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revelation/22.htm | <img> |
genesis/2.htm | <img> |
/genesis/1-1.htm | God creates heaven and earth; |
/genesis/1-3.htm | the light; |
/genesis/1-6.htm | the firmament; |
/genesis/1-9.htm | separates the dry land; |
/genesis/1-14.htm | forms the sun, moon, and stars; |
/genesis/1-20.htm | fishes and fowls; |
/genesis/1-24.htm | cattle, wild beasts, and creeping things; |
/genesis/1-26.htm | creates man in his own image, blesses him; |
/genesis/1-29.htm | grants the fruits of the earth for food. |
/genesis/2-1.htm | The first Sabbath. |
/genesis/2-4.htm | Further details concerning the manner of creation. |
/genesis/2-8.htm | The planting of the garden of Eden, and its situation; |
/genesis/2-15.htm | man is placed in it; and the tree of knowledge forbidden. |
/genesis/2-18.htm | The animals are named by Adam. |
/genesis/2-21.htm | The making of woman, and the institution of marriage. |
/genesis/3-1.htm | The serpent deceives Eve. |
/genesis/3-6.htm | Both she and Adam transgress the divine command, and fall into sin. |
/genesis/3-8.htm | God arraigns them. |
/genesis/3-14.htm | The serpent is cursed. |
/genesis/3-15.htm | The promised seed. |
/genesis/3-16.htm | The punishment of mankind. |
/genesis/3-21.htm | Their first clothing. |
/genesis/3-22.htm | Their expulsion from paradise. |
/genesis/4-1.htm | The birth, occupation, and offerings of Cain and Abel. |
/genesis/4-8.htm | Cain murders his brother Abel. |
/genesis/4-11.htm | The curse of Cain. |
/genesis/4-17.htm | Has a son called Enoch, and builds a city, which he calls after his name. |
/genesis/4-18.htm | His descendants, with Lamech and his two wives. |
/genesis/4-25.htm | The birth of Seth, |
/genesis/4-26.htm | and Enos. |
/genesis/5-1.htm | Recapitulation of the creation of man. |
/genesis/5-3.htm | The genealogy, age, and death of the patriarchs from Adam to Noah. |
/genesis/5-22.htm | Enoch's godliness and translation into Heaven. |
/genesis/5-25.htm | The family line of Methuselah to Noah and his sons |
/genesis/6-1.htm | The wickedness of the world, which provoked God's wrath. |
/genesis/6-8.htm | Noah finds grace. |
/genesis/6-9.htm | His family line |
/genesis/6-14.htm | The order, form, dimensions, and building of the ark. |
/genesis/7-1.htm | Noah, his family and the living creatures enter the ark. |
/genesis/7-6.htm | The flood begins. |
/genesis/7-17.htm | The increase of the flood for forty days. |
/genesis/7-21.htm | All flesh is destroyed by it. |
/genesis/7-24.htm | Its duration of 150 days. |
/genesis/8-1.htm | God remembers Noah and calms the waters. |
/genesis/8-4.htm | The ark rests on Ararat. |
/genesis/8-6.htm | Noah sends forth a raven and then a dove. |
/genesis/8-13.htm | Noah, being commanded, goes forth from the ark. |
/genesis/8-20.htm | He builds an altar, and offers sacrifices, |
/genesis/8-21.htm | which God accepts, and promises to curse the earth no more. |
/genesis/9-1.htm | God blesses Noah and his sons, and grants them flesh for food. |
/genesis/9-4.htm | Blood and murder are forbidden. |
/genesis/9-8.htm | God's covenant, of which the rainbow was constituted a pledge. |
/genesis/9-18.htm | Noah's family replenishes the world. |
/genesis/9-20.htm | Noah plants a vineyard, |
/genesis/9-21.htm | Is drunken, and mocked by his son; |
/genesis/9-25.htm | Curses Canaan; |
/genesis/9-26.htm | Blesses Shem; |
/genesis/9-27.htm | Prays for Japheth, and dies. |
/genesis/10-1.htm | The generations of Noah. |
/genesis/10-2.htm | Japheth. |
/genesis/10-6.htm | Ham. |
/genesis/10-8.htm | Nimrod becomes the first monarch; the descendants of Canaan. |
/genesis/10-21.htm | The sons of Shem. |
/genesis/11-1.htm | One language in the world. |
/genesis/11-2.htm | The building of Babel. |
/genesis/11-5.htm | It is interrupted by the confusion of tongues, and the builders dispersed. |
/genesis/11-10.htm | The generations of Shem. |
/genesis/11-27.htm | The generations of Terah, the father of Abram. |
/genesis/11-31.htm | Terah, with Abram and Lot, move from Ur to Haran. |
/genesis/12-1.htm | God calls Abram, and blesses him with a promise of Christ. |
/genesis/12-4.htm | He departs with Lot from Haran, and comes to Canaan. |
/genesis/12-6.htm | He journeys through Canaan, |
/genesis/12-7.htm | which is promised to him in a vision. |
/genesis/12-10.htm | He is driven by famine into Egypt. |
/genesis/12-11.htm | Fear makes him feign his wife to be his sister. |
/genesis/12-14.htm | Pharaoh, having taken her from him, is compelled to restore her. |
/genesis/12-18.htm | Pharaoh reproves Abram, whom he dismisses. |
/genesis/13-1.htm | Abram and Lot return with great riches out of Egypt. |
/genesis/13-6.htm | Strife arises between Abram's herdsmen and those of Lot. |
/genesis/13-8.htm | Abram allows Lot to choose his part of the country, |
/genesis/13-10.htm | and Lot goes toward Sodom. |
/genesis/13-14.htm | God renews his promise to Abram. |
/genesis/13-18.htm | He moves to Hebron, and there builds an altar. |
/genesis/14-1.htm | The battle of four kings against the king of Sodom and his allies. |
/genesis/14-12.htm | Lot is taken prisoner. |
/genesis/14-14.htm | Abram rescues him. |
/genesis/14-17.htm | Melchizedek blesses Abram, who gives him tithes. |
/genesis/14-21.htm | Abram restores the rest of the spoil to the king of Sodom. |
/genesis/15-1.htm | God encourages Abram, who asks for an heir. |
/genesis/15-4.htm | God promises him a son, and a multiplying of his seed. |
/genesis/15-6.htm | Abram is justified by faith. |
/genesis/15-7.htm | Canaan is promised again, |
/genesis/15-9.htm | and confirmed by a sign, and a vision, |
/genesis/15-18.htm | prophetic of the condition of his posterity till brought out of Egypt. |
/genesis/16-1.htm | Sarai, being barren, gives Hagar to Abram. |
/genesis/16-4.htm | Hagar, being afflicted for despising her mistress, runs away. |
/genesis/16-7.htm | An angel commands her to return and submit herself, |
/genesis/16-10.htm | promises her a numerous posterity, |
/genesis/16-12.htm | and shows their character and condition. |
/genesis/16-13.htm | Hagar names the place, and returns to Sarai. |
/genesis/16-15.htm | Ishmael is born. |
/genesis/16-16.htm | The age of Abram. |
/genesis/17-1.htm | God renews the covenant with Abram, |
/genesis/17-5.htm | and changes his name to Abraham, in token of a greater blessing. |
/genesis/17-9.htm | Circumcision is instituted. |
/genesis/17-15.htm | Sarai's name is changed to Sarah, and she is blessed. |
/genesis/17-17.htm | Isaac is promised, and the time of his birth fixed. |
/genesis/17-23.htm | Abraham and Ishmael are circumcised. |
/genesis/18-1.htm | The Lord appears to Abraham, who entertains angels. |
/genesis/18-9.htm | Sarah is reproved for laughing at the promise of a son. |
/genesis/18-16.htm | The destruction of Sodom is revealed to Abraham. |
/genesis/18-23.htm | Abraham makes intercession for its inhabitants. |
/genesis/19-1.htm | Lot entertains two angels. |
/genesis/19-4.htm | The vicious Sodomites are smitten with blindness. |
/genesis/19-12.htm | Lot is warned, and in vain warns his sons-in-law. |
/genesis/19-15.htm | He is directed to flee to the mountains, but obtains leave to go into Zoar. |
/genesis/19-24.htm | Sodom and Gomorrah are destroyed. |
/genesis/19-26.htm | Lot's wife looks back and becomes a pillar of salt. |
/genesis/19-29.htm | Lot dwells in a cave. |
/genesis/19-31.htm | The incestuous origin of Moab and Ammon. |
/genesis/20-1.htm | Abraham sojourns at Gerar. |
/genesis/20-2.htm | Denies his wife, who is taken by Abimelech. |
/genesis/20-3.htm | Abimelech is reproved for her in a dream. |
/genesis/20-9.htm | He rebukes Abraham. |
/genesis/20-14.htm | Restores Sarah; |
/genesis/20-16.htm | and reproves her. |
/genesis/20-17.htm | Abimelech and his family are healed at Abraham's prayer. |
/genesis/21-1.htm | Isaac is born, and circumcised. |
/genesis/21-6.htm | Sarah's joy. |
/genesis/21-8.htm | Isaac is weaned. |
/genesis/21-9.htm | Hagar and Ishmael sent away. |
/genesis/21-15.htm | Hagar in distress. |
/genesis/21-17.htm | The angel relieves and comforts her. |
/genesis/21-23.htm | Abimelech's covenant with Abraham at Beersheba. |
/genesis/22-1.htm | Abraham is tested with the command to offer Isaac. |
/genesis/22-3.htm | He gives proof of his faith and obedience. |
/genesis/22-11.htm | The angel prevents him. |
/genesis/22-13.htm | Isaac is exchanged for a ram. |
/genesis/22-14.htm | The place is called Jehovah-jireh. |
/genesis/22-15.htm | Abraham is again blessed. |
/genesis/22-20.htm | The generations of Nahor unto Rebekah. |
/genesis/23-1.htm | The age and death of Sarah. |
/genesis/23-3.htm | The purchase of the field and cave of Machpelah; |
/genesis/23-19.htm | where Sarah is buried. |
/genesis/24-1.htm | Abraham swears his servant. |
/genesis/24-10.htm | The servant's journey. |
/genesis/24-12.htm | His prayer. |
/genesis/24-14.htm | His sign. |
/genesis/24-15.htm | Rebekah meets him; |
/genesis/24-18.htm | fulfils his sign; |
/genesis/24-22.htm | receives jewels; |
/genesis/24-23.htm | shows her kindred; |
/genesis/24-25.htm | and invites him home. |
/genesis/24-26.htm | The servant blesses God. |
/genesis/24-29.htm | Laban entertains him. |
/genesis/24-34.htm | The servant shows his message. |
/genesis/24-50.htm | Laban and Bethuel approve it. |
/genesis/24-58.htm | Rebekah consents to go, and departs. |
/genesis/24-62.htm | Isaac meets and marries her. |
/genesis/25-1.htm | The sons of Abraham by Keturah. |
/genesis/25-5.htm | The division of his goods. |
/genesis/25-7.htm | His age, death, and burial. |
/genesis/25-11.htm | God blesses Isaac. |
/genesis/25-12.htm | The generations of Ishmael. |
/genesis/25-17.htm | His age and death. |
/genesis/25-19.htm | Isaac prays for Rebekah, being barren. |
/genesis/25-22.htm | The children strive in her womb. |
/genesis/25-24.htm | The birth of Esau and Jacob. |
/genesis/25-27.htm | Their different characters and pursuits. |
/genesis/25-29.htm | Esau sells his birthright. |
/genesis/26-1.htm | Isaac, because of famine, sojourns in Gerar, and the Lord blesses him. |
/genesis/26-7.htm | He is reproved by Abimelech for denying his wife. |
/genesis/26-12.htm | He grows rich, and the Philistines envy his prosperity. |
/genesis/26-18.htm | He digs wells. |
/genesis/26-23.htm | God appears to him at Beersheba, and blesses him; |
/genesis/26-26.htm | and Abimelech makes a covenant with him. |
/genesis/26-34.htm | Esau's wives. |
/genesis/27-1.htm | Isaac sends Esau for venison. |
/genesis/27-6.htm | Rebekah instructs Jacob to obtain the blessing. |
/genesis/27-14.htm | Jacob, feigning to be Esau, obtains it. |
/genesis/27-30.htm | Esau brings venison. |
/genesis/27-33.htm | Isaac trembles. |
/genesis/27-34.htm | Esau complains, and by importunity obtains a blessing. |
/genesis/27-41.htm | He threatens Jacob's life. |
/genesis/27-42.htm | Rebekah disappoints him, by sending Jacob away. |
/genesis/28-1.htm | Isaac blesses Jacob, and sends him to Padan-aram. |
/genesis/28-6.htm | Esau marries Mahalath the daughter of Ishmael. |
/genesis/28-10.htm | Jacob journeys, and has a vision of a ladder. |
/genesis/28-18.htm | The stone of Bethel. |
/genesis/28-20.htm | Jacob's vow. |
/genesis/29-1.htm | Jacob comes to the well of Haran. |
/genesis/29-9.htm | He becomes acquainted with Rachel. |
/genesis/29-13.htm | Laban entertains him. |
/genesis/29-18.htm | Jacob covenants for Rachel. |
/genesis/29-23.htm | He is deceived by Laban with Leah. |
/genesis/29-28.htm | He marries also Rachel, and serves for her seven years more. |
/genesis/29-32.htm | Leah bears Reuben; |
/genesis/29-33.htm | Simeon; |
/genesis/29-34.htm | Levi; |
/genesis/29-35.htm | and Judah. |
/genesis/30-1.htm | Rachel, in grief for her barrenness, gives Bilhah her maid unto Jacob. |
/genesis/30-5.htm | Bilhah bears Dan and Naphtali. |
/genesis/30-9.htm | Leah gives Zilpah her maid, who bears Gad and Asher. |
/genesis/30-14.htm | Reuben finds mandrakes, |
/genesis/30-15.htm | with which Leah buys her husband's company of Rachel. |
/genesis/30-17.htm | Leah bears Issachar, Zebulun, and Dinah. |
/genesis/30-22.htm | Rachel bears Joseph. |
/genesis/30-25.htm | Jacob desires to depart. |
/genesis/30-27.htm | Laban detains him on a new agreement. |
/genesis/30-37.htm | Jacob's policy, whereby he becomes rich. |
/genesis/31-1.htm | Jacob, displeased with the envy of Laban and his sons, departs secretly. |
/genesis/31-19.htm | Rachel steals her father's household gods. |
/genesis/31-22.htm | Laban pursues after him, and complains of the wrong. |
/genesis/31-34.htm | Rachel's plan to hide the images. |
/genesis/31-36.htm | Jacob's complaint of Laban. |
/genesis/31-43.htm | The covenant of Laban and Jacob at Galeed. |
/genesis/32-1.htm | Jacob's vision at Mahanaim. |
/genesis/32-3.htm | His message to Esau. |
/genesis/32-6.htm | He is afraid of Esau's coming. |
/genesis/32-9.htm | He prays for deliverance. |
/genesis/32-13.htm | He sends a present to Esau, and passes the brook Jabbok. |
/genesis/32-24.htm | He wrestles with an angel at Peniel, where he is called Israel. |
/genesis/32-31.htm | He halts. |
/genesis/33-1.htm | Jacob and Esau's meeting; and Esau's departure. |
/genesis/33-17.htm | Jacob comes to Succoth. |
/genesis/33-18.htm | At Shechem he buys a field, and builds an altar, called El Elohe Israel. |
/genesis/34-1.htm | Dinah is ravished by Shechem. |
/genesis/34-4.htm | He requests to marry her. |
/genesis/34-13.htm | The sons of Jacob offer the condition of circumcision to the Shechemites. |
/genesis/34-20.htm | Hamor and Shechem persuade them to accept it. |
/genesis/34-25.htm | The sons of Jacob upon that advantage slay them, and spoil their city. |
/genesis/34-30.htm | Jacob reproves Simeon and Levi. |
/genesis/35-1.htm | God commands Jacob to go to Bethel. |
/genesis/35-2.htm | He purges his house of idols. |
/genesis/35-6.htm | He builds an altar at Bethel. |
/genesis/35-8.htm | Deborah dies at Allon Bacuth. |
/genesis/35-9.htm | God blesses Jacob at Bethel. |
/genesis/35-10.htm | Jacob Named Israel. |
/genesis/35-16.htm | Rachel travails of Benjamin, and dies in the way to Edar. |
/genesis/35-22.htm | Reuben lies with Bilhah. |
/genesis/35-23.htm | The sons of Jacob. |
/genesis/35-27.htm | Jacob comes to Isaac at Hebron. |
/genesis/35-28.htm | The age, death, and burial of Isaac. |
/genesis/36-1.htm | Esau's three wives. |
/genesis/36-6.htm | His removal to mount Seir. |
/genesis/36-9.htm | His sons. |
/genesis/36-15.htm | The dukes which descended of his sons. |
/genesis/36-20.htm | The sons and dukes of Seir the Horite. |
/genesis/36-24.htm | Anah finds mules. |
/genesis/36-31.htm | The kings of Edom. |
/genesis/36-40.htm | The dukes that descended of Esau. |
/genesis/37-1.htm | Joseph is loved by Jacob, but hated by his brothers. |
/genesis/37-5.htm | His dreams and the interpretation. |
/genesis/37-12.htm | Jacob sends him to his brothers, who counsel to slay him. |
/genesis/37-21.htm | At Reuben's desire they cast him into a pit; |
/genesis/37-25.htm | and afterwards sell him to the Ishmaelites; |
/genesis/37-29.htm | while Ruben grieves at not finding him. |
/genesis/37-31.htm | His coat, covered with blood, is sent to Jacob, who mourns him inordinately. |
/genesis/37-36.htm | Joseph is brought to Egypt and sold to Potiphar. |
/genesis/38-1.htm | Judah begets Er, Onan, and Shelah. |
/genesis/38-6.htm | Er's marriage with Tamar, and death. |
/genesis/38-8.htm | The trespass of Onan. |
/genesis/38-11.htm | Tamar is reserved for Shelah. |
/genesis/38-12.htm | Judah's wife dies. |
/genesis/38-13.htm | Tamar deceives Judah. |
/genesis/38-27.htm | She bears twins, Pharez and Zarah. |
/genesis/39-1.htm | Joseph is bought by Potiphar, and preferred in the family. |
/genesis/39-7.htm | He resists temptation by Potiphar's Wife. |
/genesis/39-13.htm | He is falsely accused by her. |
/genesis/39-20.htm | He is cast into prison. |
/genesis/39-21.htm | God is with him there, and he is advanced by the keeper of prison. |
/genesis/40-1.htm | The chief butler and baker of Pharaoh are also imprisoned. |
/genesis/40-5.htm | Joseph interprets their dreams. |
/genesis/40-20.htm | They are accomplished according to his interpretation. |
/genesis/40-23.htm | The ingratitude of the butler, in forgetting Joseph. |
/genesis/41-1.htm | Pharaoh has two dreams. |
/genesis/41-9.htm | Joseph interprets them. |
/genesis/41-33.htm | He gives Pharaoh counsel, and is highly advanced, and married. |
/genesis/41-46.htm | The seven years of plenty. |
/genesis/41-50.htm | He begets children. |
/genesis/41-53.htm | The famine begins. |
/genesis/42-1.htm | Jacob sends his ten sons to buy grain in Egypt. |
/genesis/42-16.htm | They are imprisoned by Joseph as spies. |
/genesis/42-18.htm | They are set at liberty, on condition to bring Benjamin. |
/genesis/42-21.htm | They have remorse for Joseph. |
/genesis/42-24.htm | Simeon is kept for a pledge. |
/genesis/42-25.htm | They return with grain, and their money. |
/genesis/42-29.htm | Their relation to Jacob. |
/genesis/42-36.htm | Jacob refuses to send Benjamin. |
/genesis/43-1.htm | Jacob is persuaded to send Benjamin. |
/genesis/43-15.htm | Joseph entertains his brothers. |
/genesis/43-19.htm | They discover their fears to the steward. |
/genesis/43-26.htm | Joseph makes them a feast. |
/genesis/44-1.htm | Joseph's policy to stay his brothers. |
/genesis/44-6.htm | The silver cup is found in Benjamin's sack. |
/genesis/44-14.htm | They are brought before Joseph. |
/genesis/44-18.htm | Judah's humble supplication to Joseph. |
/genesis/45-1.htm | Joseph makes himself known to his brothers. |
/genesis/45-5.htm | He comforts them in God's providence. |
/genesis/45-9.htm | He sends for his father. |
/genesis/45-16.htm | Pharaoh confirms it. |
/genesis/45-21.htm | Joseph furnishes then for their journey. |
/genesis/45-25.htm | Jacob is revived with the news. |
/genesis/46-1.htm | Jacob is comforted by God at Beersheba. |
/genesis/46-5.htm | Thence he with his company goes into Egypt. |
/genesis/46-8.htm | The number of his family that went into Egypt. |
/genesis/46-28.htm | Joseph meets Jacob. |
/genesis/46-31.htm | He instructs his brothers how to answer Pharaoh. |
/genesis/47-1.htm | Joseph presents his father, and five of his brothers before Pharaoh. |
/genesis/47-11.htm | He gives them habitation and maintenance. |
/genesis/47-13.htm | He gets the Egyptian's money; |
/genesis/47-16.htm | their cattle; |
/genesis/47-18.htm | and their lands, except the priests', to Pharaoh. |
/genesis/47-23.htm | He restores the land for a fifth. |
/genesis/47-28.htm | Jacob's age. |
/genesis/47-29.htm | He swears Joseph to bury him with his fathers. |
/genesis/48-1.htm | Joseph with his sons visits his sick father. |
/genesis/48-2.htm | Jacob strengthens himself to bless them. |
/genesis/48-3.htm | He repeats God's promise. |
/genesis/48-5.htm | He takes Ephraim and Manasseh as his own sons. |
/genesis/48-7.htm | He tells Joseph of his mother's grave. |
/genesis/48-8.htm | He blesses Ephraim and Manasseh. |
/genesis/48-17.htm | He prefers the younger before the elder. |
/genesis/48-21.htm | He prophesies their return to Canaan. |
/genesis/49-1.htm | Jacob calls his sons to bless them. |
/genesis/49-3.htm | Their blessing in particular. |
/genesis/49-29.htm | He charges them about his burial. |
/genesis/49-33.htm | He dies. |
/genesis/50-1.htm | The mourning for Jacob. |
/genesis/50-4.htm | Joseph gets leave of Pharaoh to go to bury him. |
/genesis/50-7.htm | The funeral. |
/genesis/50-15.htm | Joseph comforts his brothers, who crave his pardon. |
/genesis/50-22.htm | His age. |
/genesis/50-23.htm | He sees the third generation of his sons. |
/genesis/50-24.htm | He prophesies unto his brothers of their return. |
/genesis/50-25.htm | He takes an oath of them concerning his bones. |
/genesis/50-26.htm | He dies, and is put into a coffin. |
/exodus/1-1.htm | The children of Israel, after Joseph's death, increase. |
/exodus/1-8.htm | The more they are oppressed by a new king, the more they multiply. |
/exodus/1-15.htm | The godliness of the midwives in saving the male children alive. |
/exodus/1-22.htm | Pharaoh commands the male children to be cast into the river |
/exodus/2-1.htm | Moses is born, and placed in a basket in the reeds of Nile. |
/exodus/2-5.htm | He is found, and brought up by Pharaoh's daughter; |
/exodus/2-7.htm | who employs his mother to nurse him. |
/exodus/2-11.htm | He kills an Egyptian. |
/exodus/2-13.htm | He reproves a Hebrew. |
/exodus/2-15.htm | He flees into Midian, and marries Zipporah. |
/exodus/2-22.htm | Gershom is born. |
/exodus/2-23.htm | God respects the Israelites' cry. |
/exodus/3-1.htm | Moses keeps Jethro's flock. |
/exodus/3-2.htm | God appears to him in a burning bush. |
/exodus/3-9.htm | He sends him to deliver Israel. |
/exodus/3-13.htm | The name of God. |
/exodus/3-15.htm | His message to Israel, and Pharaoh, whose opposition is foretold. |
/exodus/3-20.htm | He is assured of Israel's deliverance. |
/exodus/4-1.htm | Moses's rod is turned into a serpent. |
/exodus/4-6.htm | His hand is leprous. |
/exodus/4-10.htm | He loathes his calling. |
/exodus/4-13.htm | Aaron is appointed to assist him. |
/exodus/4-18.htm | Moses departs from Jethro. |
/exodus/4-21.htm | God's message to Pharaoh. |
/exodus/4-24.htm | Zipporah circumcises her son. |
/exodus/4-27.htm | Aaron is sent to meet Moses. |
/exodus/4-29.htm | The people believe them. |
/exodus/5-1.htm | Pharaoh chides Moses and Aaron for their message. |
/exodus/5-6.htm | He increases the Israelites' task. |
/exodus/5-16.htm | He ignores their complaints. |
/exodus/5-19.htm | They cry out to Moses and Aaron. |
/exodus/5-22.htm | Moses complains to God. |
/exodus/6-1.htm | God renews his promise by his name JEHOVAH |
/exodus/6-9.htm | Moses vainly attempts to encourage the Israelites |
/exodus/6-10.htm | He and Aaron are again sent to Pharaoh |
/exodus/6-14.htm | Genealogies of Reuben, Simeon and Levi, of whom came Moses and Aaron |
/exodus/6-26.htm | The history resumed |
/exodus/7-1.htm | Moses and Aaron are encouraged to go again to Pharaoh |
/exodus/7-8.htm | Aaron's rod is turned into a serpent |
/exodus/7-11.htm | The sorcerers do the like; but their rods are swallowed up by Aaron's |
/exodus/7-13.htm | Pharaoh's heart is hardened |
/exodus/7-14.htm | God's message to Pharaoh |
/exodus/7-19.htm | The river is turned into blood; and the consequent distress of the Egyptians |
/exodus/8-1.htm | Frogs are sent |
/exodus/8-8.htm | Pharaoh complains to Moses, who by prayer removes them |
/exodus/8-16.htm | The dust is turned into lice, which the magicians could not do |
/exodus/8-20.htm | The plague of flies |
/exodus/8-25.htm | Pharaoh inclines to let the people go, but yet is hardened |
/exodus/9-1.htm | The plague on livestock |
/exodus/9-8.htm | The plague of boils |
/exodus/9-13.htm | The message of Moses about the hail, |
/exodus/9-22.htm | The plague of hail |
/exodus/9-27.htm | Pharaoh pleads with Moses, but yet is hardened |
/exodus/10-1.htm | God threatens to send locusts |
/exodus/10-7.htm | Pharaoh, moved by his servants, inclines to let the Israelites go |
/exodus/10-12.htm | The plague of the locusts |
/exodus/10-16.htm | Pharaoh entreats Moses |
/exodus/10-21.htm | The plague of darkness |
/exodus/10-24.htm | Pharaoh again entreats Moses, but yet is hardened |
/exodus/11-1.htm | God's message to the Israelites to borrow jewels of their neighbors |
/exodus/11-4.htm | Moses threatens Pharaoh with the death the firstborn |
/exodus/12-1.htm | The beginning of the year is changed |
/exodus/12-3.htm | The Passover is instituted |
/exodus/12-11.htm | The import of the rite of the Passover |
/exodus/12-15.htm | Unleavened bread |
/exodus/12-29.htm | The firstborn are slain |
/exodus/12-31.htm | The Israelites are driven out of the land |
/exodus/12-37.htm | They come to Succoth |
/exodus/12-41.htm | The time of their sojourning |
/exodus/12-43.htm | The ordinance of the Passover |
/exodus/13-1.htm | The firstborn are sanctified to God |
/exodus/13-3.htm | The memorial of the Passover is commanded |
/exodus/13-11.htm | The firstborn of man and beast are set apart |
/exodus/13-17.htm | The Israelites go out of Egypt, and carry Joseph's bones with them. |
/exodus/13-20.htm | They come to Etham |
/exodus/13-21.htm | God guides them by a pillar of a cloud, and a pillar of fire |
/exodus/14-1.htm | God instructs the Israelites in their journey |
/exodus/14-5.htm | Pharaoh pursues after them |
/exodus/14-10.htm | The Israelites murmur |
/exodus/14-13.htm | Moses comforts them |
/exodus/14-15.htm | God instructs Moses |
/exodus/14-19.htm | The cloud removes behind the camp |
/exodus/14-21.htm | The Israelites pass through the Red sea, which drowns the Egyptians |
/exodus/15-1.htm | The song of Moses, Miriam, and Israel on their deliverance |
/exodus/15-22.htm | The people want water in the desert |
/exodus/15-23.htm | The waters at Marah are bitter, |
/exodus/15-24.htm | they murmur, |
/exodus/15-25.htm | Moses prays, and sweetens the waters by God's direction |
/exodus/15-27.htm | They encamp at Elim, where are twelve wells, and seventy palm trees |
/exodus/16-1.htm | The Israelites come to Sin, and murmur for want of bread |
/exodus/16-4.htm | God promises them bread and meat from heaven, and they are rebuked |
/exodus/16-13.htm | Quail and manna are sent |
/exodus/16-16.htm | The ordering of manna |
/exodus/16-25.htm | It was not to be found on the Sabbath |
/exodus/16-32.htm | An omer of it is preserved |
/exodus/17-1.htm | The people murmur for water to Rephidim |
/exodus/17-6.htm | God send them for water to the rock in Horeb |
/exodus/17-7.htm | The place is called Massah and Meribah |
/exodus/17-8.htm | Amalek is overcome by Joshua, while Moses holds up his hand |
/exodus/17-14.htm | Amalek is doomed to destruction; and Moses builds the altar Jehovah-nissi |
/exodus/18-1.htm | Jethro brings his wife and two sons to Moses |
/exodus/18-7.htm | Moses entertains him, and relates the goodness of the Lord |
/exodus/18-9.htm | Jethro rejoices, blesses God, and offers sacrifice |
/exodus/18-13.htm | He gives good counsel, which is accepted |
/exodus/18-27.htm | Jethro departs |
/exodus/19-1.htm | The people arrive at Sinai |
/exodus/19-3.htm | God's message by Moses unto the people out of the mount |
/exodus/19-8.htm | The people are prepared against the third day, for the giving of the law |
/exodus/19-12.htm | The mountain must not be touched |
/exodus/19-16.htm | The fearful presence of God upon the mount |
/exodus/20-1.htm | The ten commandments are spoken by Jehovah |
/exodus/20-18.htm | The people are afraid, but Moses comforts them |
/exodus/20-21.htm | Idolatry is forbidden |
/exodus/20-23.htm | Of what sort the altar should be |
/exodus/21-1.htm | Laws for men servants |
/exodus/21-5.htm | For the servant whose ear is bored |
/exodus/21-7.htm | For women servants |
/exodus/21-12.htm | For manslaughter |
/exodus/21-16.htm | For kidnappers |
/exodus/21-17.htm | For cursers of parents |
/exodus/21-18.htm | For smiters |
/exodus/21-22.htm | For a hurt by chance |
/exodus/21-28.htm | For an ox that gores |
/exodus/21-33.htm | For him who is an occasion of harm |
/exodus/22-1.htm | Of Theft |
/exodus/22-5.htm | Of damage |
/exodus/22-7.htm | Of trespasses |
/exodus/22-14.htm | Of borrowing |
/exodus/22-16.htm | Of fornication |
/exodus/22-18.htm | Of witchcraft |
/exodus/22-19.htm | Of bestiality |
/exodus/22-20.htm | Of idolatry |
/exodus/22-21.htm | Of strangers, widows, and fatherless |
/exodus/22-25.htm | Of usury |
/exodus/22-26.htm | Of pledges |
/exodus/22-28.htm | Of reverence to magistrates |
/exodus/22-29.htm | Of the first fruits |
/exodus/22-31.htm | Of torn flesh |
/exodus/23-1.htm | Of slander, false witness, and partiality |
/exodus/23-4.htm | Of charitableness |
/exodus/23-6.htm | Of justice in judgment |
/exodus/23-8.htm | Of taking bribes |
/exodus/23-9.htm | Of oppressing a stranger |
/exodus/23-10.htm | Of the year of rest |
/exodus/23-12.htm | Of the Sabbath |
/exodus/23-13.htm | Of idolatry |
/exodus/23-14.htm | Of the three feasts |
/exodus/23-18.htm | Of the blood and the fat of the sacrifice |
/exodus/23-20.htm | An angel is promised, with a blessing, if they obey him |
/exodus/24-1.htm | Moses is called up into the mountain |
/exodus/24-3.htm | The people promise obedience |
/exodus/24-4.htm | Moses builds an altar, and twelve pillars. |
/exodus/24-6.htm | He sprinkles the blood of the covenant |
/exodus/24-9.htm | The glory of God appears |
/exodus/24-14.htm | Aaron and Hur have the charge of the people |
/exodus/24-15.htm | Moses goes into the mountain, where he continues forty days and forty nights. |
/exodus/25-1.htm | What the Israelites were to offer for the building of the tabernacle |
/exodus/25-10.htm | The dimensions of the ark |
/exodus/25-17.htm | The mercy seat, with the cherubim |
/exodus/25-23.htm | The table of show bread, with the furniture thereof |
/exodus/25-31.htm | The golden candlestick, with the instruments thereof |
/exodus/26-1.htm | The ten curtains of the tabernacle |
/exodus/26-7.htm | The eleven curtains of goats' hair, the covering of rams' and badgers' skins. |
/exodus/26-15.htm | The boards of the tabernacle, with their sockets and bars |
/exodus/26-31.htm | The veil for the ark |
/exodus/26-36.htm | The hanging for the door |
/exodus/27-1.htm | The altar of burnt offering, with the vessels thereof |
/exodus/27-9.htm | The court of the tabernacle enclosed with hangings and pillars |
/exodus/27-18.htm | The measure of the court, and the furniture of brass |
/exodus/27-20.htm | The oil for the lamp |
/exodus/28-1.htm | Aaron and his sons are set apart for the priest's office |
/exodus/28-2.htm | Holy garments are appointed |
/exodus/28-6.htm | The ephod and girdle |
/exodus/28-15.htm | The breast-plate with twelve precious stones |
/exodus/28-30.htm | The Urim and Thummim |
/exodus/28-31.htm | The robe of the ephod, with pomegranates and bells |
/exodus/28-36.htm | The plate of the mitre |
/exodus/28-39.htm | The embroidered coat |
/exodus/28-40.htm | The garments for Aaron's sons |
/exodus/29-1.htm | The sacrifice and ceremonies of consecrating the priests and the altar |
/exodus/29-38.htm | The continual burnt offerings |
/exodus/29-45.htm | God's promise to dwell among the children of Israel |
/exodus/30-1.htm | The altar of incense |
/exodus/30-11.htm | The ransom of souls |
/exodus/30-17.htm | The bronze basin |
/exodus/30-22.htm | The holy anointing oil |
/exodus/30-34.htm | The composition of the incense |
/exodus/31-1.htm | Bezaleel and Aholiah are appointed for the work of the tabernacle |
/exodus/31-12.htm | The observation of the Sabbath is again commanded |
/exodus/31-18.htm | Moses receives the two tablets |
/exodus/32-1.htm | The people in the absence of Moses, caused Aaron to make a calf |
/exodus/32-7.htm | God informs Moses, who intercedes for Israel, and prevails |
/exodus/32-15.htm | Moses comes down with the tablets |
/exodus/32-19.htm | He breaks them |
/exodus/32-20.htm | He destroys the calf |
/exodus/32-22.htm | Aaron's excuse for himself |
/exodus/32-25.htm | Moses causes the idolaters to be slain |
/exodus/32-30.htm | He prays for the people |
/exodus/33-1.htm | The Lord refuses to go as he had promised with the people |
/exodus/33-4.htm | The people mourn there |
/exodus/33-7.htm | The tabernacle is removed out of the camp |
/exodus/33-9.htm | The Lord talks familiarly with Moses |
/exodus/33-12.htm | Moses prevails with God, and desires to see his glory |
/exodus/34-1.htm | The tablets are replaced |
/exodus/34-5.htm | The name of the Lord proclaimed |
/exodus/34-8.htm | Moses entreats God to go with them |
/exodus/34-10.htm | God makes a covenant with them, repeating certain duties |
/exodus/34-28.htm | Moses after forty days on the mount, comes down with the tablets |
/exodus/34-29.htm | His face is radiant, and he covers it with a veil |
/exodus/35-1.htm | The Sabbath |
/exodus/35-4.htm | The free gifts for the tabernacle |
/exodus/35-20.htm | The readiness of the people to offer |
/exodus/35-30.htm | Bezaleel and Aholiab are called to the work |
/exodus/36-1.htm | The offerings are delivered to the workmen |
/exodus/36-4.htm | The generosity of the people is restrained |
/exodus/36-8.htm | The curtains with cherubim |
/exodus/36-14.htm | The curtains of goats' hair |
/exodus/36-19.htm | The covering of skins |
/exodus/36-20.htm | The boards with their sockets |
/exodus/36-31.htm | The bars |
/exodus/36-35.htm | The veil |
/exodus/36-37.htm | The hanging for the door |
/exodus/37-1.htm | The ark and mercy seat with cherubim made |
/exodus/37-10.htm | The table of showbread with its vessels |
/exodus/37-17.htm | The candlestick with its lamps and instruments |
/exodus/37-25.htm | The altar of incense |
/exodus/37-29.htm | The anointing oil and sweet incense |
/exodus/38-1.htm | The altar of burnt offering |
/exodus/38-8.htm | The laver of brass |
/exodus/38-9.htm | The court, and its hangings |
/exodus/38-21.htm | The sum of what the people offered, and the use to which it was applied |
/exodus/39-1.htm | The cloths of service and holy garments. |
/exodus/39-2.htm | The ephod |
/exodus/39-8.htm | The breast-plate |
/exodus/39-22.htm | The robe of the ephod |
/exodus/39-27.htm | The coats, mitre, and girdle of fine linen |
/exodus/39-30.htm | The plate of the holy crown |
/exodus/39-32.htm | All is finished, reviewed, and approved by Moses |
/exodus/40-1.htm | The tabernacle is commanded to be reared, anointed, and consecrated |
/exodus/40-13.htm | Aaron and his sons to be sanctified |
/exodus/40-16.htm | Moses performs all things accordingly |
/exodus/40-34.htm | A cloud covers the tabernacle |
/leviticus/1-1.htm | The law of burnt offerings |
/leviticus/1-3.htm | of the herd |
/leviticus/1-10.htm | of the flocks |
/leviticus/1-14.htm | of the fowls |
/leviticus/2-1.htm | The meat offering with oil and incense |
/leviticus/2-4.htm | either baked in the oven |
/leviticus/2-5.htm | or on a plate |
/leviticus/2-7.htm | or in a frying pan |
/leviticus/2-12.htm | The first fruits not to be burnt on the altar, |
/leviticus/2-13.htm | Salt to be used with every offering |
/leviticus/2-14.htm | The offering of first fruits |
/leviticus/3-1.htm | The peace offering of the herd |
/leviticus/3-6.htm | whether a sheep |
/leviticus/3-7.htm | whether a lamb |
/leviticus/3-12.htm | or a goat |
/leviticus/3-17.htm | A prohibition to eat fat or blood |
/leviticus/4-1.htm | The sin offering of ignorance |
/leviticus/4-3.htm | for the priest |
/leviticus/4-13.htm | for the congregation |
/leviticus/4-22.htm | for the ruler |
/leviticus/4-27.htm | for any of the people |
/leviticus/5-1.htm | He who sins in concealing his knowledge |
/leviticus/5-2.htm | in touching an unclean thing |
/leviticus/5-4.htm | or in making an oath |
/leviticus/5-6.htm | His trespass offering, of the flock |
/leviticus/5-7.htm | of fowls |
/leviticus/5-11.htm | or of flour |
/leviticus/5-14.htm | The trespass offering in sacrilege |
/leviticus/5-17.htm | and in sins of ignorance |
/leviticus/6-1.htm | The trespass offering for sins done wittingly |
/leviticus/6-8.htm | The law of the burnt offering |
/leviticus/6-14.htm | and of the meat offering |
/leviticus/6-19.htm | The offering at the consecration of a priest |
/leviticus/6-24.htm | The law of the sin offering |
/leviticus/7-1.htm | The law of the trespass offering |
/leviticus/7-11.htm | and of the peace offering |
/leviticus/7-12.htm | whether it be for a thanksgiving |
/leviticus/7-16.htm | or a vow, or a free will offering |
/leviticus/7-22.htm | the fat and the blood are forbidden |
/leviticus/7-28.htm | The priests' portion in the peace offerings |
/leviticus/7-35.htm | The whole summed up |
/leviticus/8-1.htm | Moses consecrates Aaron and his sons |
/leviticus/8-14.htm | Their sin offering |
/leviticus/8-18.htm | Their burnt offering |
/leviticus/8-22.htm | The ram of consecration |
/leviticus/8-31.htm | The place and time of their consecration |
/leviticus/9-1.htm | The first offerings of Aaron, for himself and the people |
/leviticus/9-8.htm | The sin offering |
/leviticus/9-12.htm | and the burn offering for himself |
/leviticus/9-15.htm | the offerings for the people |
/leviticus/9-23.htm | Moses and Aaron bless the people |
/leviticus/9-24.htm | Fire comes from the Lord, upon the altar |
/leviticus/10-1.htm | Aadab and Abihu, for offering strange fire, are burnt by fire |
/leviticus/10-6.htm | Aaron and his sons are forbidden to mourn for them |
/leviticus/10-8.htm | The priests are forbidden wine when they are to go into the tabernacle |
/leviticus/10-12.htm | The law of eating the holy things |
/leviticus/10-16.htm | Aaron's excuse for transgressing thereof |
/leviticus/11-1.htm | What animals may be eaten |
/leviticus/11-4.htm | and what may not be eaten |
/leviticus/11-9.htm | What fishes |
/leviticus/11-13.htm | What fowls |
/leviticus/11-29.htm | The creeping things which are unclean |
/leviticus/12-1.htm | The purification of a woman after childbirth |
/leviticus/12-6.htm | Her offerings for her purifying |
/leviticus/13-1.htm | The laws whereby the priest is to be guided in discerning the leprosy. |
/leviticus/14-1.htm | The rites and sacrifices in cleansing the leper |
/leviticus/14-33.htm | The signs of leprosy in a house |
/leviticus/14-48.htm | The cleansing of that house |
/leviticus/15-1.htm | The uncleanness of men in their issues |
/leviticus/15-13.htm | The cleansing of them |
/leviticus/15-19.htm | The uncleanness of women in their issues |
/leviticus/15-28.htm | Their cleansing |
/leviticus/16-1.htm | how the high priest must enter into the holy place |
/leviticus/16-11.htm | The sin offering for himself |
/leviticus/16-15.htm | The sin offering for the people |
/leviticus/16-20.htm | The scapegoat |
/leviticus/16-29.htm | The yearly feast of the expiations |
/leviticus/17-1.htm | The blood of slain beasts must be offered to the Lord at the tabernacle door |
/leviticus/17-7.htm | They must not offer to idols |
/leviticus/17-10.htm | All eating of blood is forbidden |
/leviticus/17-15.htm | and of all that dies by itself, or is torn |
/leviticus/18-1.htm | Unlawful marriages and unlawful lusts |
/leviticus/19-1.htm | A repetition of various laws |
/leviticus/20-1.htm | Of him who gives his seed to Moloch |
/leviticus/20-4.htm | Of him who favors such an one |
/leviticus/20-6.htm | Of going to wizards |
/leviticus/20-7.htm | Of sanctification |
/leviticus/20-9.htm | Of him who curses his parents |
/leviticus/20-11.htm | Of incest |
/leviticus/20-13.htm | Of sodomy |
/leviticus/20-15.htm | Of bestiality |
/leviticus/20-18.htm | Of uncleanness |
/leviticus/20-22.htm | Obedience is required with holiness |
/leviticus/20-27.htm | Wizards must be put to death |
/leviticus/21-1.htm | Of the priests' mourning |
/leviticus/21-6.htm | Of their holiness |
/leviticus/21-7.htm | Of their marriages |
/leviticus/21-8.htm | Of their estimation |
/leviticus/21-9.htm | Of the high priest's holiness |
/leviticus/21-10.htm | Of his marriage |
/leviticus/21-13.htm | The priests that have blemishes must not minister in the sanctuary |
/leviticus/22-1.htm | The priests in their uncleanness must abstain from the holy things |
/leviticus/22-6.htm | How they shall be cleansed |
/leviticus/22-10.htm | Who of the priest's house may eat of the holy things |
/leviticus/22-17.htm | The sacrifices must be without blemish |
/leviticus/22-26.htm | The age of the sacrifice |
/leviticus/22-29.htm | The law of eating the sacrifice of thanksgiving |
/leviticus/23-1.htm | The feasts of the Lord |
/leviticus/23-3.htm | the Sabbath |
/leviticus/23-4.htm | The Passover |
/leviticus/23-9.htm | The sheaf of firstfruits |
/leviticus/23-15.htm | The feast of Pentecost |
/leviticus/23-22.htm | Gleanings to be left for the poor |
/leviticus/23-23.htm | The feast of trumpets |
/leviticus/23-26.htm | The day of atonement |
/leviticus/23-33.htm | The feast of tabernacles |
/leviticus/24-1.htm | The oil for the lamps |
/leviticus/24-5.htm | The showbread |
/leviticus/24-10.htm | Shelomith's son blasphemes |
/leviticus/24-13.htm | The law of blasphemy |
/leviticus/24-17.htm | Of murder |
/leviticus/24-18.htm | Of damage |
/leviticus/24-23.htm | The blasphemer is stoned |
/leviticus/25-1.htm | the Sabbath of the seventh year |
/leviticus/25-8.htm | The jubilee in the fiftieth year |
/leviticus/25-14.htm | Of oppression |
/leviticus/25-18.htm | A blessing of obedience |
/leviticus/25-23.htm | The redemption of land |
/leviticus/25-29.htm | Of houses |
/leviticus/25-35.htm | Compassion to the poor |
/leviticus/25-39.htm | The usage of bondmen |
/leviticus/25-47.htm | The redemption of servants |
/leviticus/26-1.htm | Of idolatry |
/leviticus/26-2.htm | Reverence |
/leviticus/26-3.htm | A blessing to those who keep the commandments |
/leviticus/26-14.htm | A curse to those who break them |
/leviticus/26-40.htm | God promises to remember those who repent |
/leviticus/27-1.htm | He who makes a singular vow must be the Lord's |
/leviticus/27-3.htm | The estimation of the person |
/leviticus/27-9.htm | of a beast given by vow |
/leviticus/27-14.htm | of a house |
/leviticus/27-16.htm | of a field, and the redemption thereof |
/leviticus/27-28.htm | No devoted thing may be redeemed |
/leviticus/27-30.htm | The tithe may not be changed |
/numbers/1-1.htm | God commands Moses to number the people |
/numbers/1-5.htm | The princes of the tribes |
/numbers/1-17.htm | The number of every tribe |
/numbers/1-47.htm | The Levites are exempted for the service of the Lord |
/numbers/2-1.htm | The order of the tribes in their tents. |
/numbers/3-1.htm | The sons of Aaron |
/numbers/3-5.htm | The Levites are given to the priests instead of the firstborn |
/numbers/3-14.htm | Are numbered by their families |
/numbers/3-21.htm | The families, number, and charge of the Gershonites |
/numbers/3-27.htm | Of the Kohathites |
/numbers/3-33.htm | Of the Merarites |
/numbers/3-38.htm | The place and charge of Moses and Aaron |
/numbers/3-40.htm | The firstborn are freed by the Levites |
/numbers/3-44.htm | The balances are refunded |
/numbers/4-1.htm | The age at which the Levites were to serve, and the duration of the service |
/numbers/4-4.htm | The duty of the Kohathites |
/numbers/4-16.htm | The charge of Eleazar |
/numbers/4-17.htm | The office of the priests |
/numbers/4-21.htm | The duty of the Gershonites |
/numbers/4-29.htm | Of the Merarites |
/numbers/4-34.htm | The number of the Kohathites |
/numbers/4-38.htm | Of the Gershonites |
/numbers/4-42.htm | And of the Merarites |
/numbers/5-1.htm | The unclean are removed out of camp |
/numbers/5-5.htm | Restitution is to be made in trespass |
/numbers/5-11.htm | The trial of jealously |
/numbers/6-1.htm | The law of the Nazarite in the days of his separation |
/numbers/6-13.htm | And after their completion |
/numbers/6-22.htm | The form of blessing the people |
/numbers/7-1.htm | The offering of the princes at the dedication of the tabernacle |
/numbers/7-10.htm | Their several offerings at the dedication of the altar |
/numbers/7-89.htm | God speaks to Moses from the mercy seat |
