bond.
- Eros – romantic love.
- Agape – unconditional "God" love.
The Greeks had four different words they used for love. Agape, eros, philia, and storge.
Ludus. Ludus means "game" in Latin. Lee uses the term to describe those who see love as a desiring to want to have fun with each other, to do activities indoor and outdoor, tease, indulge, and play harmless pranks on each other. The acquisition of love and attention itself may be part of the game.
3 Types of Love: Eros, Agape, and Philos.
The villages of Nazareth and Capernaum in Galilee, where Jesus spent most of his time, were Aramaic-speaking communities. It is also likely that Jesus knew enough Koine Greek to converse with those not native to Judea, and it is also possible that Jesus knew some Hebrew for religious purposes.
Technically Koine Greek (New Testament Greek) is a dead language. There is not a single country on this earth that speaks it or has it as an official language and the only people that speak it are the ones that have learned it for theological study.
When people use the term classical Greek the usually mean the dialect of Athens in her heyday, the Attic sub dialect of Ionic. Koine or common developed to replace the various,dialects of Greek with a single common one. Koine is mostly simplified Attic, with a mostly eastern (Ionic) pronunciation.
It is generally agreed by historians that Jesus and his disciples primarily spoke Aramaic, the common language of Judea in the first century AD, most likely a Galilean dialect distinguishable from that of Jerusalem.
Koine Greek (UK: /ˈk??niː/, US: /k??ˈne?, ˈk??ne?, kiːˈniː/), also known as Alexandrian dialect, common Attic, Hellenistic or Biblical Greek, was the common supra-regional form of Greek spoken and written during the Hellenistic period, the Roman Empire, and the early Byzantine Empire, or late antiquity.
The texts were mainly written in Biblical Hebrew, with some portions (notably in Daniel and Ezra) in Biblical Aramaic. Biblical Hebrew, sometimes called Classical Hebrew, is an archaic form of the Hebrew language. The very first translation of the Hebrew Bible was into Greek.
Koine, the fairly uniform Hellenistic Greek spoken and written from the 4th century bc until the time of the Byzantine emperor Justinian (mid-6th century ad) in Greece, Macedonia, and the parts of Africa and the Middle East that had come under the influence or control of Greeks or of Hellenized rulers.
Koine, which means "common" or "shared" in Greek, was the language spoken in the eastern Mediterranean countries from the 4th century B.C.E. In linguistics, the word koine is applied to a language developed from contact between dialects of the same language over a large region.