Search for: running
8381 Matthew Henry’s Complete Bible Commentary, p. 647.8 (Matthew Henry)
… to run to waste. 2. Idleness is no better. He that is remiss in his work, whose hands hang down (so the word signifies), that stands, as we may, with his thumbs in his mouth …
8382 Matthew Henry’s Complete Bible Commentary, p. 647.9 (Matthew Henry)
… him, run into it, as their city of refuge. Having made sure their interest in God’s name, they take the comfort and benefit of it; they go out of themselves, retire …
8383 Matthew Henry’s Complete Bible Commentary, p. 648.3 (Matthew Henry)
… , and run themselves a-ground, and embarrass themselves: The foolishness of man perverts his way. Men meet with crosses and disappointments in their affairs …
8384 Matthew Henry’s Complete Bible Commentary, p. 648.6 (Matthew Henry)
… that run away from their masters; and how do I know but that David may be one of them?” Let poor people therefore make God their friend, pursue him with their prayers …
8385 Matthew Henry’s Complete Bible Commentary, p. 648.10 (Matthew Henry)
… of running into any indecencies. Plato said to his servant, “I would beat thee, but that I am angry.” Give it time, and it will cool. 2. Not to be over-critical in his resentments …
8386 Matthew Henry’s Complete Bible Commentary, p. 649.14 (Matthew Henry)
… and run down that which yet they know to be of value; they cry, “ It is naught, it is naught; it has this and the other fault, or perhaps may have; it is not good of the sort …
8387 Matthew Henry’s Complete Bible Commentary, p. 650.23 (Matthew Henry)
… tongue runs men into. Keep thy heart, and that will keep thy tongue from sin; keep thy tongue, and that will keep thy heart from trouble.
8388 Matthew Henry’s Complete Bible Commentary, p. 651.21 (Matthew Henry)
… that runs may read,— made known this day more fully than ever before, in this day of light and knowledge,— made known in this thy day. But it is only a little while …
8389 Matthew Henry’s Complete Bible Commentary, p. 651.27 (Matthew Henry)
… be run down and trampled upon. If men will not appear for them, God will. 2. The oppressors will find him a just avenger. He will make reprisals upon them, will spoil …
8390 Matthew Henry’s Complete Bible Commentary, p. 653.6 (Matthew Henry)
… which runs first from the honey-comb. Canaan was said to flow with milk and honey, and honey was the common food of the country ( Luke 24:41, 24:42 ), even for children …
8391 Matthew Henry’s Complete Bible Commentary, p. 654.7 (Matthew Henry)
… , that runs well, is well-circumstanced, in proper time and place—instruction, advice, or comfort, given seasonably, and in apt expressions, adapted to the case …
8392 Matthew Henry’s Complete Bible Commentary, p. 654.20 (Matthew Henry)
… , and run down, and trampled upon, by the violence or subtlety of evil men, to be displaced and thrust into obscurity, this is the troubling of the fountains of …
8393 Matthew Henry’s Complete Bible Commentary, p. 656.2 (Matthew Henry)
… to run him down that cries himself up. There may be a just occasion for us to vindicate ourselves, but it does not become us to applaud ourselves. Proprio laus …
8394 Matthew Henry’s Complete Bible Commentary, p. 657.29 (Matthew Henry)
… them) running into debt and leaving them to pay it. Now, 1. This is commonly made light of by untoward children; they say, “ It is no transgression, for it will be our …
8395 Matthew Henry’s Complete Bible Commentary, p. 657.33 (Matthew Henry)
… and run down. When power is put into the hands of the wicked, men hide themselves; wise men retire into privacy, and decline public business, not caring to be employed …
8396 Matthew Henry’s Complete Bible Commentary, p. 658.8 (Matthew Henry)
… and run them into confusion. Those are scornful men that mock at religion, the obligations of conscience, the fears of another world, and every thing that is …
8397 Matthew Henry’s Complete Bible Commentary, p. 659.6 (Matthew Henry)
… shall run ourselves into endless mistakes: “Thou wilt be found a liar, a corrupter of the word of truth, a broacher of heresies, and guilty of the worst of forgeries …
8398 Matthew Henry’s Complete Bible Commentary, p. 659.23 (Matthew Henry)
… for running; or (as the margin reads it) a horse, which ought not to be omitted among the creatures that are comely in going, for so he is, especially when he is dressed …
8399 Matthew Henry’s Complete Bible Commentary, p. 660.12 (Matthew Henry)
… , or run into debt, to do it, but she does it with what she can spare out of the gains of her own housewifery. Men should not lay out any thing upon superfluities, till …
8400 Matthew Henry’s Complete Bible Commentary, p. 661.12 (Matthew Henry)
… that run into it; it is still as it was, a troubled sea that cannot rest. 6. That all things continue as they were from the beginning of the creation, 2 Peter 3:4. The …