/numbers/8-1.htm | How the lamps are to be lighted |
/numbers/8-5.htm | The consecration of the Levites |
/numbers/8-23.htm | The age and time of their service |
/numbers/9-1.htm | The Passover is again commanded |
/numbers/9-6.htm | A second Passover for the unclean or absent |
/numbers/9-15.htm | The cloud directs the removals and encampments of the Israelites |
/numbers/10-1.htm | The use of the silver trumpets |
/numbers/10-11.htm | The Israelites move from Sinai to Paran |
/numbers/10-14.htm | The order of their march |
/numbers/10-29.htm | Hobab is entreated by Moses not to leave them |
/numbers/10-33.htm | The blessing of Moses at the removing and resting of the ark |
/numbers/11-1.htm | The burning at Taberah quenched by Moses' prayer |
/numbers/11-4.htm | The people crave meat, and loathe manna |
/numbers/11-10.htm | Moses complains of his charge |
/numbers/11-16.htm | God promises to divide his burden unto seventy elders, |
/numbers/11-18.htm | and to give the people meat for a month |
/numbers/11-21.htm | Moses' faith is staggered |
/numbers/11-31.htm | Quails are given in wrath at Kibroth Hattaavah |
/numbers/12-1.htm | God rebukes the sedition of Miriam and Aaron |
/numbers/12-11.htm | Miriam's leprosy is healed at the prayer of Moses |
/numbers/12-14.htm | God commands her to be shut out of the host |
/numbers/12-16.htm | The people encamp in the desert of Paran |
/numbers/13-1.htm | The names of the men who were sent to search the land |
/numbers/13-17.htm | Their instructions |
/numbers/13-21.htm | Their acts |
/numbers/13-26.htm | Their relation |
/numbers/14-1.htm | The people murmur at the news |
/numbers/14-6.htm | Joshua and Caleb labor to still them |
/numbers/14-11.htm | God threatens them |
/numbers/14-13.htm | Moses intercedes with God, and obtains pardon |
/numbers/14-26.htm | The Murmurers are debarred from entering into the land |
/numbers/14-36.htm | The men who raised the evil report die by a plague |
/numbers/14-40.htm | The people that would invade the land against the will of God are smitten |
/numbers/15-1.htm | The law of the meat offering, and the drink offering |
/numbers/15-14.htm | The stranger is under the same law |
/numbers/15-17.htm | The law of the first of the dough |
/numbers/15-22.htm | The sacrifice for sins of ignorance |
/numbers/15-30.htm | The punishment of presumption |
/numbers/15-32.htm | He who violated the Sabbath is stoned |
/numbers/15-37.htm | The law of tassels |
/numbers/16-1.htm | The rebellion of Korah, Dathan, and Abiram |
/numbers/16-23.htm | Moses separates the people from the rebels' tents |
/numbers/16-31.htm | The earth swallows up Korah, and a fire consumes others |
/numbers/16-36.htm | The censers are reserved to holy use |
/numbers/16-41.htm | 14,700 are slain by a plague, for murmuring against Moses and Aaron |
/numbers/16-46.htm | Aaron by incense stays the plague |
/numbers/17-1.htm | Aaron's rod, among all the rods of the tribes, only flourishes |
/numbers/17-10.htm | It is left for a monument against the rebels |
/numbers/18-1.htm | The charge of the priests and Levites |
/numbers/18-8.htm | The priests, portion |
/numbers/18-21.htm | The Levites, |
/numbers/18-25.htm | The heave offering to the priests out of the Levites' portion |
/numbers/19-1.htm | The water of separation made of the ashes of a red heifer |
/numbers/19-11.htm | The law for the use of it in purification of the unclean |
/numbers/20-1.htm | The children of Israel come to Zin, where Miriam dies. |
/numbers/20-2.htm | They murmur for want of water |
/numbers/20-7.htm | Moses smiting the rock, brings forth water at Meribah |
/numbers/20-14.htm | Moses at Kadesh desires passage through Edom, which is denied him |
/numbers/20-22.htm | At Mount Hor Aaron resigns his place to Eleazar, and dies |
/numbers/21-1.htm | Israel destroys the Canaanites at Hormah |
/numbers/21-4.htm | The people murmuring are plagued with fiery serpents |
/numbers/21-7.htm | They repenting are healed by a bronze serpent |
/numbers/21-10.htm | Various journeys of the Israelites |
/numbers/21-21.htm | Sihon is overcome |
/numbers/21-33.htm | And Og |
/numbers/22-1.htm | Balak's first message for Balaam is refused |
/numbers/22-15.htm | His second message obtains him |
/numbers/22-22.htm | An angel would have slain him, if he had not been saved by his donkey |
/numbers/22-36.htm | Balak entertains him |
/numbers/23-1.htm | Balak's sacrifices |
/numbers/24-1.htm | Balaam, leaving divinations, prophesies the happiness of Israel |
/numbers/24-10.htm | Balak, in anger, dismisses him |
/numbers/24-15.htm | He prophesies of the Star of Jacob, and the destruction of some nations |
/numbers/25-1.htm | Israel at Shittim commit unfaithfulness and idolatry |
/numbers/25-6.htm | Phinehas kills Zimri and Cozbi |
/numbers/25-10.htm | God therefore gives him an everlasting priesthood |
/numbers/25-16.htm | The Midianites are to be troubled |
/numbers/26-1.htm | The sum of all Israel is taken in the plains of Moab |
/numbers/26-52.htm | The law of dividing among them the inheritance of the land |
/numbers/26-57.htm | The families and number of the Levites |
/numbers/26-63.htm | None but Caleb and Joshua was left of those who were numbered at Sinai |
/numbers/27-1.htm | The daughters of Zelophehad ask for an inheritance |
/numbers/27-6.htm | The law of inheritances |
/numbers/27-12.htm | Moses, being told of his death, asks for a successor |
/numbers/27-18.htm | Joshua is appointed to succeed him |
/numbers/28-1.htm | Offerings are to be observed |
/numbers/28-3.htm | The continual burnt offering |
/numbers/28-9.htm | The offering on the Sabbath |
/numbers/28-11.htm | On the new Moons |
/numbers/28-16.htm | At the Passover |
/numbers/28-26.htm | In the day of the firstfruits |
/numbers/29-1.htm | The offering at the feast of trumpets |
/numbers/29-7.htm | At the day of afflicting their souls |
/numbers/29-12.htm | And on the eight days of the feast of tabernacles |
/numbers/30-1.htm | Vows are not to be broken |
/numbers/30-3.htm | The exceptions of a maid's vows |
/numbers/30-6.htm | Of a wife's |
/numbers/30-9.htm | Of a widow's or her that is divorced |
/numbers/31-1.htm | The Midianites are spoiled, and Balaam slain |
/numbers/31-13.htm | Moses is angry with the officers, for saving the women alive |
/numbers/31-19.htm | How the soldiers, with their captives and spoil, are to be purified |
/numbers/31-25.htm | The proportion in which the prey is to be divided |
/numbers/31-48.htm | The voluntary offering unto the treasure of the Lord |
/numbers/32-1.htm | The Reubenites and Gadites ask for inheritance on the east side of Jordan |
/numbers/32-6.htm | Moses reproves them |
/numbers/32-16.htm | They offer him conditions with which he is content |
/numbers/32-33.htm | Moses assigns them the land |
/numbers/32-39.htm | They conquer it. |
/numbers/33-1.htm | The forty-two journeys of the Israelites |
/numbers/33-50.htm | The Canaanites are to be destroyed |
/numbers/34-1.htm | The borders of the land |
/numbers/34-16.htm | The names of the men who shall divide the land |
/numbers/35-1.htm | Forty-eight cities for the Levites, with their suburbs, and measure thereof |
/numbers/35-6.htm | Six of them are to be cities of refuge |
/numbers/35-9.htm | The laws of murder and manslaughter |
/numbers/35-31.htm | No satisfaction for murder |
/numbers/36-1.htm | The inheritance of daughters is remedied by marrying in their own tribes |
/numbers/36-7.htm | Lest the inheritance should be removed from the tribe |
/numbers/36-10.htm | The daughters of Zelophehad marry their father's brothers' sons |
/deuteronomy/1-1.htm | Moses' speech in the end of the fortieth year |
/deuteronomy/1-6.htm | briefly rehearsing the history of God's sending them from Horeb |
/deuteronomy/1-14.htm | of giving them officers |
/deuteronomy/1-19.htm | of sending the spies to search the land |
/deuteronomy/1-34.htm | of his anger for their incredulity |
/deuteronomy/1-41.htm | and disobedience |
/deuteronomy/2-1.htm | The story is continued, that they were not to meddle with the Edomites |
/deuteronomy/2-9.htm | nor with the Moabites |
/deuteronomy/2-16.htm | nor with the Ammonites |
/deuteronomy/2-24.htm | but Sihon the Amorite was subdued by them |
/deuteronomy/3-1.htm | The conquest of Og, king of Bashan |
/deuteronomy/3-11.htm | This size of his bed |
/deuteronomy/3-12.htm | The distribution of his lands to the two tribes and half |
/deuteronomy/3-23.htm | Moses prays to enter into the land |
/deuteronomy/3-26.htm | He is permitted to see it |
/deuteronomy/4-1.htm | An exhortation to obedience |
/deuteronomy/4-41.htm | Moses appoints the three cities of refuge on that side of Jordan |
/deuteronomy/4-44.htm | Recapitulation |
/deuteronomy/5-1.htm | The covenant in Horeb |
/deuteronomy/5-6.htm | The ten commandments |
/deuteronomy/5-23.htm | At the people's request Moses receives the law from God |
/deuteronomy/6-1.htm | The end of the law is obedience |
/deuteronomy/6-3.htm | An exhortation thereto |
/deuteronomy/6-20.htm | What they are to teach their children |
/deuteronomy/7-1.htm | All communion with the nations is forbidden |
/deuteronomy/7-5.htm | for fear of idolatry, |
/deuteronomy/7-6.htm | for the holiness of the people, |
/deuteronomy/7-9.htm | for the nature of God in his mercy and justice, |
/deuteronomy/7-17.htm | and for the assuredness of victory which God will give over them. |
/deuteronomy/8-1.htm | An exhortation to obedience in regard to God's mercy and goodness to Israel. |
/deuteronomy/9-1.htm | Moses dissuades them from the opinion of their own righteousness |
/deuteronomy/9-7.htm | Moses reminds them of the golden calf |
/deuteronomy/10-1.htm | God's mercy in restoring the two tablets |
/deuteronomy/10-6.htm | in continuing the priesthood |
/deuteronomy/10-8.htm | in separating the tribe of Levi |
/deuteronomy/10-10.htm | in hearkening unto Moses' plea for his people |
/deuteronomy/10-12.htm | An exhortation to obedience |
/deuteronomy/11-1.htm | Another exhortation to obedience |
/deuteronomy/11-2.htm | by their own experience of God's great works |
/deuteronomy/11-8.htm | by promise of God's great blessings |
/deuteronomy/11-16.htm | and by threatenings |
/deuteronomy/11-18.htm | A careful study is required in God's words |
/deuteronomy/11-26.htm | The blessing and curse set before them |
/deuteronomy/12-1.htm | Monuments of idolatry to be destroyed |
/deuteronomy/12-4.htm | The place of God's service to be kept |
/deuteronomy/12-15.htm | Blood is forbidden |
/deuteronomy/12-17.htm | Holy things must be eaten in the holy place |
/deuteronomy/12-19.htm | The Levite is not to be forsaken |
/deuteronomy/12-20.htm | Blood is again forbidden |
/deuteronomy/12-26.htm | and holy things must be eaten in the holy place |
/deuteronomy/12-29.htm | Idolatry is not to be enquired after |
/deuteronomy/13-1.htm | Enticers to idolatry |
/deuteronomy/13-6.htm | however near to oneself |
/deuteronomy/13-9.htm | are to be stoned to death |
/deuteronomy/13-12.htm | Idolatrous cities are not to be spared |
/deuteronomy/14-1.htm | God's children are not to disfigure themselves in mourning |
/deuteronomy/14-3.htm | What may and may not be eaten |
/deuteronomy/14-4.htm | of animals |
/deuteronomy/14-9.htm | of fishes |
/deuteronomy/14-11.htm | of fowls |
/deuteronomy/14-21.htm | That which dies of itself may not be eaten |
/deuteronomy/14-22.htm | Tithes of Divine Service |
/deuteronomy/14-23.htm | Tithes and firstborns to be eaten before the Lord |
/deuteronomy/14-28.htm | The third year's tithe of alms and charity |
/deuteronomy/15-1.htm | The seventh year a year of release for the poor |
/deuteronomy/15-7.htm | one must be generous in lending or giving |
/deuteronomy/15-12.htm | A Hebrew servant, except by choice, must be freed in the seventh year |
/deuteronomy/15-19.htm | All firstborn males of the cattle are to be sanctified unto the Lord. |
/deuteronomy/16-1.htm | The feast of the Passover |
/deuteronomy/16-9.htm | of weeks |
/deuteronomy/16-13.htm | of tabernacles |
/deuteronomy/16-16.htm | Every male must offer, as he is able, at these three feasts |
/deuteronomy/16-18.htm | Of judges and justice |
/deuteronomy/16-21.htm | Asherah poles and images are forbidden |
/deuteronomy/17-1.htm | The things sacrificed must be sound |
/deuteronomy/17-2.htm | Idolaters must be slain |
/deuteronomy/17-8.htm | Hard controversies are to be determined by the priests and judges |
/deuteronomy/17-12.htm | The one who shows contempt for the judge must die |
/deuteronomy/17-14.htm | The election |
/deuteronomy/17-16.htm | and duty of a king |
/deuteronomy/18-1.htm | The LORD is the priests and Levites' inheritance |
/deuteronomy/18-3.htm | The priests' due |
/deuteronomy/18-6.htm | The Levites' portion |
/deuteronomy/18-9.htm | The abominations of the nations are to be avoided |
/deuteronomy/18-15.htm | Christ the Prophet is to be heard |
/deuteronomy/18-20.htm | The presumptuous prophet is to die |
/deuteronomy/19-1.htm | The cities of refuge |
/deuteronomy/19-4.htm | The privilege thereof for the manslayer |
/deuteronomy/19-14.htm | The landmark is not to be removed |
/deuteronomy/19-15.htm | At least two witnesses are required |
/deuteronomy/19-16.htm | the punishment of a false witness |
/deuteronomy/20-1.htm | The priest's exhortation to encourage the people to battle |
/deuteronomy/20-5.htm | The officers' proclamation of who are to be dismissed from the war |
/deuteronomy/20-10.htm | How to use the cities that accept or refuse the proclamation of peace |
/deuteronomy/20-16.htm | What cities must be devoted |
/deuteronomy/20-19.htm | Trees must not be destroyed in the siege |
/deuteronomy/21-1.htm | The Atonement for an Unsolved Murder |
/deuteronomy/21-10.htm | The usage of a captive taken to wife |
/deuteronomy/21-15.htm | The firstborn is not to be disinherited upon private affection |
/deuteronomy/21-18.htm | A rebellious son is to be stoned to death |
/deuteronomy/21-22.htm | The malefactor must not hang all night on a tree |
/deuteronomy/22-1.htm | Of humanity toward brothers |
/deuteronomy/22-5.htm | The sex is to be distinguished by apparel |
/deuteronomy/22-6.htm | The bird is not to be taken with her young ones |
/deuteronomy/22-8.htm | The house must have battlements |
/deuteronomy/22-9.htm | Confusion is to be avoided |
/deuteronomy/22-12.htm | Tassels upon the vesture |
/deuteronomy/22-13.htm | The punishment of him who slanders his wife |
/deuteronomy/22-22.htm | of adultery |
/deuteronomy/22-23.htm | of rape |
/deuteronomy/22-28.htm | of fornication |
/deuteronomy/22-30.htm | of incest |
/deuteronomy/23-1.htm | Who may or may not enter into the congregation |
/deuteronomy/23-9.htm | Uncleanness is to be avoided in the host |
/deuteronomy/23-15.htm | Of the fugitive servant |
/deuteronomy/23-17.htm | Of filthiness |
/deuteronomy/23-18.htm | Of abominable sacrifices |
/deuteronomy/23-19.htm | Of usury |
/deuteronomy/23-20.htm | Of vows |
/deuteronomy/23-24.htm | Of trespass |
/deuteronomy/24-1.htm | Of divorce |
/deuteronomy/24-5.htm | A new married man goes not to war |
/deuteronomy/24-6.htm | Of pledges |
/deuteronomy/24-7.htm | Of kidnapping |
/deuteronomy/24-8.htm | Of leprosy |
/deuteronomy/24-10.htm | Of pledges |
/deuteronomy/24-14.htm | The hire is to be given |
/deuteronomy/24-16.htm | Of justice |
/deuteronomy/24-19.htm | Of charity |
/deuteronomy/25-1.htm | Punishment must not exceed forty lashes |
/deuteronomy/25-4.htm | The ox is not to be muzzled |
/deuteronomy/25-5.htm | Of raising seed unto a brother |
/deuteronomy/25-11.htm | Of the immodest woman |
/deuteronomy/25-13.htm | Of unjust weights and measures |
/deuteronomy/25-17.htm | The memory of Amalek is to be blotted out |
/deuteronomy/26-1.htm | The confession of him who offers the basket of firstfruits |
/deuteronomy/26-12.htm | The prayer of him who gives his third year's tithes |
/deuteronomy/26-16.htm | The covenant between God and his people |
/deuteronomy/27-1.htm | The people are commanded to write the law upon stones |
/deuteronomy/27-5.htm | and to build an altar of whole stones |
/deuteronomy/27-11.htm | The tribes to be divided on Gerizim and Ebal |
/deuteronomy/27-14.htm | The curses to be pronounced on mount Ebal |
/deuteronomy/28-1.htm | The blessings for obedience |
/deuteronomy/28-15.htm | The curses for disobedience |
/deuteronomy/29-1.htm | Moses exhorts them to obedience, reminding of the works they had seen |
/deuteronomy/29-10.htm | All are presented before the Lord to enter into his covenant |
/deuteronomy/29-18.htm | The great wrath on him who flatters himself in his wickedness |
/deuteronomy/29-29.htm | Secret things belong unto God |
/deuteronomy/30-1.htm | Great mercies promised unto the penitent |
/deuteronomy/30-11.htm | The commandment is manifest |
/deuteronomy/30-15.htm | Death and life are set before them |
/deuteronomy/31-1.htm | Moses encourages the people |
/deuteronomy/31-7.htm | He encourages Joshua |
/deuteronomy/31-9.htm | He delivers the law unto the priests to be read in the seventh year |
/deuteronomy/31-14.htm | God gives a charge to Joshua |
/deuteronomy/31-19.htm | and a song to testify against the people |
/deuteronomy/31-24.htm | Moses delivers the book of the law to the Levites to keep |
/deuteronomy/31-28.htm | He makes a protestation |
/deuteronomy/32-1.htm | Moses' song, which sets forth God's mercy and vengeance |
/deuteronomy/32-46.htm | He exhorts them to set their hearts upon it |
/deuteronomy/32-48.htm | God sends him up to mount Nebo to see the land, and to die |
/deuteronomy/33-1.htm | The majesty of God |
/deuteronomy/33-6.htm | The blessings of the twelve tribes |
/deuteronomy/33-26.htm | The excellence of Israel |
/deuteronomy/34-1.htm | Moses from mount Nebo views the land |
/deuteronomy/34-5.htm | He dies there |
/deuteronomy/34-6.htm | His burial |
/deuteronomy/34-7.htm | His age |
/deuteronomy/34-8.htm | Thirty days mourning for him |
/deuteronomy/34-9.htm | Joshua succeeds him |
/deuteronomy/34-10.htm | The praise of Moses |
/joshua/1-1.htm | The Lord appoints Joshua to succeed Moses |
/joshua/1-3.htm | The borders of the promised land |
/joshua/1-5.htm | God promises to assist Joshua |
/joshua/1-8.htm | He gives him instructions |
/joshua/1-10.htm | Joshua prepares the people to pass over Jordan |
/joshua/1-12.htm | He puts the two tribes and a half in mind of their promise to Moses |
/joshua/1-16.htm | They promise him allegiance |
/joshua/2-1.htm | Rahab receives and conceals the two spies sent from Shittim |
/joshua/2-8.htm | The covenant between her and them |
/joshua/2-23.htm | Their return and description of events |
/joshua/3-1.htm | Joshua come to Jordan |
/joshua/3-2.htm | The officers instruct the people for their passage |
/joshua/3-7.htm | The Lord encourages Joshua |
/joshua/3-9.htm | Joshua encourages the people |
/joshua/3-14.htm | The water of Jordan are divided |
/joshua/4-1.htm | Twelve men are appointed to take twelve memorial stones from Jordan |
/joshua/4-9.htm | Twelve other stones are set up in the midst of Jordan |
/joshua/4-10.htm | The people pass over |
/joshua/4-14.htm | God magnifies Joshua |
/joshua/4-15.htm | The priests commanded to come out of Jordan |
/joshua/4-20.htm | The twelve stones are pitched in Gilgal |
/joshua/5-1.htm | The Canaanites are afraid |
/joshua/5-2.htm | Joshua renews circumcision |
/joshua/5-10.htm | The Passover is kept at Gilgal |
/joshua/5-12.htm | manna ceases |
/joshua/5-13.htm | An angel appears to Joshua |
/joshua/6-1.htm | Jericho is shut up |
/joshua/6-2.htm | God instructs Joshua how to beseige it |
/joshua/6-12.htm | The city is composed |
/joshua/6-17.htm | It is accursed |
/joshua/6-20.htm | The walls fall down |
/joshua/6-22.htm | Rahab is saved |
/joshua/6-26.htm | The builder of Jericho is cursed |
/joshua/7-1.htm | The Israelites are smitten at Ai |
/joshua/7-6.htm | Joshua's complaint |
/joshua/7-10.htm | God instructs him what to do |
/joshua/7-16.htm | Achan is taken by the lot |
/joshua/7-19.htm | His confession |
/joshua/7-24.htm | He and all he had are destroyed in the valley of Achor |
/joshua/8-1.htm | God encourages Joshua |
/joshua/8-3.htm | The plan whereby Ai was taken |
/joshua/8-29.htm | The king thereof is hanged |
/joshua/8-30.htm | Joshua builds an altar |
/joshua/8-32.htm | writes the law on stones |
/joshua/8-33.htm | and pronounces the blessings and curses |
/joshua/9-1.htm | The kings combine against Israel |
/joshua/9-3.htm | The Gibeonites by craft obtain a league |
/joshua/9-22.htm | They are condemned to perpetual bondage |
/joshua/10-1.htm | Five kings war against Gibeon |
/joshua/10-6.htm | Joshua rescues it |
/joshua/10-10.htm | God fights against them with hailstones |
/joshua/10-12.htm | The sun and moon stand still at the word of Joshua |
/joshua/10-16.htm | The five kings are murdered in a cave |
/joshua/10-22.htm | They are brought forth |
/joshua/10-24.htm | scornfully used |
/joshua/10-26.htm | and hanged |
/joshua/10-28.htm | Seven kings more are conquered |
/joshua/10-43.htm | Joshua returns to Gilgal |
/joshua/11-1.htm | Diverse kings overcome at the waters of Merom |
/joshua/11-10.htm | Hazor is taken and burnt |
/joshua/11-16.htm | All the country taken by Joshua |
/joshua/11-21.htm | The Anakims cut off |
/joshua/11-23.htm | The land rests from war |
/joshua/12-1.htm | The two kings whose countries Moses took and disposed of |
/joshua/12-7.htm | The thirty-one kings on the other side of Jordan which Joshua smote |
/joshua/13-1.htm | The bounds of the land not yet conquered |
/joshua/13-8.htm | The inheritance of the two tribes and a half |
/joshua/13-14.htm | The Lord and his sacrifices are the inheritance of Levi |
/joshua/13-15.htm | The bounds of the inheritance of Reuben |
/joshua/13-22.htm | Balaam slain |
/joshua/13-24.htm | The bounds of the inheritance of God |
/joshua/13-29.htm | and of the half tribe of Manasseh |
/joshua/14-1.htm | The nine tribes and a half are to have their inheritance by lot |
/joshua/14-6.htm | Caleb by privilege obtains Hebron |
/joshua/15-1.htm | The borders of the lot of Judah |
/joshua/15-13.htm | Caleb's portion and conquest |
/joshua/15-16.htm | Othniel, for his valour, marries Achsah, Caleb's daughter |
/joshua/15-18.htm | She obtains a blessing of her father |
/joshua/15-21.htm | The cities of Judah |
/joshua/15-63.htm | The Jebusites unconquered |
/joshua/16-1.htm | The general borders of the sons of Joseph |
/joshua/16-5.htm | The border of the inheritance of Ephraim |
/joshua/16-10.htm | The Canaanites of Gezer not conquered |
/joshua/17-1.htm | The lot of Manasseh |
/joshua/17-7.htm | His coast |
/joshua/17-12.htm | The Canaanites not driven out |
/joshua/17-14.htm | The children of Joseph obtain another lot |
/joshua/18-1.htm | The tabernacle is set up at Shiloh |
/joshua/18-2.htm | The remainder of the land is described, and divided into seven parts |
/joshua/18-10.htm | Joshua distributes it by lot |
/joshua/18-11.htm | The lot and border of Benjamin |
/joshua/18-21.htm | Their cities |
/joshua/19-1.htm | The lot of Simeon |
/joshua/19-10.htm | of Zebulun |
/joshua/19-17.htm | of Issachar |
/joshua/19-24.htm | of Asher |
/joshua/19-32.htm | of Naphtali |
/joshua/19-40.htm | of Dan |
/joshua/19-49.htm | The children of Israel give an inheritance to Joshua |
/joshua/20-1.htm | God commands |
/joshua/20-7.htm | and the children of Israel appoint the six cities of refuge |
/joshua/21-1.htm | Forty-eight cities given by lot, out of the other tribes unto the Levites. |
/joshua/21-43.htm | God gives the land, and rest unto the Israelites, according to his promise |
/joshua/22-1.htm | The two tribes and a half with a blessing are sent home, |
/joshua/22-10.htm | They build the altar of testimony in their journey |
/joshua/22-11.htm | The Israelites are offended thereat |
/joshua/22-21.htm | They vindicate their conduct, and give them good satisfaction |
/joshua/23-1.htm | Joshua's exhortation before his death |
/joshua/23-3.htm | by former benefits |
/joshua/23-5.htm | by promises |
/joshua/23-11.htm | and by threatenings |
/joshua/24-1.htm | Joshua assembles the tribes at Shechem |
/joshua/24-2.htm | A brief history of God's benefits from Terah |
/joshua/24-14.htm | He renews the covenant between them and God |
/joshua/24-26.htm | A stone the witness of the covenant |
/joshua/24-29.htm | Joshua's age, death, and burial |
/joshua/24-32.htm | Joseph's bones are buried |
/joshua/24-33.htm | Eleazar dies |
/judges/1-1.htm | The acts of Judah and Simeon |
/judges/1-4.htm | Adonibezek justly requited |
/judges/1-8.htm | Jerusalem taken |
/judges/1-10.htm | Hebron taken |
/judges/1-11.htm | Othniel has Achsah to wife for taking of Debir |
/judges/1-16.htm | The Kenites dwell in Judah |
/judges/1-17.htm | Hormah, Gaza, Askelon, and Ekron taken |
/judges/1-21.htm | The acts of Benjamin |
/judges/1-22.htm | Of the house of Joseph, who take Bethel |
/judges/1-30.htm | Of Zebulun |
/judges/1-31.htm | Of Asher |
/judges/1-33.htm | Of Naphtali |
/judges/1-34.htm | Of Dan |
/judges/2-1.htm | An angel rebukes the people at Bochim |
/judges/2-6.htm | The wickedness of the new generation after Joshua |
/judges/2-14.htm | God's anger and pity toward them |
/judges/2-20.htm | The Canaanites left to prove Israel |
/judges/3-1.htm | The nations which were left to prove Israel |
/judges/3-5.htm | By communion with them they commit idolatry |
/judges/3-8.htm | Othniel delivered them from Chushan-Rishathaim |
/judges/3-12.htm | Ehud from Eglon |
/judges/3-31.htm | and Shamgar from the Philistines |
/judges/4-1.htm | Deborah and Barak deliver them from Jabin and Sisera |
/judges/4-17.htm | Jael kills Sisera |
/judges/5-1.htm | The Song of Deborah and Barak |
/judges/6-1.htm | The Israelites for their sin are oppressed by Midian |
/judges/6-8.htm | A prophet rebukes them |
/judges/6-11.htm | An angel sends Gideon for their deliverance |
/judges/6-17.htm | Gideon's present is consumed with fire |
/judges/6-24.htm | Gideon destroys Baal's altar; offers a sacrifice upon the altar Jehovah-shalom |
/judges/6-28.htm | Joash defends his son, and calls him Jerubbaal |
/judges/6-33.htm | Gideon's army |
/judges/6-36.htm | Gideon's signs |
/judges/7-1.htm | Gideon's army of thirty-two thousand is brought to three hundred |
/judges/7-9.htm | He is encouraged by the dream and interpretation of the burley cake |
/judges/7-16.htm | His plan of trumpets and lamps in pitchers |
/judges/7-24.htm | The Ephraimites take Oreb and Zeeb |
/judges/8-1.htm | Gideon pacifies the Ephraimites |
/judges/8-4.htm | Succoth and Penuel refuse to deliver Gideon's army |
/judges/8-10.htm | Zebah and Zalmunna are taken |
/judges/8-13.htm | Succoth and Penuel are destroyed |
/judges/8-17.htm | Gideon revenges his brothers's death on Zebah and Zalmunna |
/judges/8-22.htm | He refuses government |
/judges/8-24.htm | His ephod the cause of idolatry |
/judges/8-28.htm | Midian subdued |
/judges/8-29.htm | Gideon's children, and death |
/judges/8-33.htm | The Israelites' idolatry and ingratitude |
/judges/9-1.htm | Abimelech by conspiracy with the Shechemites, and murder of his brothers, is made king |
/judges/9-7.htm | Jotham by a parable rebukes them, and foretells their ruin |
/judges/9-22.htm | Gaal conspires with the Shechemites against him |
/judges/9-30.htm | Zebul reveals it |
/judges/9-34.htm | Abimelech overcomes them, and sows the city with salt |
/judges/9-46.htm | He burns the hold of the god Berith |
/judges/9-50.htm | At Thebez he is slain by a piece of a millstone |
/judges/9-56.htm | Jotham's curse is fulfilled. |
/judges/10-1.htm | Tola judges Israel in Shamir |
/judges/10-3.htm | Jair, whose thirty sons had thirty cities |
/judges/10-6.htm | The Philistines and Ammonites oppress Israel |
/judges/10-10.htm | In their misery God sends them to their false gods |
/judges/10-15.htm | Upon their repentance he pities them |
/judges/11-1.htm | The covenant between Jephthah and the Gileadites, that he should lead |
/judges/11-12.htm | The treaty of peace between him and the Ammonites is in vain |
/judges/11-29.htm | Jephthah's vow |
/judges/11-32.htm | His conquest of the Ammonites |
/judges/11-34.htm | He performs his vow on his daughter. |
/judges/12-1.htm | The Ephraimites, quarrelling with Jephthah, are slain by the Gileadites |
/judges/12-7.htm | Jephthah dies |
/judges/12-8.htm | Ibzan, who had thirty sons, and thirty daughters |
/judges/12-11.htm | and Elon |
/judges/12-13.htm | and Abdon, who had forty sons, and thirty nephews, judge Israel |
/judges/13-1.htm | Israel is delivered into the hands of Philistines |
/judges/13-2.htm | An angel appears to Manoah's wife |
/judges/13-8.htm | The angel appears to Manoah |
/judges/13-15.htm | Manoah's sacrifices, whereby the angel is discovered. |
/judges/13-24.htm | Samson is born |
/judges/14-1.htm | Samson desires a wife of the Philistines. |
/judges/14-6.htm | In his journey he kills a lion |
/judges/14-8.htm | In a second journey he finds honey in the carcass |
/judges/14-10.htm | Samson's marriage feast |
/judges/14-12.htm | His riddle by his wife is made known |
/judges/14-19.htm | He strikes down thirty Philistines |
/judges/14-20.htm | His wife is married to another. |
/judges/15-1.htm | Samson is denied his wife |
/judges/15-3.htm | He burns the Philistines' corn with foxes and firebrands |
/judges/15-6.htm | His wife and her father are burnt by the Philistines |
/judges/15-8.htm | Samson smites them hip and thigh |
/judges/15-9.htm | He is bound by the men of Judah, and delivered to the Philistines |
/judges/15-14.htm | He kills them with a jawbone |
/judges/15-18.htm | God makes the fountain En-hakkore for him in Lehi |
/judges/16-1.htm | Samson at Gaza escapes, and carries away the gates of the city |
/judges/16-4.htm | Delilah corrupted by the Philistines, entices Samson |
/judges/16-6.htm | Thrice she is deceived |
/judges/16-15.htm | At last she overcomes him |
/judges/16-21.htm | The Philistines take him, and put out his eyes |
/judges/16-22.htm | His strength renewing, he pulls down the house upon the Philistines and dies |
/judges/17-1.htm | Of the money that Micah first stole, then restored, his mother makes idols |
/judges/17-5.htm | And he makes ornaments for them |
/judges/17-7.htm | He hires a Levite to be his priest |
/judges/18-1.htm | The Danites send five men to seek out an inheritance |
/judges/18-3.htm | At the house of Micah they consult with Jonathan, and are encouraged |
/judges/18-7.htm | They search Laish, and bring back news of good hope |
/judges/18-11.htm | Six hundred men are sent to surprise it |
/judges/18-16.htm | In their way they rob Micah of his priest and his consecrated things |
/judges/18-27.htm | They win Laish, and call it Dan |
/judges/18-30.htm | They set up idolatry, wherein Jonathan inherits the priesthood. |
/judges/19-1.htm | A Levite goes to Bethlehem to fetch home his concubine |
/judges/19-16.htm | An old man entertains him at Gibeah |
/judges/19-22.htm | The Gibeonites abuse his concubine to death |
/judges/19-29.htm | He divides her into twelve pieces, and sends them to the twelve tribes |
/judges/20-1.htm | The Levite in a general assembly declared his wrong |
/judges/20-8.htm | The decree of the assembly |
/judges/20-12.htm | The Benjamites, being cited, make head against the Israelites |
/judges/20-18.htm | The Israelites in two battles lose forty thousand |
/judges/20-26.htm | They destroy by a plan all the Benjamites, except six hundred. |
/judges/21-1.htm | The people bewail the desolation of Benjamin |
/judges/21-8.htm | By the destruction of Jabesh Gilead they provide them four hundred wives. |
/judges/21-16.htm | They advise the remainder to surprise the virgins that danced at Shiloh |
/ruth/1-1.htm | Elimelech, driven by famine into Moab, dies there |
/ruth/1-4.htm | Mahlon and Chilion, having married wives of Moab, die also |
/ruth/1-6.htm | Naomi, returning homeward |
/ruth/1-8.htm | dissuades her two daughters-in-law from going with her |
/ruth/1-14.htm | Orpah leaves her, but Ruth with great constancy accompanies her |
/ruth/1-19.htm | The two come to Bethlehem, where they are gladly received |
/ruth/2-1.htm | Ruth gleans in the field of Boaz |
/ruth/2-4.htm | Boaz takes notice of her |
/ruth/2-8.htm | and shows her great favor |
/ruth/2-18.htm | That which she got, she carries to Naomi |
/ruth/3-1.htm | By Naomi's instruction |
/ruth/3-5.htm | Ruth lies at Boaz's feet |
/ruth/3-8.htm | Boaz acknowledges the right of a kinsman |
/ruth/3-14.htm | He sends her away with six measures of barley |
/ruth/4-1.htm | Boaz calls into judgment the next kinsman |
/ruth/4-6.htm | He refuses the redemption according to the manner in Israel |
/ruth/4-9.htm | Boaz buys the inheritance |
/ruth/4-11.htm | He marries Ruth |
/ruth/4-13.htm | She bears Obed, the grandfather of David |
/ruth/4-18.htm | The generations of Pharez unto David |
/1_samuel/1-1.htm | Elkanah, a Levite, having two wives, worships yearly at Shiloh |
/1_samuel/1-4.htm | He cherishes Hannah, though barren, and provoked by Peninnah |
/1_samuel/1-9.htm | Hannah in grief prays for a child |
/1_samuel/1-12.htm | Eli first rebuking her, afterwards blesses her |
/1_samuel/1-19.htm | Hannah, having born Samuel, stays at home till he is weaned |
/1_samuel/1-24.htm | She presents him, according to her vow, to the Lord |
/1_samuel/2-1.htm | Hannah's song in thankfulness |
/1_samuel/2-12.htm | The sin of Eli's sons |
/1_samuel/2-18.htm | Samuel's ministry |
/1_samuel/2-20.htm | by Eli's blessing Hannah is more fruitful |
/1_samuel/2-22.htm | Eli reproves his sons |
/1_samuel/2-27.htm | A prophecy against Eli's house |
/1_samuel/3-1.htm | How the word of the Lord was first revealed to Samuel |
/1_samuel/3-11.htm | God tells Samuel the destruction of Eli's house |
/1_samuel/3-15.htm | Samuel, though loath, tells Eli the vision |
/1_samuel/3-19.htm | Samuel grows in credit |
/1_samuel/4-1.htm | The Israelites are overcome by the Philistines at Ebenezer |
/1_samuel/4-3.htm | They fetch the ark unto the terror of the Philistines |
/1_samuel/4-10.htm | They are smitten again, the ark taken, and Hophni and Phinehas are slain |
/1_samuel/4-12.htm | Eli at the news, falling backward, breaks his neck |
/1_samuel/4-19.htm | Phinehas's wife, discouraged in her travail with Ichabod, dies |
/1_samuel/5-1.htm | The Philistines having brought the ark into Ashdod, set it in the house Dagon |
/1_samuel/5-3.htm | Dagon is smitten down and cut and cut in pieces, |
/1_samuel/5-5.htm | and they of Ashdod smitten with tumors |
/1_samuel/5-8.htm | So God deals with them of Gath, when it was brought thither |
/1_samuel/5-10.htm | and so with them of Ekron, when it was brought thither |
/1_samuel/6-1.htm | After seven months the Philistines take counsel how to send back the ark |
/1_samuel/6-10.htm | They bring it on a new cart with an offering unto Beth Shemesh |
/1_samuel/6-19.htm | The people are smitten for looking into the ark |
/1_samuel/6-21.htm | They send to them of Kiriath Jearim to fetch it |
/1_samuel/7-1.htm | They of Kiriath Jearim bring the ark to Abinadab, and sanctify Eleazar as guard |
/1_samuel/7-2.htm | After twenty years, |
/1_samuel/7-3.htm | the Israelites, by Samuel's means, solemnly repent at Mizpeh |
/1_samuel/7-7.htm | While Samuel prays and sacrifices, |
/1_samuel/7-10.htm | the Lord thwarts the Philistines by thunder at Ebenezer |
/1_samuel/7-13.htm | The Philistines are subdued |
/1_samuel/7-15.htm | Samuel judges Israel |
/1_samuel/8-1.htm | By occasion of the ill government of Samuel's sons, the Israelites ask a king |
/1_samuel/8-6.htm | Samuel praying in grief is comforted by God |
/1_samuel/8-10.htm | He tells the manner of a king |
/1_samuel/8-19.htm | God wills Samuel to yield unto the importunity of the people |
/1_samuel/9-1.htm | Saul despairing to find his father's donkeys |
/1_samuel/9-6.htm | by the counsel of his servant |
/1_samuel/9-11.htm | and direction of young maidens |
/1_samuel/9-15.htm | according to God's revelation |
/1_samuel/9-18.htm | comes to Samuel |
/1_samuel/9-19.htm | Samuel entertains Saul at the feast |
/1_samuel/9-25.htm | Samuel, after secret communication, brings Saul on his way |
/1_samuel/10-1.htm | Samuel anoints Saul |
/1_samuel/10-2.htm | He confirms him by prediction of three signs |
/1_samuel/10-9.htm | Saul's heart is changed, and he prophesies |
/1_samuel/10-14.htm | He conceals the matter of the kingdom from his uncle |
/1_samuel/10-17.htm | Saul is chosen at Mizpeh by lot |
/1_samuel/10-26.htm | The different affections of his subjects |
/1_samuel/11-1.htm | Nahash offers them of Jabesh Gilead a reproachful condition |
/1_samuel/11-4.htm | They send messengers, and are delivered by Saul |
/1_samuel/11-12.htm | Saul thereby is confirmed, and his kingdom renewed |
/1_samuel/12-1.htm | Samuel testifies his integrity |
/1_samuel/12-6.htm | He reproves the people of ingratitude |
/1_samuel/12-16.htm | He terrifies them with thunder in harvest time |
/1_samuel/12-20.htm | he comforts them in God's mercy |
/1_samuel/13-1.htm | Saul's select band |
/1_samuel/13-3.htm | He calls the Hebrews to Gilgal against the Philistines |
/1_samuel/13-5.htm | The Philistines' great army |
/1_samuel/13-6.htm | The distress of the Israelites |
/1_samuel/13-8.htm | Saul, weary of staying for Samuel, sacrifices |
/1_samuel/13-11.htm | Samuel reproves him |
/1_samuel/13-17.htm | The three raiding parties of the Philistines |
/1_samuel/13-19.htm | The policy of the Philistines, to allow no blacksmith in Israel |
/1_samuel/14-1.htm | Jonathan goes and miraculously smites the Philistine's garrison |
/1_samuel/14-15.htm | A divine terror makes them beat themselves |
/1_samuel/14-17.htm | Saul, not staying the priest's answer, sets on them |
/1_samuel/14-21.htm | The captivated Hebrews, and the hidden Israelites, join against them. |
/1_samuel/14-24.htm | Saul's unadvised adjuration hinders the victory |
/1_samuel/14-31.htm | He restrains the people from eating blood |
/1_samuel/14-35.htm | He builds an altar |
/1_samuel/14-37.htm | Jonathan, taken by lot, is save by the people |
/1_samuel/14-47.htm | Saul's victories, strength, and family |
/1_samuel/15-1.htm | Samuel sends Saul to destroy Amalek |
/1_samuel/15-6.htm | Saul favors the Kenites |
/1_samuel/15-7.htm | He spares Agag and the best of the spoil |
/1_samuel/15-10.htm | Samuel denounces unto Saul God's rejection of him for his disobedience |
/1_samuel/15-24.htm | Saul's humiliation |
/1_samuel/15-32.htm | Samuel kills Agag |
/1_samuel/15-34.htm | Samuel and Saul part |
/1_samuel/16-1.htm | Samuel sent by God, under pretense of a sacrifice, comes to Bethlehem |
/1_samuel/16-6.htm | His human judgment is reproved |
/1_samuel/16-11.htm | He anoints David |
/1_samuel/16-15.htm | Saul sends for David to quiet his evil spirit |
/1_samuel/17-1.htm | The armies of the Israelites and Philistines being ready to battle |
/1_samuel/17-4.htm | Goliath challenges a combat |
/1_samuel/17-12.htm | David, sent by his father to visit his brothers, takes the challenge |
/1_samuel/17-28.htm | Eliab chides him |
/1_samuel/17-30.htm | He is brought to Saul |
/1_samuel/17-32.htm | shows the reason of his confidence |
/1_samuel/17-38.htm | and slays the giant |
/1_samuel/17-55.htm | Saul takes notice of David |
/1_samuel/18-1.htm | Jonathan befriends David |
/1_samuel/18-5.htm | Saul envies his praise |
/1_samuel/18-10.htm | seeks to kill him in his fury |
/1_samuel/18-12.htm | fears him for his good success |
/1_samuel/18-17.htm | offers him his daughters for snare |
/1_samuel/18-23.htm | David persuaded to be the king's son-in-law, |
/1_samuel/18-25.htm | gives two hundred foreskins of the Philistines for Michal's dowry |
/1_samuel/18-28.htm | Saul's hatred and David's glory increase |
/1_samuel/19-1.htm | Elkanah, a Levite, having two wives, worships yearly at Shiloh |
/1_samuel/19-4.htm | He cherishes Hannah, though barren, and provoked by Peninnah |
/1_samuel/19-9.htm | Hannah in grief prays for a child |
/1_samuel/19-12.htm | Eli first rebuking her, afterwards blesses her |
/1_samuel/19-19.htm | Hannah, having born Samuel, stays at home till he is weaned |
/1_samuel/19-24.htm | She presents him, according to her vow, to the Lord |
/1_samuel/20-1.htm | David consults with Jonathan for his safety |
/1_samuel/20-11.htm | Jonathan and David renew their covenant by oath |
/1_samuel/20-18.htm | Jonathan's token to David |
/1_samuel/20-23.htm | Saul, missing David, seeks to kill Jonathan |
/1_samuel/20-35.htm | Jonathan affectionately takes his leave of David |
/1_samuel/21-1.htm | David at Nob obtains Ahimelech's hallowed bread |
/1_samuel/21-7.htm | Doeg is present |
/1_samuel/21-8.htm | David takes Goliath's sword |
/1_samuel/21-10.htm | David at Gath feigns himself insane |
/1_samuel/22-1.htm | Companies resort unto David at Adullam |
/1_samuel/22-3.htm | At Mizpeh he commends his parents unto the king of Moab |
/1_samuel/22-5.htm | Admonished by Gad, he comes to Hareth, |
/1_samuel/22-6.htm | Saul going to pursue him, complains of his servants' unfaithfulness |
/1_samuel/22-9.htm | Doeg accuses Ahimelech |
/1_samuel/22-11.htm | Saul commands to kill the priests |
/1_samuel/22-17.htm | The footmen refusing, Doeg executes it |
/1_samuel/22-20.htm | Abiathar escaping, brings David the news |
/1_samuel/23-1.htm | David, enquiring of the Lord by Abiathar, rescues Keilah |
/1_samuel/23-7.htm | God showing him the coming of Saul, and the treachery of the Keilites, |
/1_samuel/23-13.htm | he escapes from Keilah |
/1_samuel/23-14.htm | In Ziph Jonathan comes and comforts him |
/1_samuel/23-19.htm | The Ziphites discover him to Saul |
/1_samuel/23-25.htm | At Maon he is rescued from Saul by the invasion of the Philistines |
/1_samuel/23-29.htm | He dwells at En Gedi |
/1_samuel/24-1.htm | David, in a cave at En Gedi, spares his life |
/1_samuel/24-8.htm | He shows thereby his innocence, |
/1_samuel/24-16.htm | Saul, acknowledging his fault, takes an oath of David, and departs. |
/1_samuel/25-1.htm | Samuel dies |
/1_samuel/25-2.htm | David in Paran sends to Nabal |
/1_samuel/25-10.htm | Provoked by Nabal's rudeness, he minds to destroy him |
/1_samuel/25-14.htm | Abigail understanding thereof |
/1_samuel/25-18.htm | takes a present |
/1_samuel/25-23.htm | and by her wisdom |
/1_samuel/25-32.htm | pacifies David |
/1_samuel/25-36.htm | Nabal hearing thereof, dies |
/1_samuel/25-39.htm | David takes Abigail and Ahinoam to be his wives |
/1_samuel/25-44.htm | Michal is given to Phalti |
/1_samuel/26-1.htm | Saul, by the discovery of the Ziphites, comes to Hachilah against David |
/1_samuel/26-4.htm | David coming into the trench keeps Abishai from killing Saul, |
/1_samuel/26-11.htm | but takes his spear and jug |
/1_samuel/26-13.htm | David reproves Abner |
/1_samuel/26-17.htm | and exhorts Saul |
/1_samuel/26-21.htm | Saul acknowledges his sin |
/1_samuel/27-1.htm | Saul, hearing David to be in Gath, seeks no more for him |
/1_samuel/27-5.htm | David begs Ziklag of Achish |
/1_samuel/27-8.htm | He, invading other countries, persuades Achish he fought against Judah. |
/1_samuel/28-1.htm | Achish puts confidence in David |
/1_samuel/28-3.htm | Saul having destroyed the witches |
