Search for: STORMS
3661 Matthew Henry's Complete Bible Commentary, p. 1036.9 (Matthew Henry)
… this storm. For a good man, for such good men as the apostles were, some would even dare to die. (4.) They accused them to the rulers, and represented them a dangerous …
3662 Matthew Henry's Complete Bible Commentary, p. 1036.13 (Matthew Henry)
… the storm rose they withdrew, taking this as an indication to them that they must quit that place for the present. That command of Christ to his disciples, When …
3663 Matthew Henry's Complete Bible Commentary, p. 1037.24 (Matthew Henry)
… the storm arose, but not from Corinth, because there it had no sooner risen than it fell again. Some tell us that Gallio did privately countenance Paul, and took …
3664 Matthew Henry's Complete Bible Commentary, p. 1038.48 (Matthew Henry)
… the storm than that he should venture into it, Acts 19:31. They were certain of the chief of Asia, the princes of Asia — Asiarchai. The critics tell us they were the …
3665 Matthew Henry's Complete Bible Commentary, p. 1039.3 (Matthew Henry)
… a storm. Yet some think that before he now left Ephesus he wrote the first epistle to the Corinthians, and that his fighting with beasts at Ephesus, which he …
3666 Matthew Henry's Complete Bible Commentary, p. 1039.27 (Matthew Henry)
… a storm before him; for the prophets in every city he passed through told him, by the Holy Ghost, that bonds and afflictions awaited him. Besides the common notice …
3667 Matthew Henry's Complete Bible Commentary, p. 1039.29 (Matthew Henry)
… the storm rise, but went on resolutely, preaching there, where he knew how dearly it would cost him. [2.] They did not deprive him of his comfort, nor make him drive …
3668 Matthew Henry's Complete Bible Commentary, p. 1046.1 (Matthew Henry)
… a storm coming, but could not prevail with them to lie by, Acts 27:9-27:11. III. As they pursued their voyage, they met with a great deal of tempestuous weather, which …
3669 Matthew Henry's Complete Bible Commentary, p. 1046.7 (Matthew Henry)
… what storms they may yet meet with, and therefore must not be secure, nor take it for granted that they have obtained their purpose, when so many accidents may …
3670 Matthew Henry's Complete Bible Commentary, p. 1046.8 (Matthew Henry)
… a storm presently, a dreadful storm. They looked at second causes, and took their measures from the favourable hints they gave, and imagined that because the …
3671 Matthew Henry's Complete Bible Commentary, p. 1046.9 (Matthew Henry)
… a storm would endanger them rather than to them any service, and so let the ship drive, Not whither it would, but whither it was impelled by the impetuous waves …
3672 Matthew Henry's Complete Bible Commentary, p. 1046.10 (Matthew Henry)
… a storm; but what heavy artillery they had then which it was necessary to lighten the ship of I do not know; and I question whether it was not then a vulgar error …
3673 Matthew Henry's Complete Bible Commentary, p. 1046.11 (Matthew Henry)
… . The storm continued, and they saw no symptoms of its abatement; we have known very blustering weather to continue for some weeks. The means they had used were …
3674 Matthew Henry's Complete Bible Commentary, p. 1046.12 (Matthew Henry)
… a storm was not gone out of fashion and made a jest of. However, Paul among these seamen was not, like Jonah among his, the cause of the storm, but the comforter in …
3675 Matthew Henry's Complete Bible Commentary, p. 1046.18 (Matthew Henry)
… . No storms nor tempests can hinder the communications of God’s favour to his people, for he is a very present help, a help at hand, even when the sea roars and is …
3676 Matthew Henry's Complete Bible Commentary, p. 1046.19 (Matthew Henry)
… a storm; for the Lord of hosts is with them, and their place of defence shall be the munitions of rocks, Isaiah 33:14-33:16. [2.] He is assured that for his part he shall …
3677 Matthew Henry's Complete Bible Commentary, p. 1046.22 (Matthew Henry)
… the storm, continually expecting death: The fourteenth night, and not sooner, they came near land; they were that night driven up and down in Adria, not in the …
3678 Matthew Henry's Complete Bible Commentary, p. 1046.23 (Matthew Henry)
… a storm, and, in the distress of the ship, then is the proper time for him to exert himself. Now the greatest difficulty of all was before them, and therefore the …
3679 Matthew Henry's Complete Bible Commentary, p. 1046.25 (Matthew Henry)
… the storm for the greater steadiness of the ship, but, now that they were putting into the port, were loosed, that the pilot might steer with the greater freedom …
3680 Matthew Henry's Complete Bible Commentary, p. 1046.27 (Matthew Henry)
… , the storm turned into a calm. They were rescued from the dreaded sea, and brought to the desired haven. O that men would praise the Lord for his goodness! Psalms …