Search for: ${reference}
40001 A Greek Falsehood, p. 9.1 (Uriah Smith)
… texts, refers to the margin where he says, “Supply hemera [day].” So in all these passages we have “first day’ as a fixed fact; but first day of what?
40002 A Greek Falsehood, p. 9.3 (Uriah Smith)
… “week,” referring to the whole seven days? and can it mean so here? If it can, then all difficulty is removed, the Greek which Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, and Paul have …
40003 A Greek Falsehood, p. 12.7 (Uriah Smith)
“A week (from Sabbath to Sabbath) sabbata .” He then refers to Matthew 28:1; Mark 16:1; Luke 24:1; John 20:1, 19; Acts 20:7; 1 Corinthians 16:2. Again he says:—
40004 A Greek Falsehood, p. 12.8 (Uriah Smith)
“A week (from Sabbath to Sabbath) sabbaton ,” and then refers to Mark 16:9 and Luke 18:12 .
40005 A Greek Falsehood, p. 20.1 (Uriah Smith)
… passages referred to in the New Testament, but in an entirely different declaration. When any one speaks of “the day of the Sabbath,” every one understands it …
40006 A Greek Falsehood, p. 23.4 (Uriah Smith)
25. The first day of the week is mentioned eight times only in the New Testament. How many times does it refer to a single day, the day of the resurrection of Christ? — Six times.
40007 A Greek Falsehood, p. 27.7 (Uriah Smith)
… considerable reference to a sort of consecration of the day, it does not seem at any period of the Church (ancient) to have assumed the form of such an observance …
40008 Here and Hereafter, p. 15.2 (Uriah Smith)
… in reference to which it cannot be that the word of God will leave us in darkness, or perplex us with doubt, or deceive us with falsehood.
40009 Here and Hereafter, p. 18.1 (Uriah Smith)
… in reference to man, and all that was imparted to him, to make him the being that he was. And was not this sufficient? O, no! exclaims the theologian; this was not enough …
40010 Here and Hereafter, p. 19.1 (Uriah Smith)
… whom reference is made, openly confess it. What is matter? and what is spirit? Those who presume the heaviest on the contrast between matter and spirit, acknowledge …
40011 Here and Hereafter, p. 20.5 (Uriah Smith)
But notwithstanding such acknowledgments as these, we find Mr. Clark arguing as follows, in reference to mind and matter:—
40012 Here and Hereafter, p. 24.3 (Uriah Smith)
… questions referring to matter alone. In sight of the writer, as these lines are being penned, a dog is attempting to drive a hog from a neighboring field. The …
40013 Here and Hereafter, p. 31.1 (Uriah Smith)
… , must refer solely to the attribute of immortality. There is no room for any other conclusion than that just as a son is, in outward appearance, the image of his …
40014 Here and Hereafter, p. 32.1 (Uriah Smith)
… here refers only to the inward nature, instead of the outward from, it must still ever be borne in mind that the point which popular theology has to prove is …
40015 Here and Hereafter, p. 32.3 (Uriah Smith)
… , 27 refers to immortality, and may not be confined to man’s outward form and moral nature.
40016 Here and Hereafter, p. 32.4 (Uriah Smith)
… , therefore, refer to the image stamped upon man at his creation, unless it be admitted that that image, with all its included qualities, has been lost by the human …
40017 Here and Hereafter, p. 33.2 (Uriah Smith)
… the reference in all such passages is not only to “the human face divine,” but to the whole physical frame, with its mental and moral capabilities, which, in comparison …
40018 Here and Hereafter, p. 45.3 (Uriah Smith)
… Paul refers directly to the facts recorded in Genesis 2:7. In verse 47 he tells us the nature of this man that was made a living soul: “The first man is of the earth …
40019 Here and Hereafter, p. 47.2 (Uriah Smith)
… occasionally refer to its positions.
40020 Here and Hereafter, p. 50.1 (Uriah Smith)
… , in reference to all the others.