/1_samuel/28-4.htm | and now in his fear forsaken of God |
/1_samuel/28-7.htm | has recourse to a witch |
/1_samuel/28-8.htm | who, encouraged by Saul, raises up Samuel |
/1_samuel/28-15.htm | Saul hearing his ruin, faints |
/1_samuel/28-21.htm | The woman and his servants refresh him with meat |
/1_samuel/29-1.htm | David marching with the Philistines |
/1_samuel/29-3.htm | is disallowed by their princes |
/1_samuel/29-6.htm | Achish dismisses him, with commendations of his fidelity |
/1_samuel/30-1.htm | The Amalekites raid Ziklag |
/1_samuel/30-4.htm | David asking counsel, is encouraged by God to pursue them |
/1_samuel/30-11.htm | By the means of a received Egyptian he is brought to the enemies, |
/1_samuel/30-18.htm | and recovers all the spoil |
/1_samuel/30-22.htm | David's law to divide the spoil equally |
/1_samuel/30-26.htm | He sends presents to his friends |
/1_samuel/31-1.htm | Saul, having lost his army, and his sons slain, |
/1_samuel/31-4.htm | he and his armor bearer kill themselves. |
/1_samuel/31-7.htm | The Philistines possess the forsaken towns of the Israelites |
/1_samuel/31-8.htm | They triumph over the dead bodies |
/1_samuel/31-11.htm | They of Jabesh Gilead recovering the dead bodies by night, |
/1_samuel/31-12.htm | burn them at Jabesh, |
/1_samuel/31-13.htm | and mournfully bury their bodies. |
/2_samuel/1-1.htm | The Amalekite who accused himself of Saul's death is slain |
/2_samuel/1-17.htm | David laments Saul and Jonathan with a song |
/2_samuel/2-1.htm | David, by God's direction, with his company goes up to Hebron |
/2_samuel/2-4.htm | where he is made king of Judah |
/2_samuel/2-5.htm | He commends them of Jabesh Gilead for their king of Israel |
/2_samuel/2-8.htm | Abner makes Ishbosheth king of Israel |
/2_samuel/2-12.htm | A mortal skirmish between twelve of Abner's and twelve of Joab's men. |
/2_samuel/2-18.htm | Asahel is slain |
/2_samuel/2-25.htm | At Abner's motion, Joab sounds a retreat |
/2_samuel/2-32.htm | Asahel's burial |
/2_samuel/3-1.htm | During the war David becomes stronger |
/2_samuel/3-2.htm | Six sons are born to him in Hebron |
/2_samuel/3-6.htm | Abner, displeased with Ishbosheth |
/2_samuel/3-7.htm | revolts to David |
/2_samuel/3-13.htm | David requires as a condition to bring him his wife Michal |
/2_samuel/3-17.htm | Abner confers with the Israelites, feasted by David, and dismissed |
/2_samuel/3-22.htm | Joab returning from battle, is displeased with the king, and kills Abner |
/2_samuel/3-28.htm | David curses Joab |
/2_samuel/3-31.htm | and mourns for Abner |
/2_samuel/4-1.htm | The Israelites being troubled at the death of Abner |
/2_samuel/4-2.htm | Baanah and Rechab slay Ish-Bosheth, and bring his head to Hebron |
/2_samuel/4-9.htm | David causes them to be slain, and Ish-Bosheth's head to be buried. |
/2_samuel/5-1.htm | The tribes come to Hebron and anoint David over Israel, |
/2_samuel/5-4.htm | David's age |
/2_samuel/5-6.htm | Taking Zion from the Jebusites, he dwells in it |
/2_samuel/5-11.htm | Hiram sends to David, |
/2_samuel/5-13.htm | Eleven sons are born to him in Jerusalem |
/2_samuel/5-17.htm | David, directed by God, smites the Philistines at Baal-perazim |
/2_samuel/5-22.htm | And again at the mulberry trees |
/2_samuel/6-1.htm | David fetches the ark from Kirjath Jearim on a new cart, |
/2_samuel/6-6.htm | Uzzah is smitten at Perez Uzzah |
/2_samuel/6-9.htm | God blesses Obed-Edom for the ark |
/2_samuel/6-12.htm | David brings the ark into Zion with sacrifices, and dances before it; |
/2_samuel/6-16.htm | for which Michal despises him |
/2_samuel/6-17.htm | He places it in a tabernacle with great joy and feasting |
/2_samuel/6-20.htm | Michal, reproving David for his joy, is childless to her death |
/2_samuel/7-1.htm | Nathan, first approving the purpose of David to build God a house |
/2_samuel/7-4.htm | After by the word of God forbids him |
/2_samuel/7-12.htm | God promises him benefits and blessings in his seed |
/2_samuel/7-18.htm | David's prayer and thanksgiving |
/2_samuel/8-1.htm | David subdues the Philistines and the Moabites |
/2_samuel/8-3.htm | He smites Hadadezer, and the Syrians |
/2_samuel/8-9.htm | Toi sends Joram with presents to bless him |
/2_samuel/8-11.htm | David dedicates the presents and the spoil to God |
/2_samuel/8-14.htm | He puts garrisons in Edom |
/2_samuel/8-16.htm | David's officers |
/2_samuel/9-1.htm | David by Ziba sends for Mephibosheth |
/2_samuel/9-7.htm | For Jonathan's sake he restores to him all that was Saul's |
/2_samuel/9-9.htm | He makes Ziba his farmer |
/2_samuel/10-1.htm | David's messengers, sent to comfort Hanun are villainously treated |
/2_samuel/10-6.htm | The Ammonites, strengthened by the Syrians, overcome by Joab and Abishai |
/2_samuel/10-15.htm | Shobuch, making a new supply of the Syrains at Helam, is slain by David |
/2_samuel/11-1.htm | While Joab besieges Rabbah, David commits adultery with Bathsheba |
/2_samuel/11-6.htm | Uriah, sent for by David to cover the adultery, would not go home. |
/2_samuel/11-14.htm | He carries to Joab the letter of his death |
/2_samuel/11-18.htm | Joab sends the news thereof to David |
/2_samuel/11-26.htm | David takes Bathsheba as his wife |
/2_samuel/12-1.htm | Nathan's parable of the ewe lamb causes David to be his own judge. |
/2_samuel/12-7.htm | David, reproved by Nathan, confesses his sin, and is pardoned |
/2_samuel/12-15.htm | David mourns and prays for the child while it lives |
/2_samuel/12-24.htm | Solomon is born, and named Jedidiah |
/2_samuel/12-26.htm | David takes Rabbah, and tortures the people thereof |
/2_samuel/13-1.htm | Amnon loving Tamar, by Jonadab's counsel feigning himself sick, ravishes her. |
/2_samuel/13-15.htm | He hates her, and shamefully turns her away |
/2_samuel/13-19.htm | Absalom entertains her, and conceals his purpose |
/2_samuel/13-23.htm | At a sheep-shearing among all the king's sons, he kills Amnon |
/2_samuel/13-31.htm | David grieving at the news, is comforted by Jonadab |
/2_samuel/13-37.htm | Absalom flies to Talmai at Geshur |
/2_samuel/14-1.htm | Joab, suborning a widow of Tekoah to incline the king's heart to fetch Absalom, |
/2_samuel/14-21.htm | brings him home to Jerusalem |
/2_samuel/14-25.htm | Absalom's beauty, hair, and children |
/2_samuel/14-28.htm | After two years, Absalom is brought into the king's presence by Joab |
/2_samuel/15-1.htm | Absalom, by fair speeches and courtesies, steals the hearts of Israel. |
/2_samuel/15-7.htm | By pretense of a vow, he obtains leave to go to Hebron |
/2_samuel/15-10.htm | He makes there a great conspiracy |
/2_samuel/15-13.htm | David upon the news flees from Jerusalem |
/2_samuel/15-19.htm | Ittai will leave him |
/2_samuel/15-24.htm | Zadok and Abiathar are sent back with the ark |
/2_samuel/15-30.htm | David and his company go up mount Olivet weeping, |
/2_samuel/15-31.htm | He curses Ahithophel's counsel |
/2_samuel/15-32.htm | Hushai is sent back with instructions |
/2_samuel/16-1.htm | Ziba, by presents and false suggestions, obtains his master's inheritance |
/2_samuel/16-5.htm | At Bahurim, Shimei curses David |
/2_samuel/16-9.htm | David with patience abstains, and restrains others, from revenge |
/2_samuel/16-15.htm | Hushai insinuates himself into Absalom's counsel |
/2_samuel/16-20.htm | Ahithophel's counsel |
/2_samuel/17-1.htm | Ahithophel's counsel is overthrown by Hushai's |
/2_samuel/17-15.htm | Secret intelligence is sent unto David |
/2_samuel/17-23.htm | Ahithophel hangs himself |
/2_samuel/17-25.htm | Amasa is made captain |
/2_samuel/17-27.htm | David at Mahanaim is furnished with provisions |
/2_samuel/18-1.htm | David viewing the armies in their march gives them charge of Absalom |
/2_samuel/18-6.htm | The Israelites are sorely smitten in the wood of ephraim |
/2_samuel/18-9.htm | Absalom, hanging in an oak is slain by Joab, and cast into a pit |
/2_samuel/18-18.htm | Absalom's place |
/2_samuel/18-19.htm | Ahimaaz and Cushi bring tidings to David |
/2_samuel/18-33.htm | David mourns for Absalom |
/2_samuel/19-1.htm | Joab causes the king to cease his mourning |
/2_samuel/19-9.htm | The Israelites are earnest to bring the king back |
/2_samuel/19-11.htm | David sends to the priest to incite them of Judah |
/2_samuel/19-18.htm | Shimei is pardoned |
/2_samuel/19-24.htm | Mephibosheth excused |
/2_samuel/19-32.htm | Barzillai dismissed, and Chimham his son taken into the king's family |
/2_samuel/19-41.htm | The Israelites expostulate with Judah for bringing home the king without them |
/2_samuel/20-1.htm | By occasion of the quarrel, Sheba rebels in Israel |
/2_samuel/20-3.htm | David's ten concubines are put in confinement for life |
/2_samuel/20-4.htm | Amasa, made captain over Judah, is slain by Joab |
/2_samuel/20-14.htm | Joab pursues Sheba to Abel |
/2_samuel/20-16.htm | A wise woman saves the city by Sheba's head |
/2_samuel/20-23.htm | David's officers |
/2_samuel/21-1.htm | The three year Gibeonite famine ceases, by hanging seven of Saul's sons. |
/2_samuel/21-10.htm | Rizpah's kindness unto the dead |
/2_samuel/21-12.htm | David buries the bones of Saul and Jonathan in his father's tomb |
/2_samuel/21-15.htm | Four battles against the Philistines, wherein four men of David slay four giants. |
/2_samuel/22-1.htm | David's psalm of thanksgiving for God's deliverance and blessings |
/2_samuel/23-1.htm | David, in his last words, professes his faith in God's promises |
/2_samuel/23-6.htm | The different state of the wicked |
/2_samuel/23-8.htm | A catalogue of David's mighty men |
/2_samuel/24-1.htm | David, tempted by Satan, forces Joab to number the people |
/2_samuel/24-5.htm | The captains, in nine months and twenty days, gather 1,300,000 fighting men |
/2_samuel/24-10.htm | David repents, and having three plagues proposed by God, chooses pestilence |
/2_samuel/24-15.htm | After the death of 70,000, David by prayer prevents the destruction of Jerusalem |
/2_samuel/24-18.htm | David, by God's direction, purchases Araunah's threshing floor; |
/2_samuel/24-25.htm | and the plague stops |
/1_kings/1-1.htm | Abishag cherishes David in his extreme age |
/1_kings/1-5.htm | Adonijah, David's darling, usurps the kingdom |
/1_kings/1-11.htm | By the council of Nathan |
/1_kings/1-15.htm | Bathsheba moves the king |
/1_kings/1-22.htm | And Nathan seconds her |
/1_kings/1-28.htm | David renews his oath to Bathsheba |
/1_kings/1-32.htm | Solomon, by David's appointment, |
/1_kings/1-38.htm | being anointed king by Zadok and Nathan, the people triumph |
/1_kings/1-41.htm | Jonathan bringing the news, Adonijah's guests fly |
/1_kings/1-50.htm | Adonijah, flying to the horns of the altar, is dismissed by Solomon |
/1_kings/2-1.htm | David, having given a charge to Solomon |
/1_kings/2-3.htm | of Reverence |
/1_kings/2-5.htm | of Joab |
/1_kings/2-7.htm | of Barzillai |
/1_kings/2-8.htm | of Shimei |
/1_kings/2-10.htm | Solomon succeeds |
/1_kings/2-12.htm | Adonijah, moving Bathsheba to ask unto Solomon for Abishag, |
/1_kings/2-13.htm | is put to death |
/1_kings/2-26.htm | Abiathar, having his life given him, is deprived of the priesthood |
/1_kings/2-28.htm | Joab fleeing to the horns of the altar, is there slain |
/1_kings/2-35.htm | Benaiah is put in Joab's room, and Zadfok in Abiathar's |
/1_kings/2-36.htm | Shimei, confined to Jerusalem, by occasion of going to Gath, is put to death. |
/1_kings/3-1.htm | Solomon marries Pharaoh's daughter |
/1_kings/3-2.htm | High places being in use, Solomon sacrifices at Gibeon |
/1_kings/3-5.htm | Solomon at Gibeon, in the choice which God gave him, |
/1_kings/3-10.htm | preferring wisdom, obtains wisdom, riches, and honor |
/1_kings/3-16.htm | Solomon's judgment makes him renowned |
/1_kings/4-1.htm | Solomon's princes |
/1_kings/4-7.htm | His twelve officers for provision |
/1_kings/4-20.htm | The peace and largeness of his kingdom |
/1_kings/4-22.htm | His daily provision |
/1_kings/4-26.htm | His stable |
/1_kings/4-29.htm | His wisdom |
/1_kings/5-1.htm | Hiram, sending to congratulate Solomon, is desired to furnish him with timber |
/1_kings/5-7.htm | Hiram, blessing God for Solomon, furnishes him with trees. |
/1_kings/5-13.htm | The number of Solomon's workmen and laborers |
/1_kings/6-1.htm | The building of Solomon's temple |
/1_kings/6-5.htm | The chambers thereof |
/1_kings/6-11.htm | God's promise unto it |
/1_kings/6-15.htm | The ceiling and adorning of it |
/1_kings/6-23.htm | The cherubim |
/1_kings/6-31.htm | The doors |
/1_kings/6-36.htm | The court |
/1_kings/6-37.htm | The time of building it |
/1_kings/7-1.htm | The building of Solomon's house |
/1_kings/7-2.htm | Of the house of Lebanon |
/1_kings/7-6.htm | Of the porch of pillars |
/1_kings/7-7.htm | Of the porch of judgment |
/1_kings/7-8.htm | Of the house for Pharaoh's daughter |
/1_kings/7-13.htm | Hiram's work of the two pillars, |
/1_kings/7-23.htm | Of the molten sea |
/1_kings/7-27.htm | Of the ten bases |
/1_kings/7-38.htm | Of the ten lavers |
/1_kings/7-40.htm | and all the vessels |
/1_kings/8-1.htm | The feast of the temple |
/1_kings/8-12.htm | Solomon's blessing |
/1_kings/8-22.htm | Solomon's prayer |
/1_kings/8-54.htm | Solomon's blessing |
/1_kings/8-62.htm | His sacrifice of peace offerings |
/1_kings/9-1.htm | God's covenant in a vision with Solomon |
/1_kings/9-10.htm | The mutual presents of Solomon and Hiran |
/1_kings/9-15.htm | In Solomon's works the Gentiles were his bondmen, the Israelites servants |
/1_kings/9-24.htm | Pharaoh's daughter removes to her house |
/1_kings/9-25.htm | Solomon's yearly solemn sacrifices |
/1_kings/9-26.htm | His navy fetches gold from Ophir |
/1_kings/10-1.htm | The queen of Sheba admires the wisdom of Solomon |
/1_kings/10-14.htm | Solomon's gold |
/1_kings/10-16.htm | His targets |
/1_kings/10-18.htm | The throne of ivory |
/1_kings/10-21.htm | His vessels |
/1_kings/10-24.htm | His presents |
/1_kings/10-26.htm | his chariots and horse |
/1_kings/10-28.htm | his tribute |
/1_kings/11-1.htm | Solomon's wives and concubines |
/1_kings/11-4.htm | In his old age they draw him to idolatry |
/1_kings/11-9.htm | God threatens him, |
/1_kings/11-14.htm | Solomon's adversaries were Hadad, who was entertained in Egypt |
/1_kings/11-23.htm | Rezon, who reigned in Damascus |
/1_kings/11-26.htm | And Jeroboam, to whom Ahijah prophesied |
/1_kings/11-41.htm | Solomon's acts, reign, and death. Rehoboam succeeds him |
/1_kings/12-1.htm | The Israelites, assembled at Shechem to crown Rehoboam, |
/1_kings/12-4.htm | by Jeroboam make a suit of relaxation unto him |
/1_kings/12-6.htm | Rehoboam, refusing the old men's counsel, answers them roughly |
/1_kings/12-16.htm | Ten tribes revolting, kill Adoram, and make Rehoboam flee |
/1_kings/12-21.htm | Rehoboam, raising an army, is forbidden by Shemaiah |
/1_kings/12-25.htm | Jeroboam strengthens himself by cities |
/1_kings/12-26.htm | and by idolatry of the two calves |
/1_kings/13-1.htm | Jeroboam's hand withers |
/1_kings/13-6.htm | and at the prayer of the prophet is restored |
/1_kings/13-7.htm | The prophet departs from Bethel |
/1_kings/13-11.htm | An old prophet brings him back |
/1_kings/13-20.htm | He is reproved by God |
/1_kings/13-23.htm | slain by a lion |
/1_kings/13-26.htm | buried by the old prophet |
/1_kings/13-31.htm | who confirms the prophecy |
/1_kings/13-33.htm | Jeroboam's obstinacy |
/1_kings/14-1.htm | Abijah being sick, |
/1_kings/14-2.htm | Jeroboam sends his wife, disguised, with presents to the prophet Ahijah |
/1_kings/14-5.htm | Ahijah forewarned by God, denounces God's judgment |
/1_kings/14-17.htm | Abijah dies, and is buried |
/1_kings/14-19.htm | Nadab succeeds Jeroboam |
/1_kings/14-21.htm | Rehoboam's wicked reign, |
/1_kings/14-25.htm | Shishak raids Jerusalem |
/1_kings/14-29.htm | Abijam succeeds Rehoboam |
/1_kings/15-1.htm | Abijam's wicked reign |
/1_kings/15-7.htm | Asa succeeds him |
/1_kings/15-9.htm | Asa's good reign |
/1_kings/15-16.htm | The war between Baasha and him causes him to make a league with Ben-Hadad |
/1_kings/15-23.htm | Jehoshaphat succeeds Asa |
/1_kings/15-25.htm | Nadab's wicked reign |
/1_kings/15-27.htm | Baasha conspiring against him, executes Ahijah's prophecy |
/1_kings/15-31.htm | Nadab's acts and death |
/1_kings/15-33.htm | Baasha's wicked reign |
/1_kings/16-1.htm | Jehu's prophecy against Baasha |
/1_kings/16-5.htm | Elah succeeds him |
/1_kings/16-8.htm | Zimri, conspiring against Elah, succeeds him |
/1_kings/16-11.htm | Zimri executes Jehu's prophecy |
/1_kings/16-15.htm | Omri, made king by the soldiers, forces Zimri desperately to burn himself |
/1_kings/16-21.htm | The kingdom being divided, Omri prevails against Tibni |
/1_kings/16-23.htm | Omri builds Samaria |
/1_kings/16-25.htm | His wicked reign |
/1_kings/16-27.htm | Ahab succeeds him |
/1_kings/16-29.htm | Ahab's most wicked reign |
/1_kings/16-34.htm | Joshua's curse upon Hiel the builder of Jericho |
/1_kings/17-1.htm | Elijah, having prophesied against Ahab, |
/1_kings/17-3.htm | is sent to Cherith where the ravens feed him. |
/1_kings/17-8.htm | He is sent to the widow of Zarephath |
/1_kings/17-17.htm | He raises the widow's son |
/1_kings/17-24.htm | The woman believes him |
/1_kings/18-1.htm | In the extremity of famine Elijah, sent to Ahab, meets good Obadiah |
/1_kings/18-9.htm | Obadiah brings Ahab to Elijah |
/1_kings/18-17.htm | Elijah, reproving Ahab, by fire from heaven convinces Baal's prophets |
/1_kings/18-41.htm | Elijah, by prayer obtaining rain, follows Ahab to Jezreel |
/1_kings/19-1.htm | Elijah, threatened by Jezebel, flees to Beersheba |
/1_kings/19-4.htm | In the desert, being weary of his life, he is comforted by an angel |
/1_kings/19-9.htm | At Horeb God appears unto him, sending him to anoint Hazael, Jehu, and Elisha |
/1_kings/19-19.htm | Elisha, taking leave of his friends, follows Elijah |
/1_kings/20-1.htm | Ben-Hadad, not content with Ahab's homage, besieges Samaria |
/1_kings/20-13.htm | By the direction of a prophet, the Syrians are slain |
/1_kings/20-22.htm | As the prophet forewarned Ahab, the Syrians come against him in Aphek |
/1_kings/20-28.htm | By the word of the prophet, and God's judgment, the Syrians are smitten again |
/1_kings/20-31.htm | The Syrians submit; Ahab sends Ben-Hadad away with a covenant |
/1_kings/20-35.htm | The prophet, under the parable of a prisoner, |
/1_kings/20-39.htm | making Ahab judge himself, denounces God's judgment against him |
/1_kings/21-1.htm | Ahab being denied Naboth's vineyard, is grieved |
/1_kings/21-5.htm | Jezebel writing letters against Naboth, he is condemned of blasphemy |
/1_kings/21-15.htm | Ahab take possession of the vineyard |
/1_kings/21-17.htm | Elijah denounces judgments against Ahab and Jezebel |
/1_kings/21-25.htm | Wicked Ahab repenting, God defers the judgment |
/1_kings/22-1.htm | Ahab, seduced by false prophets, by Michaiah's word, is slain at Ramoth Gilead |
/1_kings/22-37.htm | The dogs lick up his blood, and Ahaziah succeeds him |
/1_kings/22-41.htm | Jehoshaphat's good reign |
/1_kings/22-45.htm | His acts |
/1_kings/22-46.htm | Jehoram succeeds him |
/1_kings/22-51.htm | Ahaziah's evil reign |
/2_kings/1-1.htm | Moab rebels |
/2_kings/1-2.htm | Ahaziah, sending to Baal-Zebub, has his judgement by Elijah |
/2_kings/1-5.htm | Elijah twice brings fire from heaven on those Ahaziah sent to apprehend him. |
/2_kings/1-13.htm | He pities the third captain, |
/2_kings/1-15.htm | and, encouraged by an angel, tells the king of his death |
/2_kings/1-17.htm | Jehoram succeeds Ahaziah |
/2_kings/2-1.htm | Elijah, taking his leave of Elisha, with his mantle divides Jordan |
/2_kings/2-9.htm | and, granting Elisha his request, is taken up by a fiery chariot into heaven |
/2_kings/2-12.htm | Elisha, dividing Jordan with Elijah's mantle, is acknowledged his successor |
/2_kings/2-16.htm | The young prophets, hardly obtaining leave to seek Elijah, cannot find him. |
/2_kings/2-19.htm | Elisha with salt heals the unwholesome waters |
/2_kings/2-23.htm | Bears destroy the children that mocked Elisha |
/2_kings/3-1.htm | Jehoram's reign |
/2_kings/3-4.htm | Mesha rebels |
/2_kings/3-6.htm | Jehoram, with Jehoshaphat, and the king of Edom, being distressed for want of water, |
/2_kings/3-13.htm | by Elisha obtains water, and promise of victory |
/2_kings/3-21.htm | The Moabites, deceived by the colour of the water, coming to spoil, are overcome |
/2_kings/3-26.htm | The king of Moab sacrifices his son, and raises the siege |
/2_kings/4-1.htm | Elisha multiplies the widow's oil |
/2_kings/4-8.htm | He obtains a son for the good Shunammite |
/2_kings/4-18.htm | He restores her son when dead |
/2_kings/4-38.htm | At Gilgal he heals the deadly pottage |
/2_kings/4-42.htm | He satisfies a hundred men with twenty loaves |
/2_kings/5-1.htm | Naaman, by the report of a captive maid, is sent to Samaria to be cured of leprosy |
/2_kings/5-8.htm | Elisha, sending him to Jordan cures him |
/2_kings/5-15.htm | He refusing Naaman's gifts grants him some of the earth |
/2_kings/5-20.htm | Gehazi, abusing his master's name unto Naaman, is smitten with leprosy |
/2_kings/6-1.htm | Elisha, allowing the young prophets to enlarge dwellings, floats an axhead |
/2_kings/6-8.htm | He discloses the king of Syria's counsel |
/2_kings/6-13.htm | The army which was sent to Dothan to apprehend Elisha, is blinded |
/2_kings/6-19.htm | Being brought into Samaria, they are dismissed in peace |
/2_kings/6-24.htm | The famine in Samaria causes women to eat their own children |
/2_kings/6-30.htm | The king sends to slay Elisha |
/2_kings/7-1.htm | Elisha prophesies incredible plenty in Samaria |
/2_kings/7-3.htm | four lepers, venturing on the host of the Syrians, bring tidings of their flight |
/2_kings/7-12.htm | The king, finding by spies the news to be true, spoils the tents of the Syrians. |
/2_kings/7-17.htm | The lord who would not believe the prophecy of plenty is trampled in the press |
/2_kings/8-1.htm | The Shunammite, having left her country seven years, to avoid the famine, |
/2_kings/8-5.htm | for Elisha's miracle's sake has her land restored by the king. |
/2_kings/8-7.htm | Hazael Murders Ben-Hadad and succeeds him |
/2_kings/8-16.htm | Jehoram's wicked reign in Judah |
/2_kings/8-20.htm | Edom and Libnah revolt |
/2_kings/8-23.htm | Ahaziah succeeds Jehoram |
/2_kings/8-25.htm | Ahaziah's wicked reign |
/2_kings/8-28.htm | He visits Joram, being wounded, at Jezreel |
/2_kings/9-1.htm | Elisha sends a young prophet with instructions to anoint Jehu at Ramoth Gilead |
/2_kings/9-4.htm | The prophet having done his message, flees |
/2_kings/9-11.htm | Jehu, being made king by the soldiers, kills Joram in the field of Naboth |
/2_kings/9-27.htm | Ahaziah is slain at Gur, and buried at Jerusalem |
/2_kings/9-30.htm | Proud Jezebel is thrown down out of a window, and eaten by dogs. |
/2_kings/10-1.htm | Jehu, by his letters, causes seventy of Ahab's sons to be beheaded |
/2_kings/10-8.htm | He excuses the fact by the prophecy of Elijah |
/2_kings/10-12.htm | At the shearing house he slays forty-two of Ahaziah's brothers |
/2_kings/10-15.htm | He takes Jehonadab into his company |
/2_kings/10-18.htm | By subtilty he destroys all the worshippers of Baal |
/2_kings/10-29.htm | Jehu follows Jeroboam's sins |
/2_kings/10-32.htm | Hazael oppresses Israel |
/2_kings/10-34.htm | Jehoahaz succeeds Jehu |
/2_kings/11-1.htm | Jehoash, being saved by Jehosheba his aunt from Athaliah's massacre, |
/2_kings/11-3.htm | is hidden six years in the house of God |
/2_kings/11-13.htm | Jehoiada, giving order to the captains, in the seventh year anoints him king |
/2_kings/11-17.htm | Jehoiada restores the worship of God |
/2_kings/12-1.htm | Jehoash reigns well all the days of Jehoiada |
/2_kings/12-4.htm | He gives order for the repair of the temple |
/2_kings/12-17.htm | Hazael is diverted from Jerusalem by a present of the hallowed treasures |
/2_kings/12-19.htm | Jehoash being slain, Amaziah succeeds him |
/2_kings/13-1.htm | Jehoahaz's wicked reign |
/2_kings/13-3.htm | Jehoahaz, oppressed by Hazael, is relieved by prayer |
/2_kings/13-8.htm | Joash succeeds him |
/2_kings/13-10.htm | His wicked reign |
/2_kings/13-12.htm | Jeroboam succeeds him |
/2_kings/13-14.htm | Elisha dying, prophesies to Joash three victories over the Syrians |
/2_kings/13-20.htm | The Moabites invading the land, Elisha's bones raise a dead man. |
/2_kings/13-22.htm | Joash gets three victories over Ben-hadad |
/2_kings/14-1.htm | Amaziah's good reign |
/2_kings/14-5.htm | His justice on the murderers of his father |
/2_kings/14-7.htm | His victory over Edom |
/2_kings/14-8.htm | Amaziah, provoking Jehoash, is overcome |
/2_kings/14-15.htm | Jeroboam succeeds Jehoash |
/2_kings/14-17.htm | Amaziah slain by a conspiracy |
/2_kings/14-21.htm | Azariah succeeds him |
/2_kings/14-23.htm | Jeroboam's wicked reign |
/2_kings/14-28.htm | Zachariah succeeds him |
/2_kings/15-1.htm | Azariah's good reign |
/2_kings/15-5.htm | He dying a leper, is succeeded by Jotham |
/2_kings/15-8.htm | Zachariah the last of Jehu's generation, reigning ill, is slain by Shallum |
/2_kings/15-13.htm | Shallum, reigning a month, is slain by Nenahem |
/2_kings/15-16.htm | Menahem strengthens himself by Pul |
/2_kings/15-21.htm | Pekahiah succeeds him |
/2_kings/15-23.htm | Pekahiah is slain by Pekah |
/2_kings/15-27.htm | Pekah is oppressed by Tiglath-pileser, and slain by Hoshea |
/2_kings/15-32.htm | Jotham's good reign |
/2_kings/15-36.htm | Ahaz succeeds him |
/2_kings/16-1.htm | Ahaz's wicked reign |
/2_kings/16-5.htm | Ahaz, assailed by Rezin and Pekah, hires Tiglath-Pileser against them |
/2_kings/16-10.htm | Ahaz, sending a pattern of an altar from Damascus to Urijah, |
/2_kings/16-12.htm | diverts the bronze altar to his own devotions, |
/2_kings/16-17.htm | He raids the temple |
/2_kings/16-19.htm | Hezekiah succeeds him |
/2_kings/17-1.htm | Hoshea the Last King of Israel |
/2_kings/17-3.htm | Being subdued by Shalmaneser, he conspires against him with So, king of Egypt |
/2_kings/17-5.htm | Samaria for sinning is led into captivity |
/2_kings/17-24.htm | The strange nations transplanted into Samaria make a mixture of religions. |
/2_kings/18-1.htm | Hezekiah's good reign |
/2_kings/18-4.htm | He destroys idolatry, and prospers |
/2_kings/18-9.htm | The inhabitants of Samaria are carried captive for their sins |
/2_kings/18-13.htm | Sennacherib invading Judah, is pacified by a tribute |
/2_kings/18-17.htm | Rabshakeh, by blasphemous persuasions, solicits the people to revolt |
/2_kings/19-1.htm | Hezekiah, in mourning, sends to Isaiah to pray for them. |
/2_kings/19-6.htm | Isaiah comforts them. |
/2_kings/19-8.htm | Sennacherib, going to encounter Tirhakah, sends a blasphemous letter to Hezekiah. |
/2_kings/19-14.htm | Hezekiah's prayer. |
/2_kings/19-20.htm | Isaiah's prophecy of the destruction of Sennacherib, and the good of Zion. |
/2_kings/19-35.htm | An angel slays the Assyrians. |
/2_kings/19-36.htm | Sennacherib is slain by his own sons. |
/2_kings/20-1.htm | Hezekiah, having received a message of death, by prayer has his life lengthened. |
/2_kings/20-8.htm | The sun goes ten degrees backward for a sign of that promise. |
/2_kings/20-12.htm | Berodach-baladan sending to visit Hezekiah has notice of his treasures. |
/2_kings/20-14.htm | Isaiah understanding thereof, foretells the Babylonian captivity. |
/2_kings/20-20.htm | Manasseh succeeds Hezekiah. |
/2_kings/21-1.htm | Manasseh's reign. |
/2_kings/21-3.htm | His great idolatry. |
/2_kings/21-10.htm | His wickedness causes prophecies against Judah. |
/2_kings/21-17.htm | Amon succeeds him. |
/2_kings/21-19.htm | Amon's wicked reign. |
/2_kings/21-23.htm | He being slain by his servants, and those murderers slain by the people, |
/2_kings/21-26.htm | Josiah is made king. |
/2_kings/22-1.htm | Josiah's good reign. |
/2_kings/22-3.htm | He takes care for the repair of the temple. |
/2_kings/22-8.htm | Hilkiah having found a book of the law, |
/2_kings/22-12.htm | Josiah sends to Huldah to enquire of the Lord. |
/2_kings/22-15.htm | Huldah prophesies the destruction of Jerusalem, but respite thereof in Josiah's time. |
/2_kings/23-1.htm | Josiah causes the book to be read in a solemn assembly. |
/2_kings/23-3.htm | He renews the covenant of the Lord. |
/2_kings/23-4.htm | He destroys idolatry. |
/2_kings/23-15.htm | He burns dead men's bones upon the altar of Bethel, as was prophesied. |
/2_kings/23-21.htm | He keeps a most solemn Passover. |
/2_kings/23-24.htm | He puts away witches and all abomination. |
/2_kings/23-26.htm | God's final wrath against Judah. |
/2_kings/23-29.htm | Josiah, provoking Pharaoh Neco, is slain at Megiddo. |
/2_kings/23-31.htm | Jehoahaz, succeeding him, |
/2_kings/23-33.htm | is imprisoned by Pharaoh Neco, who makes Jehoiakim king. |
/2_kings/23-36.htm | Jehoiakim's wicked reign. |
/2_kings/24-1.htm | Jehoiakim, first subdued by Nebuchadnezzar, then rebelling against him, |
/2_kings/24-2.htm | procures his own ruin. |
/2_kings/24-5.htm | Jehoiachin succeeds him. |
/2_kings/24-7.htm | The king of Egypt is vanquished by the king of Babylon. |
/2_kings/24-8.htm | Jehoiachin's evil reign. |
/2_kings/24-10.htm | Jerusalem is taken and carried captive into Babylon. |
/2_kings/24-17.htm | Zedekiah is made king, and reigns ill, unto the utter destruction of Judah. |
/2_kings/25-1.htm | Jerusalem is besieged. |
/2_kings/25-4.htm | Zedekiah taken, his sons slain, his eyes put out. |
/2_kings/25-8.htm | Nebuzaradan defaces the city, exiles the remnant, except a few poor laborers; |
/2_kings/25-13.htm | and carries away the treasures. |
/2_kings/25-18.htm | The nobles are slain at Riblah. |
/2_kings/25-22.htm | Gedaliah, who was over those who remained, being slain, the rest flee into Egypt. |
/2_kings/25-27.htm | Evil-Merodach advances Jehoiachin in his court. |
/1_chronicles/1-1.htm | Adam's line to Noah. |
/1_chronicles/1-5.htm | The sons of Japheth. |
/1_chronicles/1-8.htm | The sons of Ham. |
/1_chronicles/1-17.htm | The sons of Shem. |
/1_chronicles/1-24.htm | Shem's line to Abraham. |
/1_chronicles/1-29.htm | Ishmael's sons. |
/1_chronicles/1-32.htm | The sons of Keturah. |
/1_chronicles/1-34.htm | The posterity of Abraham by Esau. |
/1_chronicles/1-38.htm | The sons of Seir. |
/1_chronicles/1-43.htm | The kings of Edom. |
/1_chronicles/1-51.htm | The dukes of Edom. |
/1_chronicles/2-1.htm | The sons of Israel. |
/1_chronicles/2-3.htm | The posterity of Judah by Tamar. |
/1_chronicles/2-13.htm | The children of Jesse. |
/1_chronicles/2-18.htm | The posterity of Caleb the son of Hezron. |
/1_chronicles/2-21.htm | Hezron's posterity by the daughter of Machir. |
/1_chronicles/2-25.htm | Jerahmeel's posterity. |
/1_chronicles/2-34.htm | Sheshan's posterity. |
/1_chronicles/2-42.htm | Another branch of Caleb's posterity. |
/1_chronicles/2-50.htm | The posterity of Caleb the son of Hur. |
/1_chronicles/3-1.htm | The sons of David. |
/1_chronicles/3-10.htm | His line to Zedekiah. |
/1_chronicles/3-17.htm | The successors of Jeconiah. |
/1_chronicles/4-1.htm | The posterity of Judah by Caleb, the son of Hur. |
/1_chronicles/4-5.htm | Of Ashur, the posthumous son Hezron. |
/1_chronicles/4-9.htm | Of Jabez, and his prayer. |
/1_chronicles/4-11.htm | The other families of the same stock. |
/1_chronicles/4-21.htm | The sons of Shelah. |
/1_chronicles/4-24.htm | The posterity and cities of Simeon. |
/1_chronicles/4-39.htm | Their conquest of Gedor, and of the Amalekites in mount Seir. |
/1_chronicles/5-1.htm | Judah and Joseph preferred before Reuben, who forfeited his birthright. |
/1_chronicles/5-3.htm | Ruben's descendants; some of whom vanquish the Hagarites. |
/1_chronicles/5-11.htm | The chief men of Gad, and their habitations. |
/1_chronicles/5-18.htm | Ruben, Gad, and half of Manasseh, obtain a victory over the Hagarites. |
/1_chronicles/5-23.htm | The habitations and chief men of that half of Manasseh. |
/1_chronicles/5-25.htm | The captivity of the two tribes and half, for their sins. |
/1_chronicles/6-1.htm | The sons of Levi. |
/1_chronicles/6-4.htm | The line of Eleazar unto the captivity. |
/1_chronicles/6-16.htm | The families of Gershom, Kohath, and Merari. |
/1_chronicles/6-49.htm | The office of Aaron, and his line unto Ahimaaz. |
/1_chronicles/6-54.htm | The cities of the priests and Levites. |
/1_chronicles/7-1.htm | The sons of Issachar; |
/1_chronicles/7-6.htm | of Benjamin; |
/1_chronicles/7-13.htm | of Naphtali; |
/1_chronicles/7-14.htm | of Manasseh; |
/1_chronicles/7-15.htm | and of Ephraim. |
/1_chronicles/7-21.htm | The calamity of Ephraim by the men of Gath. |
/1_chronicles/7-23.htm | His posterity by Beriah. |
/1_chronicles/7-28.htm | Their habitations. |
/1_chronicles/7-30.htm | The sons of Asher. |
/1_chronicles/8-1.htm | The sons and chief men of Benjamin |
/1_chronicles/8-33.htm | The stock of Saul and Jonathan |
/1_chronicles/9-1.htm | The original of Israel and Judah's genealogies |
/1_chronicles/9-2.htm | The Israelites |
/1_chronicles/9-10.htm | The priests |
/1_chronicles/9-14.htm | and the Levites, with Nethinims, who dwelt in Jerusalem |
/1_chronicles/9-27.htm | The charge of certain Levites |
/1_chronicles/9-35.htm | The stock of Saul and Jonathan |
/1_chronicles/10-1.htm | Saul's overthrow and death |
/1_chronicles/10-8.htm | The Philistines triumph over Saul |
/1_chronicles/10-11.htm | The kindness of Jabesh Gilead toward Saul and his sons |
/1_chronicles/10-13.htm | Saul's sin for which the kingdom was transferred from him to David |
/1_chronicles/11-1.htm | David Becomes King over All Israel |
/1_chronicles/11-4.htm | Jerusalem |
/1_chronicles/11-10.htm | David's Mighty Men |
/1_chronicles/12-1.htm | The companies that came to David at Ziklag |
/1_chronicles/12-23.htm | The armies that came to him at Hebron |
/1_chronicles/13-1.htm | David fetches the ark with great solemnity from Kirjath Jearim |
/1_chronicles/13-9.htm | Uzza being smitten, the ark is left at the house of Obed-Edom |
/1_chronicles/14-1.htm | Hiram's kindness to David |
/1_chronicles/14-2.htm | David's fortune in people, wives, and children |
/1_chronicles/14-8.htm | His two victories against the Philistines |
/1_chronicles/15-1.htm | David having prepared a place for the ark, |
/1_chronicles/15-15.htm | the priests and Levites bring it from Obed-Edom |
/1_chronicles/15-25.htm | He performs the solemnity thereof with great joy |
/1_chronicles/15-29.htm | Michal despises him |
/1_chronicles/16-1.htm | David's festival sacrifice |
/1_chronicles/16-4.htm | He orders a choir to sing thanksgiving |
/1_chronicles/16-7.htm | The psalm of thanksgiving |
/1_chronicles/16-37.htm | He appoints ministers, porters, priests, and musicians, to attend the ark |
/1_chronicles/17-1.htm | Nathan first approving the purpose of David, to build God a house |
/1_chronicles/17-3.htm | after by the word of God forbids him |
/1_chronicles/17-11.htm | He promises him blessings and benefits in his seed |
/1_chronicles/17-16.htm | David's prayer and thanksgiving |
/1_chronicles/18-1.htm | David subdues the Philistines and the Moabites |
/1_chronicles/18-3.htm | He smites Hadarezer and the Syrians |
/1_chronicles/18-9.htm | Tou sends Hadoram with presents to bless David |
/1_chronicles/18-11.htm | The presents and the spoil David dedicates to God |
/1_chronicles/18-13.htm | He put garrisons in Edom |
/1_chronicles/18-14.htm | David's officers |
/1_chronicles/19-1.htm | David's messengers, sent to comfort Hanun, are villainously treated |
/1_chronicles/19-6.htm | The Ammonites, strengthened by the Syrians, are overcome by Joab and Abishai |
/1_chronicles/19-16.htm | Shobach, making a new supply of the Syrians, is slain by David |
/1_chronicles/20-1.htm | Rabbah is besieged by Joab, spoiled by David, and the people thereof tortured |
/1_chronicles/20-4.htm | Three giants are slain in overthrows of the Philistines. |
/1_chronicles/21-1.htm | David, tempted by Satan, forces Joab to number the people |
/1_chronicles/21-5.htm | The number of the people being brought, David repents of it |
/1_chronicles/21-9.htm | David having three plagues proposed by God, chooses the pestilence |
/1_chronicles/21-14.htm | After the death of 70,000, David by repentance prevents the destruction of Jerusalem |
/1_chronicles/21-18.htm | David, by Gad's direction, purchases Ornan's threshing floor; |
/1_chronicles/21-26.htm | where having built an altar, God gives a sign of his favor by fire. |
/1_chronicles/21-28.htm | David sacrifices there, being restrained from Gibeon by fear of the angel |
/1_chronicles/22-1.htm | David, foreknowing the place of the temple, prepares abundance for building it. |
/1_chronicles/22-6.htm | He instructs Solomon in God's promises, and his duty in building the temple. |
/1_chronicles/22-17.htm | He charges the princes to assist his son |
/1_chronicles/23-1.htm | David in his old age makes Solomon king |
/1_chronicles/23-2.htm | The number and distribution of the Levites |
/1_chronicles/23-7.htm | The families of the Gershonites |
/1_chronicles/23-12.htm | The sons of Kohath |
/1_chronicles/23-21.htm | The sons of Merari |
/1_chronicles/23-24.htm | The office of the Levites |
/1_chronicles/24-1.htm | The division of the sons of Aaron by lot into twenty-four orders. |
/1_chronicles/24-20.htm | The Kohathites |
/1_chronicles/24-26.htm | and the Merarites, divided by lot |
/1_chronicles/25-1.htm | The number and offices of the singers |
/1_chronicles/25-8.htm | Their division by lot into twenty-four orders |
/1_chronicles/26-1.htm | The divisions of the porters |
/1_chronicles/26-13.htm | The gates assigned by lot |
/1_chronicles/26-20.htm | The Levites that had charge of the treasures |
/1_chronicles/26-29.htm | Officers and judges |
/1_chronicles/27-1.htm | The twelve captains for each month |
/1_chronicles/27-16.htm | The princes of the twelve tribes |
/1_chronicles/27-23.htm | The numbering of the people is hindered |
/1_chronicles/27-25.htm | David's several officers |
/1_chronicles/28-1.htm | David in a solemn assembly having declared God's favor to him, |
/1_chronicles/28-5.htm | and promise to his son Solomon, exhorts them to fear God |
/1_chronicles/28-9.htm | He encourages Solomon to build the temple |
/1_chronicles/28-11.htm | He gives him patterns, gold and silver, etc |
/1_chronicles/29-1.htm | David, by his example and entreaty |
/1_chronicles/29-6.htm | causes the princes and people to offer willingly |
/1_chronicles/29-10.htm | David's thanksgiving and prayer |
/1_chronicles/29-20.htm | The people, having blessed God, and sacrificed, make Solomon king. |
/1_chronicles/29-26.htm | David's reign and death |
/2_chronicles/1-1.htm | The solemn offering of Solomon at Gibeon |
/2_chronicles/1-7.htm | Solomon's choice of wisdom is blessed by God |
/2_chronicles/1-13.htm | Solomon's forces and wealth |
/2_chronicles/2-1.htm | Solomon's laborers for the building of the temple |
/2_chronicles/2-3.htm | His ambassage to Huram for workmen and provisions |
/2_chronicles/2-11.htm | Huram sends him a kind answer |
/2_chronicles/3-1.htm | The place and time of building the temple |
/2_chronicles/3-3.htm | The measure and ornaments of the house |
/2_chronicles/3-11.htm | The cherubim |
/2_chronicles/3-14.htm | The veil and pillars |
/2_chronicles/4-1.htm | The altar of brass |
/2_chronicles/4-2.htm | The molten sea upon twelve oxen |
/2_chronicles/4-6.htm | The ten lavers, candlesticks, and tables |
/2_chronicles/4-9.htm | The courts, and the instruments of brass |
/2_chronicles/4-19.htm | The instruments of gold |
/2_chronicles/5-1.htm | The dedicated treasures |
/2_chronicles/5-2.htm | The solemn induction of the ark into the oracle |
/2_chronicles/5-11.htm | God being praised, gives a visible sign of his favor |
/2_chronicles/6-1.htm | Solomon, having blessed the people, blessed God |
/2_chronicles/6-12.htm | Solomon's prayer in the consecration of the temple, upon the bronze platform. |
/2_chronicles/7-1.htm | God having given testimony to Solomon's prayer by fire from heaven, |
/2_chronicles/7-2.htm | and glory in the temple, the people worship him |
/2_chronicles/7-4.htm | Solomon's solemn sacrifice |
/2_chronicles/7-8.htm | Solomon having kept the feasts of tabernacles and dedication, dismisses the people |
/2_chronicles/7-12.htm | God appearing to Solomon, gives him promises upon condition |
/2_chronicles/8-1.htm | Solomon's buildings |
/2_chronicles/8-7.htm | The remaining Canaanites, Solomon makes tributaries, but the Israelites rulers |
/2_chronicles/8-11.htm | Pharaoh's daughter removes to her house |
/2_chronicles/8-12.htm | Solomon's yearly solemn sacrifices |
/2_chronicles/8-14.htm | He appoints the priests and Levites to their places |
/2_chronicles/8-17.htm | The navy fetches gold from Ophir |
/2_chronicles/9-1.htm | The queen of sheba admires the wisdom of Solomon |
/2_chronicles/9-13.htm | Solomon's revenue in gold |
/2_chronicles/9-15.htm | His targets and shields |
/2_chronicles/9-17.htm | The throne of ivory |
/2_chronicles/9-20.htm | His vessels |
/2_chronicles/9-23.htm | His presents |
/2_chronicles/9-25.htm | His chariots and horse |
/2_chronicles/9-26.htm | His tributes |
/2_chronicles/9-29.htm | His reign and death |
/2_chronicles/10-1.htm | The Israelites, assembled at Shechem to crown Rehoboam, |
/2_chronicles/10-3.htm | by Jeroboam make a suit of relaxation unto him, |
/2_chronicles/10-6.htm | Rehoboam, refusing the old mens' counsel, answers them roughly, |
/2_chronicles/10-16.htm | Ten tribes revolting, kill Hadoram, and make Rehoboam flee |
/2_chronicles/11-1.htm | Rehoboam raising an army to subdue Israel, is forbidden by Shemaiah |
/2_chronicles/11-5.htm | He strengthens his kingdom with forts and provisions |
/2_chronicles/11-13.htm | The priests and Levites, and such as feared God, forsaken by Jeroboam, |
/2_chronicles/11-17.htm | strengthen the kingdom of Judah |
/2_chronicles/11-18.htm | The wives and children of Rehoboam |
/2_chronicles/12-1.htm | Rehoboam, forsaking the Lord, is punished by Shishak |
/2_chronicles/12-5.htm | He and the princes, repenting at the preaching of Shemaiah, |
/2_chronicles/12-7.htm | are delivered from destruction, but not from spoil |
/2_chronicles/12-13.htm | The reign and death of Rehoboam |
/2_chronicles/13-1.htm | Abijah succeeding makes war against Jeroboam |
/2_chronicles/13-4.htm | he declares the right of his cause |
/2_chronicles/13-13.htm | Trusting in God, he overcomes Jeroboam |
/2_chronicles/13-21.htm | The wives and children of Abijah |
/2_chronicles/14-1.htm | Asa following, destroys idolatry |
/2_chronicles/14-6.htm | having peace, he strengthens his kingdom with forts and armies |
/2_chronicles/14-9.htm | Calling of God, he overthrows Zerah, and spoils the Ethiopians |
/2_chronicles/15-1.htm | Asa, with Judah and many of Israel, moved by the prophecy of Azariah, |
/2_chronicles/15-12.htm | make a solemn covenant with God |
/2_chronicles/15-16.htm | He puts down Maachah his grandmother for idolatry |
/2_chronicles/15-18.htm | He brings dedicated things into the house of God, and enjoys a long peace. |
/2_chronicles/16-1.htm | Asa, by the aid of the Syrians, diverts Baasha from building Ramah |
/2_chronicles/16-7.htm | Being reproved thereof by Hanani, he puts him in prison |
/2_chronicles/16-11.htm | Among his other acts in his disease he seeks not to God, but to the physicians |
/2_chronicles/16-13.htm | His death and burial |
/2_chronicles/17-1.htm | Jehoshaphat, succeeding Asa, reigns well, and prospers |
/2_chronicles/17-7.htm | He sends Levites with the princes to teach Judah |
/2_chronicles/17-10.htm | His enemies being terrified by God, some of them bring him presents and tribute |
/2_chronicles/17-12.htm | His greatness, captains, and armies |
/2_chronicles/18-1.htm | Jehoshaphat, joined in affinity with Ahab, is persuaded to go against Ramoth Gilead |
/2_chronicles/18-4.htm | Ahab, seduced by false prophets, according to the word of Micaiah, is slain there |
/2_chronicles/19-1.htm | Jehoshaphat, reproved by Jehu, visits his kingdom |
/2_chronicles/19-5.htm | His instructions to the judges |
/2_chronicles/19-8.htm | to the priests and Levites |
/2_chronicles/20-1.htm | Jehoshaphat, invaded by Moab, proclaims a fast |
/2_chronicles/20-5.htm | His prayer |
/2_chronicles/20-14.htm | The prophecy of Jahaziel |
/2_chronicles/20-20.htm | Jehoshaphat exhorts the people, and sets singers to praise the Lord |
/2_chronicles/20-22.htm | The great overthrow of his enemies |
/2_chronicles/20-26.htm | The people, having blessed God at Berachah, return in triumph |
/2_chronicles/20-31.htm | Jehoshaphat's reign |
/2_chronicles/20-35.htm | His convoy of ships, according to the prophecy of Eliezer, unhappily perishes. |
/2_chronicles/21-1.htm | Jehoram, succeeding Jehoshaphat, slays his brothers |
/2_chronicles/21-5.htm | His wicked reign |
/2_chronicles/21-8.htm | Edom and Libnah revolt |
/2_chronicles/21-12.htm | The prophecy of Elijah against him in writing |
/2_chronicles/21-16.htm | Philistines and Arabians oppress him |
/2_chronicles/21-18.htm | His incurable disease, infamous death, and burial |
/2_chronicles/22-1.htm | Ahaziah succeeding, reigns wickedly |
/2_chronicles/22-5.htm | in his confederacy with Joram, the son of Ahab, he is slain by Jehu |
/2_chronicles/22-10.htm | Athaliah, destroying all the seed royal, save Joash, usurps the kingdom |
/2_chronicles/23-1.htm | Jehoiada, having set things in order, makes joash king |
/2_chronicles/23-12.htm | Athaliah is slain |
/2_chronicles/23-16.htm | Jehoiada restores the worship of God |
/2_chronicles/24-1.htm | Joash reigns well all the days of Jehoiada |
/2_chronicles/24-4.htm | He gives order for the repair of the temple |
/2_chronicles/24-15.htm | Jehoiada's death and honorable burial |
/2_chronicles/24-17.htm | Joash, falling into idolatry, slays Zechariah the son of Jehoiada |
/2_chronicles/24-23.htm | Joash is spoiled by the Syrians, and slain by Zabad and Jehozabad |
/2_chronicles/24-27.htm | Amaziah succeeds him |
/2_chronicles/25-1.htm | Amaziah begins to reign well |
/2_chronicles/25-3.htm | He executes justice on the traitors |
/2_chronicles/25-5.htm | having hired an army of Israelites against the Edomites, |
/2_chronicles/25-7.htm | at the word of a prophet dismisses them |
/2_chronicles/25-11.htm | He overthrows the Edomites |
/2_chronicles/25-13.htm | The Israelites, discontented with their dismission, spoil as they return home |
/2_chronicles/25-14.htm | Amaziah, proud of his victory, serves the gods of Edom, and ignores the prophet |
/2_chronicles/25-17.htm | He provokes Joash to his overthrow |
/2_chronicles/25-25.htm | His reign |
/2_chronicles/25-27.htm | He is slain by conspiracy |
/2_chronicles/26-1.htm | Uzziah succeeding, and reigning well in the days of Zechariah, prospers |
/2_chronicles/26-16.htm | Waxing proud, he invades the priest's office, and is smitten with leprosy |
/2_chronicles/26-22.htm | He dies, and Jotham succeeds him |
/2_chronicles/27-1.htm | Jotham Reigns in Judah |
/2_chronicles/28-1.htm | Ahaz, reigning wickedly, is greatly afflicted by the Syrians. |
/2_chronicles/28-6.htm | Judah, being captivated by the Israelites, is sent home by the counsel of Oded. |
/2_chronicles/28-16.htm | Ahaz sending for aid to Assyria, is not helped thereby, |
/2_chronicles/28-22.htm | In his distress he grows more idolatrous |
/2_chronicles/28-26.htm | He dying, Hezekiah succeeds him |
/2_chronicles/29-1.htm | Hezekiah's good reign. |
/2_chronicles/29-3.htm | He restores religion |
/2_chronicles/29-5.htm | He exhorts the Levites |
/2_chronicles/29-12.htm | They sanctify themselves, and cleanse the house of God |
/2_chronicles/29-20.htm | Hezekiah offers solemn sacrifices, |
/2_chronicles/29-24.htm | wherein the Levites are more forward than the priests |
/2_chronicles/30-1.htm | Hezekiah proclaims a solemn passover on the second month for Judah and Israel. |
/2_chronicles/30-13.htm | The assembly, having destroyed the altars of idolatry, keep the feast fourteen days |
/2_chronicles/30-27.htm | The priests and Levites bless the people |
/2_chronicles/31-1.htm | The people go forward in destroying idolatry |
/2_chronicles/31-2.htm | Hezekiah orders the courses of the priests and Levites, |
/2_chronicles/31-4.htm | and provides for their work and maintenance |
/2_chronicles/31-5.htm | The people's forwardness in offerings and tithes |
/2_chronicles/31-11.htm | Hezekiah appoints officers to dispose of the tithes |
/2_chronicles/31-20.htm | The sincerity of Hezekiah |
/2_chronicles/32-1.htm | Sennacherib invading Judah, Hezekiah fortifies himself, and encourages his people |
/2_chronicles/32-9.htm | Hezekiah and Isaiah pray against the blasphemies of Sennarchib |
/2_chronicles/32-21.htm | An angel destroys the host of the Assyrians |
/2_chronicles/32-24.htm | Hezekiah praying in his sickness, God gives him a sign of recovery |
/2_chronicles/32-25.htm | His proud heart is humbled by God |
/2_chronicles/32-27.htm | His wealth and works |
/2_chronicles/32-31.htm | His error in the ambassage of Babylon |
/2_chronicles/32-32.htm | He dying, Manasseh succeeds him |
/2_chronicles/33-1.htm | Manasseh's wicked reign |
/2_chronicles/33-3.htm | He sets up idolatry, and will not be admonished |
/2_chronicles/33-11.htm | He is carried into Babylon |
/2_chronicles/33-12.htm | Upon his prayer to God he is released and puts down idolatry |
/2_chronicles/33-18.htm | His acts |
/2_chronicles/33-20.htm | He dying, Amon succeeds him |
/2_chronicles/33-21.htm | who is slain by his servants |
/2_chronicles/33-25.htm | The murderers being slain, Josiah succeeds him |
/2_chronicles/34-1.htm | Josiah's good reign |
/2_chronicles/34-3.htm | He destroys idolatry |
/2_chronicles/34-8.htm | He takes order for the repair of the temple |
/2_chronicles/34-14.htm | Hilkiah, having found a book of the law, |
/2_chronicles/34-21.htm | Josiah sends to Huldah to enquire of the Lord |
/2_chronicles/34-23.htm | Huldah prophesies the destruction of Jerusalem, but respite thereof in Josiah's time |
/2_chronicles/34-29.htm | Josiah, causing it to be read in a solemn assembly, renews the covenant with God |
/2_chronicles/35-1.htm | Josiah keeps a most solemn Passover |
/2_chronicles/35-20.htm | He provoking Pharaoh Neco, is slain at Megiddo |
/2_chronicles/35-25.htm | Lamentations for Josiah |
/2_chronicles/36-1.htm | Jehoahaz succeeding, is deposed by Pharaoh, and carried into Egypt |
/2_chronicles/36-5.htm | Jehoiakim reigning ill, is carried bound into Babylon |
/2_chronicles/36-9.htm | Jehoiachin succeeding, reigns ill, and is brought into Babylon |
/2_chronicles/36-11.htm | Zedekiah succeeding, reigns ill, despite the prophets, and rebels against Nebuchadnezzar |
/2_chronicles/36-14.htm | Jerusalem, for the sins of the priests and the people, is wholly destroyed |
/2_chronicles/36-22.htm | The proclamation of Cyrus |
/ezra/1-1.htm | The proclamation of Cyrus for the building of the temple |
/ezra/1-5.htm | The people provide for their return |
/ezra/1-7.htm | Cyrus restores the vessels of the temple to Sheshbazzar |
/ezra/2-1.htm | The number that return of the people |
/ezra/2-36.htm | of the priests |
/ezra/2-40.htm | of the Levites |
/ezra/2-43.htm | of the Nethinims |
/ezra/2-55.htm | of Solomon's servants |
/ezra/2-61.htm | of the priests who could not show their pedigree |
/ezra/2-64.htm | The whole number of them, with their substance |
/ezra/2-68.htm | Their offerings |
/ezra/3-1.htm | The altar is set up |
/ezra/3-4.htm | Offerings renewed |
/ezra/3-7.htm | Workmen employed in preparing materials |
/ezra/3-8.htm | The foundations of the temple are laid in great joy and mourning |
/ezra/4-1.htm | The adversaries, being not accepted in the building of the temple with the Jews, |
/ezra/4-4.htm | endeavor to hinder it |
/ezra/4-7.htm | Their letter to Artaxerxes |
/ezra/4-17.htm | The answer and decree of Artaxerxes |
/ezra/4-23.htm | The building is hindered |
/ezra/5-1.htm | Zerubbabel and Jeshua, incited by Haggai and Zechariah, set forward to building |
/ezra/5-3.htm | Tattenai and Shethar-Bozenai are not able to hinder the Jews |
/ezra/5-6.htm | Their letter to Darius against the Jews |
/ezra/6-1.htm | Darius, finding the decree of Cyrus, makes a new decree for building |
/ezra/6-13.htm | By the help of Tattenai and Shethar-Bozenai the temple is finished |
/ezra/6-16.htm | The feast of the dedication is kept |
/ezra/6-19.htm | and the Passover |
/ezra/7-1.htm | Ezra goes up to Jerusalem |
/ezra/7-11.htm | The gracious commission of Artaxerxes to Ezra |
/ezra/7-27.htm | Ezra blesses God for this favor |
/ezra/8-1.htm | The companions of Ezra, who returned from Babylon |
/ezra/8-15.htm | He sends to Iddo for ministers for the temple |
/ezra/8-21.htm | He keeps a fast |
/ezra/8-24.htm | He commits the treasures to the custody of the priests |
/ezra/8-31.htm | From Ahava they come to Jerusalem |
/ezra/8-33.htm | The treasure is weighed in the temple |
/ezra/8-36.htm | The commission is delivered |
/ezra/9-1.htm | Ezra mourns for the affinity of the people with strangers |
/ezra/9-5.htm | He prays unto God, with confession of sins |
/ezra/10-1.htm | Ezra encouraged to reform the strange marriages |
/ezra/10-6.htm | Ezra assembles the people |
/ezra/10-9.htm | The people repent, and promise amendment |
/ezra/10-15.htm | The care to perform it |
/ezra/10-18.htm | The names of them which had married strange wives |
/nehemiah/1-1.htm | Nehemiah, understanding by Hanani the misery of Jerusalem, mourns, fasts, and prays |
/nehemiah/1-5.htm | His prayer |
/nehemiah/2-1.htm | Artaxerxes, understanding the cause of Nehemiah's sadness, |
/nehemiah/2-6.htm | sends him with letters and commission to Jerusalem |
/nehemiah/2-9.htm | Nehemiah, to the grief of the enemies, comes to Jerusalem |
/nehemiah/2-12.htm | He views secretly the ruins of the walls |
/nehemiah/2-17.htm | He incites the Jews to build |
/nehemiah/3-1.htm | The names and order of those who built the wall |
/nehemiah/4-1.htm | While the enemies scoff, Nehemiah prays and continues the work |
/nehemiah/4-7.htm | Understanding the wrath and secrets of the enemy, he sets a watch |
/nehemiah/4-13.htm | He arms the laborers |
/nehemiah/4-19.htm | and gives military precepts |
/nehemiah/5-1.htm | The Jews complain of their debt, mortgage, and bondage |
/nehemiah/5-6.htm | Nehemiah rebukes the usurers, and causes them to make a covenant of restitution |
/nehemiah/5-14.htm | He forbears his own allowance, and keeps hospitality |
/nehemiah/6-1.htm | Sanballat practices by craft, by rumors, and by hired prophecies, to terrify Nehemiah |
/nehemiah/6-15.htm | The work is finished, to the terror of the enemies |
/nehemiah/6-17.htm | Secret intelligence passes between the enemies and the nobles of Judah |
/nehemiah/7-1.htm | Nehemiah commits the charge of Jerusalem to Hanani and Hananiah |
/nehemiah/7-5.htm | A register of the genealogy of them which came at the first out of Babylon |
/nehemiah/7-9.htm | of the people |
/nehemiah/7-39.htm | of the priests |
/nehemiah/7-43.htm | of the Levites |
/nehemiah/7-46.htm | of the Nethinims |
/nehemiah/7-57.htm | of Solomon's servants |
/nehemiah/7-63.htm | and of the priests which could not find their pedigree |
/nehemiah/7-66.htm | The whole number of them, with their substance |
/nehemiah/7-70.htm | Their offerings |
/nehemiah/8-1.htm | The reverent manner of reading and hearing the law |
/nehemiah/8-9.htm | They comfort the people |
/nehemiah/8-13.htm | The eagerness of the people to hear and be instructed |
/nehemiah/8-16.htm | They keep the feast of tabernacles |
/nehemiah/9-1.htm | A solemn fast, and repentance of the people |
/nehemiah/9-4.htm | The Levites make a confession of God's goodness, and their wickedness |
/nehemiah/10-1.htm | The names of those who sealed the covenant. |
/nehemiah/10-29.htm | The points of the covenant. |
/nehemiah/11-1.htm | The rulers, voluntary men, and the tenth man chosen by lot, dwell at Jerusalem. |
/nehemiah/11-3.htm | A catalogue of their names. |
/nehemiah/11-20.htm | Those who remain dwell in other cities. |
/nehemiah/12-1.htm | The priests and the Levites which came up with Zerubbabel. |
/nehemiah/12-10.htm | The succession of high priests. |
/nehemiah/12-22.htm | Certain chief Levites. |
/nehemiah/12-27.htm | The solemnity of the dedication of the walls. |
/nehemiah/12-44.htm | The offices of priests and Levites appointed in the temple. |
/nehemiah/13-1.htm | Upon the reading of the law, separation is made from the mixed multitude. |
/nehemiah/13-4.htm | Nehemiah, at his return, causes the chambers to be cleansed. |
/nehemiah/13-10.htm | He reforms the offices in the house of God; |
/nehemiah/13-15.htm | the violation of the Sabbath; |
/nehemiah/13-23.htm | and the marriages with the strange wives. |
/esther/1-1.htm | Xerxes makes royal feasts. |
/esther/1-10.htm | Vashti, sent for, refuses to come. |
/esther/1-13.htm | Xerxes, by the counsel of Memucan, puts away Vashti, and decrees men's sovereignty. |
/esther/2-1.htm | Out of the choice of virgins a queen is to be chosen. |
/esther/2-5.htm | Mordecai the nursing father of Esther. |
/esther/2-8.htm | Esther preferred before the rest. |
/esther/2-12.htm | The manner of purification, and going in to the king. |
/esther/2-15.htm | Esther, best pleasing the king, is made queen. |
/esther/2-21.htm | Mordecai, discovering a treason, is recorded in the chronicles. |
/esther/3-1.htm | Haman, advanced by the king, and despised by Mordecai, seeks revenge upon the Jews. |
/esther/3-7.htm | He casts lots. |
/esther/3-8.htm | He obtains by false accusations a decree of the king to put the Jews to death. |
/esther/4-1.htm | The great mourning of Mordecai and the Jews. |
/esther/4-4.htm | Esther, understanding it, sends to Mordecai, |
/esther/4-7.htm | who shows the cause, and advises her to undertake the suit. |
/esther/4-10.htm | She, excusing herself, is threatened by Mordecai. |
/esther/4-15.htm | She, appointing a fast, undertakes the suit. |
/esther/5-1.htm | Esther, adventuring on the king's favor, obtains the grace of the golden sceptre, |
/esther/5-4.htm | and invites the king and Haman to a banquet. |
/esther/5-6.htm | She, being encouraged by the king in her suit, invites them to another banquet. |
/esther/5-9.htm | Haman, proud of his advancement, repines at the contempt of Mordecai. |
/esther/5-14.htm | By the counsel of Zeresh he prepares for him a gallows. |
/esther/6-1.htm | Xerxes, reading of the good service done by Mordecai, takes care for his reward. |
/esther/6-4.htm | Haman, coming to ask that Mordecai might be hanged, |
/esther/6-10.htm | gives counsel that he might do him honor. |
/esther/6-12.htm | Complaining of this, his friends tell him of his final destiny. |
/esther/7-1.htm | Esther, entertaining the king and Haman, pleads for her own life, and her people's. |
/esther/7-5.htm | She accuses Haman. |
/esther/7-7.htm | The king in his anger, understanding of the gallows Haman had made for Mordecai, |
/esther/7-10.htm | causes Haman to be hanged thereon. |
/esther/8-1.htm | Mordecai is advanced. |
/esther/8-3.htm | Esther makes suit to reverse Haman's letters. |
/esther/8-7.htm | Xerxes grants to the Jews to defend themselves. |
/esther/8-15.htm | Mordecai's honor, and the Jews' joy. |
/esther/9-1.htm | The Jews slay their enemies, with the ten sons of Haman. |
/esther/9-12.htm | Xerxes, at the request of Esther, |
/esther/9-14.htm | grants another day of slaughter, and Haman's sons to be hanged. |
/esther/9-20.htm | The two days of Purim are instituted. |
/esther/10-1.htm | Xerxes' greatness. |
/esther/10-3.htm | Mordecai's advancement. |
/job/1-1.htm | The holiness, riches, and reverent care of Job for his children. |
/job/1-6.htm | Satan, appearing before God, obtains leave to afflict Job. |
/job/1-13.htm | Understanding of the loss of his children and goods, in his mourning Job blesses God. |
/job/2-1.htm | Satan, appearing again before God, obtains further leave to tempt Job. |
/job/2-7.htm | He afflicts him with sore boils. |
/job/2-9.htm | Job reproves his wife, who moved him to curse God. |
/job/2-11.htm | His three friends console with him in silence. |
/job/3-1.htm | Job curses the day and services of his birth. |
/job/3-13.htm | The ease of death. |
/job/3-20.htm | He complains of life, because of his anguish. |
/job/4-1.htm | Eliphaz reproves Job that the innocent do not suffer |
/job/4-7.htm | He teaches God's judgments to be not for the righteous, but for the wicked. |
/job/4-12.htm | His fearful vision to humble the excellency of creatures before God. |
/job/5-1.htm | Eliphaz shows that the end of the wicked is misery; |
/job/5-6.htm | that man is born to trouble; |
/job/5-8.htm | that God is to be regarded in affliction; |
/job/5-17.htm | the happy end of God's correction. |
/job/6-1.htm | Job shows that his complaints are not causeless. |
/job/6-8.htm | He wishes for death, wherein he is assured of comfort. |
/job/6-14.htm | He reproves his friends of unkindness. |
/job/7-1.htm | Job excuses his desire of death. |
/job/7-12.htm | He complains of his own restlessness, and reasons with God. |
/job/8-1.htm | Bildad shows God's justice in dealing with men according to their works. |
/job/8-8.htm | He alleges antiquity to prove the certain destruction of the hypocrite. |
/job/8-20.htm | He applies God's just dealing to Job. |
/job/9-1.htm | Job acknowledges God's justice |
/job/9-22.htm | Man's innocence is not to be condemned by afflictions |
/job/10-1.htm | Job, taking liberty of complaint, expostulates with God about his afflictions |
/job/10-18.htm | He complains of life, and craves a little ease before death |
/job/11-1.htm | Zophar reproves Job for justifying himself |
/job/11-5.htm | God's wisdom is unsearchable |
/job/11-13.htm | The assured blessing of repentance |
/job/12-1.htm | Job maintains himself against his friends that reprove him |
/job/12-7.htm | He acknowledges the doctrine of God's omnipotence |
/job/13-1.htm | Job reproves his friends for partiality |
/job/13-14.htm | He professes his confidence in God; |
/job/13-19.htm | and entreats to know his own sins, and God's purpose in afflicting him |
/job/14-1.htm | Job entreats God for favor, by the shortness of life, and certainty of death |
/job/14-7.htm | He waits for his change |
/job/14-16.htm | By sin the creature is subject to corruption |
/job/15-1.htm | Eliphaz reproves Job for impiety in justifying himself |
/job/15-17.htm | He proves by tradition the restlessness of wicked men |
/job/16-1.htm | Job reproves his friends for unmercifulness |
/job/16-17.htm | He maintains his innocence |
/job/17-1.htm | Job appeals from men to God |
/job/17-6.htm | The unmerciful dealing of men with the afflicted may astonish, |
/job/17-9.htm | but not discourage the righteous |
/job/17-11.htm | His hope is not in life, but in death |
/job/18-1.htm | Bildad reproves Job for presumption and impatience |
/job/18-5.htm | The calamities of the wicked |
/job/19-1.htm | Job, complaining of his friends' cruelty, |
/job/19-6.htm | shows there is misery enough in him to feed their cruelty |
/job/19-21.htm | He craves pity |
/job/19-23.htm | He believes the resurrection |
/job/20-1.htm | Zophar shows the state and portion of the wicked |
/job/21-1.htm | Job shows that even in the judgment of man he has reason to be grieved |
/job/21-7.htm | Sometimes the wicked prosper, though they despise God |
/job/21-16.htm | Sometimes their destruction is manifest |
/job/21-21.htm | The happy and unhappy are alike in death |
/job/21-27.htm | The judgment of the wicked is in another world |
/job/22-1.htm | Eliphaz shows that man's goodness profits not God |
/job/22-5.htm | He accuses Job of various sins |
/job/22-21.htm | He exhorts him to repentance, with promises of mercy |
/job/23-1.htm | Job longs to appear before God |
/job/23-6.htm | in confidence of his mercy |
/job/23-8.htm | God, who is invisible, observes our ways |
/job/23-11.htm | Job's innocence |
/job/23-13.htm | God's decree is immutable |
/job/24-1.htm | Wickedness often goes unpunished |
/job/24-17.htm | There is a secret judgment for the wicked |
/job/25-1.htm | Bildad shows that man cannot be justified before God |
/job/26-1.htm | Job, reproving the uncharitable spirit of Bildad |
/job/26-5.htm | acknowledges the power of God to be infinite and unsearchable |
/job/27-1.htm | Job protests his sincerity |
/job/27-8.htm | The hypocrite is without hope |
/job/27-11.htm | The blessings which the wicked have are turned into curses |
/job/28-1.htm | There is a knowledge of natural things |
/job/28-12.htm | But wisdom is an excellent gift of God |
/job/29-1.htm | Job bemoans his former prosperity |
/job/30-1.htm | Job's honor is turned into extreme contempt |
/job/30-15.htm | and his prosperity into calamity |
/job/31-1.htm | Job makes a solemn protestation of his integrity in several duties |
/job/32-1.htm | Elihu is angry with Job and his three friends |
/job/32-6.htm | Because wisdom comes not from age, he excuses the boldness of his youth |
/job/32-11.htm | He reproves them for not satisfying Job |
/job/32-16.htm | His zeal to speak |
/job/33-1.htm | Elihu offers himself instead of God to reason with Job |
/job/33-8.htm | He excuses God from giving man an account of his ways, by his greatness |
/job/33-14.htm | God calls man to repentance by visions, by afflictions, and by his ministry |
/job/33-31.htm | He incites Job to attention |
/job/34-1.htm | Elihu accuses Job for charging God with injustice |
/job/34-10.htm | God omnipotent cannot be unjust |
/job/34-31.htm | Man must humble himself unto God |
/job/34-34.htm | Elihu reproves Job |
/job/35-1.htm | Comparison is not to be made with God, |
/job/35-6.htm | because our good or evil cannot extend unto him |
/job/35-9.htm | Many cry in their afflictions, but are not heard for lack of faith |
/job/36-1.htm | Elihu shows how God is just in his ways |
/job/36-16.htm | How Job's sins hinder God's blessings |
/job/36-24.htm | God's works are to be magnified |
/job/37-1.htm | God is to be feared because of his great works |
/job/37-15.htm | His wisdom is unsearchable in them |
/job/38-1.htm | God challenges Job to answer |
/job/38-4.htm | God, by his mighty works, convinces Job of ignorance |
/job/38-31.htm | and weakness |
/job/39-1.htm | Of the wild goats and hinds |
/job/39-5.htm | Of the wild donkey |
/job/39-9.htm | The unicorn |
/job/39-13.htm | The peacock, stork, and ostrich |
/job/39-19.htm | The horse |
/job/39-26.htm | The hawk |
/job/39-27.htm | The eagle |
/job/40-1.htm | Job humbles himself to God |
/job/40-6.htm | God stirs him up to show his righteousness, power, and wisdom |
/job/40-16.htm | Of the behemoth |
/job/41-1.htm | Of God's great power in the leviathan |
/job/42-1.htm | Job submits himself unto God |
/job/42-7.htm | God, preferring Job's cause, makes his friends submit themselves, and accepts him |
/job/42-10.htm | He magnifies and blesses Job |
/job/42-16.htm | Job's age and death |
/psalms/1-1.htm | The happiness of the godly |
/psalms/1-4.htm | The unhappiness of the ungodly |
/psalms/2-1.htm | The kingdom of Christ |
/psalms/2-10.htm | Kings are exhorted to accept it |
/psalms/3-1.htm | The security of God's protection |
/psalms/4-1.htm | David prays for audience |
/psalms/4-2.htm | He reproves and exhorts his enemies |
/psalms/4-6.htm | Man's happiness is in God's favor |
/psalms/5-1.htm | David prays, and professes his study in prayer |
/psalms/5-4.htm | God favors not the wicked |
/psalms/5-7.htm | David, professing his faith, prays to God to guide him |
/psalms/5-10.htm | to destroy his enemies |
/psalms/5-11.htm | and to preserve the godly |
/psalms/6-1.htm | David's complaint in his sickness |
/psalms/6-8.htm | He triumphs over his enemies |
/psalms/7-1.htm | David prays against the malice of his enemies, professing his innocence |
/psalms/7-10.htm | By faith he sees his defense, and the destruction of his enemies |
/psalms/8-1.htm | God's glory is magnified by his works, and by his love to man |
/psalms/9-1.htm | David praises God for executing judgment |
/psalms/9-11.htm | He incites others to praise him |
/psalms/9-13.htm | He prays that he may have cause to praise him |
/psalms/10-1.htm | David complains of the wicked |
/psalms/10-12.htm | He prays for remedy |
/psalms/10-16.htm | He professes his confidence |
/psalms/11-1.htm | David encourages himself in God against his enemies |
/psalms/11-4.htm | The providence and justice of God |
/psalms/12-1.htm | David, destitute of human comfort, craves help of God |
/psalms/12-3.htm | He comforts himself with God's promises, and his judgments on the wicked |
/psalms/13-1.htm | David complains of delay |
/psalms/13-3.htm | He prays for preventing grace |
/psalms/13-5.htm | He boasts of divine mercy |
/psalms/14-1.htm | David describes a natural man |
/psalms/14-4.htm | He convinces the wicked by the light of their conscience |
/psalms/14-7.htm | He glories in the salvation of God |
/psalms/15-1.htm | David describes a citizen of Zion |
/psalms/16-1.htm | David, in distrust of merits, and hatred of idolatry |
/psalms/16-5.htm | He shows the hope of his calling, of the resurrection, and life everlasting |
/psalms/17-1.htm | David, in confidence of his integrity, craves defense of God against his enemies |
/psalms/17-10.htm | He shows their pride, craft, and eagerness |
/psalms/17-13.htm | He prays against them in confidence of his hope |
/psalms/18-1.htm | David praises God for his manifold and marvelous blessings |
/psalms/19-1.htm | The creatures show God's glory |
/psalms/19-7.htm | The excellence of the divine law |
/psalms/19-12.htm | David prays for grace |
/psalms/20-1.htm | The church blesses the King in his exploits |
/psalms/20-7.htm | and expresses her confidence in God's helpfulness |
/psalms/21-1.htm | A thanksgiving for victory |
/psalms/21-7.htm | with confidence of further success |
/psalms/22-1.htm | David complains in great discouragement |
/psalms/22-9.htm | He prays in great distress |
/psalms/22-23.htm | He praises God |
/psalms/23-1.htm | David's confidence in God's grace |
/psalms/24-1.htm | God's Lordship in the world |
/psalms/24-3.htm | The citizens of his spiritual kingdom |
/psalms/24-7.htm | An exhortation to receive him |
/psalms/25-1.htm | David's confidence in prayer |
/psalms/25-7.htm | He prays for remission of sins |
/psalms/25-16.htm | and for help in affliction |
/psalms/26-1.htm | David resorts to God in confidence of his integrity |
/psalms/27-1.htm | David sustains his faith by prayer |
/psalms/28-1.htm | David prays earnestly against his enemies |
/psalms/28-6.htm | and for the people |
/psalms/29-1.htm | David exhorts princes to give glory to God |
/psalms/29-3.htm | by reason of is power |
/psalms/29-11.htm | and protection of his people |
/psalms/30-1.htm | David praises God for his deliverance |
/psalms/30-4.htm | He exhorts others to praise him by example of God's dealings with him |
/psalms/31-1.htm | David, showing his confidence in God, craves his help |
/psalms/31-7.htm | He rejoices in his mercy |
/psalms/31-9.htm | He prays in his calamity |
/psalms/31-19.htm | He praises God for his goodness |
/psalms/32-1.htm | Blessedness consists in remission of sins |
/psalms/32-3.htm | Confession of sins gives ease to the conscience |
/psalms/32-8.htm | God's promises bring joy |
/psalms/33-1.htm | God is to be praised for his goodness |
/psalms/33-6.htm | for his power |
/psalms/33-12.htm | and for his providence |
/psalms/33-20.htm | Confidence is to be placed in God |
/psalms/34-1.htm | David praises God, and exhorts others thereto by his experience |
/psalms/34-8.htm | They are blessed who trust in God |
/psalms/34-11.htm | He exhorts to the fear of God |
/psalms/34-15.htm | The privileges of the righteous |
/psalms/35-1.htm | David prays for his own safety, and his enemies' confusion |
/psalms/35-11.htm | He complains of their wrongful dealing |
/psalms/35-22.htm | Thereby he incites God against them |
/psalms/36-1.htm | The grievous state of the wicked |
/psalms/36-8.htm | The excellence of God's mercy |
/psalms/36-10.htm | David prays for favor to God's children |
/psalms/37-1.htm | David persuades to patience and confidence in God, |
/psalms/37-12.htm | by the different estate of the godly and the wicked |
/psalms/38-1.htm | David moves God to take compassion on his pitiful case |
/psalms/39-1.htm | David's care of his thoughts |
/psalms/39-4.htm | The consideration of the brevity and vanity of life |
/psalms/39-7.htm | the reverence of God's judgments |
/psalms/39-10.htm | and prayer, are his bridles of impatience |
/psalms/40-1.htm | The benefit of confidence in God |
/psalms/40-6.htm | Obedience is the best sacrifice |
/psalms/40-11.htm | The sense of David's evils inflames his prayer |
/psalms/41-1.htm | The recompense of the charitable |
/psalms/41-4.htm | David complains of his enemies' treachery |
/psalms/41-10.htm | He flees to God for helpfulness |
/psalms/42-1.htm | David's zeal to serve God in the temple |
/psalms/42-5.htm | He encourages his soul to trust in God |
/psalms/43-1.htm | David, praying to be restored to the temple, promises to serve God joyfully |
/psalms/43-5.htm | He encourages his soul to trust in God |
/psalms/44-1.htm | The church, in memory of former favors |
/psalms/44-7.htm | complains of her present evils |
/psalms/44-17.htm | professing her integrity, |
/psalms/44-24.htm | she fervently prays for helpfulness |
/psalms/45-1.htm | The majesty and grace of Christ's kingdom |
/psalms/45-10.htm | The duty of the church, and the benefits thereof |
/psalms/46-1.htm | The confidence which the church has in God |
/psalms/46-8.htm | An exhortation to behold it |
/psalms/47-1.htm | The nations are exhorted cheerfully to entertain the kingdom of Christ. |
/psalms/48-1.htm | The ornaments and privileges of the church |
/psalms/49-1.htm | An earnest persuasion to build the faith of resurrection |
/psalms/49-16.htm | Worldly prosperity is not to be admired |
/psalms/50-1.htm | The majesty of God in the church |
/psalms/50-5.htm | His order to gather his saints |
/psalms/50-7.htm | The pleasure of God is not in ceremonies |
/psalms/50-14.htm | but in sincerity of obedience |
/psalms/51-1.htm | David prays for remission of sins, whereof he makes a deep confession |
/psalms/51-6.htm | He prays for sanctification |
/psalms/51-16.htm | God delights not in sacrifice, but in sincerity |
/psalms/51-18.htm | He prays for the church |
/psalms/52-1.htm | David, condemning the spitefulness of Doeg, prophesies his destruction |
/psalms/52-6.htm | The righteous shall rejoice at it |
/psalms/52-8.htm | David, upon his confidence in God's mercy, gives thanks |
/psalms/53-1.htm | David describes the corruption of the natural man |
/psalms/53-4.htm | He convinces the wicked by the light of their own conscience |
/psalms/53-6.htm | He glories in the salvation of God |
/psalms/54-1.htm | David, complaining of the Ziphims, prays for salvation |
/psalms/54-4.htm | Upon his confidence in God's help he promises sacrifice |
/psalms/55-1.htm | David in his prayer complains of his fearful case |
/psalms/55-9.htm | He prays against his enemies, of whose wickedness and treachery he complains |
/psalms/55-16.htm | He comforts himself in God's preservation oh him, and confusion of his enemies |
/psalms/56-1.htm | David, praying to God in confidence of his word, complains of his enemies, |
/psalms/56-9.htm | He professes his confidence in God's word, and promises to praise him |
/psalms/57-1.htm | David in prayer fleeing unto God, complains of his dangerous case |
/psalms/57-7.htm | He encourages himself to praise God |
/psalms/58-1.htm | David reproves wicked judges |
/psalms/58-3.htm | describes the nature of the wicked |
/psalms/58-6.htm | devotes them to God's judgments |
/psalms/58-10.htm | whereat the righteous shall rejoice |
/psalms/59-1.htm | David prays to be delivered from his enemies |
/psalms/59-6.htm | He complains of their cruelty |
/psalms/59-8.htm | He trusts in god |
/psalms/59-11.htm | He prays against them |
/psalms/59-16.htm | He praises God |
/psalms/60-1.htm | David, complaining to God of former judgment |
/psalms/60-4.htm | now upon better hope, prays for deliverance |
/psalms/60-6.htm | Comforting himself in God's promises, he craves that help whereon he trusts |
/psalms/61-1.htm | David flees to God upon his former experience |
/psalms/61-4.htm | He vows perpetual service unto him, because of his promises |
/psalms/62-1.htm | David, professing his confidence in God, discourages his enemies |
/psalms/62-5.htm | In the same confidence he encourages the godly |
/psalms/62-9.htm | No trust is to be put in worldly things |
/psalms/62-11.htm | Power and mercy belong to God |
/psalms/63-1.htm | David's thirst for God |
/psalms/63-4.htm | His manner of blessing God |
/psalms/63-9.htm | His confidence of his enemies' destruction, and his own safety |
/psalms/64-1.htm | David prays for deliverance, complaining of his enemies |
/psalms/64-7.htm | He promises himself to see such an evident destruction of his enemies, |
/psalms/64-10.htm | as the righteous shall rejoice at it. |
/psalms/65-1.htm | David praises God for his grace |
/psalms/65-4.htm | The blessedness of God's chosen by reason of benefits |
/psalms/66-1.htm | David exhorts to praise God |
/psalms/66-5.htm | observe his great works |
/psalms/66-8.htm | to bless him for his gracious benefits |
/psalms/66-12.htm | He vows for himself reverent service to God |
/psalms/66-16.htm | He declares God's special goodness to himself |
/psalms/67-1.htm | A prayer for the enlargement of God's kingdom |
/psalms/67-3.htm | to the joy of the people |
/psalms/67-6.htm | and the increase of God's blessings |
/psalms/68-1.htm | A prayer at the removing of the ark |
/psalms/68-4.htm | An exhortation to praise God for his mercies |
/psalms/68-7.htm | for his care of the church |
/psalms/68-19.htm | for his great works |
/psalms/69-1.htm | David complains of his affliction |
/psalms/69-13.htm | He prays for deliverance |
/psalms/69-22.htm | He devotes his enemies to destruction |
/psalms/69-30.htm | He praises God with thanksgiving |
/psalms/70-1.htm | David solicits God to the speedy destruction of the wicked, |
/psalms/70-4.htm | and preservation of the godly |
/psalms/71-1.htm | David, in confidence of faith, and experience of God's favor, prays both for himself, |
/psalms/71-10.htm | and against the enemies of his soul |
/psalms/71-14.htm | He promises constancy |
/psalms/71-17.htm | He prays for perseverance |
/psalms/71-19.htm | He praises God, and promises to do it cheerfully |
/psalms/72-1.htm | David, praying for Solomon, shows the goodness and glory of God's kingdom |
/psalms/72-18.htm | He blessed God |
/psalms/73-1.htm | The prophet, prevailing in a temptation |
/psalms/73-2.htm | Shows the occasion thereof, the prosperity of the wicked |
/psalms/73-13.htm | The wound given thereby, diffidence |
/psalms/73-15.htm | The victory over it, knowledge of God's purpose. |
/psalms/74-1.htm | The prophet complains of the desolation of the sanctuary |
/psalms/74-10.htm | He moves God to help in consideration of his power |
/psalms/74-18.htm | Of his reproachful enemies, or his children and of his covenant. |
/psalms/75-1.htm | The prophet praises God |
/psalms/75-2.htm | He promises to judge uprightly |
/psalms/75-4.htm | He rebukes the proud by consideration of God's providence |
/psalms/75-9.htm | He praises God, and promises to execute justice. |
/psalms/76-1.htm | A declaration of God's majesty in the church |
/psalms/76-11.htm | An exhortation to serve him reverently. |
/psalms/77-1.htm | The psalmist shows what fierce combat he had with distrust |
/psalms/77-10.htm | The victory which he had by consideration of God's great and gracious works. |
/psalms/78-1.htm | An exhortation both to learn and to preach, the law of God |
/psalms/78-9.htm | The story of God's wrath against the incredulous and disobedient |
/psalms/78-67.htm | The Israelites being rejected, God chose Judah, Zion, and David. |
/psalms/79-1.htm | The psalmist complains of the desolation of Jerusalem |
/psalms/79-8.htm | He prays for deliverance |
/psalms/79-13.htm | and promises thankfulness |
/psalms/80-1.htm | The psalmist in his prayer complains of the miseries of the church |
/psalms/80-8.htm | God's former favors are turned into judgments |
/psalms/80-14.htm | He prays for deliverance |
/psalms/81-1.htm | An exhortation to a solemn praising of God |
/psalms/81-4.htm | God challenges that duty by reason of his benefits |
/psalms/81-8.htm | God, exhorting to obedience, complains of their disobedience, which proves their own hurt. |
/psalms/82-1.htm | The psalmist, having exhorted the judges |
/psalms/82-5.htm | And reproved their negligence |
/psalms/82-8.htm | Prays God to judge |
/psalms/83-1.htm | A complaint to God of the enemies conspiracies |
/psalms/83-9.htm | A prayer against those who oppress the Church |
/psalms/84-1.htm | The prophet, longing for the communion of the sanctuary |
/psalms/84-4.htm | Shows how blessed they are that dwell therein |
/psalms/84-8.htm | He prays to be restored unto it. |
/psalms/85-1.htm | The Psalmist, out of the experience of former mercies, prays for continuance thereof. |
/psalms/85-8.htm | He promises to wait thereon, out of confidence of God's goodness |
/psalms/86-1.htm | David strengthens his prayer by the consciousness of his religion |
/psalms/86-5.htm | By the goodness and power of God |
/psalms/86-11.htm | He desires the continuance of former grace |
/psalms/86-14.htm | Complaining of the proud, he craves some token of God's goodness |
/psalms/87-1.htm | The nature and glory of the church |
/psalms/87-4.htm | The increase, honor, and comfort of the members thereof. |
/psalms/88-1.htm | A prayer containing a grievous complaint. |
/psalms/89-1.htm | The psalmist praises God for his covenant |
/psalms/89-5.htm | For his wonderful power |
/psalms/89-15.htm | For the care of his church |
/psalms/89-19.htm | For his favor to the kingdom of David |
/psalms/89-38.htm | Then complaining of contrary events |
/psalms/89-46.htm | He expostulates, prays, and blesses God. |
/psalms/90-1.htm | Moses, setting forth God's providence |
/psalms/90-3.htm | Complains of human fragility |
/psalms/90-7.htm | Divine chastisement |
/psalms/90-10.htm | and brevity of life |
/psalms/90-12.htm | He prays for the knowledge and sensible experience of God's good providence. |
/psalms/91-1.htm | The state of the godly |
/psalms/91-3.htm | Their safety |
/psalms/91-9.htm | Their habitation |
/psalms/91-11.htm | Their servants |
/psalms/91-14.htm | Their friend; with the effects of them all. |
/psalms/92-1.htm | The prophet exhorts to praise God |
/psalms/92-4.htm | For his great works |
/psalms/92-6.htm | For his judgments on the wicked |
/psalms/92-10.htm | And for his goodness to the godly. |
/psalms/93-1.htm | The majesty, stability, power, and holiness of Christ's kingdom. |
/psalms/94-1.htm | The prophet, calling for justice, complains of tyranny and impiety. |
/psalms/94-8.htm | He teaches God's providence |
/psalms/94-12.htm | He shows the blessedness of affliction |
/psalms/94-16.htm | God is the defender of the afflicted. |
/psalms/95-1.htm | An exhortation to praise God |
/psalms/95-3.htm | For his greatness |
/psalms/95-6.htm | And for his goodness |
/psalms/95-8.htm | And not to tempt him |
/psalms/96-1.htm | An exhortation to praise God |
/psalms/96-4.htm | for his greatness |
/psalms/96-8.htm | for his kingdom |
/psalms/96-11.htm | for his general judgment |
/psalms/97-1.htm | The majesty of God's kingdom |
/psalms/97-7.htm | The church rejoices at God's judgments upon idolaters |
/psalms/97-10.htm | An exhortation to godliness and gladness |
/psalms/98-1.htm | The psalmist exhorts the Jews |
/psalms/98-4.htm | The Gentiles |
/psalms/98-7.htm | And all the creatures, to praise God |
/psalms/99-1.htm | The prophet, setting forth the kingdom of God in Zion |
/psalms/99-5.htm | Exhorts all, by the example of their forefathers, to worship God at his holy hill |
/psalms/100-1.htm | An exhortation to praise God, cheerfully |
/psalms/100-3.htm | For his greatness |
/psalms/100-4.htm | And for his power |
/psalms/101-1.htm | David makes a vow and profession of godliness. |
/psalms/102-1.htm | The prophet in his prayer makes a grievous complaint. |
/psalms/102-12.htm | He takes comfort in the eternity, and mercy of God |
/psalms/102-18.htm | The mercies of God are to be recorded |
/psalms/102-23.htm | He sustains his weakness by the unchangeableness of God. |
/psalms/103-1.htm | An exhortation to bless God for his mercy |
/psalms/103-5.htm | And for the constancy thereof |
/psalms/104-1.htm | A meditation upon the mighty power |
/psalms/104-7.htm | And wonderful providence of God |
/psalms/104-31.htm | God's glory is eternal |
/psalms/104-33.htm | The prophet vows perpetually to praise God |
/psalms/105-1.htm | An exhortation to praise God, and to seek out his works |
/psalms/105-7.htm | The story of God's providence over Abraham |
/psalms/105-16.htm | Over Joseph |
/psalms/105-23.htm | Over Jacob in Egypt |
/psalms/105-26.htm | Over Moses delivering the Israelites |
/psalms/105-37.htm | Over the Israelites brought out of Egypt, fed in the desert, and planted in Canaan. |
/psalms/106-1.htm | The psalmist exhorts to praise God |
/psalms/106-4.htm | He prays for pardon of sin, as God pardoned the fathers |
/psalms/106-7.htm | The story of the people's rebellion, and God's mercy |
/psalms/106-47.htm | He concludes with prayer and praise |
/psalms/107-1.htm | The psalmist exhorts the redeemed in praising God to observe his manifold providence |
/psalms/107-4.htm | Over travelers |
/psalms/107-10.htm | Over captives |
/psalms/107-17.htm | Over sick men |
/psalms/107-23.htm | Over sailors |
/psalms/107-33.htm | And in diverse varieties of life. |
/psalms/108-1.htm | David encourages himself to praise God |
/psalms/108-5.htm | He prays for God's assistance according to his promise |
/psalms/108-11.htm | His confidence in God's help |
/psalms/109-1.htm | David complains of his slanderous enemies |
/psalms/109-16.htm | He shows their sin |
/psalms/109-21.htm | Complaining of his own misery, he prays for help |
/psalms/109-29.htm | He promises thankfulness |
/psalms/110-1.htm | The kingdom |
/psalms/110-4.htm | The priesthood |
/psalms/110-5.htm | The conquest |
/psalms/110-7.htm | And the passion of Christ |
/psalms/111-1.htm | The psalmist by his example incites others to praise God for his glorious |
/psalms/111-5.htm | And gracious works |
/psalms/111-10.htm | The fear of God breeds true wisdom |
/psalms/112-1.htm | Godliness has the promises of this life |
/psalms/112-4.htm | And of the life to come |
/psalms/112-10.htm | The prosperity of the godly shall be an eyesore to the wicked |
/psalms/113-1.htm | An exhortation to praise God for his excellence |
/psalms/113-6.htm | For his mercy |
/psalms/114-1.htm | The miracles wrought by God, when he brought his people out of Egypt, |
/psalms/114-7.htm | are a just ground of fearing him. |
/psalms/115-1.htm | Because God is truly glorious |
/psalms/115-4.htm | And idols are vanity |
/psalms/115-9.htm | He exhorts to confidence in God |
/psalms/115-12.htm | God is to be blessed for his blessing |
/psalms/116-1.htm | The psalmist professes his love and duty to God for his deliverance |
/psalms/116-12.htm | He studies to be thankful |
/psalms/117-1.htm | An exhortation to praise God for his mercy and truth |
/psalms/118-1.htm | An exhortation to praise God for his mercy |
/psalms/118-5.htm | The psalmist by his experience shows how good it is to trust in God |
/psalms/118-19.htm | Under the type of the psalmist the coming of Christ in his kingdom is expressed |
/psalms/119-1.htm | This psalm contains various prayers, praises, and professions of obedience. |
/psalms/119-2.htm | Aleph. |
/psalms/119-9.htm | Beth |
/psalms/119-17.htm | Gimel |
/psalms/119-25.htm | Daleth |
/psalms/119-33.htm | He |
/psalms/119-41.htm | Waw |
/psalms/119-49.htm | Zayin |
/psalms/119-57.htm | Heth |
/psalms/119-65.htm | Teth |
/psalms/119-73.htm | Yodh |
/psalms/119-81.htm | Kaph |
/psalms/119-89.htm | Lamedh |
/psalms/119-97.htm | Mem |
/psalms/119-105.htm | Nun |
/psalms/119-113.htm | Samekh |
/psalms/119-121.htm | Ayin |
/psalms/119-129.htm | Pe |
/psalms/119-137.htm | Tsadhe |
/psalms/119-145.htm | Qoph |
/psalms/119-153.htm | Resh |
/psalms/119-161.htm | Sin and Shin |
/psalms/119-169.htm | Taw |
/psalms/120-1.htm | David prays against Doeg |
/psalms/120-3.htm | Reproves his tongue |
/psalms/120-5.htm | Complains of his necessary conversation with the wicked |
/psalms/121-1.htm | The great safety of the godly, who put their trust in God's protection |
/psalms/122-1.htm | David professes his joy for the church |
/psalms/122-6.htm | And prays for the peace thereof |
/psalms/123-1.htm | The godly profess their confidence in God |
/psalms/123-3.htm | And pray to be delivered from contempt |
/psalms/124-1.htm | The church blesses God for a miraculous deliverance |
/psalms/125-1.htm | The safety of such as trust in God |
/psalms/125-4.htm | A prayer for the godly, and against the wicked |
/psalms/126-1.htm | The church celebrating her incredible return out of captivity |
/psalms/126-4.htm | Prays for and prophesies the good success thereof |
/psalms/127-1.htm | The virtue of God's blessing |
/psalms/127-3.htm | Good children are his gift |
/psalms/128-1.htm | The various blessings which follow those who fear God |
/psalms/129-1.htm | An exhortation to praise God for saving Israel in their great afflictions |
/psalms/129-5.htm | The haters of the church are cursed |
/psalms/130-1.htm | The psalmist professes his hope in prayer |
/psalms/130-5.htm | And his patience in hope |
/psalms/130-7.htm | He exhorts Israel to trust in God |
/psalms/131-1.htm | David professing his humility |
/psalms/131-3.htm | Exhorts Israel to trust in God |
/psalms/132-1.htm | David in his prayer commends unto God the reverent care he had for the ark |
/psalms/132-8.htm | His prayer at the removing of the ark |
/psalms/132-11.htm | With a repetition of God's promises |
/psalms/133-1.htm | The blessedness of unity among brothers |
/psalms/134-1.htm | An exhortation to bless God |
/psalms/135-1.htm | An exhortation to praise God for his mercy |
/psalms/135-5.htm | For his power |
/psalms/135-8.htm | For his judgments |
/psalms/135-15.htm | The vanity of idols |
/psalms/135-19.htm | An exhortation to bless God |
/psalms/136-1.htm | An exhortation to give thanks to God for particular mercies. |
/psalms/137-1.htm | The constancy of the Jews in captivity |
/psalms/137-7.htm | The prophet curses Edom and Babel |
/psalms/138-1.htm | David praises God for the truth of his word |
/psalms/138-4.htm | He prophesies that the kings of the earth shall praise God |
/psalms/138-7.htm | He professes his confidence in God |
/psalms/139-1.htm | David praises God for his all-seeing providence |
/psalms/139-17.htm | And for this infinite mercies |
/psalms/139-19.htm | He defies the wicked |
/psalms/139-23.htm | He prays for sincerity |
/psalms/140-1.htm | David prays to be delivered from Saul and Doeg |
/psalms/140-8.htm | He prays against them |
/psalms/140-12.htm | He comforts himself by confidence in God |
/psalms/141-1.htm | David prays that his suit may be acceptable |
/psalms/141-3.htm | His conscience sincere |
/psalms/141-7.htm | And his life free from snares |
/psalms/142-1.htm | David shows that in his trouble all his comfort was in prayer unto God |
/psalms/143-1.htm | David prays for favor in judgment |
/psalms/143-3.htm | He complains of his grief |
/psalms/143-5.htm | He strengthens his faith by meditation and prayer |
/psalms/143-7.htm | He prays for grace |
/psalms/143-9.htm | For deliverance |
/psalms/143-10.htm | For sanctification |
/psalms/143-12.htm | For destruction of his enemies |
/psalms/144-1.htm | David blesses God for his mercy both to him and to man |
/psalms/144-5.htm | He prays that God would powerfully deliver him from his enemies |
/psalms/144-9.htm | He promises to praise God |
/psalms/144-11.htm | He prays for the happy state of the kingdom |
/psalms/145-1.htm | David praises God for his fame |
/psalms/145-8.htm | For his goodness |
/psalms/145-11.htm | For his kingdom |
/psalms/145-14.htm | For his providence |
/psalms/145-17.htm | For his justice, holiness, and savings mercy |
/psalms/146-1.htm | The Psalmist vows perpetual praises to God |
/psalms/146-3.htm | He exhorts not to trust in man |
/psalms/146-5.htm | God, for his power, justice, mercy, and kingdom, is only worthy to be trusted |
/psalms/147-1.htm | The prophet exhorts to praise God for his care of the church |
/psalms/147-4.htm | His power and wisdom |
/psalms/147-6.htm | His mercy |
/psalms/147-7.htm | His providence |
/psalms/147-12.htm | To praise him for his blessings upon the kingdom |
/psalms/147-15.htm | For his power over the elements |
/psalms/147-19.htm | And for his ordinances in the church |
/psalms/148-1.htm | The psalmist exhorts the celestial |
/psalms/148-7.htm | The terrestrial |
/psalms/148-11.htm | And the rational creatures to praise God |
/psalms/149-1.htm | The prophet exhorts to praise God for his love to the church |
/psalms/149-5.htm | And for that power which he has given to the church |
/psalms/150-1.htm | An exhortation to praise God |
/psalms/150-3.htm | With all kinds of instruments |
/proverbs/1-1.htm | The use of the proverbs |
/proverbs/1-7.htm | An exhortation to fear God, and believe his word |
/proverbs/1-10.htm | to avoid the enticing of sinners |
/proverbs/1-20.htm | Wisdom complains of her contempt |
/proverbs/1-24.htm | She threatens her contemners |
/proverbs/2-1.htm | wisdom promises godliness to her children |
/proverbs/2-10.htm | and safety from evil company |
/proverbs/2-20.htm | and direction in good ways |
/proverbs/3-1.htm | various exhortations |
/proverbs/3-13.htm | The gain of wisdom |
/proverbs/3-27.htm | Exhortation to goodness |
/proverbs/3-33.htm | the different state of the wicked and upright |
/proverbs/4-1.htm | persuades to wisdom |
/proverbs/4-14.htm | and to show wickedness |
/proverbs/4-20.htm | He exhorts to sanctification |
/proverbs/5-1.htm | Solomon exhorts to wisdom |
/proverbs/5-3.htm | He shows the mischief of unfaithfulness and riot |
/proverbs/5-15.htm | He exhorts to contentedness, generosity, and chastity |
/proverbs/5-22.htm | The wicked are overtaken with their own sins |
/proverbs/6-1.htm | against indebtedness |
/proverbs/6-6.htm | idleness |
/proverbs/6-12.htm | and mischievousness |
/proverbs/6-16.htm | seven things detestable to God |
/proverbs/6-20.htm | the blessings of obedience |
/proverbs/6-25.htm | the mischief of unfaithfulness |
/proverbs/7-1.htm | Solomon persuades to a sincere and kind familiarity with wisdom |
/proverbs/7-6.htm | In an example of his own experience he shows |
/proverbs/7-10.htm | the cunning of a harlot |
/proverbs/7-22.htm | and the desperate simplicity of a young wanton |
/proverbs/7-24.htm | He detests such wickedness |
/proverbs/8-1.htm | the fame |
/proverbs/8-6.htm | and evidence of wisdom |
/proverbs/8-10.htm | The excellence |
/proverbs/8-12.htm | the nature |
/proverbs/8-15.htm | the power |
/proverbs/8-18.htm | the riches |
/proverbs/8-22.htm | and the eternity of wisdom |
/proverbs/8-32.htm | Wisdom is to be desired for the blessedness it brings |
/proverbs/9-1.htm | The discipline |
/proverbs/9-4.htm | and the doctrine of wisdom |
/proverbs/9-13.htm | The custom |
/proverbs/9-16.htm | and error of folly |
/proverbs/10-1.htm | Proverbs of Solomon: observations of moral virtues, and their contrary vices |
/proverbs/11-1.htm | On Deception |
/proverbs/12-1.htm | Whoever loves discipline loves knowledge |
/proverbs/13-1.htm | a scoffer does not listen to rebuke |
/proverbs/14-1.htm | A wise woman builds her house |
/proverbs/15-1.htm | A gentle answer turns away wrath |
/proverbs/16-1.htm | The Plans of the heart |
/proverbs/17-1.htm | Contrasts between the Righteous and the Wicked |
/proverbs/18-1.htm | A fool delights not in understanding |
/proverbs/19-1.htm | Life and Conduct |
/proverbs/20-1.htm | Proper Living |
/proverbs/21-1.htm | The king's heart in the hand of the Lord |
/proverbs/22-1.htm | A good name is more desirable than great wealth |
/proverbs/23-1.htm | Consider carefully what is before you |
/proverbs/24-1.htm | Precepts and Warnings |
/proverbs/25-1.htm | observations about kings |
/proverbs/25-8.htm | and about avoiding causes of quarrels |
/proverbs/26-1.htm | observations about fools |
/proverbs/26-13.htm | about sluggards |
/proverbs/26-17.htm | and about contentious busybodies |
/proverbs/27-1.htm | observations of self love |
/proverbs/27-5.htm | of true love |
/proverbs/27-11.htm | of care to avoid offenses |
/proverbs/27-23.htm | and of the household care |
/proverbs/28-1.htm | general observations of impiety and integrity |
/proverbs/29-1.htm | observations of public government |
/proverbs/29-15.htm | and of private |
/proverbs/29-22.htm | Of anger, pride, thievery, cowardice and corruption |
/proverbs/30-1.htm | Agur's confession of his faith |
/proverbs/30-7.htm | The two points of his prayer |
/proverbs/30-10.htm | The meanest are not to be wronged |
/proverbs/30-11.htm | Four wicked generations |
/proverbs/30-15.htm | Four things insatiable |
/proverbs/30-24.htm | four things exceeding wise |
/proverbs/30-29.htm | Four things stately |
/proverbs/30-32.htm | Wrath is to be prevented |
/proverbs/31-1.htm | Lemuel's lesson of chastity and temperance |
/proverbs/31-6.htm | The afflicted are to be comforted and defended |
/proverbs/31-10.htm | The praise and properties of a good wife |
/ecclesiastes/1-1.htm | the preacher shows that all human courses are vain |
/ecclesiastes/1-4.htm | because the creatures are restless in their courses |
/ecclesiastes/1-9.htm | they bring forth nothing new, and all old things are forgotten |
/ecclesiastes/1-12.htm | and because he has found it so in the studies of wisdom |
/ecclesiastes/2-1.htm | the vanity of human courses is the work of pleasure |
/ecclesiastes/2-12.htm | Though the wise be better than the fool, yet both have one event |
/ecclesiastes/2-18.htm | The vanity of human labor, in leaving it they know not to whom |
/ecclesiastes/2-24.htm | Nothing better than joy in our labor but that is God's gift |
/ecclesiastes/3-1.htm | by the necessary change of times, vanity is added to human travail |
/ecclesiastes/3-11.htm | is an excellence in God's works |
/ecclesiastes/3-16.htm | as for man, God shall judge his works hereafter, though here he be like a beast |
/ecclesiastes/4-1.htm | vanity is increased unto men by oppression |
/ecclesiastes/4-4.htm | by envy |
/ecclesiastes/4-5.htm | by idleness |
/ecclesiastes/4-7.htm | by covetousness |
/ecclesiastes/4-9.htm | by solitariness |
/ecclesiastes/4-13.htm | by willfulness |
/ecclesiastes/5-1.htm | vanities in divine service |
/ecclesiastes/5-8.htm | in murmuring against oppression |
/ecclesiastes/5-9.htm | and in riches |
/ecclesiastes/5-18.htm | Joy in riches is the gift of God. |
/ecclesiastes/6-1.htm | the vanity of riches without use |
/ecclesiastes/6-3.htm | though a man have many children and a long life |
/ecclesiastes/6-7.htm | the vanity of sight and wandering desires |
/ecclesiastes/6-10.htm | The conclusion of vanities |
/ecclesiastes/7-1.htm | remedies against vanity are, a good name |
/ecclesiastes/7-2.htm | mortification |
/ecclesiastes/7-7.htm | patience |
/ecclesiastes/7-11.htm | wisdom |
/ecclesiastes/7-23.htm | The difficulty of wisdom |
/ecclesiastes/8-1.htm | true wisdom is modest |
/ecclesiastes/8-2.htm | Kings are to be respected |
/ecclesiastes/8-6.htm | Divine providence is to be observed |
/ecclesiastes/8-12.htm | It is better with the godly in adversity, than with the wicked in prosperity |
/ecclesiastes/8-16.htm | The work of God is unsearchable |
/ecclesiastes/9-1.htm | like things happen to good and bad |
/ecclesiastes/9-4.htm | there is a necessity of death unto men |
/ecclesiastes/9-7.htm | Comfort is all their portion in this life |
/ecclesiastes/9-11.htm | God's providence rules over all |
/ecclesiastes/9-13.htm | wisdom is better than strength |
/ecclesiastes/10-1.htm | observations of wisdom and folly |
/ecclesiastes/10-7.htm | death in life |
/ecclesiastes/10-9.htm | and the day of judgment in the days of youth, are to be thought on |
/ecclesiastes/11-1.htm | directions for charity |
/ecclesiastes/11-7.htm | death in life and the day of judgment |
/ecclesiastes/11-9.htm | in the days of youth |
/ecclesiastes/12-1.htm | the Creator is to be remembered in due time |
/ecclesiastes/12-8.htm | The preacher's care to edify |
/ecclesiastes/12-13.htm | the fear of God is the chief antidote for vanity |
/songs/1-1.htm | the church's love unto Christ |
/songs/1-5.htm | She confesses her deformity |
/songs/1-7.htm | and prays to be directed, to his flock |
/songs/1-8.htm | Christ directs her to the shepherd's tents |
/songs/1-9.htm | and showing his love to her |
/songs/1-11.htm | gives her gracious promises |
/songs/1-12.htm | the church and Christ congratulate one another |
/songs/2-1.htm | the mutual love of Christ and his church |
/songs/2-8.htm | The hope |
/songs/2-10.htm | and calling of the church |
/songs/2-14.htm | Christ's care of the church |
/songs/2-16.htm | The profession of the church, her faith, and hope |
/songs/3-1.htm | the church's fight and victory in temptation |
/songs/3-6.htm | The church glories in Christ |
/songs/4-1.htm | Christ sets forth the graces of the church |
/songs/4-8.htm | He shows forth his love to her |
/songs/4-16.htm | The church prays to be made fit for his presence |
/songs/5-1.htm | Christ awakes the church with his calling |
/songs/5-2.htm | The church having a taste of Christ's love is sick of love |
/songs/5-9.htm | A description of Christ by his graces |
/songs/6-1.htm | the church professes her faith in Christ |
/songs/6-4.htm | Christ shows the graces of the church |
/songs/6-10.htm | and his love toward her |
/songs/7-1.htm | a further description of the church's graces. |
/songs/7-10.htm | The church professes her faith and desire |
/songs/8-1.htm | The love of the church to Christ |
/songs/8-6.htm | The vehemence of love |
/songs/8-8.htm | The calling of the Gentiles |
/songs/8-14.htm | the church prays for Christ's coming |
/isaiah/1-1.htm | Isaiah complains of Judah for her rebellion |
/isaiah/1-5.htm | He laments her judgments |
/isaiah/1-10.htm | He upbraids their whole service |
/isaiah/1-16.htm | He exhorts to repentance, with promises and threats |
/isaiah/1-21.htm | Bewailing their wickedness, he denounces God's judgments |
/isaiah/1-25.htm | He promises grace |
/isaiah/1-28.htm | And threatens destruction to the wicked |
/isaiah/2-1.htm | Isaiah prophesies the coming of Christ's kingdom |
/isaiah/2-6.htm | Wickedness is the cause of God's forsaking |
/isaiah/2-10.htm | He exhorts to fear, because of the powerful effects of God's majesty |
/isaiah/3-1.htm | The great calamities which come by sin |
/isaiah/3-10.htm | The different rewards of the righteous and wicked |
/isaiah/3-12.htm | The oppression and covetousness of the rulers |
/isaiah/3-16.htm | The judgments which shall be for the pride of the women |
/isaiah/3-25.htm | The general desolation |
/isaiah/4-1.htm | In the extremity of evils, Christ's kingdom shall be a sanctuary. |
/isaiah/5-1.htm | Under the parable of a vineyard, God excuses his severe judgment |
/isaiah/5-8.htm | His judgments upon covetousness |
/isaiah/5-11.htm | Upon lasciviousness |
/isaiah/5-13.htm | Upon impiety |
/isaiah/5-20.htm | And upon injustice |
/isaiah/5-26.htm | The executioners of God's judgments |
/isaiah/6-1.htm | Isaiah, in a vision of the Lord in his glory |
/isaiah/6-5.htm | Being terrified, has apprehensions removed |
/isaiah/6-8.htm | He offers himself, and is sent to show the obstinacy of the people |
/isaiah/6-13.htm | A remnant shall be saved |
/isaiah/7-1.htm | Ahaz, being troubled with fear of Rezin and Pekah, is comforted by Isaiah |
/isaiah/7-10.htm | Ahaz, having liberty to choose a sign, and refusing it, has for a sign, Christ promised |
/isaiah/7-17.htm | His judgment is prophesied to come by Assyria |
/isaiah/8-1.htm | In Maher-Shalal-Hash-Baz, he prophesies Syria and Israel shall be subdued by Assyria |
/isaiah/8-5.htm | Judah likewise for their infidelity |
/isaiah/8-9.htm | God's judgments shall be irresistible |
/isaiah/8-11.htm | Comfort shall be to those who fear God |
/isaiah/8-19.htm | Great afflictions to idolaters |
/isaiah/9-1.htm | What joy shall be in the midst of afflictions, by the birth and kingdom of Christ |
/isaiah/9-8.htm | The judgments upon Israel for their pride |
/isaiah/9-13.htm | For their hypocrisy |
/isaiah/9-18.htm | And for their unrepentance |
/isaiah/10-1.htm | The woe of tyrants |
/isaiah/10-5.htm | Assyria, the rod of hypocrites, for its pride shall be broken |
/isaiah/10-20.htm | A remnant of Israel shall be saved |
/isaiah/10-23.htm | Judah is comforted with promise of deliverance from Assyria |
/isaiah/11-1.htm | The peaceable kingdom of the Branch out of the root of Jesse |
/isaiah/11-10.htm | The victorious restoration of Israel, and vocation of the Gentiles. |
/isaiah/12-1.htm | A joyful thanksgiving of the faithful for the mercies of God |
/isaiah/13-1.htm | God musters the armies of his wrath |
/isaiah/13-6.htm | He threatens to destroy Babylon by the Medes |
/isaiah/13-19.htm | The desolation of Babylon |
/isaiah/14-1.htm | God's merciful restoration of Israel |
/isaiah/14-3.htm | Their triumphant exultation over Babel |
/isaiah/14-24.htm | God's purpose against Assyria |
/isaiah/14-29.htm | Philistia is threatened |
/isaiah/15-1.htm | The lamentable state of Moab |
/isaiah/16-1.htm | Moab is exhorted to yield obedience to the throne of David |
/isaiah/16-6.htm | Moab is threatened for her pride |
/isaiah/16-9.htm | The prophet bewails her |
/isaiah/16-12.htm | The judgment of Moab |
/isaiah/17-1.htm | Syria and Israel are threatened |
/isaiah/17-6.htm | A remnant shall forsake idolatry |
/isaiah/17-9.htm | The rest shall be plagued for their impiety |
/isaiah/17-12.htm | The woe of Israel's enemies |
/isaiah/18-1.htm | God, in care of his people, will destroy the Ethiopians |
/isaiah/18-7.htm | An accession thereby shall be made to the church |
/isaiah/19-1.htm | The confusion of Egypt |
/isaiah/19-11.htm | The foolishness of their princes |
/isaiah/19-18.htm | The calling of Egypt into the church |
/isaiah/19-23.htm | The covenant of Egypt, Assyria, and Israel |
/isaiah/20-1.htm | A type prefiguring the shameful captivity of Egypt and Ethiopia. |
/isaiah/21-1.htm | The prophet, bewailing the captivity of his people, |
/isaiah/21-6.htm | sees in a vision the fall of Babylon by the Medes and Persians. |
/isaiah/21-11.htm | Edom, scorning the prophet, is moved to repentance. |
/isaiah/21-13.htm | The set time of Arabia's calamity. |
/isaiah/22-1.htm | The prophet laments the invasion of Jerusalem |
/isaiah/22-8.htm | He reproves their human wisdom and worldly joy |
/isaiah/22-15.htm | He prophesies Shebna's deprivation |
/isaiah/22-20.htm | And the substitution of Eliakim, prefiguring the kingdom of Christ. |
/isaiah/23-1.htm | The miserable overthrow of Tyre |
/isaiah/23-15.htm | Her restoration and unfaithfulness |
/isaiah/24-1.htm | The doleful judgments of God upon the land |
/isaiah/24-13.htm | A remnant shall joyfully praise him |
/isaiah/24-16.htm | God in his judgments shall advance his kingdom |
/isaiah/25-1.htm | Song of Praise for God's Favor |
/isaiah/26-1.htm | Trust in God's Provision |
/isaiah/27-1.htm | The Deliverance of Israel |
/isaiah/28-1.htm | The prophet threatens Ephraim for their pride and drunkenness |
/isaiah/28-5.htm | The residue shall be advanced in the kingdom of Christ |
/isaiah/28-7.htm | He rebukes their error |
/isaiah/28-9.htm | Their unwillingness to learn |
/isaiah/28-14.htm | And their security |
/isaiah/28-16.htm | Christ the sure foundation is promised |
/isaiah/28-17.htm | Their security shall be tried |
/isaiah/28-23.htm | They are incited to the consideration of God's providence |
/isaiah/29-1.htm | God's heavy judgment upon Jerusalem |
/isaiah/29-7.htm | The insatiableness of her enemies |
/isaiah/29-9.htm | The senselessness |
/isaiah/29-13.htm | And deep hypocrisy of the people |
/isaiah/29-17.htm | A promise of sanctification to the godly |
/isaiah/30-1.htm | The prophet threatens the people for their confidence in Egypt |
/isaiah/30-8.htm | And contempt of God's word |
/isaiah/30-18.htm | God's mercies toward his church |
/isaiah/30-27.htm | God's wrath and the people's joy, in the destruction of Assyria |
/isaiah/31-1.htm | The prophet shows the folly and danger of trusting Egypt, and forsaking God |
/isaiah/31-6.htm | He exhorts to conversion |
/isaiah/31-8.htm | He shows the fall of Assyria |
/isaiah/32-1.htm | The blessings of Christ's kingdom |
/isaiah/32-9.htm | Desolation is foreshown |
/isaiah/32-14.htm | Restoration is promised to succeed |
/isaiah/33-1.htm | God's judgments against the enemies of the church |
/isaiah/33-13.htm | The consternation of sinners, and privileges of the godly |
/isaiah/34-1.htm | The judgments wherewith God revenges his church |
/isaiah/34-11.htm | The desolation of her enemies |
/isaiah/34-16.htm | The certainty of the prophecy |
/isaiah/35-1.htm | The joyful flourishing of Christ's kingdom |
/isaiah/35-3.htm | The weak are encouraged by the virtues and privileges of the Gospel |
/isaiah/36-1.htm | Sennacherib invades Judah |
/isaiah/36-2.htm | Rabshakeh, sent by Sennacherib, solicits the people to revolt |
/isaiah/36-22.htm | His words are told to Hezekiah |
/isaiah/37-1.htm | Hezekiah mourning, sends to Isaiah to pray for them |
/isaiah/37-6.htm | Isaiah comforts them |
/isaiah/37-8.htm | Sennacherib, going to encounter Tirhakah, sends a blasphemous letter to Hezekiah |
/isaiah/37-14.htm | Hezekiah's prayer |
/isaiah/37-21.htm | Isaiah's prophecy of the destruction of Sennacherib, and the good of Zion |
/isaiah/37-36.htm | An angel slays the Assyrians |
/isaiah/37-37.htm | Sennacherib is slain at Nineveh by his own sons. |
/isaiah/38-1.htm | Hezekiah, having received a message of death, by prayer has his life lengthened |
/isaiah/38-8.htm | The sun goes ten degrees backward, for a sign of that promise |
/isaiah/38-9.htm | His song of thanksgiving. |
/isaiah/39-1.htm | Merodach-baladan, sending to visit Hezekiah, has notice of his treasures. |
/isaiah/39-3.htm | Isaiah, understanding thereof, foretells the Babylonian captivity. |
/isaiah/40-1.htm | The promulgation of the Gospel |
/isaiah/40-3.htm | The preaching of John Baptist foretold |
/isaiah/40-9.htm | The preaching of the apostles foretold |
/isaiah/40-12.htm | The prophet, by the omnipotence of God |
/isaiah/40-18.htm | And his incomparableness |
/isaiah/40-26.htm | Comforts the people. |
/isaiah/41-1.htm | God expostulates with his people, about his mercies to the church. |
/isaiah/41-10.htm | About his promises |
/isaiah/41-21.htm | And about the vanity of idols. |
/isaiah/42-1.htm | The office of Christ, graced with meekness and constancy. |
/isaiah/42-5.htm | God's promise unto him. |
/isaiah/42-10.htm | An exhortation to praise God for his Gospel |
/isaiah/42-13.htm | God will manifest himself, and check idolatry |
/isaiah/42-18.htm | He reproves the people of incredulity. |
/isaiah/43-1.htm | The Lord comforts the church with his promises. |
/isaiah/43-8.htm | He appeals to the people for witness of his omnipotence |
/isaiah/43-14.htm | He foretells them the destruction of Babylon |
/isaiah/43-18.htm | And his wonderful deliverance of his people |
/isaiah/43-22.htm | He reproves the people as inexcusable |
/isaiah/44-1.htm | God comforts the church with his promises |
/isaiah/44-7.htm | The vanity of idols |
/isaiah/44-9.htm | And folly of idol makers |
/isaiah/44-21.htm | He exhorts to praise God for his redemption and omnipotence |
/isaiah/45-1.htm | God calls Cyrus for his church's sake |
/isaiah/45-5.htm | By his omnipotence he challenges obedience |
/isaiah/45-20.htm | He convinces the idols of vanity by his saving power |
/isaiah/46-1.htm | The idols of Babylon could not save themselves |
/isaiah/46-3.htm | God saves his people to the end |
/isaiah/46-5.htm | Idols are not comparable to God for power |
/isaiah/46-12.htm | Or present salvation. |
/isaiah/47-1.htm | God's judgment upon Babylon and Chaldea |
/isaiah/47-6.htm | For their unmercifulness |
/isaiah/47-7.htm | Pride |
/isaiah/47-10.htm | And over-boldness |
/isaiah/47-11.htm | Shall be irresistible |
/isaiah/48-1.htm | God, to convince the people of their foreknown obstinance, revealed his prophecies |
/isaiah/48-9.htm | He saves them for his own sake |
/isaiah/48-12.htm | He exhorts them to obedience, because of his power and providence |
/isaiah/48-16.htm | He laments their backwardness |
/isaiah/48-20.htm | He powerfully delivers his people out of Babylon |
/isaiah/49-1.htm | Christ being sent to the Jews, complains of them |
/isaiah/49-5.htm | He is sent to the Gentiles with gracious promises |
/isaiah/49-13.htm | God's love is perpetual to his church |
/isaiah/49-18.htm | The ample restoration of the church |
/isaiah/49-24.htm | The powerful deliverance out of captivity |
/isaiah/50-1.htm | Christ shows Israel's Sin is not to be imputed to him, |
/isaiah/50-2.htm | by his ability to save |
/isaiah/50-5.htm | By his obedience in that work |
/isaiah/50-7.htm | And by his confidence in that assistance |
/isaiah/50-10.htm | An exhortation to trust in God, and not in ourselves |
/isaiah/51-1.htm | An exhortation after the pattern of Abraham, to trust in Christ |
/isaiah/51-3.htm | By reason of his comfortable promises, |
/isaiah/51-4.htm | Of his righteous salvation |
/isaiah/51-7.htm | And man's mortality |
/isaiah/51-9.htm | Christ by his sanctified arm defends his from the fear of man |
/isaiah/51-17.htm | He bewails the afflictions of Jerusalem |
/isaiah/51-21.htm | And promises deliverance |
/isaiah/52-1.htm | Christ persuades the church to believe his free redemption |
/isaiah/52-7.htm | To receive the ministers thereof |
/isaiah/52-9.htm | To joy in the power thereof |
/isaiah/52-11.htm | And to free themselves from bondage |
/isaiah/52-13.htm | Christ's kingdom shall be exalted |
/isaiah/53-1.htm | The prophet, complaining of incredulity, excuses the scandal of the cross |
/isaiah/53-4.htm | By the benefit of his passion |
/isaiah/53-10.htm | And the good success thereof |
/isaiah/54-1.htm | The prophet, to comfort the Gentiles, prophesies the amplitude of their church |
/isaiah/54-4.htm | Their safety |
/isaiah/54-6.htm | Their certain deliverance out of affliction |
/isaiah/54-11.htm | Their fair edification |
/isaiah/54-15.htm | And their sure preservation |
/isaiah/55-1.htm | The prophet, with the promises of Christ, calls to faith |
/isaiah/55-6.htm | And to repentance |
/isaiah/55-8.htm | The happy success of those who believe |
/isaiah/56-1.htm | The prophet exhorts to sanctification |
/isaiah/56-3.htm | He promises it shall be general, without respect of persons |
/isaiah/56-9.htm | He protests against blind watchmen |
/isaiah/57-1.htm | The blessed death of the righteous |
/isaiah/57-3.htm | God reproves the People for their idolatry |
/isaiah/57-13.htm | He gives promises of mercy to the penitent |
/isaiah/58-1.htm | The prophet, being sent to reprove hypocrisy, |
/isaiah/58-3.htm | shows the difference between a counterfeit fast and a true |
/isaiah/58-8.htm | He declares what promises are due unto godliness |
/isaiah/58-13.htm | And to the keeping of the Sabbath |
/isaiah/59-1.htm | Calamities are not due to lack of saving power in God, but to their own sins |
/isaiah/59-16.htm | Salvation is only of God |
/isaiah/59-20.htm | The covenant of the Redeemer |
/isaiah/60-1.htm | The glory of the church in the abundant access of the Gentiles. |
/isaiah/60-15.htm | And the great blessings after a short affliction |
/isaiah/61-1.htm | The office of Christ |
/isaiah/61-4.htm | The forwardness |
/isaiah/61-7.htm | And blessing of the faithful |
/isaiah/62-1.htm | The fervent desire of the prophet to confirm the church in God's promises. |
/isaiah/62-6.htm | The office of the ministers in preaching the Gospel |
/isaiah/62-10.htm | And preparing the people thereto |
/isaiah/63-1.htm | Christ shows who he is |
/isaiah/63-2.htm | What his victory over his enemies |
/isaiah/63-7.htm | And what his mercy toward his church |
/isaiah/63-10.htm | In his just wrath he remembers his free mercy |
/isaiah/63-15.htm | The church, in her prayer |
/isaiah/63-17.htm | And complaint, professes her faith |
/isaiah/64-1.htm | The church prays for the illustration of God's power |
/isaiah/64-4.htm | Celebrating God's mercy, it makes confession of their natural corruptions |
/isaiah/64-9.htm | It complains of their afflictions |
/isaiah/65-1.htm | The calling of the Gentiles, |
/isaiah/65-2.htm | and the rejection of the Jews, for their incredulity, idolatry, and hypocrisy |
/isaiah/65-8.htm | A remnant shall be saved |
/isaiah/65-11.htm | Judgments on the wicked, and blessings on the godly |
/isaiah/65-17.htm | The blessed state of the new Jerusalem |
/isaiah/66-1.htm | The glorious God will be served in humble sincerity |
/isaiah/66-5.htm | He comforts the humble by showing the confusion of their enemies |
/isaiah/66-7.htm | With the marvelous growth |
/isaiah/66-10.htm | And the gracious benefits of the church |
/isaiah/66-15.htm | God's severe judgments against the wicked |
/isaiah/66-18.htm | The Gentiles shall have an holy church |
/isaiah/66-24.htm | And see the damnation of the wicked |
/jeremiah/1-1.htm | The time |
/jeremiah/1-4.htm | And the calling of Jeremiah |
/jeremiah/1-11.htm | His prophetical visions of an almond rod and a seething pot |
/jeremiah/1-15.htm | His heavy message against Judah |
/jeremiah/1-17.htm | God encourages him with his promise of assistance |
/jeremiah/2-1.htm | God having shown his former kindness, |
/jeremiah/2-5.htm | expostulates with the people on their causeless and unexampled revolt |
/jeremiah/2-14.htm | They are the causes of their own calamities |
/jeremiah/2-18.htm | The sins and idolatries of Judah |
/jeremiah/2-35.htm | Her confidence is rejected. |
/jeremiah/3-1.htm | God's great mercy to Judah the polluted land |
/jeremiah/3-6.htm | Judah is worse than Israel |
/jeremiah/3-12.htm | The promises of the gospel to the penitent |
/jeremiah/3-20.htm | Israel reproved, and called by God, makes a solemn confession of their sins |
/jeremiah/4-1.htm | God calls Israel by his promise |
/jeremiah/4-3.htm | He exhorts Judah to repentance by fearful judgments |
/jeremiah/4-19.htm | A grievous lamentation for Judah |
/jeremiah/5-1.htm | The judgments of God upon the people, for their perverseness; |
/jeremiah/5-7.htm | for their adultery; |
/jeremiah/5-10.htm | for their impiety; |
/jeremiah/5-15.htm | for their worship of idols; |
/jeremiah/5-19.htm | for their contempt of God; |
/jeremiah/5-25.htm | and for their great corruption in the civil state; |
/jeremiah/5-30.htm | and ecclesiastical. |
/jeremiah/6-1.htm | The enemies sent against Judah, |
/jeremiah/6-4.htm | encourage themselves. |
/jeremiah/6-6.htm | God sets them on work because of their sins. |
/jeremiah/6-9.htm | The prophet laments the judgments of God because of their sins. |
/jeremiah/6-18.htm | He proclaims God's wrath. |
/jeremiah/6-26.htm | He calls the people to mourn for the judgment on their sins. |
/jeremiah/7-1.htm | Jeremiah is sent to call to true repentance, to prevent the Jews' captivity. |
/jeremiah/7-8.htm | He rejects their vain confidence, |
/jeremiah/7-12.htm | by the example of Shiloh. |
/jeremiah/7-17.htm | He threatens them for their idolatry. |
/jeremiah/7-21.htm | He rejects the sacrifices of the disobedient. |
/jeremiah/7-29.htm | He exhorts to mourn for their abominations in Tophet; |
/jeremiah/7-32.htm | and the judgments for the same. |
/jeremiah/8-1.htm | The calamity of the Jews, both dead and alive. |
/jeremiah/8-4.htm | He upbraids their foolish and shameless impenitency. |
/jeremiah/8-13.htm | He shows their grievous judgment; |
/jeremiah/8-18.htm | and bewails their desperate estate. |
/jeremiah/9-1.htm | Jeremiah laments the people for their manifold sins; |
/jeremiah/9-9.htm | and for their judgment. |
/jeremiah/9-12.htm | Disobedience is the cause of their bitter calamity. |
/jeremiah/9-17.htm | He exhorts to mourn for their destruction; |
/jeremiah/9-23.htm | and to trust not in themselves, but in God. |
/jeremiah/9-25.htm | He threatens both Jews and Gentiles. |
/jeremiah/10-1.htm | The unequal comparison of God and idols. |
/jeremiah/10-17.htm | The prophet exhorts to flee from the calamity to come. |
/jeremiah/10-19.htm | He laments the spoil of the tabernacle by foolish pastors. |
/jeremiah/10-23.htm | He makes an humble supplication. |
/jeremiah/11-1.htm | Jeremiah proclaims God's covenant; |
/jeremiah/11-8.htm | rebukes the peoples' disobeying thereof; |
/jeremiah/11-11.htm | prophesies evils to come upon them; |
/jeremiah/11-18.htm | and upon the men of Anathoth, for conspiring to kill him. |
/jeremiah/12-1.htm | Jeremiah, complaining of the prosperity of the wicked, by faith sees their ruin. |
/jeremiah/12-5.htm | God admonishes him of his brothers' treachery against him; |
/jeremiah/12-7.htm | and laments his heritage. |
/jeremiah/12-14.htm | He promises to the penitent return from captivity. |
/jeremiah/13-1.htm | By the type of a linen belt, hidden at Euphrates, |
/jeremiah/13-9.htm | God prefigures the destruction of his people. |
/jeremiah/13-12.htm | By the parable of bottles filled with wine he foretells their drunkenness in misery. |
/jeremiah/13-15.htm | He exhorts to prevent their future judgments. |
/jeremiah/13-22.htm | He shows their abominations are the cause thereof. |
/jeremiah/14-1.htm | The grievous famine, |
/jeremiah/14-7.htm | causes Jeremiah to pray. |
/jeremiah/14-10.htm | The Lord will not be entreated for the people. |
/jeremiah/14-13.htm | false prophets are no excuse for them. |
/jeremiah/14-17.htm | Jeremiah is moved to complain for them. |
/jeremiah/15-1.htm | The utter rejection and manifold judgments of the people. |
/jeremiah/15-10.htm | Jeremiah, complaining of their spite, receives a promise for himself; |
/jeremiah/15-12.htm | and a threatening for them. |
/jeremiah/15-15.htm | He prays; |
/jeremiah/15-19.htm | and receives a gracious promise. |
/jeremiah/16-1.htm | The prophet, under the types of abstaining from marriage, |
/jeremiah/16-8.htm | from houses of mourning and feasting, foreshows the utter ruin of the Jews; |
/jeremiah/16-10.htm | because they were worse than their fathers. |
/jeremiah/16-14.htm | Their return from captivity shall be stranger than their deliverance out of Egypt. |
/jeremiah/16-16.htm | God will doubly recompense their idolatry. |
/jeremiah/17-1.htm | The captivity of Judah for her sin. |
/jeremiah/17-5.htm | Trust in man is cursed; |
/jeremiah/17-7.htm | in God is blessed. |
/jeremiah/17-9.htm | The deceitful heart cannot deceive God. |
/jeremiah/17-12.htm | The salvation of God. |
/jeremiah/17-15.htm | The prophet complains of the mockers of his prophecy. |
/jeremiah/17-19.htm | He is sent to renew the covenant in hallowing the Sabbath. |
/jeremiah/18-1.htm | Under the type of a potter is shown God's absolute power in disposing of nations. |
/jeremiah/18-11.htm | Judgments threatened to Judah for her strange revolt. |
/jeremiah/18-18.htm | Jeremiah prays against his conspirators. |
/jeremiah/19-1.htm | Under the type of breaking a potter's vessel, is foreshown the desolation of the Jews |
/jeremiah/20-1.htm | Pashur, smiting Jeremiah, receives a new name, and a fearful doom. |
/jeremiah/20-7.htm | Jeremiah complains of contempt; |
/jeremiah/20-10.htm | of treachery; |
/jeremiah/20-14.htm | and of his birth. |
/jeremiah/21-1.htm | Zedikiah sends to Jeremiah to enquire the event of Nebuchadnezzar's war. |
/jeremiah/21-3.htm | Jeremiah foretells a hard siege and miserable captivity. |
/jeremiah/21-8.htm | He counsels the people to fall to the Chaldeans; |
/jeremiah/21-11.htm | and upbraids the King's house. |
/jeremiah/22-1.htm | He exhorts to repentance, with promises and threats. |
/jeremiah/22-10.htm | The judgment of Shallum; |
/jeremiah/22-13.htm | of Jehoiakim; |
/jeremiah/22-20.htm | and of Coniah. |
/jeremiah/23-1.htm | He prophesies a restoration of the scattered flock. |
/jeremiah/23-5.htm | Christ shall rule and save them. |
/jeremiah/23-9.htm | Against false prophets; |
/jeremiah/23-33.htm | and mockers of the true prophets. |
/jeremiah/24-1.htm | Under the type of good and bad figs, |
/jeremiah/24-4.htm | he foreshows the restoration of those who were in captivity; |
/jeremiah/24-8.htm | and the desolation of Zedekiah and the rest. |
/jeremiah/25-1.htm | Jeremiah, reproving the Jews' disobedience to the prophets, |
/jeremiah/25-8.htm | foretells the seventy years' captivity; |
/jeremiah/25-12.htm | and after that, the destruction of Babylon. |
/jeremiah/25-15.htm | Under the type of a cup of wine he foreshows the destruction of all nations. |
/jeremiah/25-34.htm | The howling of the shepherds. |
/jeremiah/26-1.htm | Jeremiah by promises and threats exhorts to repentance. |
/jeremiah/26-8.htm | He is therefore apprehended, |
/jeremiah/26-10.htm | and arraigned. |
/jeremiah/26-12.htm | His apology. |
/jeremiah/26-16.htm | He is quit in judgment, by the example of Micah, |
/jeremiah/26-20.htm | and of Urijah, |
/jeremiah/26-24.htm | and by the care of Ahikam. |
/jeremiah/27-1.htm | By the type of bonds and yokes he prophesies the subduing of the neighbor kings |
/jeremiah/27-8.htm | He exhorts them to yield, and not to believe the false prophets. |
/jeremiah/27-12.htm | The like he does to Zedekiah. |
/jeremiah/27-19.htm | He foretells the remnant of the vessels shall be carried to Babylon, |
/jeremiah/28-1.htm | Hananiah prophesies falsely the return of the vessels, and of Jeconiah |
/jeremiah/28-3.htm | and there continue until the day of visitation. |
/jeremiah/28-5.htm | Jeremiah, wishing it to be true, shows that the event will declare the true prophets. |
/jeremiah/28-10.htm | Hananiah breaks Jeremiah's yoke. |
/jeremiah/28-12.htm | Jeremiah tells of an iron yoke; |
/jeremiah/28-15.htm | and foretells Hananiah's death. |
/jeremiah/29-1.htm | Jeremiah sends a letter to the captives in Babylon to be quiet there, |
/jeremiah/29-8.htm | and not to believe the dreams of their prophets; |
/jeremiah/29-10.htm | and that they shall return with grace after seventy years. |
/jeremiah/29-15.htm | He foretells the destruction of the rest for their disobedience. |
/jeremiah/29-20.htm | He shows the fearful end of Ahab and Zedekiah, two false prophets. |
/jeremiah/29-24.htm | Shemaiah writes a letter against Jeremiah. |
/jeremiah/29-30.htm | Jeremiah foretells his doom. |
/jeremiah/30-1.htm | God shows Jeremiah the return of the Jews. |
/jeremiah/30-4.htm | After their trouble they shall have deliverance. |
/jeremiah/30-10.htm | He comforts Jacob. |
/jeremiah/30-18.htm | Their return shall be gracious. |
/jeremiah/30-23.htm | Wrath shall fall on the wicked. |
/jeremiah/31-1.htm | The restoration of Israel. |
/jeremiah/31-10.htm | The publication thereof. |
/jeremiah/31-15.htm | Rahel mourning is comforted. |
/jeremiah/31-18.htm | Ephraim repenting is brought home again. |
/jeremiah/31-22.htm | Christ is promised. |
/jeremiah/31-27.htm | His care over the church. |
/jeremiah/31-31.htm | His new covenant. |
/jeremiah/31-35.htm | The stability, |
/jeremiah/31-38.htm | and amplitude of the church. |
/jeremiah/32-1.htm | Jeremiah, being imprisoned by Zedekiah for his prophecy, |
/jeremiah/32-6.htm | buys Hanameel's field. |
/jeremiah/32-13.htm | Baruch must preserve the evidences, as tokens of the people's return. |
/jeremiah/32-16.htm | Jeremiah in his prayer complains to God. |
/jeremiah/32-26.htm | God confirms the captivity for their sins; |
/jeremiah/32-36.htm | and promises a gracious return. |
/jeremiah/33-1.htm | God promises to the captivity a gracious return; |
/jeremiah/33-9.htm | a joyful state; |
/jeremiah/33-12.htm | a settled government; |
/jeremiah/33-15.htm | Christ the branch of righteousness; |
/jeremiah/33-17.htm | a continuance of kingdom and priesthood; |
/jeremiah/33-19.htm | and a stability of a blessed seed. |
/jeremiah/34-1.htm | Jeremiah prophesies the captivity of Zedekiah and the city. |
/jeremiah/34-8.htm | The princes and the people having dismissed their bond-servants, |
/jeremiah/34-11.htm | contrary to the covenant of God, re-assume them. |
/jeremiah/34-12.htm | Jeremiah gives them and Zedekiah into the hands of their enemies. |
/jeremiah/35-1.htm | By the obedience of the Rechabites, |
/jeremiah/35-12.htm | Jeremiah condemns the disobedience of the Jews. |
/jeremiah/35-18.htm | God blesses the Rechabites for their obedience. |
/jeremiah/36-1.htm | Jeremiah causes Baruch to write his prophesy, |
/jeremiah/36-5.htm | and publicly to read it. |
/jeremiah/36-11.htm | The princes, having intelligence thereof by Michaiah, |
/jeremiah/36-14.htm | send Jehudi to fetch the roll and read it. |
/jeremiah/36-19.htm | They will Baruch to hide himself and Jeremiah. |
/jeremiah/36-20.htm | The king, Jehoiakim, being certified thereof, hears part of it and burns the roll. |
/jeremiah/36-27.htm | Jeremiah denounces his judgment. |
/jeremiah/36-32.htm | Baruch writes a new copy. |
/jeremiah/37-1.htm | The Egyptians having raised the siege of the Chaldeans, |
/jeremiah/37-3.htm | king Zedekiah sends to Jeremiah to pray for the people. |
/jeremiah/37-6.htm | Jeremiah prophesies the Chaldeans' certain return and victory. |
/jeremiah/37-11.htm | He is taken for a fugitive, beaten, and put in prison. |
/jeremiah/37-16.htm | He assures Zedekiah of the captivity. |
/jeremiah/37-18.htm | Entreating for his liberty, he obtains some favor. |
/jeremiah/38-1.htm | Jeremiah, by a false suggestion, is put into the dungeon of Malchiah. |
/jeremiah/38-7.htm | Ebed-Melech, by suit, gets him some enlargement. |
/jeremiah/38-14.htm | Upon secret conference, he counsels the king by yielding to save his life. |
/jeremiah/38-24.htm | By the king's instructions he conceals the conference from the princes. |
/jeremiah/39-1.htm | Jerusalem is taken. |
/jeremiah/39-4.htm | Zedekiah is made blind and sent to Babylon. |
/jeremiah/39-8.htm | The city laid in ruins, |
/jeremiah/39-9.htm | and the people captivated. |
/jeremiah/39-11.htm | Nebuchadrezzar's charge for the good usage of Jeremiah. |
/jeremiah/39-15.htm | God's promise to Ebed Melech. |
/jeremiah/40-1.htm | Jeremiah, being set free by Nebuzaradan, goes to Gedaliah. |
/jeremiah/40-7.htm | The dispersed Jews repair unto him. |
/jeremiah/40-13.htm | Johanan revealing Ishmael's conspiracy is not believed. |
/jeremiah/41-1.htm | Ishmael, treacherously killing Gedaliah and others, |
/jeremiah/41-7.htm | purposes with the residue to flee unto the Ammonites. |
/jeremiah/41-11.htm | Johanan rescues the captives, and is minded to flee into Egypt. |
/jeremiah/42-1.htm | Johanan desires Jeremiah to enquire of God, promising obedience to his will. |
/jeremiah/42-7.htm | Jeremiah assures him of safety in Judea; |
/jeremiah/42-13.htm | and destruction in Egypt. |
/jeremiah/42-19.htm | He reproves their hypocrisy. |
/jeremiah/43-1.htm | Johanan, discrediting Jeremiah's prophecy, carries him and the rest in Egypt. |
/jeremiah/43-8.htm | Jeremiah prophesies by a type the conquest of Egypt by the Babylonians. |
/jeremiah/44-1.htm | Jeremiah expresses the desolation of Judah for their idolatry |
/jeremiah/44-11.htm | He prophesies the destruction of those who commit idolatry in Egypt |
/jeremiah/44-15.htm | The obstinacy of the Jews |
/jeremiah/44-20.htm | For which Jeremiah threatens them |
/jeremiah/44-29.htm | and for a sign prophesies the destruction of Egypt |
/jeremiah/45-1.htm | Baruch being dismayed |
/jeremiah/45-4.htm | Jeremiah instructs and comforts him |
/jeremiah/46-1.htm | Jeremiah prophesies the overthrow of Pharaoh's army at Euphrates |
/jeremiah/46-13.htm | and the conquest of Egypt by Nebuchadnezzar |
/jeremiah/46-27.htm | He comforts Jacob in his chastisement |
/jeremiah/47-1.htm | The destruction of the Philistines |
/jeremiah/48-1.htm | The judgment of Moab |
/jeremiah/48-7.htm | for their pride |
/jeremiah/48-11.htm | for their security |
/jeremiah/48-14.htm | for their carnal confidence |
/jeremiah/48-26.htm | and for their contempt of God and his people |
/jeremiah/48-47.htm | The restoration of Moab |
/jeremiah/49-1.htm | The judgment of the Ammonites |
/jeremiah/49-6.htm | Their restoration |
/jeremiah/49-7.htm | The judgment of Edom |
/jeremiah/49-23.htm | of Damascus |
/jeremiah/49-28.htm | of Kedar |
/jeremiah/49-30.htm | of Hazor |
/jeremiah/49-34.htm | and of Elam |
/jeremiah/49-39.htm | The restoration of Elam |
/jeremiah/50-1.htm | The judgment of Babylon and the redemption of Israel |
/jeremiah/51-1.htm | The severe judgment of God against Babylon, in revenge of Israel |
/jeremiah/51-59.htm | Jeremiah delivers the book of this prophecy to Seraiah, to be cast into Euphrates, |
/jeremiah/51-64.htm | in token of the perpetual sinking of Babylon |
/jeremiah/52-1.htm | Zedekiah rebels |
/jeremiah/52-4.htm | Jerusalem is besieged and taken |
/jeremiah/52-8.htm | Zedekiah's sons killed, and his own eyes put out, |
/jeremiah/52-12.htm | Nebuzaradan burns and spoils the city |
/jeremiah/52-24.htm | He carries away the captives |
/jeremiah/52-28.htm | The number of Jews carried captive |
/jeremiah/52-31.htm | Evil-Merodach advances Jehoiachin |
/lamentations/1-1.htm | The miseries of Jerusalem and of the Jews lamented |
/lamentations/1-12.htm | The attention of beholders demanded to this unprecedented case |
/lamentations/1-18.htm | The justice of God acknowledged, and his mercy supplicated. |
/lamentations/2-1.htm | Jeremiah laments the misery of Jerusalem |
/lamentations/2-20.htm | He complains thereof to God |
/lamentations/3-1.htm | The prophet bewails his own calamities |
/lamentations/3-22.htm | By the mercies of God, he nourishes his hope |
/lamentations/3-37.htm | He acknowledges God's justice |
/lamentations/3-55.htm | He prays for deliverance |
/lamentations/3-64.htm | And vengeance on his enemies |
/lamentations/4-1.htm | Zion bewails her pitiful estate |
/lamentations/4-13.htm | She confesses her sins |
/lamentations/4-21.htm | Edom is threatened and Zion comforted. |
/lamentations/5-1.htm | A complaint of Zion in prayer unto God. |
/ezekiel/1-1.htm | The time of Ezekiel's prophecy at Chebar. |
/ezekiel/1-4.htm | His vision of four cherubim; |
/ezekiel/1-15.htm | of the four wheels; |
/ezekiel/1-26.htm | and of the glory of God. |
/ezekiel/2-1.htm | Ezekiel's commission |
/ezekiel/2-6.htm | His instruction |
/ezekiel/2-9.htm | The scroll of his heavy prophecy |
/ezekiel/3-1.htm | Ezekiel eats the scroll |
/ezekiel/3-4.htm | God encourages him |
/ezekiel/3-15.htm | God shows him the rule of prophecy |
/ezekiel/3-22.htm | God shuts and opens the prophet's mouth |
/ezekiel/4-1.htm | Under type of a siege is shown the time from the defection of Jeroboam to captivity |
/ezekiel/4-9.htm | By the provision of the siege, is shown the hardness of the famine |
/ezekiel/5-1.htm | Under the type of hair |
/ezekiel/5-5.htm | is shown the judgment of Jerusalem for their rebellion |
/ezekiel/5-12.htm | by famine, sword, and dispersion |
/ezekiel/6-1.htm | The judgment of Israel for their idolatry |
/ezekiel/6-8.htm | A remnant shall be blessed |
/ezekiel/6-11.htm | The faithful are exhorted to lament their abominations and calamities |
/ezekiel/7-1.htm | The final desolation of Israel |
/ezekiel/7-16.htm | The mournful repentance from that escape |
/ezekiel/7-20.htm | The enemies defile the sanctuary because of the Israelites' abominations |
/ezekiel/7-23.htm | Under the type of a chain is shown the miserable captivity of all orders of men |
/ezekiel/8-1.htm | Ezekiel, in a vision of God at Jerusalem |
/ezekiel/8-5.htm | is shown the image of jealousy |
/ezekiel/8-7.htm | the chambers of imagery |
/ezekiel/8-13.htm | the mourners for Tammuz |
/ezekiel/8-16.htm | the worshippers toward the sun |
/ezekiel/8-17.htm | God's wrath for their idolatry |
/ezekiel/9-1.htm | A vision, whereby is shown the preservation of some |
/ezekiel/9-5.htm | and the destruction of the rest |
/ezekiel/9-8.htm | God cannot be entreated for them |
/ezekiel/10-1.htm | The vision of the coals of fire, to be scattered over the city |
/ezekiel/10-8.htm | The vision of the cherubim |
/ezekiel/11-1.htm | The presumption of the princes |
/ezekiel/11-4.htm | Their sin and judgment |
/ezekiel/11-13.htm | Ezekiel complaining, God shows him his purpose in saving a remnant |
/ezekiel/11-22.htm | The glory of God leaves the city |
/ezekiel/11-24.htm | Ezekiel is returned to the captivity |
/ezekiel/12-1.htm | Under the type of Ezekiel's removing |
/ezekiel/12-8.htm | is shown the captivity of Zedekiah |
/ezekiel/12-17.htm | Ezekiel's trembling shows the Jews' desolation |
/ezekiel/12-21.htm | The Jews' presumptuous proverb is reproved |
/ezekiel/12-26.htm | The speediness of the vision |
/ezekiel/13-1.htm | The reproof of false prophets |
/ezekiel/13-10.htm | and their untempered mortar |
/ezekiel/13-17.htm | Of prophecies and their pillows |
/ezekiel/14-1.htm | God answers idolaters according to their own heart |
/ezekiel/14-6.htm | They are exhorted to repent, for fear of judgments, by means of seduced prophets |
/ezekiel/14-12.htm | God's irrevocable sentence of famine |
/ezekiel/14-15.htm | of wild beasts |
/ezekiel/14-17.htm | of the sword |
/ezekiel/14-19.htm | and of pestilence |
/ezekiel/14-22.htm | A remnant shall be reserved for example of others |
/ezekiel/15-1.htm | By the unfitness of the vine branch for any work |
/ezekiel/15-6.htm | is shown the rejection of Jerusalem |
/ezekiel/16-1.htm | Under the parable of a wretched infant is shown the natural state of Jerusalem |
/ezekiel/16-6.htm | God's extraordinary love toward her, |
/ezekiel/16-15.htm | Her grievous judgment |
/ezekiel/16-35.htm | Her sin, equal to her mother, |
/ezekiel/16-46.htm | and exceeding her sisters, Sodom and Samaria, |
/ezekiel/16-59.htm | calls for judgments |
/ezekiel/16-60.htm | Mercy is promised her in the end |
/ezekiel/17-1.htm | Under the parable of two eagles and a vine |
/ezekiel/17-11.htm | is shown God's judgment upon Jerusalem for revolting from Babylon to Egypt |
/ezekiel/17-22.htm | God promises to plant the cedar of the Gospel |
/ezekiel/18-1.htm | God defends his justice |
/ezekiel/18-31.htm | and exhorts to repentance |
/ezekiel/19-1.htm | A lamentation for the princes of Israel, by the parable of a lion whelping in a pit |
/ezekiel/19-10.htm | and for Jerusalem, under the parable of a wasted vine |
/ezekiel/20-1.htm | God refuses to be consulted by the elders of Israel |
/ezekiel/20-4.htm | He shows the story of their rebellions in Egypt |
/ezekiel/20-19.htm | in the desert |
/ezekiel/20-27.htm | and in the land |
/ezekiel/20-33.htm | He promises to gather them by the Gospel |
/ezekiel/20-45.htm | Under the name of a forest he shows the destruction of Jerusalem |
/ezekiel/21-1.htm | Ezekiel prophesies against Jerusalem with a sign of sighing |
/ezekiel/21-8.htm | The sharp and bright sword |
/ezekiel/21-18.htm | against Jerusalem |
/ezekiel/21-25.htm | against the kingdom |
/ezekiel/21-28.htm | and against the Ammonites |
/ezekiel/22-1.htm | A catalogue of sins in Jerusalem, and the dispersion of the Jews in consequence |
/ezekiel/22-17.htm | God will burn them as dross in his furnace |
/ezekiel/22-23.htm | The general corruption of prophets, priests, princes, and the people |
/ezekiel/23-1.htm | The unfaithfulness of Aholah and Aholibah |
/ezekiel/23-23.htm | Aholibah is to be plagued by her lovers |
/ezekiel/23-36.htm | The prophet reproves the adulteries of them both |
/ezekiel/23-45.htm | and shows their judgments |
/ezekiel/24-1.htm | Under the parable of a boiling pot |
/ezekiel/24-6.htm | is shown the irrevocable destruction of Jerusalem |
/ezekiel/24-15.htm | By the sign of Ezekiel not mourning for the death of his wife |
/ezekiel/24-19.htm | is shown the calamity of the Jews to be beyond all sorrow |
/ezekiel/25-1.htm | God's vengeance, for their insolence against the Jews, upon the Ammonites |
/ezekiel/25-8.htm | upon Moab and Seir |
/ezekiel/25-12.htm | upon Edom |
/ezekiel/25-15.htm | and upon the Philistines |
/ezekiel/26-1.htm | Tyrus, for insulting Jerusalem, is threatened with destruction |
/ezekiel/26-7.htm | The power of Nebuchadnezzar against her |
/ezekiel/26-15.htm | The mourning and astonishment of the sea at her fall |
/ezekiel/27-1.htm | The riches and commerce of Tyrus |
/ezekiel/27-26.htm | The great and irrecoverable fall thereof |
/ezekiel/28-1.htm | God's judgment upon the prince of Tyrus for his sacrilegious pride |
/ezekiel/28-11.htm | A lamentation of his great glory corrupted by Sidon |
/ezekiel/28-20.htm | The judgment of Zion |
/ezekiel/28-24.htm | The restoration of Israel |
/ezekiel/29-1.htm | The judgment of Pharaoh for his treachery to Israel |
/ezekiel/29-8.htm | The desolation of Egypt |
/ezekiel/29-13.htm | The restoration thereof after forty years |
/ezekiel/29-17.htm | Egypt the reward of Nebuchadnezzar |
/ezekiel/29-21.htm | Israel shall be restored |
/ezekiel/30-1.htm | The desolation of Egypt and her helpers |
/ezekiel/30-20.htm | The arm of Babylon shall be strengthened to break the arm of Egypt. |
/ezekiel/31-1.htm | A relation unto Pharaoh |
/ezekiel/31-3.htm | of the glory of Assyria |
/ezekiel/31-10.htm | and the fall thereof for pride |
/ezekiel/31-18.htm | The like destruction of Egypt |
/ezekiel/32-1.htm | A lamentation for the fearful fall of Egypt |
/ezekiel/32-11.htm | The sword of Babylon shall destroy it |
/ezekiel/32-17.htm | It shall be brought down to hell, among all the uncircumcised nations |
/ezekiel/33-1.htm | According to the duty of a watchman in warning the people |
/ezekiel/33-7.htm | Ezekiel is admonished of his duty |
/ezekiel/33-10.htm | God shows the justice of his ways toward the penitent and toward revolters |
/ezekiel/33-17.htm | He maintains his justice |
/ezekiel/33-21.htm | Upon the news of the taking of Jerusalem |
/ezekiel/33-25.htm | he prophecies the desolation of the land |
/ezekiel/33-30.htm | God's judgment upon the mockers of the prophets |
/ezekiel/34-1.htm | A reproof of the shepherds |
/ezekiel/34-7.htm | God's judgment against them |
/ezekiel/34-11.htm | His providence over his flock |
/ezekiel/34-20.htm | The kingdom of Christ |
/ezekiel/35-1.htm | The judgment of mount Seir for their hatred of Israel, and insulting over their distress |
/ezekiel/36-1.htm | The land of Israel is comforted, by destruction of the heathen, who spitefully used it |
/ezekiel/36-8.htm | and by the blessings of God promised unto it |
/ezekiel/36-16.htm | Israel was rejected for their sin |
/ezekiel/36-21.htm | and shall be restored without their desert |
/ezekiel/36-25.htm | The blessings of Christ's kingdom |
/ezekiel/37-1.htm | By the resurrection of dry bones |
/ezekiel/37-11.htm | the dead hope of Israel is revived |
/ezekiel/37-15.htm | By the uniting of two sticks |
/ezekiel/37-18.htm | is shown the incorporation of Israel into Judah |
/ezekiel/37-21.htm | The promises of Christ's kingdom |
/ezekiel/38-1.htm | The army |
/ezekiel/38-8.htm | and malice of Gog |
/ezekiel/38-14.htm | God's judgment against him |
/ezekiel/39-1.htm | God's judgment upon Gog |
/ezekiel/39-8.htm | Israel's victory |
/ezekiel/39-11.htm | Gog's burial in Hamon-gog |
/ezekiel/39-17.htm | The feast of the fowls |
/ezekiel/39-21.htm | Israel having been plagued for their sins |
/ezekiel/39-25.htm | shall be gathered again with eternal favor |
/ezekiel/40-1.htm | The time, manner, and end of the vision of the city and temple |
/ezekiel/40-6.htm | The description of the east gate of the outer court |
/ezekiel/40-20.htm | of the north gate |
/ezekiel/40-24.htm | of the south gate |
/ezekiel/40-27.htm | of the south gate of the inner court |
/ezekiel/40-32.htm | of the east gate |
/ezekiel/40-35.htm | and of the north gate |
/ezekiel/40-39.htm | Eight tables |
/ezekiel/40-44.htm | The chambers |
/ezekiel/40-48.htm | The porch of the house |
/ezekiel/41-1.htm | The measures, parts, chambers, and ornaments of the temple |
/ezekiel/42-1.htm | The chambers for the priests |
/ezekiel/42-13.htm | The use thereof |
/ezekiel/42-15.htm | The measures of the outward court |
/ezekiel/43-1.htm | The returning of the glory of God into the temple |
/ezekiel/43-7.htm | The sin of Israel hindered God's presence |
/ezekiel/43-10.htm | The prophet exhorts them to repentance and observation of the law of the house |
/ezekiel/43-13.htm | The measures |
/ezekiel/43-18.htm | and ordinances of the altar |
/ezekiel/44-1.htm | The east gate assigned only to the prince |
/ezekiel/44-4.htm | The priests reproved for polluting the sanctuary |
/ezekiel/44-9.htm | Idolaters incapable of the priests office |
/ezekiel/44-15.htm | The sons of Zadok are accepted thereto |
/ezekiel/44-17.htm | Ordinances for the priests |
/ezekiel/45-1.htm | The portion of land for the sanctuary |
/ezekiel/45-6.htm | for the city |
/ezekiel/45-7.htm | and for the prince |
/ezekiel/45-9.htm | Ordinances for the prince |
/ezekiel/46-1.htm | Ordinances for the prince in his worship |
/ezekiel/46-9.htm | and for the people |
/ezekiel/46-16.htm | An order for the prince's inheritance |
/ezekiel/46-19.htm | The courts for boiling and baking |
/ezekiel/47-1.htm | The vision of the holy waters |
/ezekiel/47-6.htm | The virtue of them |
/ezekiel/47-13.htm | The borders of the land |
/ezekiel/47-22.htm | The division of it by lot |
/ezekiel/48-1.htm | The portions of the twelve tribes; |
/ezekiel/48-8.htm | of the sanctuary; |
/ezekiel/48-15.htm | of the city and suburbs; |
/ezekiel/48-21.htm | and of the prince. |
/ezekiel/48-23.htm | The portions of the twelve tribes. |
/ezekiel/48-30.htm | The dimensions and gates of the city. |
/daniel/1-1.htm | Jehoiakim's captivity. |
/daniel/1-3.htm | Ashpenaz takes Daniel, Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah. |
/daniel/1-8.htm | They refusing the king's portion do prosper with pulse and water. |
/daniel/1-17.htm | Their proficiency in wisdom. |
/daniel/2-1.htm | Nebuchadnezzar, forgetting his dream, |
/daniel/2-5.htm | requires it of the Chaldeans, by promises and threats. |
/daniel/2-10.htm | They acknowledging their inability are judged to die. |
/daniel/2-14.htm | Daniel obtaining some respite finds the dream. |
/daniel/2-19.htm | He blesses God. |
/daniel/2-24.htm | He staying the decree is brought to the king. |
/daniel/2-31.htm | The dream. |
/daniel/2-36.htm | The interpretation. |
/daniel/2-46.htm | Daniel's advancement. |
/daniel/3-1.htm | Nebuchadnezzar dedicates a golden image in Dura. |
/daniel/3-3.htm | They being threatened, make a good confession. |
/daniel/3-8.htm | Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego are accused for not worshipping the image. |
/daniel/3-19.htm | They are cast into the furnace, |
/daniel/3-24.htm | from which God delivers them. |
/daniel/3-28.htm | Nebuchadnezzar seeing the miracle blesses God, and advances them. |
/daniel/4-1.htm | Nebuchadnezzar confesses God's kingdom, |
/daniel/4-4.htm | makes relation of his dreams, which the magicians could not interpret. |
/daniel/4-8.htm | Daniel hears the dream. |
/daniel/4-19.htm | He interprets it. |
/daniel/4-28.htm | The dream fulfilled. |
/daniel/5-1.htm | Belshazzar's impious feast. |
/daniel/5-5.htm | A hand-writing unknown to the magicians, troubles the king. |
/daniel/5-10.htm | At the commendation of the queen Daniel is brought. |
/daniel/5-17.htm | He, reproving the king of pride and idolatry, |
/daniel/5-25.htm | reads and interprets the writing. |
/daniel/5-30.htm | The monarchy is translated to the Medes |
/daniel/6-1.htm | Daniel is made chief of the presidents. |
/daniel/6-4.htm | They, conspiring against him, obtain an idolatrous decree. |
/daniel/6-10.htm | Daniel, accused of the breach thereof, is cast into the lion's den. |
/daniel/6-18.htm | Daniel is saved; |
/daniel/6-24.htm | his adversaries devoured; |
/daniel/6-25.htm | and God magnified by a decree. |
/daniel/7-1.htm | Daniel's vision of the four beasts, |
/daniel/7-9.htm | and of God's kingdom. |
/daniel/7-15.htm | The interpretation thereof. |
/daniel/8-1.htm | Daniel's vision of the ram and he goat. |
/daniel/8-13.htm | The two thousand three hundred days of the suspension of the daily sacrifice. |
/daniel/8-15.htm | Gabriel comforts Daniel, and interprets the vision. |
/daniel/9-1.htm | Daniel, considering the time of the captivity, |
/daniel/9-3.htm | makes confession of sins, |
/daniel/9-16.htm | and prays for the restoration of Jerusalem. |
/daniel/9-20.htm | Gabriel informs him of the seventy weeks. |
/daniel/10-1.htm | Daniel, having humbled himself, sees a vision. |
/daniel/10-10.htm | Being troubled with fear, he is comforted by the angel. |
/daniel/11-1.htm | The overthrow of Persia by the king of Grecia. |
/daniel/11-5.htm | Leagues and conflicts between the kings of the south and of the north. |
/daniel/11-30.htm | The invasion and tyranny of the Romans. |
/daniel/12-1.htm | Michael shall deliver Israel from their troubles. |
/daniel/12-5.htm | Daniel is informed of the times. |
/hosea/1-1.htm | Hosea, to show God's judgment for spiritual unfaithfulness, takes Gomer, |
/hosea/1-4.htm | and has by her Jezreel; |
/hosea/1-6.htm | Loruhamah; |
/hosea/1-8.htm | and Lo-Ammi. |
/hosea/1-10.htm | The restoration of Judah and Israel under one head. |
/hosea/2-1.htm | The idolatry of the people. |
/hosea/2-6.htm | God's judgments against them. |
/hosea/2-14.htm | His promises of reconciliation with them. |
/hosea/3-1.htm | The Lord's intended future kindness to Israel, not withstanding their wickedness, |
/hosea/3-2.htm | illustrated by the emblem of Hosea's conduct toward his adulterous wife. |
/hosea/3-4.htm | The desolation of Israel before their restoration. |
/hosea/4-1.htm | God denounces judgments on Israel, for their aggravated impieties and iniquities. |
/hosea/4-12.htm | He exposes the ignorance and wickedness of the priests, |
/hosea/4-13.htm | and moral dissolution of the people, |
/hosea/4-14.htm | he will leave their wives and daughters to commit lewdness, without present punishment. |
/hosea/4-15.htm | He warns Judah, not to imitate Israel's crimes, which are still further reproved. |
/hosea/5-1.htm | The judgments of God are denounced against the priests, people, and princes, |
/hosea/5-9.htm | both of Israel and Judah, for their manifold sins. |
/hosea/5-15.htm | An intimation is given of mercy on their repentance. |
/hosea/6-1.htm | Exhortations to repent and hope in God. |
/hosea/6-4.htm | A lamentation over those who had sinned after conviction. |
/hosea/6-5.htm | Reproofs of obstinate sinners, and threats against them. |
/hosea/7-1.htm | A reproof of manifold sins. |
/hosea/7-11.htm | God's wrath against them for their hypocrisy. |
/hosea/8-1.htm | Destruction is threatened both to Israel and Judah for their impiety and idolatry. |
/hosea/9-1.htm | The distress and captivity of Israel for their sins. |
/hosea/10-1.htm | Israel is reproved and threatened for their impiety and idolatry, |
/hosea/10-12.htm | and exhorted to repentance. |
/hosea/11-1.htm | The ingratitude of Israel unto God for his benefits. |
/hosea/11-5.htm | His judgment. |
/hosea/11-8.htm | God's mercy toward them. |
/hosea/11-12.htm | Israel's falsehood and Judah's fidelity. |
/hosea/12-1.htm | A reproof of Ephraim, Judah, and Jacob. |
/hosea/12-3.htm | By former favors he exhorts to repentance. |
/hosea/12-7.htm | Ephraim's sins provoke God. |
/hosea/13-1.htm | Ephraim's glory vanishes. |
/hosea/13-4.htm | God's anger. |
/hosea/13-9.htm | God's mercy. |
/hosea/13-15.htm | The judgment of Samaria. |
/hosea/14-1.htm | An exhortation to repentance. |
/hosea/14-4.htm | A promise of God's blessing. |
/joel/1-1.htm | Joel, declaring various judgments of God, exhorts to observe them, |
/joel/1-8.htm | and to mourn. |
/joel/1-14.htm | He prescribes a solemn fast to deprecate those judgments. |
/joel/2-1.htm | He shows unto Zion the terribleness of God's judgment. |
/joel/2-12.htm | He exhorts to repentance; |
/joel/2-15.htm | prescribes a fast; |
/joel/2-18.htm | promises a blessing thereon. |
/joel/2-21.htm | He comforts Zion with present, |
/joel/2-28.htm | and future blessings. |
/joel/3-1.htm | God's judgments against the enemies of his people. |
/joel/3-9.htm | God will be known in his judgment. |
/joel/3-18.htm | His blessing upon the church. |
/amos/1-1.htm | The time when Amos prophesied. |
/amos/1-3.htm | He shows God's judgment upon Syria, |
/amos/1-6.htm | upon the Philistines, |
/amos/1-9.htm | upon Tyrus, |
/amos/1-11.htm | upon Edom, |
/amos/1-13.htm | upon Ammon. |
/amos/2-1.htm | God's judgments upon Moab, |
/amos/2-4.htm | upon Judah, |
/amos/2-6.htm | and upon Israel. |
/amos/2-9.htm | God complains of their ingratitude. |
/amos/3-1.htm | The necessity of God's judgment against Israel. |
/amos/3-9.htm | The publication of it, with the causes thereof. |
/amos/4-1.htm | He reproves Israel for oppression, |
/amos/4-4.htm | for idolatry, |
/amos/4-6.htm | and for their incorrigibleness. |
/amos/5-1.htm | A lamentation for Israel. |
/amos/5-4.htm | An exhortation to repentance. |
/amos/5-21.htm | God rejects their hypocritical service. |
/amos/6-1.htm | The wantonness of Israel, |
/amos/6-7.htm | shall be plagued with desolation; |
/amos/6-12.htm | and their incorrigibleness shall end in affliction. |
/amos/7-1.htm | The judgments of the grasshoppers, |
/amos/7-4.htm | and of the fire are diverted by the prayer of Amos. |
/amos/7-7.htm | By the wall of a plumb line is signified the rejection of Israel. |
/amos/7-10.htm | Amaziah complains of Amos. |
/amos/7-14.htm | Amos shows his calling |
/amos/7-16.htm | and Amaziah's judgment. |
/amos/8-1.htm | By a basket of summer fruit is shown the approach of Israel's end. |
/amos/8-4.htm | Oppression is reproved. |
/amos/8-11.htm | A famine of the word of God threatened. |
/amos/9-1.htm | The certainty of the desolation. |
/amos/9-11.htm | The restoring of the tabernacle of David. |
/obadiah/1-1.htm | The destruction of Edom, |
/obadiah/1-3.htm | for their pride, |
/obadiah/1-10.htm | and for their wrong unto Jacob. |
/obadiah/1-17.htm | The salvation and victory of Jacob. |
/jonah/1-1.htm | Jonah, sent to Nineveh, flees to Tarshish. |
/jonah/1-4.htm | He is betrayed by a great storm; |
/jonah/1-11.htm | thrown into the sea; |
/jonah/1-17.htm | and swallowed by a fish. |
/jonah/2-1.htm | The prayer of Jonah. |
/jonah/2-10.htm | He is delivered out of the belly of the fish. |
/jonah/3-1.htm | Jonah, sent again, preaches to the Ninevites. |
/jonah/3-5.htm | Upon their repentance, |
/jonah/3-10.htm | God relents. |
/jonah/4-1.htm | Jonah repining at God's mercy, |
/jonah/4-4.htm | is reproved by the type of a withering vine. |
/micah/1-1.htm | The time when Micah prophesied. |
/micah/1-2.htm | He shows the wrath of God against Jacob for idolatry. |
/micah/1-10.htm | He exhorts to mourning. |
/micah/2-1.htm | Against oppression. |
/micah/2-4.htm | A lamentation. |
/micah/2-7.htm | A reproof of injustice and idolatry. |
/micah/2-12.htm | A promise to restore Jacob. |
/micah/3-1.htm | The cruelty of the princes. |
/micah/3-5.htm | The falsehood of the prophets. |
/micah/3-8.htm | The false security of them both. |
/micah/4-1.htm | The glory, |
/micah/4-5.htm | and the peace of Christ's kingdom. |
/micah/4-6.htm | The restoration, |
/micah/4-11.htm | and victory of the church. |
/micah/5-1.htm | The birth of Christ. |
/micah/5-4.htm | His kingdom. |
/micah/5-8.htm | His conquest. |
/micah/6-1.htm | God's punishment for ingratitude; |
/micah/6-6.htm | for ignorance, |
/micah/6-10.htm | for injustice; |
/micah/6-16.htm | and for idolatry. |
/micah/7-1.htm | The church, complaining of her small number, |
/micah/7-3.htm | and the general corruption, |
/micah/7-5.htm | puts her confidence not in man, but in God. |
/micah/7-8.htm | She triumphs over her enemies. |
/micah/7-14.htm | She prays to God. |
/micah/7-15.htm | God comforts her by promises of confusion to her enemies; |
/micah/7-18.htm | and by his mercies. |
/nahum/1-1.htm | The majesty of God in goodness to his people, and severity against his enemies. |
/nahum/2-1.htm | The fearful and victorious armies of God against Nineveh. |
/nahum/3-1.htm | The destruction of Nineveh. |
/habakkuk/1-1.htm | Unto Habakkuk, complaining of the iniquity of the land, |
/habakkuk/1-5.htm | is shown the fearful vengeance by the Chaldeans. |
/habakkuk/1-12.htm | He complains that vengeance should be executed by them who are far worse. |
/habakkuk/2-1.htm | Unto Habakkuk, waiting for an answer, is shown that he must wait by faith. |
/habakkuk/2-5.htm | The judgment upon the Chaldean for unsatiableness, |
/habakkuk/2-9.htm | for covetousness, |
/habakkuk/2-12.htm | for cruelty, |
/habakkuk/2-15.htm | for drunkenness, |
/habakkuk/2-18.htm | and for idolatry. |
/habakkuk/3-1.htm | Habakkuk, in his prayer, trembles at God's majesty. |
/habakkuk/3-17.htm | The confidence of his faith. |
/zephaniah/1-1.htm | The time when Zephaniah prophesied. |
/zephaniah/1-2.htm | God's severe judgments against Judah. |
/zephaniah/2-1.htm | An exhortation to repentance. |
/zephaniah/2-4.htm | The judgment of the Philistines, |
/zephaniah/2-8.htm | of Moab and Ammon, |
/zephaniah/2-12.htm | of Ethiopia, |
/zephaniah/2-13.htm | and of Assyria. |
/zephaniah/3-1.htm | A sharp reproof of Jerusalem for various sins. |
/zephaniah/3-8.htm | An exhortation to wait for the restoration of Israel, |
/zephaniah/3-14.htm | and to rejoice for their salvation by God. |
/haggai/1-1.htm | The time when Haggai prophesied. |
/haggai/1-2.htm | He reproves the people for neglecting the building of the house. |
/haggai/1-7.htm | He incites them to the building. |
/haggai/1-12.htm | He promises them, being forward, God's assistance. |
/haggai/2-1.htm | He encourages the people to the work, |
/haggai/2-4.htm | by promise of greater glory to the second temple than was in the first. |
/haggai/2-10.htm | In the type of holy things and unclean he shows their sins hindered the work. |
/haggai/2-20.htm | God's promise to Zerubbabel. |
/zechariah/1-1.htm | Zechariah exhorts to repentance. |
/zechariah/1-7.htm | The vision of the horses. |
/zechariah/1-12.htm | At the prayer of the angel comfortable promises are made to Jerusalem. |
/zechariah/1-18.htm | The vision of the four horns and the four carpenters. |
/zechariah/2-1.htm | God, in the care of Jerusalem, sends to measure it. |
/zechariah/2-6.htm | The redemption of Zion. |
/zechariah/2-10.htm | The promise of God's presence. |
/zechariah/3-1.htm | Under the type of Joshua, the high priest, receiving clean garments, |
/zechariah/3-6.htm | and a covenant of promise, |
/zechariah/3-8.htm | Christ the Branch and Cornerstone is promised. |
/zechariah/4-1.htm | By the golden candlestick is foreshown the good success of Zerubbabel's foundation; |
/zechariah/4-11.htm | by the two olive trees the two anointed ones. |
/zechariah/5-1.htm | By the flying scroll is shown the curse of thieves and swearers; |
/zechariah/5-5.htm | and by a woman pressed in an ephah the final judgment of wickedness. |
/zechariah/6-1.htm | The vision of the four chariots. |
/zechariah/6-9.htm | By the crowns of Joshua are shown the temple and kingdom of Christ the Branch. |
/zechariah/7-1.htm | The captives enquire concerning the set fasts. |
/zechariah/7-4.htm | Zechariah reproves the hypocrisy of their fasting. |
/zechariah/7-8.htm | Sin the cause of their captivity. |
/zechariah/8-1.htm | The restoration of Jerusalem. |
/zechariah/8-9.htm | They are encouraged to build the temple by God's favor to them. |
/zechariah/8-16.htm | Good works are required of them. |
/zechariah/8-18.htm | Joy and blessing are promised. |
/zechariah/9-1.htm | God defends his church. |
/zechariah/9-9.htm | Zion is exhorted to rejoice for the coming of Christ, and his peaceable kingdom. |
/zechariah/9-12.htm | God's promises of victory and defense. |
/zechariah/10-1.htm | God is to be sought unto, and not idols. |
/zechariah/10-3.htm | As he visited his flock for sin, so he will save and restore them. |
/zechariah/11-1.htm | The destruction of Jerusalem. |
/zechariah/11-3.htm | The elect being cared for, the rest are rejected. |
/zechariah/11-10.htm | The staves of Beauty and Bands broken by the rejection of Christ. |
/zechariah/11-15.htm | The type and curse of a foolish shepherd. |
/zechariah/12-1.htm | Jerusalem a cup of trembling to herself, |
/zechariah/12-3.htm | and a burdensome stone to her adversaries. |
/zechariah/12-6.htm | The victorious restoring of Judah. |
/zechariah/12-10.htm | The repentance of Jerusalem. |
/zechariah/13-1.htm | The fountain of purgation for Jerusalem, |
/zechariah/13-2.htm | from idolatry, and false prophecy. |
/zechariah/13-7.htm | The death of Christ, and the trial of a third part. |
/zechariah/14-1.htm | The destroyers of Jerusalem destroyed. |
/zechariah/14-3.htm | The coming of Christ, and the graces of his kingdom. |
/zechariah/14-12.htm | The plague of Jerusalem's enemies. |
/zechariah/14-16.htm | The remnant shall turn to the Lord; |
/zechariah/14-20.htm | and their spoils shall be holy. |
/malachi/1-1.htm | Malachi complains of Israel's unkindness; |
/malachi/1-2.htm | of their irreverence and profaneness. |
/malachi/2-1.htm | He sharply reproves the priests for neglecting their covenant; |
/malachi/2-10.htm | and the people for marrying strange wives; |
/malachi/2-13.htm | and for putting away their former ones, |
/malachi/2-17.htm | and for infidelity. |
/malachi/3-1.htm | Of the messenger, majesty, and grace of Christ. |
/malachi/3-7.htm | Of the rebellion, |
/malachi/3-8.htm | sacrilege, |
/malachi/3-13.htm | and infidelity of the people. |
/malachi/3-16.htm | The promise of blessing to those who fear God. |
/malachi/4-1.htm | God's judgment on the wicked; |
/malachi/4-2.htm | and his blessing on the good. |
/malachi/4-4.htm | He exhorts to the study of the law; |
/malachi/4-5.htm | and tells of Elijah's coming and office. |
/matthew/1-1.htm | The genealogy of Jesus from Abraham to Joseph. |
/matthew/1-18.htm | He is miraculously conceived of the Holy Spirit by the Virgin Mary. |
/matthew/1-19.htm | The angel satisfies the doubts of Joseph, |
/matthew/1-21.htm | and declares the names and office of Jesus; |
/matthew/1-25.htm | Jesus is born |
/matthew/2-1.htm | The wise men from the east enquire after Jesus; |
/matthew/2-3.htm | at which Herod is alarmed. |
/matthew/2-9.htm | They are directed by a star to Bethlehem, worship him, and offer their presents. |
/matthew/2-13.htm | Joseph flees into Egypt with Jesus and his mother. |
/matthew/2-16.htm | Herod slays the children; |
/matthew/2-20.htm | himself dies. |
/matthew/2-23.htm | Jesus is brought back again into Galilee to Nazareth. |
/matthew/3-1.htm | John preaches: his office, life, and baptism. |
/matthew/3-7.htm | He reprimands the Pharisees, |
/matthew/3-13.htm | and baptizes Jesus in Jordan. |
/matthew/4-1.htm | Jesus, fasting forty days, |
/matthew/4-3.htm | is tempted by the devil and ministered unto by angels. |
/matthew/4-12.htm | He dwells in Capernaum; |
/matthew/4-17.htm | begins to preach; |
/matthew/4-18.htm | calls Peter and Andrew, |
/matthew/4-21.htm | James and John; |
/matthew/4-23.htm | teaches and heals all the diseased. |
/matthew/5-1.htm | Jesus' sermon on the mount: |
/matthew/5-3.htm | The Beattitudes; |
/matthew/5-13.htm | the salt of the earth; |
/matthew/5-14.htm | the light of the world. |
/matthew/5-17.htm | He came to fulfill the law. |
/matthew/5-21.htm | What it is to kill; |
/matthew/5-27.htm | to commit adultery; |
/matthew/5-33.htm | to swear. |
/matthew/5-38.htm | He exhorts to forgive wrong, |
/matthew/5-43.htm | to love our enemies; |
/matthew/5-48.htm | and to labor after perfection. |
/matthew/6-1.htm | Giving to the Needy |
/matthew/6-5.htm | The Lord's Prayer |
/matthew/6-16.htm | Proper Fasting |
/matthew/6-19.htm | Store up Treasures in Heaven |
/matthew/6-25.htm | Do Not Worry |
/matthew/6-33.htm | but seek God's kingdom. |
/matthew/7-1.htm | Do Not Judge |
/matthew/7-7.htm | Ask, Seek, Knock |
/matthew/7-13.htm | Enter through the Narrow Gate |
/matthew/7-15.htm | A Tree and Its Fruit |
/matthew/7-24.htm | The Wise and the Foolish Builders |
/matthew/7-28.htm | Jesus ends his sermon, and the people are astonished. |
/matthew/8-1.htm | Jesus cleanses the leper; |
/matthew/8-5.htm | heals the centurion's servant, |
/matthew/8-14.htm | Peter's mother in law, |
/matthew/8-16.htm | and many others; |
/matthew/8-18.htm | shows the cost of following him; |
/matthew/8-23.htm | stills the storm on the sea; |
/matthew/8-28.htm | drives the demons out of two men possessed; |
/matthew/8-31.htm | and tells them to go into the pigs. |
/matthew/9-1.htm | Jesus heals a paralytic |
/matthew/9-9.htm | calls Matthew from the receipt of custom; |
/matthew/9-10.htm | eats with tax collectors and sinners; |
/matthew/9-14.htm | defends his disciples for not fasting; |
/matthew/9-20.htm | cures the sick woman; |
/matthew/9-23.htm | raises Jairus' daughter from death; |
/matthew/9-27.htm | gives sight to two blind men; |
/matthew/9-32.htm | heals a mute man possessed of a demon; |
/matthew/9-36.htm | and has compassion on the multitude. |
/matthew/10-1.htm | Jesus sends out his apostles, enabling them with power to do miracles; |
/matthew/10-5.htm | giving them their charge, teaches them; |
/matthew/10-16.htm | comforts them against persecutions; |
/matthew/10-40.htm | and promises a blessing to those who receive them. |
/matthew/11-1.htm | John sends his disciples to Jesus. |
/matthew/11-7.htm | Jesus' testimony concerning John. |
/matthew/11-16.htm | The perverse judgment of the people concerning the Son. |
/matthew/11-20.htm | Jesus upbraids Korazin, Bethsaida, and Capernaum; |
/matthew/11-25.htm | and praising his Father's wisdom in revealing the Gospel to the simple, |
/matthew/11-28.htm | he calls to him those who are weary and burdened. |
/matthew/12-1.htm | Jesus reproves the blindness of the Pharisees concerning the Sabbath, |
/matthew/12-3.htm | by scripture, |
/matthew/12-9.htm | by reason, |
/matthew/12-13.htm | and by a miracle. |
/matthew/12-22.htm | He heals a man possessed that was blind and mute; |
/matthew/12-24.htm | and confronting the absurd charge of casting out demons by Beelzebub, |
/matthew/12-32.htm | he shows that blasphemy against the Holy Spirit shall never be forgiven. |
/matthew/12-36.htm | Account shall be made of idle words. |
/matthew/12-38.htm | He rebukes the unfaithful, who seek after a sign, |
/matthew/12-46.htm | and shows who is his brother, sister, and mother. |
/matthew/13-1.htm | The parable of the sower and the seed; |
/matthew/13-18.htm | the explanation of it. |
/matthew/13-24.htm | The parable of the weeds; |
/matthew/13-31.htm | of the mustard seed; |
/matthew/13-33.htm | of the leaven; |
/matthew/13-36.htm | explanation of the parable of the weeds. |
/matthew/13-44.htm | The parable of the hidden treasure; |
/matthew/13-45.htm | of the pearl; |
/matthew/13-47.htm | of the drag net cast into the sea. |
/matthew/13-53.htm | Jesus is a prophet without honor in his own country. |
/matthew/14-1.htm | Herod's opinion of Jesus. |
/matthew/14-3.htm | Wherefore John Baptist was beheaded. |
/matthew/14-13.htm | Jesus departs into a solitary place, |
/matthew/14-15.htm | where he feeds five thousand men with five loves and two fishes. |
/matthew/14-22.htm | He walks on the sea to his disciples; |
/matthew/14-34.htm | and landing at Gennesaret, |
/matthew/14-35.htm | heals the sick who touch of the hem of his garment. |
/matthew/15-1.htm | Jesus reproves the Scribes and Pharisees |
/matthew/15-7.htm | for transgressing God's commandments through their own traditions; |
/matthew/15-10.htm | teaches how that which goes into the mouth does not defile a man. |
/matthew/15-21.htm | He heals the daughter of the woman of Canaan, |
/matthew/15-29.htm | and other great multitudes; |
/matthew/15-32.htm | and with seven loaves and a few small fish feeds four thousand men |
/matthew/16-1.htm | The Pharisees require a sign. |
/matthew/16-5.htm | Jesus warns his disciples of the leaven of the Pharisees and Sadducees. |
/matthew/16-13.htm | The people's opinion of Jesus, |
/matthew/16-16.htm | and Peter's confession of him. |
/matthew/16-21.htm | Jesus foretells his death; |
/matthew/16-23.htm | reproves Peter for dissuading him from it; |
/matthew/16-24.htm | and admonishes those who will follow him, to bear the cross. |
/matthew/17-1.htm | The transfiguration of Jesus. |
/matthew/17-14.htm | He heals the boy with a demon, |
/matthew/17-22.htm | foretells his own passion, |
/matthew/17-24.htm | and pays tribute. |
/matthew/18-1.htm | Jesus warns his disciples to be humble and harmless, |
/matthew/18-7.htm | to avoid offenses, |
/matthew/18-10.htm | and not to despise the little ones; |
/matthew/18-15.htm | teaches how we are to deal with our brothers when they offend us, |
/matthew/18-21.htm | and how often to forgive them; |
/matthew/18-23.htm | which he sets forth by a parable of the king who took account of his servants, |
/matthew/18-32.htm | and punished him who showed no mercy to his fellow servant. |
/matthew/19-1.htm | Jesus heals the sick; |
/matthew/19-3.htm | answers the Pharisees concerning divorce; |
/matthew/19-10.htm | shows when marriage is necessary; |
/matthew/19-13.htm | receives the little children; |
/matthew/19-16.htm | instructs the young man how to attain eternal life; |
/matthew/19-20.htm | and how to be perfect; |
/matthew/19-23.htm | tells his disciples how hard it is for a rich man to enter into the kingdom of God; |
/matthew/19-27.htm | and promises reward to those who forsake all to follow him. |
/matthew/20-1.htm | Jesus, by the parable of the laborers in the vineyard, shows that God is debtor unto no man; |
/matthew/20-17.htm | foretells his passion; |
/matthew/20-20.htm | by answering the mother of Zebedee's children, teaches his disciples to be humble; |
/matthew/20-29.htm | and gives two blind men their sight. |
/matthew/21-1.htm | Jesus rides into Jerusalem upon a donkey |
/matthew/21-12.htm | drives the buyers and sellers out of the temple; |
/matthew/21-17.htm | curses the fig tree; |
/matthew/21-23.htm | puts to silence the priests and elders, |
/matthew/21-28.htm | and rebukes them by the parable of the two sons, |
/matthew/21-33.htm | and the husbandmen who slew such as were sent to them. |
/matthew/22-1.htm | The parable of the marriage of the king's son. |
/matthew/22-9.htm | The vocation of the Gentiles. |
/matthew/22-12.htm | The punishment of him who lacked a wedding garment. |
/matthew/22-15.htm | Tribute ought to be paid to Caesar. |
/matthew/22-23.htm | Jesus confutes the Sadducees for the resurrection; |
/matthew/22-34.htm | answers which is the first and great commandment; |
/matthew/22-41.htm | and puzzles the Pharisees by a question about the Messiah. |
/matthew/23-1.htm | Jesus admonishes the people to follow good doctrine, not bad examples |
/matthew/23-5.htm | His disciples must beware of their ambition. |
/matthew/23-13.htm | He denounces eight woes against their hypocrisy and blindness, |
/matthew/23-34.htm | and prophesies of the destruction of Jerusalem. |
/matthew/24-1.htm | Jesus foretells the destruction of the temple; |
/matthew/24-3.htm | what and how great calamities shall be before it; |
/matthew/24-29.htm | the signs of his coming to judgment. |
/matthew/24-36.htm | And because that day and hour are unknown, |
/matthew/24-42.htm | we ought to watch like good servants, expecting our Master's coming. |
/matthew/25-1.htm | The parable of the ten virgins, |
/matthew/25-14.htm | and of the talents. |
/matthew/25-31.htm | Also the description of the last judgment. |
/matthew/26-1.htm | Jesus foretells his own death. |
/matthew/26-3.htm | The rulers conspire against him. |
/matthew/26-6.htm | The woman anoints his feet. |
/matthew/26-14.htm | Judas bargains to betray him. |
/matthew/26-17.htm | Jesus eats the Passover; |
/matthew/26-26.htm | institutes his holy supper; |
/matthew/26-30.htm | foretells the desertion of his disciples, and Peter's denial; |
/matthew/26-36.htm | prays in the garden; |
/matthew/26-47.htm | and being betrayed by a kiss, |
/matthew/26-57.htm | is carried to Caiaphas, |
/matthew/26-69.htm | and denied by Peter. |
/matthew/27-1.htm | Jesus is delivered bound to Pilate. |
/matthew/27-3.htm | Judas hangs himself. |
/matthew/27-19.htm | Pilate, admonished of his wife, |
/matthew/27-20.htm | and being urged by the multitude, washes his hands, and releases Barabbas. |
/matthew/27-27.htm | Jesus is mocked and crowned with thorns; |
/matthew/27-33.htm | crucified; |
/matthew/27-39.htm | reviled; |
/matthew/27-50.htm | dies, and is buried; |
/matthew/27-62.htm | his tomb is sealed and watched. |
/matthew/28-1.htm | Christ's resurrection is declared by an angel to the women. |
/matthew/28-9.htm | He himself appears unto them. |
/matthew/28-11.htm | The chief priests pay the soldiers to say that he was stolen out of his tomb. |
/matthew/28-16.htm | Christ appears to his disciples, |
/matthew/28-18.htm | and sends them to baptize and teach all nations. |
/mark/1-1.htm | The office of John the Baptist. |
/mark/1-9.htm | Jesus is baptized; |
/mark/1-12.htm | tempted; |
/mark/1-14.htm | he preaches; |
/mark/1-16.htm | calls Peter, Andrew, James, and John; |
/mark/1-23.htm | heals one that had a demon; |
/mark/1-29.htm | Peter's mother in law; |
/mark/1-32.htm | many diseased persons; |
/mark/1-40.htm | and cleanses the leper. |
/mark/2-1.htm | Jesus followed by multitudes, |
/mark/2-3.htm | heals a paralytic; |
/mark/2-13.htm | calls Matthew; |
/mark/2-15.htm | eats with tax collectors and sinners; |
/mark/2-18.htm | excuses his disciples for not fasting; |
/mark/2-23.htm | and for picking the heads of grain on the Sabbath day. |
/mark/3-1.htm | Jesus heals the withered hand, |
/mark/3-10.htm | and many other infirmities; |
/mark/3-11.htm | rebukes the unclean spirit; |
/mark/3-13.htm | chooses his twelve apostles; |
/mark/3-22.htm | convinces the blasphemy of casting out demons by Beelzebub; |
/mark/3-31.htm | and shows who are his brother, sister, and mother. |
/mark/4-1.htm | The parable of the sower, |
/mark/4-14.htm | and the meaning thereof. |
/mark/4-21.htm | We must communicate the light of our knowledge to others. |
/mark/4-26.htm | The parable of the seed growing secretly; |
/mark/4-30.htm | and of the mustard seed. |
/mark/4-35.htm | Jesus stills the storm on the sea. |
/mark/5-1.htm | Jesus delivering the possessed of the legion of demons, |
/mark/5-13.htm | they enter into the pigs. |
/mark/5-22.htm | He is entreated by Jairus to go and heal his daughter. |
/mark/5-25.htm | He heals the woman subject to bleeding, |
/mark/5-35.htm | and raises Jairus' daughter from death. |
/mark/6-1.htm | Jesus is a prophet without honor in his own country. |
/mark/6-7.htm | He gives the twelve power over unclean spirits. |
/mark/6-14.htm | Various opinions of Jesus. |
/mark/6-16.htm | John the Baptist is imprisoned, beheaded, and buried. |
/mark/6-30.htm | The apostles return from preaching. |
/mark/6-34.htm | The miracle of five loaves and two fishes. |
/mark/6-45.htm | Jesus walks on the sea; |
/mark/6-53.htm | and heals all who touch him. |
/mark/7-1.htm | The Pharisees find fault with the disciples for eating with unwashed hands. |
/mark/7-8.htm | They break the commandment of God by the traditions of men. |
/mark/7-14.htm | Food defiles not the man. |
/mark/7-24.htm | He heals the Syrophenician woman's daughter of an unclean spirit; |
/mark/7-31.htm | and one that was deaf, and stammered in his speech. |
/mark/8-1.htm | Jesus feeds the people miraculously; |
/mark/8-10.htm | refuses to give a sign to the Pharisees; |
/mark/8-14.htm | admonishes his disciples to beware of the leaven of the Pharisees and Herod; |
/mark/8-22.htm | gives a blind man his sight; |
/mark/8-27.htm | acknowledges that he is the Jesus who should suffer and rise again; |
/mark/8-34.htm | and exhorts to patience in persecution for the profession of the gospel. |
/mark/9-1.htm | Jesus is transfigured. |
/mark/9-11.htm | He instructs his disciples concerning the coming of Elijah; |
/mark/9-14.htm | casts forth a deaf and mute spirit; |
/mark/9-30.htm | foretells his death and resurrection; |
/mark/9-33.htm | exhorts his disciples to humility; |
/mark/9-38.htm | bidding them not to prohibit such as are not against them, |
/mark/9-42.htm | nor to give offense to any of the faithful. |
/mark/10-1.htm | Jesus disputes with the Pharisees concerning divorce; |
/mark/10-13.htm | blesses the children that are brought unto him; |
/mark/10-17.htm | resolves a rich man how he may inherit everlasting life; |
/mark/10-23.htm | tells his disciples of the danger of riches; |
/mark/10-28.htm | promises rewards to those who forsake all for the gospel; |
/mark/10-32.htm | foretells his death and resurrection; |
/mark/10-35.htm | bids the two ambitious suitors to think rather of suffering with him; |
/mark/10-46.htm | and restores to Bartimaeus his sight. |
/mark/11-1.htm | Jesus rides with triumph into Jerusalem; |
/mark/11-12.htm | curses the fruitless fig tree; |
/mark/11-15.htm | purges the temple; |
/mark/11-20.htm | exhorts his disciples to steadfastness of faith, and to forgive their enemies; |
/mark/11-27.htm | and defends his actions by the witness of John, who was a man sent of God. |
/mark/12-1.htm | Jesus tells the parable of the tenants |
/mark/12-13.htm | He avoids the snare of the Pharisees and Herodians about paying tribute to Caesar; |
/mark/12-18.htm | convicts the Sadducees, who denied the resurrection; |
/mark/12-28.htm | resolves the scribe, who questioned of the first commandment; |
/mark/12-35.htm | refutes the opinion that the scribes held of the Christ; |
/mark/12-38.htm | bidding the people to beware of their ambition and hypocrisy; |
/mark/12-41.htm | and commends the poor widow for her two mites, above all. |
/mark/13-1.htm | Jesus foretells the destruction of the temple; |
/mark/13-9.htm | the persecutions for the gospel; |
/mark/13-10.htm | that the gospel must be preached to all nations; |
/mark/13-14.htm | that great calamities shall happen to the Jews; |
/mark/13-24.htm | and the manner of his coming to judgment; |
/mark/13-32.htm | the hour whereof being known to none, every man is to watch and pray |
/mark/14-1.htm | A conspiracy against Jesus. |
/mark/14-3.htm | Expensive perfume is poured on his head by a woman. |
/mark/14-10.htm | Judas sells his Master for money. |
/mark/14-12.htm | Jesus himself foretells how he will be betrayed by one of his disciples; |
/mark/14-22.htm | after the passover prepared, and eaten, institutes his last supper; |
/mark/14-26.htm | declares beforehand the flight of all his disciples, and Peter's denial. |
/mark/14-43.htm | Judas betrays him with a kiss. |
/mark/14-46.htm | Jesus is apprehended in the garden; |
/mark/14-53.htm | falsely accused and impiously condemned of the council; |
/mark/14-65.htm | shamefully abused by them; |
/mark/14-66.htm | and thrice denied by Peter. |
/mark/15-1.htm | Jesus brought bound, and accused before Pilate. |
/mark/15-6.htm | Upon the clamor of the people, the murderer Barabbas is released, |
/mark/15-12.htm | and Jesus delivered up to be crucified. |
/mark/15-16.htm | He is crowned with thorns, spit on, and mocked; |
/mark/15-21.htm | faints in bearing his cross; |
/mark/15-27.htm | hangs between two thieves; |
/mark/15-29.htm | suffers the triumphing reproaches of the crowd; |
/mark/15-39.htm | but is confessed by the centurion to be the Son of God; |
/mark/15-42.htm | and is honorably buried by Joseph. |
/mark/16-1.htm | An Angel declares the resurrection of Jesus to three women. |
/mark/16-9.htm | Jesus himself appears to Mary Magdalene; |
/mark/16-12.htm | to two going into the country; |
/mark/16-14.htm | then to the apostles; |
/mark/16-15.htm | whom he sends forth to preach the gospel; |
/mark/16-19.htm | and ascends into heaven. |
/luke/1-1.htm | The preface of Luke to his whole gospel. |
/luke/1-5.htm | The conception of John the Baptist; |
/luke/1-26.htm | and of Jesus. |
/luke/1-39.htm | The prophecy of Elisabeth and of Mary, concerning Jesus. |
/luke/1-57.htm | The nativity and circumcision of John. |
/luke/1-67.htm | The prophecy of Zachariah, both of Jesus, |
/luke/1-76.htm | and of John. |
/luke/2-1.htm | Augustus taxes all the Roman empire. |
/luke/2-6.htm | The nativity of Jesus. |
/luke/2-8.htm | An angel relates it to the shepherds, and many sing praises to God for it. |
/luke/2-15.htm | The shepherds glorify God. |
/luke/2-21.htm | Jesus is circumcised. |
/luke/2-22.htm | Mary purified. |
/luke/2-25.htm | Simeon and Anna prophesy of Jesus, |
/luke/2-39.htm | who increases in wisdom, |
/luke/2-41.htm | questions in the temple with the teachers, |
/luke/2-51.htm | and is obedient to his parents. |
/luke/3-1.htm | The preaching and baptism of John; |
/luke/3-15.htm | his testimony of Jesus; |
/luke/3-19.htm | Herod imprisons John; |
/luke/3-21.htm | Jesus, baptized, receives testimony from heaven. |
/luke/3-23.htm | The age and genealogy of Jesus from Joseph upwards. |
/luke/4-1.htm | The fasting and temptation of Jesus. |
/luke/4-14.htm | He begins to preach. |
/luke/4-16.htm | The people of Nazareth marvel at words, but seek to kill him. |
/luke/4-33.htm | He cures one possessed of a demon, |
/luke/4-38.htm | Peter's mother-in-law, |
/luke/4-40.htm | and various other sick persons. |
/luke/4-41.htm | The demons acknowledge Jesus, and are reproved for it. |
/luke/4-42.htm | He preaches through the cities of Galilee. |
/luke/5-1.htm | Jesus teaches the people out of Peter's ship; |
/luke/5-4.htm | shows how he will make them fishers of men; |
/luke/5-12.htm | cleanses the leper; |
/luke/5-16.htm | prays in the desert; |
/luke/5-17.htm | heals a paralytic; |
/luke/5-27.htm | calls Matthew the tax collector; |
/luke/5-29.htm | eats with sinners, as being the physician of souls; |
/luke/5-33.htm | foretells the fasting and afflictions of the apostles after his ascension; |
/luke/5-36.htm | and illustrates the matter by the parable of patches. |
/luke/6-1.htm | Jesus reproves the Pharisees; |
/luke/6-12.htm | chooses apostles; |
/luke/6-17.htm | heals the diseased; |
/luke/6-20.htm | preaches to his disciples before the people: the beattitudes; |
/luke/6-27.htm | Love your Enemy |
/luke/6-37.htm | Do not Judge |
/luke/6-43.htm | A Tree and Its Fruit |
/luke/6-46.htm | The House on the Rock |
/luke/7-1.htm | Jesus finds a greater faith in the centurion; |
/luke/7-10.htm | heals his servant, being absent; |
/luke/7-11.htm | raises from death the widow's son at Nain; |
/luke/7-18.htm | answers John's messengers with the declaration of his miracles; |
/luke/7-24.htm | testifies to the people what opinion he held of John; |
/luke/7-31.htm | compares this generation to the children in the marketplaces, |
/luke/7-36.htm | and allowing his feet to be washed and anointed by a woman who was a sinner, |
/luke/7-44.htm | he shows how he is a friend to sinners, to forgive them their sins, upon their repentance. |
/luke/8-1.htm | Women minister unto Jesus of their own means. |
/luke/8-4.htm | Jesus, after he had preached from place to place, |
/luke/8-9.htm | explains the parable of the sower, |
/luke/8-16.htm | and the candle; |
/luke/8-19.htm | declares who are his mother, and brothers; |
/luke/8-22.htm | rebukes the winds; |
/luke/8-26.htm | casts the legion of demons out of the man into the herd of pigs; |
/luke/8-37.htm | is rejected by the Gadarenes; |
/luke/8-43.htm | heals the woman of her bleeding; |
/luke/8-49.htm | and raises Jairus's daughter from death. |
/luke/9-1.htm | Jesus sends his apostles to work miracles, and to preach. |
/luke/9-7.htm | Herod desires to see Jesus. |
/luke/9-10.htm | The apostles return. |
/luke/9-12.htm | Jesus feeds five thousand; |
/luke/9-18.htm | inquires what opinion the world had of him; foretells his passion; |
/luke/9-23.htm | proposes to all the pattern of his patience. |
/luke/9-28.htm | The transfiguration. |
/luke/9-37.htm | He heals the lunatic; |
/luke/9-43.htm | again forewarns his disciples of his passion; |
/luke/9-46.htm | commends humility; |
/luke/9-51.htm | bids them to show mildness toward all, without desire of revenge. |
/luke/9-57.htm | Many would follow him, but upon conditions. |
/luke/10-1.htm | Jesus sends out at once seventy disciples to work miracles, and to preach; |
/luke/10-13.htm | pronounces a woe against certain cities. |
/luke/10-17.htm | The seventy return with joy; |
/luke/10-18.htm | he shows them wherein to rejoice, |
/luke/10-21.htm | and thanks his Father for his grace; |
/luke/10-23.htm | magnifies the happy estate of his church; |
/luke/10-25.htm | teaches the lawyer how to attain eternal life, |
/luke/10-30.htm | and tells the parable of the good Samaritan; |
/luke/10-38.htm | reprimands Martha, and commends Mary her sister. |
/luke/11-1.htm | Jesus teaches us to pray, and that instantly; |
/luke/11-11.htm | assuring us that God will give all good things to those who ask him. |
/luke/11-14.htm | He, casting out a demon, rebukes the blasphemous Pharisees; |
/luke/11-27.htm | and shows who are blessed; |
/luke/11-29.htm | preaches to the people; |
/luke/11-37.htm | and reprimands the outward show of holiness. |
/luke/12-1.htm | Jesus preaches to his apostles to avoid hypocrisy |
/luke/12-13.htm | and warns against covetousness, by the parable of the man who set up greater barns. |
/luke/12-22.htm | We must not worry about earthly things, |
/luke/12-31.htm | but seek the kingdom of God; |
/luke/12-33.htm | give alms; |
/luke/12-35.htm | be ready at a knock to open to our Lord whensoever he comes. |
/luke/12-41.htm | Jesus' disciples are to see to their charges, |
/luke/12-49.htm | and look for persecution. |
/luke/12-54.htm | The people must take this time of grace; |
/luke/12-57.htm | because it is a fearful thing to die without reconciliation. |
/luke/13-1.htm | Jesus preaches repentance upon the punishment of the Galilaeans and others. |
/luke/13-6.htm | The fruitless fig tree may not stand. |
/luke/13-10.htm | He heals the crooked woman; |
/luke/13-18.htm | shows the powerful working of the word, by the parable of the grain of mustard seed, |
/luke/13-20.htm | and of leaven; |
/luke/13-22.htm | exhorts to enter in at the strait gate; |
/luke/13-31.htm | and reproves Herod and Jerusalem. |
/luke/14-1.htm | Jesus heals the dropsy on the Sabbath; |
/luke/14-7.htm | teaches humility; |
/luke/14-12.htm | to feast the poor; |
/luke/14-15.htm | under the parable of the great supper, |
/luke/14-23.htm | shows how worldly minded men shall be shut out of heaven. |
/luke/14-25.htm | Those who will be his disciples, to bear their cross must make their accounts beforehand, |
/luke/14-31.htm | lest with shame they revolt from him afterward; |
/luke/14-34.htm | and become altogether unprofitable, like salt that has lost its flavor. |
/luke/15-1.htm | The parable of the lost sheep; |
/luke/15-8.htm | of the piece of silver; |
/luke/15-11.htm | of the prodigal son. |
/luke/16-1.htm | The parable of the unjust steward. |
/luke/16-14.htm | Jesus reproves the hypocrisy of the covetous Pharisees. |
/luke/16-19.htm | The parable of the rich man and Lazarus the beggar. |
/luke/17-1.htm | Jesus teaches to avoid occasions of offense; |
/luke/17-3.htm | and to forgive one another. |
/luke/17-5.htm | The power of faith. |
/luke/17-6.htm | How we are bound to God. |
/luke/17-11.htm | Jesus heals ten lepers. |
/luke/17-22.htm | Of the kingdom of God, and the coming of the Son of Man. |
/luke/18-1.htm | Of the importunate widow. |
/luke/18-9.htm | Of the Pharisee and the tax collector. |
/luke/18-15.htm | Of Children brought to Jesus. |
/luke/18-18.htm | A ruler would follow Jesus, but is hindered by his riches. |
/luke/18-28.htm | The reward of those who leave all for his sake. |
/luke/18-31.htm | He foretells his death; |
/luke/18-35.htm | and restores a blind man to sight. |
/luke/19-1.htm | Of Zacchaeus a tax collector. |
/luke/19-11.htm | The ten minas. |
/luke/19-28.htm | Jesus rides into Jerusalem with triumph; |
/luke/19-41.htm | weeps over it; |
/luke/19-45.htm | drives the buyers and sellers out of the temple; |
/luke/19-47.htm | Teaching daily in it. The rulers seek to destroy him, but fear the people. |
/luke/20-1.htm | Jesus confirms his authority by a question of John's baptism. |
/luke/20-9.htm | The parable of the vineyard. |
/luke/20-19.htm | Of giving tribute to Caesar. |
/luke/20-27.htm | He instructs the Sadducees, who denied the resurrection. |
/luke/20-41.htm | How Jesus is the Son of David. |
/luke/20-45.htm | He warns his disciples to beware of the scribes. |
/luke/21-1.htm | Jesus commends the poor widow. |
/luke/21-5.htm | He foretells the destruction of the temple, and of the city Jerusalem; |
/luke/21-25.htm | the signs also which shall be before the last day. |
/luke/21-34.htm | He exhorts them to be watchful. |
/luke/22-1.htm | The leaders conspire against Jesus. |
/luke/22-3.htm | Satan prepares Judas to betray him. |
/luke/22-7.htm | The apostles prepare the Passover. |
/luke/22-19.htm | Jesus institutes his holy supper; |
/luke/22-21.htm | covertly foretells of the traitor; |
/luke/22-24.htm | rebukes the rest of his apostles from ambition; |
/luke/22-31.htm | assures Peter his faith should not fail; |
/luke/22-34.htm | and yet he should deny him thrice. |
/luke/22-39.htm | He prays in the mount, and sweats blood; |
/luke/22-47.htm | is betrayed with a kiss; |
/luke/22-50.htm | he heals Malchus' ear; |
/luke/22-54.htm | he is thrice denied by Peter; |
/luke/22-63.htm | shamefully abused; |
/luke/22-66.htm | and confesses himself to be the Son of God. |
/luke/23-1.htm | Jesus is accused before Pilate, and sent to Herod. |
/luke/23-8.htm | Herod mocks him. |
/luke/23-12.htm | Herod and Pilate become friends. |
/luke/23-13.htm | Barabbas is desired of the people, |
/luke/23-24.htm | and is released by Pilate, and Jesus is given to be crucified. |
/luke/23-26.htm | He tells the women, that lament him, the destruction of Jerusalem; |
/luke/23-34.htm | prays for his enemies. |
/luke/23-39.htm | Two criminals are crucified with him. |
/luke/23-46.htm | His death. |
/luke/23-50.htm | His burial. |
/luke/24-1.htm | Jesus' resurrection is declared by two angels to the women who come to the tomb. |
/luke/24-9.htm | They report it to others. |
/luke/24-13.htm | Jesus himself appears to the two disciples that went to Emmaus; |
/luke/24-36.htm | afterwards he appears to the apostles, and reproves their unbelief; |
/luke/24-47.htm | gives them a charge; |
/luke/24-49.htm | promises the Holy Spirit; |
/luke/24-50.htm | and so ascends into heaven. |
/john/1-1.htm | The divinity, humanity, office, and incarnation of Jesus Christ. |
/john/1-15.htm | The testimony of John. |
/john/1-39.htm | The calling of Simon and Andrew, Philip and Nathanael |
/john/2-1.htm | Jesus turns water into wine; |
/john/2-12.htm | departs into Capernaum, |
/john/2-13.htm | and to Jerusalem, |
/john/2-14.htm | where he purges the temple of buyers and sellers. |
/john/2-18.htm | He foretells his death and resurrection. |
/john/2-23.htm | Many believe because of his miracles, but he will not trust himself with them. |
/john/3-1.htm | Jesus teaches Nicodemus the necessity of being born again, |
/john/3-14.htm | of faith in his death, |
/john/3-16.htm | the great love of God toward the world, |
/john/3-18.htm | and the condemnation for unbelief. |
/john/3-22.htm | Jesus baptizes in Judea. |
/john/3-23.htm | The baptism, witness, and doctrine of John concerning Jesus. |
/john/4-1.htm | Jesus talks with a woman of Samaria, and reveals his identity to her. |
/john/4-27.htm | His disciples marvel. |
/john/4-31.htm | He declares to them his zeal for God's glory. |
/john/4-39.htm | Many Samaritans believe on him. |
/john/4-43.htm | He departs into Galilee, and heals the ruler's son that lay sick at Capernaum. |
/john/5-1.htm | Jesus on the Sabbath day cures him who was diseased thirty-eight years. |
/john/5-10.htm | The Jews therefore object, and persecute him for it. |
/john/5-17.htm | He answers for himself, and reproves them, showing by the testimony of his Father, |
/john/5-31.htm | of John, |
/john/5-36.htm | of his works, |
/john/5-39.htm | and of the Scriptures, who he is. |
/john/6-1.htm | Jesus feeds five thousand men with five loaves and two fishes. |
/john/6-15.htm | Thereupon the people would have made him king; |
/john/6-16.htm | but withdrawing himself, he walks on the sea to his disciples; |
/john/6-26.htm | reproves the people flocking after him, and all the fleshly hearers of his word; |
/john/6-32.htm | declares himself to be the bread of life to believers. |
/john/6-66.htm | Many disciples depart from him. |
/john/6-68.htm | Peter confesses him. |
/john/6-70.htm | Judas is a devil. |
/john/7-1.htm | Jesus reproves the ambition and boldness of his kinsmen; |
/john/7-10.htm | goes up from Galilee to the feast of tabernacles; |
/john/7-14.htm | teaches in the temple. |
/john/7-40.htm | Various opinions of him among the people. |
/john/7-45.htm | The Pharisees are angry that their officers took him not, |
/john/7-50.htm | and chide with Nicodemus for taking his side. |
/john/8-1.htm | Jesus delivers the woman taken in adultery. |
/john/8-12.htm | He declares himself the light of the world, and justifies his doctrine; |
/john/8-31.htm | promises freedom to those who believe; |
/john/8-33.htm | answers the Jews who boasted of Abraham; |
/john/8-48.htm | answers their reviling, by showing his authority and dignity; |
/john/8-59.htm | and slips away from those who would stone him. |
/john/9-1.htm | The man born blind is restored to sight. |
/john/9-8.htm | He is brought to the Pharisees. |
/john/9-13.htm | They are offended at it; |
/john/9-35.htm | but he is received of Jesus, and confesses him. |
/john/9-39.htm | Who they are whom Jesus enlightens. |
/john/10-1.htm | Jesus is the door, and the good shepherd. |
/john/10-19.htm | Diverse opinions of him. |
/john/10-23.htm | He proves by his works that he is Jesus the Son of God; |
/john/10-31.htm | escapes the Jews; |
/john/10-39.htm | and goes again beyond Jordan, where many believe on him. |
/john/11-1.htm | Jesus raises Lazarus, four days buried. |
/john/11-45.htm | Many Jews believe. |
/john/11-47.htm | The high priests and Pharisees gather a council against Jesus. |
/john/11-49.htm | Caiaphas prophesies. |
/john/11-54.htm | Jesus hides himself. |
/john/11-55.htm | At the Passover they enquire after him, and lay wait for him. |
/john/12-1.htm | Jesus excuses Mary anointing his feet. |
/john/12-9.htm | The people flock to see Lazarus. |
/john/12-10.htm | The chief priests consult to kill him. |
/john/12-12.htm | Jesus rides into Jerusalem. |
/john/12-20.htm | Greeks desire to see Jesus. |
/john/12-23.htm | He foretells his death. |
/john/12-37.htm | The people are generally blinded; |
/john/12-42.htm | yet many chief rulers believe, but do not confess him; |
/john/12-44.htm | therefore Jesus calls earnestly for confession of faith. |
/john/13-1.htm | Jesus washes the disciples' feet, and exhorts them to humility and charity. |
/john/13-18.htm | He foretells and discovers to John by a token, that Judas should betray him; |
/john/13-31.htm | commands them to love one another; |
/john/13-36.htm | and forewarns Peter of his denials. |
/john/14-1.htm | Jesus comforts his disciples with the hope of heaven; |
/john/14-5.htm | professes himself the way, the truth, and the life, and one with the Father; |
/john/14-13.htm | assures their prayers to be effectual; |
/john/14-15.htm | requires obedience; |
/john/14-16.htm | promises the Comforter; |
/john/14-27.htm | and leaves his peace with them. |
/john/15-1.htm | The union of Jesus and his members shown under the parable of a vine. |
/john/15-18.htm | The hatred of the world. |
/john/15-26.htm | The office of the Holy Spirit. |
/john/16-1.htm | Jesus comforts his disciples by the promise of the Holy Spirit, and his ascension; |
/john/16-23.htm | assures their prayers made in his name to be acceptable. |
/john/16-33.htm | Peace in Jesus, and in the world affliction. |
/john/17-1.htm | Jesus prays to his Father. |
/john/18-1.htm | Judas betrays Jesus. |
/john/18-6.htm | The officers fall to the ground. |
/john/18-10.htm | Peter cuts off Malchus' ear. |
/john/18-12.htm | Jesus is taken, and led unto Annas and Caiaphas. |
/john/18-15.htm | Peter's denial. |
/john/18-19.htm | Jesus examined before Caiaphas. |
/john/18-25.htm | Peter's second and third denial. |
/john/18-28.htm | Jesus arraigned before Pilate. |
/john/18-36.htm | His kingdom. |
/john/18-40.htm | The Jews prefer Barabbas. |
/john/19-1.htm | Jesus is scourged, crowned with thorns, and beaten. |
/john/19-4.htm | Pilate is desirous to release him, |
/john/19-15.htm | but being overcome with the outrage of the crowd, he delivers him to be crucified. |
/john/19-23.htm | They cast lots for his garments. |
/john/19-25.htm | He commends his mother to John. |
/john/19-28.htm | He dies. |
/john/19-31.htm | His side is pierced. |
/john/19-38.htm | He is buried by Joseph and Nicodemus. |
/john/20-1.htm | Mary comes to the tomb; |
/john/20-3.htm | so do Peter and John, ignorant of the resurrection. |
/john/20-11.htm | Jesus appears to Mary Magdalene, |
/john/20-19.htm | and to his disciples. |
/john/20-24.htm | The incredulity and confession of Thomas. |
/john/20-30.htm | The Scripture is sufficient to salvation. |
/john/21-1.htm | Jesus appearing again to his disciples is known of them by the great catch of fish. |
/john/21-12.htm | He dines with them; |
/john/21-15.htm | earnestly commands Peter to feed his lambs and sheep; |
/john/21-18.htm | foretells him of his death; |
/john/21-22.htm | rebukes his curiosity. |
/john/21-24.htm | The conclusion. |
/acts/1-1.htm | Christ, preparing his apostles to the beholding of his ascension, . |
/acts/1-4.htm | gathers them together unto the Mount of Olives, |
/acts/1-6.htm | commands them to expect in Jerusalem the sending down of the Holy Spirit, |
/acts/1-9.htm | and ascends into heaven in their sight |
/acts/1-10.htm | After his ascension they are warned by two angels to depart, and to set their minds upon his second coming. |
/acts/1-12.htm | They accordingly return, and, giving themselves to prayer, |
/acts/1-23.htm | choose Matthias apostle in the place of Judas. |
/acts/2-1.htm | The apostles, filled with the Holy Spirit, and speaking various languages, |
/acts/2-12.htm | are admired by some, and derided by others; |
/acts/2-14.htm | whom Peter disproves; |
/acts/2-37.htm | he baptizes a great number who were converted; |
/acts/2-41.htm | who afterwards devoutly and charitably converse together; |
/acts/2-43.htm | the apostles working many miracles, |
/acts/2-46.htm | and God daily increasing his church. |
/acts/3-1.htm | Peter preaching to the people that came to see a lame man restored to his feet, |
/acts/3-12.htm | professes the cure to have been wrought by God, and his son Jesus; |
/acts/3-13.htm | withal reprehending them for crucifying Jesus; |
/acts/3-17.htm | which because they did it through ignorance, |
/acts/3-18.htm | and that thereby were fulfilled God's determinate counsel, and the Scriptures, |
/acts/3-19.htm | he exhorts them by repentance and faith to seek remission of their sins through Jesus. |
/acts/4-1.htm | The rulers of the Jews, offended with Peter's sermon, |
/acts/4-3.htm | imprison him and John. |
/acts/4-5.htm | After, upon examination |
/acts/4-8.htm | Peter boldly avouching the lame man to be healed by the name of Jesus, |
/acts/4-11.htm | and that only by the same Jesus we must be eternally saved, |
/acts/4-13.htm | they threaten him and John to preach no more in that name, |
/acts/4-23.htm | whereupon the church flees to prayer. |
/acts/4-31.htm | And God, by moving the place where they were assembled, testifies that he heard their prayer; |
/acts/4-34.htm | confirming the church with the gift of the Holy Spirit, and with mutual love and charity. |
/acts/5-1.htm | After that Ananias and Sapphira his wife, |
/acts/5-3.htm | at Peter's rebuke had fallen down dead; |
/acts/5-12.htm | and that the rest of the apostles had wrought many miracles; |
/acts/5-14.htm | to the increase of the faith; |
/acts/5-17.htm | the apostles are again imprisoned; |
/acts/5-19.htm | but delivered by an angel bidding them preach openly to all; |
/acts/5-21.htm | when, after their teaching accordingly in the temple, |
/acts/5-29.htm | and before the council, |
/acts/5-33.htm | they are in danger to be killed; |
/acts/5-34.htm | but through the advice of Gamaliel, they are kept alive, and are only beaten; |
/acts/5-41.htm | for which they glorify God, and cease no day from preaching. |
/acts/6-1.htm | The apostles, desirous to have the poor cared for, |
/acts/6-2.htm | as also careful themselves to dispense the word of God, the food of the soul, |
/acts/6-3.htm | recommend, |
/acts/6-5.htm | and with the church's consent ordain seven chosen men to the office of deaconship. |
/acts/6-7.htm | The word of God prevails, |
/acts/6-8.htm | Stephen, full of faith and the Holy Spirit, confuting those with whom he disputed, |
/acts/6-12.htm | is brought before the council, |
/acts/6-13.htm | and falsely accused of blasphemy against the law and the temple. |
/acts/7-1.htm | Stephen, permitted to answer to the accusation of blasphemy, |
/acts/7-2.htm | shows that Abraham worshipped God rightly, and how God chose the fathers, |
/acts/7-20.htm | before Moses was born, and before the tabernacle and temple were built; |
/acts/7-37.htm | that Moses himself witnessed of Christ; |
/acts/7-44.htm | and that all outward ceremonies were ordained to last but for a time; |
/acts/7-51.htm | reprehending their rebellion, and murdering of Christ, whom the prophets foretold. |
/acts/7-54.htm | Whereupon they stone Stephen to death, |
/acts/7-59.htm | who commends his soul to Jesus, and humbly prays for them. |
/acts/8-1.htm | By occasion of the persecution in Jerusalem, the church being planted in Samaria, |
/acts/8-4.htm | by Philip the deacon, who preached, did miracles, and baptized many; |
/acts/8-9.htm | among the rest Simon the sorcerer, a great seducer of the people; |
/acts/8-14.htm | Peter and John come to confirm and enlarge the church; |
/acts/8-15.htm | where, by prayer and imposition of hands giving the Holy Spirit; |
/acts/8-18.htm | when Simon would have bought the like power of them, |
/acts/8-20.htm | Peter sharply reproving his hypocrisy and covetousness, |
/acts/8-22.htm | and exhorting him to repentance, |
/acts/8-25.htm | together with John preaching the word of the Lord, return to Jerusalem; |
/acts/8-26.htm | but the angel sends Philip to teach and baptize the Ethiopian Eunuch. |
/acts/9-1.htm | Saul, going toward Damascus, is stricken down to the earth, |
/acts/9-8.htm | and led blind to Damascus; |
/acts/9-10.htm | is called to the apostleship; |
/acts/9-18.htm | and is baptized by Ananias. |
/acts/9-20.htm | He preaches Christ boldly. |
/acts/9-23.htm | The Jews lay wait to kill him; |
/acts/9-29.htm | so do the Grecians, but he escapes both. |
/acts/9-31.htm | The church having rest, Peter heals Aeneas; |
/acts/9-36.htm | and restores Tabitha to life. |
/acts/10-1.htm | Cornelius, a devout man, being commanded by an angel, sends for Peter, |
/acts/10-11.htm | who by a vision is taught not to despise the Gentiles; |
/acts/10-17.htm | and is commanded by the Spirit to go with the messenger to Caesarea. |
/acts/10-25.htm | Cornelius shows the occasion of his sending for him. |
/acts/10-34.htm | As he preaches Christ to Cornelius and his company, |
/acts/10-44.htm | the Holy Spirit falls on them, and they are baptized. |
/acts/11-1.htm | Peter, being accused for preaching to the Gentiles, |
/acts/11-5.htm | makes his defense; |
/acts/11-18.htm | which is accepted. |
/acts/11-19.htm | The gospel being spread in Phoenicia, and Cyprus, and Antioch, |
/acts/11-22.htm | Barnabas is sent to confirm them. |
/acts/11-26.htm | The disciples are first called Christians at Antioch. |
/acts/11-27.htm | They send relief to the brothers in Judea in time of famine. |
/acts/12-1.htm | King Herod persecutes the Christians, kills James, and imprisons Peter; |
/acts/12-6.htm | whom an angel delivers upon the prayers of the church. |
/acts/12-20.htm | Herod in his pride taking to himself the honor due to God, |
/acts/12-23.htm | is stricken by an angel, and dies miserably. |
/acts/12-24.htm | After his death, the word of God prospers. |
/acts/12-25.htm | Saul and Barnabas return to Antioch. |
/acts/13-1.htm | Paul and Barnabas are chosen to go to the Gentiles. |
/acts/13-6.htm | Of Sergius Paulus, and Elymas the sorcerer. |
/acts/13-13.htm | Paul preaches at Antioch that Jesus is Christ. |
/acts/13-42.htm | The Gentiles believe; |
/acts/13-44.htm | but the Jews talked abusively against Paul, |
/acts/13-46.htm | whereupon they turn to the Gentiles, of whom many believe. |
/acts/13-50.htm | The Jews raise a persecution against Paul and Barnabas, who go to Iconium. |
/acts/14-1.htm | Paul and Barnabas are persecuted from Iconium. |
/acts/14-8.htm | At Lystra Paul heals a cripple, whereupon they are reputed as gods. |
/acts/14-19.htm | Paul is stoned. |
/acts/14-21.htm | They pass through various churches, confirming the disciples in faith and patience. |
/acts/14-26.htm | Returning to Antioch, they report what God had done with them. |
/acts/15-1.htm | Great dissensions arise regarding circumcision. |
/acts/15-5.htm | The apostles consult about it, |
/acts/15-22.htm | and send their determination by letters to the churches. |
/acts/15-36.htm | Paul and Barnabas, thinking to visit the brothers together, |
/acts/15-39.htm | disagree, and travel different ways. |
/acts/16-1.htm | Paul and Silas are Joined by Timothy, |
/acts/16-7.htm | and being called by the Spirit from one country to another, |
/acts/16-14.htm | convert Lydia, |
/acts/16-16.htm | and cast out a spirit of divination; |
/acts/16-19.htm | for which cause they are whipped and imprisoned. |
/acts/16-25.htm | The prison doors are opened. |
/acts/16-31.htm | The jailor is converted, |
/acts/16-35.htm | and they are delivered. |
/acts/17-1.htm | Paul preaches at Thessalonica, where some believe, |
/acts/17-5.htm | and others persecute him. |
/acts/17-10.htm | He is sent to Berea, and preaches there. |
/acts/17-13.htm | Being persecuted by Jews from Thessalonica, |
/acts/17-16.htm | he comes to Athens, and disputes and preaches the living God, to them unknown; |
/acts/17-32.htm | whereby, though some mock, many are converted unto Christ. |
/acts/18-1.htm | Paul labors with his hands, and preaches at Corinth to the Gentiles. |
/acts/18-9.htm | The Lord encourages him in a vision. |
/acts/18-12.htm | He is accused before Gallio the deputy, but is dismissed. |
/acts/18-18.htm | Afterwards passing from city to city, he strengthens the disciples. |
/acts/18-24.htm | Apollos, being instructed by Aquila and Priscilla, preaches Christ boldly. |
/acts/19-1.htm | The Holy Spirit is given by Paul's hands. |
/acts/19-8.htm | The Jews blaspheme his doctrine, which is confirmed by miracles. |
/acts/19-13.htm | The Jewish exorcists, |
/acts/19-16.htm | are beaten by a man who had an evil spirit. |
/acts/19-19.htm | Conjuring books are burnt. |
/acts/19-21.htm | Demetrius, for love of gain, raises an uproar against Paul; |
/acts/19-35.htm | which is appeased by the town clerk. |
/acts/20-1.htm | Paul goes to Macedonia, and thence to Troas. |
/acts/20-7.htm | He celebrates the Lord's supper, and preaches. |
/acts/20-9.htm | Eutychus having fallen down dead is raised to life. |
/acts/20-13.htm | Paul continues his travels; |
/acts/20-17.htm | and at Miletum he calls the elders together, tells them what shall befall to himself, |
/acts/20-28.htm | commits God's flock to them, |
/acts/20-29.htm | warns them of false teachers, |
/acts/20-32.htm | commends them to God, |
/acts/20-36.htm | prays with them, and departs. |
/acts/21-1.htm | Paul calls at the house of Philip, whose daughters prophesy. |
/acts/21-10.htm | Agabus, foretelling what should befall him at Jerusalem, |
/acts/21-13.htm | he will not be dissuaded from going thither. |
/acts/21-17.htm | He comes to Jerusalem; |
/acts/21-27.htm | where he is apprehended, and in great danger, but by the chief captain is rescued; |
/acts/21-37.htm | and requests, and is permitted to speak to the people. |
/acts/22-1.htm | Paul declares how he was converted to the faith, |
/acts/22-17.htm | and called to his apostleship. |
/acts/22-22.htm | At the very mentioning of the Gentiles the people exclaim on him. |
/acts/22-24.htm | He would have been scourged; |
/acts/22-25.htm | but claiming the privilege of a Roman, he escapes. |
/acts/23-1.htm | As Paul pleads his cause, |
/acts/23-2.htm | Ananias commands them to strike him. |
/acts/23-7.htm | Dissension among his accusers. |
/acts/23-11.htm | God encourages him. |
/acts/23-14.htm | The Jews' vow to kill Paul, |
/acts/23-20.htm | is declared unto the chief captain. |
/acts/23-27.htm | He sends him to Felix the governor. |
/acts/24-1.htm | Paul being accused by Tertullus the orator, |
/acts/24-10.htm | answers for his life and doctrine. |
/acts/24-24.htm | He preaches Christ to the governor and his wife. |
/acts/24-26.htm | The governor hopes for a bribe, but in vain. |
/acts/24-27.htm | Felix, succeeded by Festus, leaves Paul in prison. |
/acts/25-1.htm | The Jews accuse Paul before Festus. |
/acts/25-8.htm | He answers for himself, |
/acts/25-11.htm | and appeals unto Caesar. |
/acts/25-14.htm | Afterwards Festus opens his matter to king Agrippa; |
/acts/25-23.htm | and he is brought forth. |
/acts/25-25.htm | Festus clears him of having done anything worthy of death. |
/acts/26-1.htm | Paul, in the presence of Agrippa, declares his life from his childhood; |
/acts/26-12.htm | and how miraculously he was converted, and called to his apostleship. |
/acts/26-24.htm | Festus charges him with being insane, whereunto he answers modestly. |
/acts/26-28.htm | Agrippa is almost persuaded to be a Christian. |
/acts/26-31.htm | The whole company pronounces him innocent. |
/acts/27-1.htm | Paul shipping toward Rome, |
/acts/27-10.htm | foretells of the danger of the voyage, |
/acts/27-11.htm | but is not believed. |
/acts/27-14.htm | They are tossed to and fro by a storm; |
/acts/27-41.htm | and suffer shipwreck; |
/acts/27-44.htm | yet all come safe to land. |
/acts/28-1.htm | Paul, after his shipwreck, is kindly entertained on Malta. |
/acts/28-5.htm | The snake on his hand hurts him not. |
/acts/28-8.htm | He heals many diseases in the island. |
/acts/28-11.htm | They depart toward Rome. |
/acts/28-17.htm | He declares to the Jews the cause of his coming. |
/acts/28-24.htm | After his preaching some were persuaded, and some believed not. |
/acts/28-30.htm | Yet he preaches there two years. |
/romans/1-1.htm | Paul commends his calling to the Romans; |
/romans/1-9.htm | and his desire to come to them. |
/romans/1-16.htm | What his gospel is. |
/romans/1-18.htm | God is angry with sin. |
/romans/1-21.htm | What were the sins of mankind. |
/romans/2-1.htm | No excuse for sin. |
/romans/2-6.htm | No escape from judgment. |
/romans/2-14.htm | Gentiles cannot; |
/romans/2-17.htm | nor Jews. |
/romans/3-1.htm | The Jews prerogative; |
/romans/3-3.htm | which they have not lost; |
/romans/3-9.htm | howbeit the law convinces them also of sin; |
/romans/3-20.htm | therefore no one is justified by the law; |
/romans/3-28.htm | but all, without difference, by faith, only; |
/romans/3-31.htm | and yet the law is not abolished. |
/romans/4-1.htm | Abraham's faith was credited to him as righteousness; |
/romans/4-10.htm | before he was circumcised. |
/romans/4-13.htm | By faith only he and his seed received the promise. |
/romans/4-16.htm | Abraham is the father of all who believe. |
/romans/4-24.htm | Our faith also shall be credited to us as righteousness. |
/romans/5-1.htm | Being justified by faith, we have peace with God; |
/romans/5-2.htm | and joy in our hope; |
/romans/5-8.htm | that since we were reconciled by his blood, when we were enemies; |
/romans/5-10.htm | we shall much more be saved, being reconciled. |
/romans/5-12.htm | As sin and death came by Adam; |
/romans/5-17.htm | so much more righteousness and life by Jesus Christ. |
/romans/5-20.htm | Where sin abounded, grace did superabound. |
/romans/6-1.htm | We may not live in sin; |
/romans/6-2.htm | for we are dead unto it; |
/romans/6-3.htm | as appears by our baptism. |
/romans/6-12.htm | Let not sin reign anymore; |
/romans/6-18.htm | because we have yielded ourselves to the service of righteousness; |
/romans/6-23.htm | and because death is the wages of sin. |
/romans/7-1.htm | No law has power over a man longer than he lives. |
/romans/7-4.htm | But we are dead to the law. |
/romans/7-7.htm | Yet is not the law sin; |
/romans/7-12.htm | but holy, just and good; |
/romans/7-16.htm | as I acknowledge, who am grieved because I cannot keep it. |
/romans/8-1.htm | Those who are in Christ are free from condemnation. |
/romans/8-5.htm | What harm comes of the flesh; |
/romans/8-13.htm | and what good of the Spirit. |
/romans/8-19.htm | The glorious deliverance the creation longs for, |
/romans/8-29.htm | was beforehand decreed from God. |
/romans/8-38.htm | Nothing can sever us from his love. |
/romans/9-1.htm | Paul is sorry for the Jews. |
/romans/9-7.htm | All of Abraham not of the promise. |
/romans/9-18.htm | God's sovereignty. |
/romans/9-25.htm | The calling of the Gentiles and rejecting of the Jews, foretold. |
/romans/9-32.htm | The cause of their stumbling. |
/romans/10-1.htm | The difference between the righteousness of the law, and that of faith; |
/romans/10-11.htm | all who believe, both Jew and Gentile, shall not be shamed; |
/romans/10-18.htm | and that the Gentiles shall receive the word and believe. |
/romans/10-19.htm | Israel was not ignorant of these things. |
/romans/11-1.htm | God has not cast off all Israel. |
/romans/11-7.htm | Some were elected, though the rest were hardened. |
/romans/11-16.htm | There is hope of their conversion. |
/romans/11-18.htm | The Gentiles may not exult over them; |
/romans/11-26.htm | for there is a promise of their salvation. |
/romans/11-33.htm | God's judgments are unsearchable. |
/romans/12-1.htm | God's mercies must move us to offer ourselves. |
/romans/12-3.htm | No man must think too well of himself; |
/romans/12-6.htm | but everyone attend to the calling wherein he is placed. |
/romans/12-9.htm | Love, and many other duties are required of us. |
/romans/12-19.htm | Revenge is especially forbidden. |
/romans/13-1.htm | Subjection, and many other duties, we owe to the authorities. |
/romans/13-8.htm | Love is the fulfillment of the law. |
/romans/13-11.htm | The acts of darkness are out of season in the time of the Gospel. |
/romans/14-1.htm | Men may not condemn one another for disputable matters; |
/romans/14-13.htm | but must take heed that they give no offense in them; |
/romans/14-15.htm | which the apostle proves unlawful by many reasons. |
/romans/15-1.htm | The strong must bear with the weak. |
/romans/15-2.htm | We must not please ourselves; |
/romans/15-3.htm | for Christ did not so; |
/romans/15-7.htm | but receive one another, as Christ did us all; |
/romans/15-8.htm | both Jews and Gentiles; |
/romans/15-15.htm | Paul excuses his writing; |
/romans/15-28.htm | and promises to see them; |
/romans/15-30.htm | and requests their prayers. |
/romans/16-1.htm | Paul wills the brothers to greet many; |
/romans/16-17.htm | and advises them to take heed of those which cause dissension and offenses; |
/romans/16-21.htm | and after various salutations ends with praise and thanks to God. |
/1_corinthians/1-1.htm | After his salutation and thanksgiving for the Corinthians, |
/1_corinthians/1-10.htm | Paul exhorts them to unity, |
/1_corinthians/1-12.htm | and reproves their dissensions. |
/1_corinthians/1-18.htm | God destroys the wisdom of the wise, |
/1_corinthians/1-21.htm | by the foolishness of preaching; |
/1_corinthians/1-26.htm | and calls not the wise, mighty, and noble, |
/1_corinthians/1-28.htm | but the foolish, weak, and men of no account. |
/1_corinthians/2-1.htm | Paul declares that his preaching, |
/1_corinthians/2-4.htm | though it bring not excellence of speech, or of human wisdom, |
/1_corinthians/2-5.htm | yet consists in the power of God; |
/1_corinthians/2-6.htm | and so far excels the wisdom of this world, that the natural man cannot understand it. |
/1_corinthians/3-1.htm | Milk is fit for children. |
/1_corinthians/3-3.htm | Strife and division, arguments of a fleshly mind. |
/1_corinthians/3-7.htm | He who plants and He who waters are nothing. |
/1_corinthians/3-9.htm | The ministers are God's fellow workmen. |
/1_corinthians/3-11.htm | Christ the only foundation. |
/1_corinthians/3-16.htm | You are the temples of God, which must be kept holy. |
/1_corinthians/3-19.htm | The wisdom of this world is foolishness with God. |
/1_corinthians/4-1.htm | In what account the apostles ought to be regarded. |
/1_corinthians/4-7.htm | We have nothing which we have not received. |
/1_corinthians/4-9.htm | The apostles spectacles to the world, angels, and men; |
/1_corinthians/4-13.htm | the filth and offscouring of the world; |
/1_corinthians/4-15.htm | yet our fathers in Christ; |
/1_corinthians/4-16.htm | whom we ought to follow. |
/1_corinthians/5-1.htm | The sexual immorality person, |
/1_corinthians/5-6.htm | is cause rather of shame unto them than of rejoicing. |
/1_corinthians/5-7.htm | The old leaven is to be purged out. |
/1_corinthians/5-10.htm | Heinous offenders are to be shamed and avoided. |
/1_corinthians/6-1.htm | The Corinthians must take their brothers to court; |
/1_corinthians/6-6.htm | especially under infidels. |
/1_corinthians/6-9.htm | The wicked shall not inherit the kingdom of God. |
/1_corinthians/6-15.htm | Our bodies are the members of Christ, and temples of the Holy Spirit: |
/1_corinthians/6-19.htm | they must not therefore be defiled. |
/1_corinthians/7-1.htm | He discusses marriage; |
/1_corinthians/7-4.htm | showing it to be a remedy against sinful desires, |
/1_corinthians/7-10.htm | and that the bond thereof ought not lightly to be dissolved. |
/1_corinthians/7-20.htm | Every man must be content with his vocation. |
/1_corinthians/7-25.htm | Virginity wherefore to be embraced; |
/1_corinthians/7-35.htm | and for what respects we may either marry, or abstain from marrying. |
/1_corinthians/8-1.htm | To abstain from food offered to idols. |
/1_corinthians/8-8.htm | We must not abuse our Christian liberty, to the offense of our brothers; |
/1_corinthians/8-11.htm | but must bridle our knowledge with charity. |
/1_corinthians/9-1.htm | He shows his liberty; |
/1_corinthians/9-7.htm | and that the minister ought to receive a living by the Gospel; |
/1_corinthians/9-15.htm | yet that himself has of his own accord abstained, |
/1_corinthians/9-18.htm | to be neither chargeable unto them, |
/1_corinthians/9-22.htm | nor offensive unto any, in matters indifferent. |
/1_corinthians/9-24.htm | Our life is like unto a race. |
/1_corinthians/10-1.htm | The sacraments of the Jews are types of ours; |
/1_corinthians/10-7.htm | and their punishments, |
/1_corinthians/10-11.htm | examples for us. |
/1_corinthians/10-13.htm | We must flee from idolatry. |
/1_corinthians/10-21.htm | We must not make the Lord's table the table of demons; |
/1_corinthians/10-24.htm | and in all things we must have regard for our brothers. |
/1_corinthians/11-1.htm | He reproves them, because in holy assemblies, |
/1_corinthians/11-4.htm | their men prayed with their heads covered, |
/1_corinthians/11-6.htm | and women with their heads uncovered; |
/1_corinthians/11-17.htm | and because generally their meetings were not for the better, but for the worse; |
/1_corinthians/11-21.htm | as, namely, in profaning with their own feast the Lord's supper. |
/1_corinthians/11-25.htm | Lastly, he calls them to the first institution thereof. |
/1_corinthians/12-1.htm | Spiritual gifts, |
/1_corinthians/12-4.htm | are diverse, |
/1_corinthians/12-7.htm | yet to profit all. |
/1_corinthians/12-8.htm | And to that end are diversely bestowed; |
/1_corinthians/12-12.htm | as the members of a natural body tend all to the mutual decency, |
/1_corinthians/12-22.htm | service, |
/1_corinthians/12-26.htm | and helpfulness of the same body; |
/1_corinthians/12-27.htm | so we should do for one another, to make up the body of Christ. |
/1_corinthians/13-1.htm | All gifts, |
/1_corinthians/13-3.htm | however excellent, are of no worth without love. |
/1_corinthians/13-4.htm | The praises thereof, |
/1_corinthians/13-13.htm | as love is greatest before hope and faith. |
/1_corinthians/14-1.htm | Prophecy is commended, |
/1_corinthians/14-2.htm | and preferred before speaking in tongues, |
/1_corinthians/14-6.htm | by a comparison drawn from musical instruments. |
/1_corinthians/14-12.htm | Both must be referred to edification, |
/1_corinthians/14-22.htm | as to their true and proper end. |
/1_corinthians/14-26.htm | The true use of each is taught, |
/1_corinthians/14-27.htm | and the abuse rebuked. |
/1_corinthians/14-34.htm | Women in the churches. |
/1_corinthians/15-1.htm | By Christ's resurrection, |
/1_corinthians/15-12.htm | he proves the necessity of our resurrection, |
/1_corinthians/15-16.htm | against all such as deny the resurrection of the body. |
/1_corinthians/15-21.htm | The fruit, |
/1_corinthians/15-35.htm | and the manner thereof; |
/1_corinthians/15-51.htm | and of the resurrection of those who shall be found alive at the last day. |
/1_corinthians/16-1.htm | He exhorts them to a collection for the brothers at Jerusalem. |
/1_corinthians/16-10.htm | Commends Timothy; |
/1_corinthians/16-13.htm | and after friendly admonitions, |
/1_corinthians/16-16.htm | concludes his epistle with various salutations. |
/2_corinthians/1-1.htm | Paul salutes the Corinthians; |
/2_corinthians/1-3.htm | he encourages them against troubles, |
/2_corinthians/1-5.htm | by the comforts and deliverances which God had given him, |
/2_corinthians/1-8.htm | so particularly in his late danger in Asia. |
/2_corinthians/1-12.htm | And calling both his own conscience and theirs, |
/2_corinthians/1-15.htm | he excuses his not coming to them, as proceeding not of lightness, |
/2_corinthians/1-23.htm | but of his care for them. |
/2_corinthians/2-1.htm | Having shown the reason why he came not to them, |
/2_corinthians/2-6.htm | he requires them to forgive and to comfort that excommunicated person, |
/2_corinthians/2-10.htm | even as he himself upon true repentance had forgiven him; |
/2_corinthians/2-12.htm | declaring why he departed from Troas to Macedonia, |
/2_corinthians/2-14.htm | and the happy success which God gave to his preaching in all places. |
/2_corinthians/3-1.htm | Lest their false teachers should charge him with vain glory, |
/2_corinthians/3-2.htm | he shows the faith of the Corinthians to be a sufficient commendation of his ministry. |
/2_corinthians/3-6.htm | Whereupon entering a comparison between the ministers of the law and of the gospel, |
/2_corinthians/3-12.htm | he proves that his ministry is so far the more excellent, |
/2_corinthians/3-17.htm | as the gospel of life and liberty is more glorious than the law of condemnation. |
/2_corinthians/4-1.htm | Paul declares how he has used all sincerity and diligence in preaching the gospel, |
/2_corinthians/4-7.htm | and how his troubles and persecutions did redound to the praise of God's power, |
/2_corinthians/4-12.htm | to the benefit of the church, |
/2_corinthians/4-16.htm | and to the apostle's own eternal glory. |
/2_corinthians/5-1.htm | That in his assured hope of immortal glory, |
/2_corinthians/5-9.htm | and in expectation of it, he labors to keep a good conscience; |
/2_corinthians/5-12.htm | not that he may boast of himself, |
/2_corinthians/5-14.htm | but as one that, having received life from Christ, |
/2_corinthians/5-17.htm | endeavors to live as a new creature to Christ only, |
/2_corinthians/5-18.htm | and by his ministry of reconciliation, to reconcile others also in Christ to God. |
/2_corinthians/6-1.htm | That he has approved himself a faithful minister of Christ by his exhortations, |
/2_corinthians/6-3.htm | and by integrity of life, |
/2_corinthians/6-4.htm | and by patiently enduring all kinds of affliction and disgrace for the gospel. |
/2_corinthians/6-10.htm | Of which he speaks the more boldly amongst them because his heart is open to them, |
/2_corinthians/6-13.htm | and he expects the like affection from them again; |
/2_corinthians/6-14.htm | exhorting them to flee the society and pollutions of idolaters, |
/2_corinthians/6-17.htm | as being themselves temples of the living God. |
/2_corinthians/7-1.htm | He proceeds in exhorting them to purity of life; |
/2_corinthians/7-2.htm | and to bear him like affection as he does to them. |
/2_corinthians/7-3.htm | Whereof lest he might seem to doubt, he declares what comfort he took in his afflictions |
/2_corinthians/7-6.htm | by the report which Titus gave of their godly sorrow, |
/2_corinthians/7-8.htm | which his former epistle had wrought in them; |
/2_corinthians/7-13.htm | and of their loving-kindness and obedience toward Titus, answerable to his former boastings of them. |
/2_corinthians/8-1.htm | He stirs them to a generous gift for the poor saints at Jerusalem, by the example of the Macedonians; |
/2_corinthians/8-7.htm | by commendation of their former forwardness; |
/2_corinthians/8-9.htm | by the example of Christ; |
/2_corinthians/8-14.htm | and by the spiritual profit that shall redound to themselves thereby; |
/2_corinthians/8-16.htm | commending to them the integrity and willingness of Titus, and those other brothers. |
/2_corinthians/9-1.htm | He yields the reason why he sent Titus and his brothers beforehand. |
/2_corinthians/9-6.htm | And he proceeds in stirring them up to a bountiful alms, as being but a kind of sowing of seed, |
/2_corinthians/9-10.htm | which shall return a great increase to them, |
/2_corinthians/9-13.htm | and occasion a great sacrifice of thanksgivings unto God. |
/2_corinthians/10-1.htm | Against the false apostles, who disgraced the weakness of his person and bodily presence, |
/2_corinthians/10-4.htm | he shows the spiritual might and authority with which he was armed against all adverse powers; |
/2_corinthians/10-7.htm | assuring those who at his coming he will be found as mighty in word as he is now in writing; |
/2_corinthians/10-12.htm | and encouraging them to reach out themselves beyond their compass. |
/2_corinthians/11-1.htm | Out of his jealousy over the Corinthians, he enters into a forced commendation of himself, |
/2_corinthians/11-5.htm | of his equality with the chief apostles, |
/2_corinthians/11-7.htm | of his preaching the gospel to them freely, and without any charge to them; |
/2_corinthians/11-13.htm | showing that he was not inferior to those deceitful workers in any legal prerogative; |
/2_corinthians/11-23.htm | and in the service of Christ, and in all kinds of sufferings for his ministry, far superior. |
/2_corinthians/12-1.htm | For commending of his apostleship, though he might glory of his wonderful revelations, |
/2_corinthians/12-9.htm | yet he rather chooses to glory of his infirmities; |
/2_corinthians/12-11.htm | blaming the Corinthians for forcing him to this vain boasting. |
/2_corinthians/12-14.htm | He promises to come to them again; but yet altogether in the affection of a father; |
/2_corinthians/12-20.htm | although he fears he shall to his grief find many offenders, and public disorders there. |
/2_corinthians/13-1.htm | Paul threatens severity, and the power of his apostleship, against obstinate sinners. |
/2_corinthians/13-5.htm | And, advising them to a trial of their faith, |
/2_corinthians/13-7.htm | and to a reformation of their sins before his coming, |
/2_corinthians/13-11.htm | he concludes his epistle with a general exhortation and a prayer. |
/galatians/1-1.htm | Paul's greeting to the Galatians; |
/galatians/1-6.htm | He wonders why they have so soon left him and the gospel; |
/galatians/1-8.htm | and accurses those who preach any other gospel than he did. |
/galatians/1-11.htm | He learned the gospel not from men, but from God; |
/galatians/1-14.htm | and shows what he was before his calling; |
/galatians/1-17.htm | and what he did immediately after it. |
/galatians/2-1.htm | He shows when he went up again to Jerusalem, and for what purpose; |
/galatians/2-3.htm | and that Titus was not circumcised; |
/galatians/2-11.htm | and that he resisted Peter, and told him the reason; |
/galatians/2-14.htm | why he and others, being Jews, believe in Christ to be justified by faith, and not by works; |
/galatians/2-20.htm | and that they live not in sin, who are so justified. |
/galatians/3-1.htm | He asks what moved them to leave the faith, and hold onto the law. |
/galatians/3-6.htm | Those who believe are justified, |
/galatians/3-9.htm | and blessed with Abraham. |
/galatians/3-10.htm | And this he shows by many reasons. |
/galatians/3-15.htm | The purpose of the Law |
/galatians/3-26.htm | You are sons of God |
/galatians/4-1.htm | We were under the law till Christ came, as the heir is under the guardian till he be of age. |
/galatians/4-5.htm | But Christ freed us from the law; |
/galatians/4-7.htm | therefore we are servants no longer to it. |
/galatians/4-14.htm | Paul remembers the Galatians' good will to him, and his to them; |
/galatians/4-22.htm | and shows that we are the sons of Abraham by the freewoman. |
/galatians/5-1.htm | He wills them to stand in their liberty, |
/galatians/5-3.htm | and not to observe circumcision; |
/galatians/5-13.htm | but rather love, which is the sum of the law. |
/galatians/5-19.htm | He lists the works of the flesh, |
/galatians/5-22.htm | and the fruits of the Spirit, |
/galatians/5-25.htm | and exhorts to walk in the Spirit. |
/galatians/6-1.htm | He moves them to deal mildly with a brother who has slipped, |
/galatians/6-2.htm | and to bear one another's burden; |
/galatians/6-6.htm | to be generous to their teachers, |
/galatians/6-9.htm | and not weary of well-doing. |
/galatians/6-12.htm | He shows what they intend that preach circumcision. |
/galatians/6-14.htm | He glories in nothing, save in the cross of Christ. |
/ephesians/1-1.htm | After Paul's salutation, |
/ephesians/1-3.htm | and thanksgiving for the Ephesians, |
/ephesians/1-4.htm | he treats of our election, |
/ephesians/1-6.htm | and adoption by grace; |
/ephesians/1-11.htm | which is the true and proper fountain of man's salvation. |
/ephesians/1-13.htm | And because the height of this mystery cannot be easily attained unto, |
/ephesians/1-16.htm | he prays that they may come to the full knowledge and possession thereof in Christ. |
/ephesians/2-1.htm | By comparing what we were by nature, with what we are by grace, |
/ephesians/2-10.htm | he declares that we are made for good works: and being brought near by Christ, |
/ephesians/2-19.htm | should not live as Gentiles and foreigners, but as citizens with the saints, and the family of God. |
/ephesians/3-1.htm | The hidden mystery that the Gentiles should be saved was made known to Paul by revelation; |
/ephesians/3-8.htm | and to him was that grace given, that he should preach it. |
/ephesians/3-13.htm | He desires them not to be discouraged over his tribulation; |
/ephesians/3-14.htm | and prays that they may perceive the great love of Christ toward them. |
/ephesians/4-1.htm | He exhorts to unity; |
/ephesians/4-7.htm | and declares that God therefore gives various gifts unto men; |
/ephesians/4-11.htm | that his church might be edified, |
/ephesians/4-16.htm | and grow up in Christ. |
/ephesians/4-18.htm | He calls them from the impurity of the Gentiles; |
/ephesians/4-24.htm | to put on the new man; |
/ephesians/4-25.htm | to cast off lying; |
/ephesians/4-29.htm | and corrupt communication. |
/ephesians/5-1.htm | After general exhortations to love; |
/ephesians/5-3.htm | to flee sexual immorality; |
/ephesians/5-4.htm | and all uncleanness; |
/ephesians/5-7.htm | not to converse with the wicked; |
/ephesians/5-15.htm | to walk carefully; |
/ephesians/5-18.htm | and to be filled with the Spirit; |
/ephesians/5-22.htm | he descends to the particular duties, how wives ought to obey their husbands; |
/ephesians/5-25.htm | and husbands ought to love their wives, |
/ephesians/5-32.htm | even as Christ does his church. |
/ephesians/6-1.htm | The duty of children toward their parents; |
/ephesians/6-5.htm | of servants toward their masters. |
/ephesians/6-10.htm | Our life is a warfare, not only against flesh and blood, but also spiritual enemies. |
/ephesians/6-13.htm | The complete armor of a Christian; |
/ephesians/6-18.htm | and how it ought to be used. |
/ephesians/6-21.htm | Tychicus is commended. |
/philippians/1-1.htm | Paul testifies his thankfulness to God, and his love toward the Philippians, |
/philippians/1-9.htm | daily praying for their increase in grace; |
/philippians/1-12.htm | he shows what good the faith of Christ had received by his troubles at Rome; |
/philippians/1-21.htm | and how ready he is to glorify Christ either by his life or death; |
/philippians/1-27.htm | exhorting them to unity; |
/philippians/1-28.htm | and to fortitude in persecution. |
/philippians/2-1.htm | Paul exhorts them to unity, and to all humbleness of mind, by the example of Christ's humility; |
/philippians/2-12.htm | to a careful proceeding in the way of salvation, that they be as lights to a wicked world, |
/philippians/2-16.htm | and comforts to him their apostle, who is now ready to be offered up to God. |
/philippians/2-19.htm | He hopes to send Timothy to them, and Epaphroditus also. |
/philippians/3-1.htm | He warns them to beware of the false teachers; |
/philippians/3-4.htm | showing that himself has greater cause than they to trust in the righteousness of the law; |
/philippians/3-7.htm | which he counts as loss, to gain Christ and his righteousness; |
/philippians/3-12.htm | acknowledging his own imperfection and pressing on toward the goal; |
/philippians/3-15.htm | He exhorts them to be thus minded; |
/philippians/3-17.htm | and to imitate him, |
/philippians/3-18.htm | and to decline carnal ways. |
/philippians/4-1.htm | From particular admonitions, |
/philippians/4-4.htm | he proceeds to general exhortations, |
/philippians/4-10.htm | showing how he rejoiced at their generosity toward him while in prison. |
/philippians/4-19.htm | And so he concludes with prayer and salutations. |
/colossians/1-1.htm | After salutation Paul thanks God for the Colossians' faith; |
/colossians/1-7.htm | confirms the doctrine of Epaphras; |
/colossians/1-9.htm | prays further for their increase in grace; |
/colossians/1-14.htm | describes the supremacy of Christ; |
/colossians/1-21.htm | encourages them to receive Jesus Christ, and commends his own ministry. |
/colossians/2-1.htm | Paul still exhorts them to be constant in Christ; |
/colossians/2-8.htm | to beware of philosophy, and vain traditions; |
/colossians/2-18.htm | worshipping of angels; |
/colossians/2-20.htm | and legal ceremonies, which are ended in Christ. |
/colossians/3-1.htm | He shows where we should seek Christ. |
/colossians/3-5.htm | He exhorts to holiness; |
/colossians/3-10.htm | to put off the old self, and put on Christ; |
/colossians/3-12.htm | exhorting to charity, humility, |
/colossians/3-18.htm | and other duties. |
/colossians/4-1.htm | He exhorts them to be fervent in prayer; |
/colossians/4-5.htm | to walk wisely toward those who are not yet come to the true knowledge of Christ. |
/colossians/4-10.htm | He salutes them, and wishes them all prosperity. |
/1_thessalonians/1-1.htm | The Thessalonians are told both how mindful of them Paul was in thanksgiving, and prayer; |
/1_thessalonians/1-5.htm | and also how well he was persuaded of the truth and sincerity of their faith and conversion to God. |
/1_thessalonians/2-1.htm | In what manner the gospel was brought and preached to the Thessalonians. |
/1_thessalonians/2-18.htm | A reason is rendered both why Paul was so long absent from them, and also so desirous to see them. |
/1_thessalonians/3-1.htm | Paul testifies his great love to the Thessalonians, |
/1_thessalonians/3-5.htm | partly by sending Timothy unto them to strengthen and comfort them; |
/1_thessalonians/3-7.htm | partly by rejoicing in their well-doing; |
/1_thessalonians/3-10.htm | and partly by praying for them, and desiring a safe coming unto them. |
/1_thessalonians/4-1.htm | He exhorts them to go forward in all manner of godliness; |
/1_thessalonians/4-6.htm | to live holily and justly; |
/1_thessalonians/4-9.htm | to love one another; |
/1_thessalonians/4-11.htm | and quietly to follow their own business; |
/1_thessalonians/4-13.htm | and last of all, to sorrow moderately for the dead. |
/1_thessalonians/4-17.htm | followed by a brief description of the resurrection, and second coming of Christ to judgment. |
/1_thessalonians/5-1.htm | He proceeds in the description of Christ's coming to judgment; |
/1_thessalonians/5-16.htm | and gives various instructions; |
/1_thessalonians/5-23.htm | and so concludes the epistle. |
/2_thessalonians/1-1.htm | Paul certifies the Thessalonians of the good opinion which he had of their faith, love, and patience; |
/2_thessalonians/1-11.htm | and therewithal uses various reasons for the comforting of them in persecution. |
/2_thessalonians/2-1.htm | Paul urges them to continue stedfast in the truth received; |
/2_thessalonians/2-3.htm | shows that there shall be a departure from the faith, |
/2_thessalonians/2-9.htm | and a discovery of Antichrist, before the day of the Lord comes; |
/2_thessalonians/2-15.htm | repeats his exhortation to stand firm, and prays for them. |
/2_thessalonians/3-1.htm | Paul craves their prayers for himself; |
/2_thessalonians/3-3.htm | testifies what confidence he has in them; |
/2_thessalonians/3-5.htm | makes request to God in their behalf; |
/2_thessalonians/3-6.htm | gives them various precepts, especially to shun idleness, and ill company; |
/2_thessalonians/3-16.htm | and then concludes with prayer and salutation. |
/1_timothy/1-1.htm | Paul declares Timothy is faithful to the charge which was given him at his going to Macedonia. |
/1_timothy/1-5.htm | The right use and end of the law. |
/1_timothy/1-11.htm | Paul's calling to be an apostle; |
/1_timothy/1-20.htm | and the disobedience or Hymenaeus and Alexander. |
/1_timothy/2-1.htm | Instruction to pray and give thanks. |
/1_timothy/2-9.htm | How women should be attired. |
/1_timothy/2-12.htm | They are not permitted to teach. |
/1_timothy/2-15.htm | They shall be saved if they continue in faith. |
/1_timothy/3-1.htm | How bishops, deacons, and their wives should be qualified; |
/1_timothy/3-14.htm | and to what end Paul wrote to Timothy of these things. |
/1_timothy/3-15.htm | Of the church, and the blessed truth therein taught and professed. |
/1_timothy/4-1.htm | He foretells that in the latter times there shall be a departure from the faith. |
/1_timothy/4-6.htm | And to the end that Timothy might not fail in doing his duty, he furnishes him with various precepts. |
/1_timothy/5-1.htm | Rules to be observed in reproving. |
/1_timothy/5-3.htm | Of widows. |
/1_timothy/5-17.htm | Of elders. |
/1_timothy/5-23.htm | A precept for Timothy's health. |
/1_timothy/5-24.htm | Some men's sins go before unto judgment, and some men's follow after. |
/1_timothy/6-1.htm | Of the duty of servants. |
/1_timothy/6-3.htm | Not to have fellowship with newfangled teachers. |
/1_timothy/6-6.htm | Godliness is great gain; |
/1_timothy/6-10.htm | and love of money the root of all evil. |
/1_timothy/6-11.htm | What Timothy is to flee, and what to follow. |
/1_timothy/6-17.htm | and whereof to admonish the rich. |
/1_timothy/6-20.htm | To keep the purity of true doctrine, and to avoid godless ideas. |
/2_timothy/1-1.htm | Paul's love to Timothy, and unfeigned confidence in Timothy himself, his mother, and grandmother. |
/2_timothy/1-6.htm | He is exhorted to stir up the gift of God which was in him; |
/2_timothy/1-8.htm | to be steadfast and patient in persecution; |
/2_timothy/1-13.htm | and to persist in the form and truth of that doctrine which he had learned of him. |
/2_timothy/1-15.htm | Phygellus and Hermogenes, and such like, are noted, and Onesiphorus is highly commended. |
/2_timothy/2-1.htm | Timothy is exhorted again to constancy and perseverance. |
/2_timothy/2-17.htm | Of Hymenaeus and Philetus. |
/2_timothy/2-19.htm | The foundation of the Lord is sure. |
/2_timothy/2-22.htm | He is taught whereof to beware, and what to follow after. |
/2_timothy/3-1.htm | Paul advises Timothy of the difficult times to come; |
/2_timothy/3-6.htm | describes the enemies of the truth; |
/2_timothy/3-10.htm | explains unto him his own example; |
/2_timothy/3-16.htm | and commends the holy Scriptures; |
/2_timothy/4-1.htm | He exhorts him to preach the Word with all care and diligence; |
/2_timothy/4-6.htm | certifies him of the nearness of his death; |
/2_timothy/4-9.htm | wills him to come speedily unto him, and to bring Marcus with him; |
/2_timothy/4-14.htm | warns him to beware of Alexander the metalworker. |
/2_timothy/4-16.htm | informs him what had befallen him at his first answering; |
/2_timothy/4-19.htm | and soon after he concludes. |
/titus/1-1.htm | Paul greets Titus, who was left to finish the work in Crete. |
/titus/1-6.htm | How those chosen as ministers ought to be qualified. |
/titus/1-11.htm | The mouths of evil teachers to be stopped; |
/titus/1-12.htm | and what manner of men they be. |
/titus/2-1.htm | Directions given unto Titus both for his doctrine and life. |
/titus/2-10.htm | Of the duty of servants, and in general of all Christians. |
/titus/3-1.htm | Titus is further directed by Paul concerning the things that he should teach and not teach. |
/titus/3-10.htm | He is to reject obstinate heretics. |
/titus/3-12.htm | Paul appoints him time and place wherein he should come unto him. |
/philemon/1-1.htm | Paul rejoices to hear of the faith and love of Philemon, |
/philemon/1-8.htm | whom he desires to forgive his servant Onesimus, and lovingly to receive him again. |
/hebrews/1-1.htm | Christ in these last times coming to us from the Father, |
/hebrews/1-4.htm | is preferred above the angels, both in person and office. |
/hebrews/2-1.htm | We ought to be obedient to Christ Jesus; |
/hebrews/2-5.htm | and that because he condescended to take our nature upon himself; |
/hebrews/2-14.htm | as it was necessary. |
/hebrews/3-1.htm | Christ is more worthy than Moses; |
/hebrews/3-7.htm | therefore if we believe not in him, we shall be more worthy punishment than hardhearted Israel. |
/hebrews/4-1.htm | The Sabbath-Rest for Christians is attained by faith. |
/hebrews/4-12.htm | The power of God's word. |
/hebrews/4-14.htm | By our high priest Jesus, the Son of God, |
/hebrews/4-16.htm | we may and must go boldly to the throne of grace. |
/hebrews/5-1.htm | The honor of our Savior's priesthood. |
/hebrews/5-11.htm | Negligence in the knowledge thereof is reproved. |
/hebrews/6-1.htm | He exhorts not to fall back from the faith; |
/hebrews/6-11.htm | but to be steadfast, |
/hebrews/6-12.htm | diligent, and patient to wait upon God; |
/hebrews/6-13.htm | because God is most sure in his promise. |
/hebrews/7-1.htm | Christ Jesus is a priest after the order of Melchizedek; |
/hebrews/7-11.htm | and so far more excellent than the priests of Aaron's order. |
/hebrews/8-1.htm | By the eternal priesthood of Christ the Levitical priesthood of Aaron is overshadowed; |
/hebrews/8-7.htm | and replaced by the new covenant of the Gospel. |
/hebrews/9-1.htm | The description of the rites and sacrifices of the law; |
/hebrews/9-11.htm | which are far inferior to the dignity and perfection of the sacrifice of Christ. |
/hebrews/10-1.htm | The weakness of the law sacrifices. |
/hebrews/10-10.htm | The sacrifice of Christ's body once offered, |
/hebrews/10-14.htm | for ever has taken away sins. |
/hebrews/10-19.htm | An exhortation to hold fast the faith with patience and thanksgiving. |
/hebrews/11-1.htm | What faith is. |
/hebrews/11-6.htm | Without faith we cannot please God. |
/hebrews/11-7.htm | The examples of faithfulness in the fathers of old time. |
/hebrews/12-1.htm | An exhortation to constant faith, patience, and godliness by Christ's example |
/hebrews/12-22.htm | A commendation of the new covenant. |
/hebrews/13-1.htm | Various admonitions as to love; |
/hebrews/13-4.htm | to honest life; |
/hebrews/13-5.htm | to avoid covetousness; |
/hebrews/13-7.htm | to regard God's preachers; |
/hebrews/13-9.htm | to take heed of strange doctrines; |
/hebrews/13-10.htm | to confess Christ; |
/hebrews/13-16.htm | to give alms; |
/hebrews/13-17.htm | to obey governors; |
/hebrews/13-18.htm | to pray for the apostles. |
/hebrews/13-20.htm | The conclusion. |
/james/1-1.htm | James greets the twelve tribes among the nations; |
/james/1-2.htm | exhorts to rejoice in trials and temptations; |
/james/1-5.htm | to ask patience of God; |
/james/1-13.htm | and in our trials not to impute our weakness, or sins, to him, |
/james/1-19.htm | but rather to hearken to the word, to meditate on it, and to do thereafter. |
/james/1-26.htm | Otherwise men may seem, but never be, truly religious. |
/james/2-1.htm | Do not regard the rich and despise the poor brothers; |
/james/2-13.htm | rather we are to be loving and merciful; |
/james/2-14.htm | and not to boast of faith without deeds; |
/james/2-17.htm | because faith without deeds is useless; |
/james/2-19.htm | as is the faith of the demons; |
/james/2-21.htm | however, Abraham displayed both faith and actions; |
/james/2-25.htm | as did Rahab. |
/james/3-1.htm | We are not rashly or arrogantly to reprove others; |
/james/3-5.htm | but rather to bridle the tongue, a little member, |
/james/3-9.htm | but a powerful instrument of much good, and great harm. |
/james/3-13.htm | The truly wise are mild and peaceable, without envy and strife. |
/james/4-1.htm | We are to strive against covetousness; |
/james/4-4.htm | intemperance; |
/james/4-5.htm | pride; |
/james/4-11.htm | detraction and rash judgment of others; |
/james/4-13.htm | and not to be boastful of our future plans. |
/james/5-1.htm | Rich oppressors are to fear God's vengeance. |
/james/5-7.htm | We ought to be patient in afflictions, after the example of the prophets, and Job; |
/james/5-12.htm | to forbear swearing; |
/james/5-13.htm | to pray in adversity, to sing in prosperity; |
/james/5-14.htm | to acknowledge mutually our several faults, to pray one for another; |
/james/5-19.htm | and to correct a straying brother. |
/1_peter/1-1.htm | Peter praises God for his manifold spiritual graces; |
/1_peter/1-10.htm | showing that the salvation in Christ the fulfillment of prophesy; |
/1_peter/1-13.htm | and exhorts them accordingly to be holy. |
/1_peter/2-1.htm | He exhorts to put away wickedness; |
/1_peter/2-4.htm | showing that Christ is the foundation whereupon they are built. |
/1_peter/2-11.htm | He beseeches them also to abstain from sinful desires; |
/1_peter/2-13.htm | to be obedient to authorities; |
/1_peter/2-18.htm | and teaches servants how to obey their masters; |
/1_peter/2-20.htm | patiently suffering for well doing, after the example of Christ. |
/1_peter/3-1.htm | He teaches the duty of wives and husbands to each other; |
/1_peter/3-8.htm | exhorting all men to unity and love; |
/1_peter/3-14.htm | and to suffer persecution. |
/1_peter/3-19.htm | He declares also the benefits of Christ toward the old world. |
/1_peter/4-1.htm | He exhorts them to cease from sin and live fore God, |
/1_peter/4-12.htm | and comforts them against persecution. |
/1_peter/5-1.htm | He exhorts the elders to feed their flocks; |
/1_peter/5-5.htm | the younger to obey; |
/1_peter/5-8.htm | and all to be sober, watchful, and constant in the faith; |
/1_peter/5-9.htm | and to resist the cruel adversary the devil. |
/2_peter/1-1.htm | Peter confirms the hope of the increase of God's grace, |
/2_peter/1-5.htm | exhorts them, by faith, and good works, to make their calling sure; |
/2_peter/1-12.htm | whereof he is careful to remind them, knowing that his death is at hand; |
/2_peter/1-16.htm | and assures them of the authenticity of the Gospel, by the eyewitness of the apostles and the prophets. |
/2_peter/2-1.htm | Peter warns of false teachers, showing the impiety and punishment both of them and their followers; |
/2_peter/2-7.htm | from which the godly shall be delivered, as Lot was out of Sodom; |
/2_peter/2-10.htm | and more fully describes the manners of those profane and blasphemous seducers. |
/2_peter/3-1.htm | He assures them of the certainty of Christ's coming to judgment; |
/2_peter/3-8.htm | warning the godly, for the long patience of God, to hasten their repentance. |
/2_peter/3-10.htm | He describes also the manner how the world shall be destroyed; |
/2_peter/3-11.htm | exhorting them to all holiness of life; |
/2_peter/3-16.htm | and again to think the patience of God to tend to their salvation, as Paul wrote to them in his epistles. |
/1_john/1-1.htm | He describes the person of Christ, in whom we have eternal life, by a communion with God; |
/1_john/1-5.htm | to which we must adjoin by walking in the light. |
/1_john/2-1.htm | He comforts them against the sins of infirmity. |
/1_john/2-3.htm | Rightly to know God is to keep his commandments; |
/1_john/2-9.htm | to love our brothers; |
/1_john/2-15.htm | and not to love the world. |
/1_john/2-18.htm | We must beware of antichrists; |
/1_john/2-20.htm | from whose deceits the godly are safe, preserved by perseverance in faith, and holiness of life. |
/1_john/3-1.htm | He declares the singular love of God toward us, in making us his sons; |
/1_john/3-3.htm | who therefore ought obediently to keep his commandments; |
/1_john/3-11.htm | as also to love one another as brothers. |
/1_john/4-1.htm | He warns them not to believe all who boast of the Spirit; |
/1_john/4-7.htm | and exhorts to brotherly love. |
/1_john/5-1.htm | He who loves God loves his children, and keeps his commandments; |
/1_john/5-3.htm | which to the faithful are not grievous. |
/1_john/5-9.htm | Jesus is the Son of God; |
/1_john/5-14.htm | and able to hear our prayers. |
/2_john/1-1.htm | He exhorts a certain honorable matron, with her children, to persevere in Christian love and belief, |
/2_john/1-8.htm | lest they lose the reward of their former profession; |
/2_john/1-10.htm | and to have nothing to do with those seducers that bring not the true doctrine of Christ Jesus. |
/3_john/1-1.htm | He commends Gaius for his piety, |
/3_john/1-5.htm | and hospitality, |
/3_john/1-7.htm | to true preachers; |
/3_john/1-9.htm | complaining of the unkind dealing of ambitious Diotrephes on the contrary side; |
/3_john/1-11.htm | whose evil example is not to be followed; |
/3_john/1-12.htm | and gives special testimony to the good report of Demetrius. |
/jude/1-1.htm | He exhorts them to be constant in the profession of the faith. |
/jude/1-4.htm | false teachers crept in to seduce them, for whose evil doctrine a horrible punishment is prepared; |
/jude/1-20.htm | whereas the godly may persevere, grow in grace, and keep the faith. |
/revelation/1-1.htm | The preface. |
/revelation/1-4.htm | John's salutation to the seven churches of Asia. |
/revelation/1-7.htm | The coming of Christ. |
/revelation/1-8.htm | His glorious power and majesty. |
/revelation/2-1.htm | What is commanded to be written to the angels, that is, the ministers of the churches of Ephesus, |
/revelation/2-8.htm | Smyrna, |
/revelation/2-12.htm | Pergamos, |
/revelation/2-18.htm | Thyatira, and what is commended and lacking in them. |
/revelation/3-1.htm | The angel of the church of Sardis is reproved and exhorted to repent. |
/revelation/3-7.htm | The angel of the church of Philadelphia is approved for his diligence and patience; |
/revelation/3-14.htm | the angel of Laodicea rebuked for being neither hot nor cold. |
/revelation/3-20.htm | Christ stands at the door and knocks. |
/revelation/4-1.htm | John sees the throne of God in heaven. |
/revelation/4-4.htm | The twenty-four elders. |
/revelation/4-6.htm | The four beasts full of eyes before and behind. |
/revelation/4-10.htm | The elders lay down their crowns, and worship him who sat on the throne. |
/revelation/5-1.htm | The book sealed with seven seals, |
/revelation/5-9.htm | which only the Lamb that was slain is worthy to open. |
/revelation/5-12.htm | Therefore the elders praise him, and confess that he redeemed them with his blood. |
/revelation/6-1.htm | The First Seal: Rider on White Horse |
/revelation/6-3.htm | The Second Seal: War |
/revelation/6-5.htm | The Third Seal: Famine |
/revelation/6-7.htm | The Fourth Seal: Death |
/revelation/6-9.htm | The Fifth Seal: Martyrs |
/revelation/6-12.htm | The Sixth Seal: Terror |
/revelation/7-1.htm | An angel seals the servants of God in their foreheads. |
/revelation/7-4.htm | The number of those who were sealed of the tribes of Israel: 144,000. |
/revelation/7-9.htm | Of all the other nations an innumerable multitude, which stand before the throne. |
/revelation/7-14.htm | Their robes were washed in the blood of the Lamb. |
/revelation/8-1.htm | At the opening of the seventh seal, |
/revelation/8-2.htm | Seven angels have seven trumpets given them. |
/revelation/8-6.htm | Four of them sound their trumpets and great plagues follow. |
/revelation/8-9.htm | Another angel puts incense to the prayers of the saints on the golden altar. |
/revelation/9-1.htm | At the sounding of the fifth angel, a star falls from heaven, to whom is given the key to the bottomless pit. |
/revelation/9-2.htm | He opens the pit, and there come forth locusts like scorpions. |
/revelation/9-12.htm | The first woe past. |
/revelation/9-13.htm | The sixth trumpet sounds. |
/revelation/9-14.htm | Four angels who were bound are let loose. |
/revelation/10-1.htm | A mighty strong angel appears with a book open in his hand. |
/revelation/10-6.htm | He swears by him who lives forever, that there shall be no more time. |
/revelation/10-9.htm | John is commanded to take and eat the book. |
/revelation/11-1.htm | The two witnesses prophesy. |
/revelation/11-6.htm | They have power to shut heaven so that it rain not. |
/revelation/11-7.htm | The beast shall fight against them, and kill them. |
/revelation/11-8.htm | They lie unburied; |
/revelation/11-11.htm | and after three and a half days rise again. |
/revelation/11-14.htm | The second woe is past. |
/revelation/11-15.htm | The seventh trumpet sounds. |
/revelation/12-1.htm | A woman clothed with the sun travails. |
/revelation/12-4.htm | The great red dragon stands before her, ready to devour her child; |
/revelation/12-6.htm | when she is delivered she flees into the desert. |
/revelation/12-7.htm | Michael and his angels fight with the dragon, and prevail. |
/revelation/12-13.htm | The dragon, being cast down into the earth, persecutes the woman. |
/revelation/13-1.htm | A beast rises out of the sea with seven heads and ten horns, to whom the dragon gives his power. |
/revelation/13-11.htm | Another beast comes out of the earth, |
/revelation/13-14.htm | causes an image to be made of the former beast, |
/revelation/13-15.htm | and that men should worship it, |
/revelation/13-16.htm | and receive his mark. |
/revelation/14-1.htm | The Lamb standing on Mount Zion with his company. |
/revelation/14-6.htm | An angel preaches the gospel. |
/revelation/14-8.htm | The fall of Babylon. |
/revelation/14-15.htm | The harvest of the world. |
/revelation/14-20.htm | The winepress of the wrath of God. |
/revelation/15-1.htm | The seven angels with the seven last plagues. |
/revelation/15-3.htm | The song of those who overcame the beast. |
/revelation/15-7.htm | The seven bowls full of the wrath of God. |
/revelation/16-1.htm | The angels pour out their bowls of wrath. |
/revelation/16-6.htm | The plagues that follow. |
/revelation/16-16.htm | Armageddon. |
/revelation/17-1.htm | A woman arrayed in purple and scarlet, with a golden cup in her hand sits upon the beast; |
/revelation/17-5.htm | which is great Babylon, the mother of all abominations. |
/revelation/17-9.htm | The interpretation of the seven heads; |
/revelation/17-12.htm | and the ten horns. |
/revelation/17-14.htm | The victory of the Lamb. |
/revelation/17-16.htm | The punishment of the harlot. |
/revelation/18-1.htm | Babylon is fallen. |
/revelation/18-4.htm | People commanded to depart out of her. |
/revelation/18-9.htm | The kings of the earth, with the merchants and mariners, lament over her. |
/revelation/18-20.htm | The saints rejoice for the judgments of God upon her. |
/revelation/19-1.htm | God is praised in heaven for judging the great harlot, and avenging the blood of his saints. |
/revelation/19-7.htm | The marriage of the Lamb. |
/revelation/19-10.htm | The angel will not be worshipped. |
/revelation/19-17.htm | The birds called to the great slaughter. |
/revelation/20-1.htm | Satan bound for a thousand years. |
/revelation/20-6.htm | The first resurrection; |
/revelation/20-7.htm | Satan let loose again. |
/revelation/20-8.htm | Gog and Magog. |
/revelation/20-10.htm | The demons cast into the lake of fire and brimstone. |
/revelation/20-11.htm | The last and general resurrection. |
/revelation/21-1.htm | A new heaven and a new earth. |
/revelation/21-10.htm | The heavenly Jerusalem, with a full description thereof. |
/revelation/21-23.htm | She needs no sun, the glory of God being her light. |
/revelation/21-24.htm | The kings of the earth bring their riches unto her. |
/revelation/22-1.htm | The river of the water of life. |
/revelation/22-2.htm | The tree of life. |
/revelation/22-5.htm | The light of the city of God is himself. |
/revelation/22-7.htm | Jesus Is Coming. |
/revelation/22-9.htm | The angel will not be worshipped. |
/revelation/22-18.htm | Nothing may be added to the word of God, nor taken away. |
/interlinear/ | Interlinear Bible |
/commentaries/ | Bible Commentaries |
/lexicon/ | Bible Lexicon |
/topical/ | Topical Bible |
/summary/ | Bible Summary |
/outline/ | Bible Outline |
/timeline/ | Bible Timeline |
/childrens/ | Children's Bible |
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