@ ENGLISH: TITLE: Robertson Word Pictures NT DESCRIPTION: WORD PICTURES IN THE NEW TESTAMENT BY ARCHIBALD THOMAS ROBERTSON A.M., D.D., LL.D., Litt.D. PROFESSOR OF NEW TESTAMENT INTERPRETATION IN THE SOUTHERN BAPTIST THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY OF LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY VOLUME I THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO MATTHEW THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO MARK | VOLUME II | THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO LUKE | | VOLUME III | THE ACTS OF THE APOSTLES | | VOLUME IV | THE EPISTLES OF PAUL | | VOLUME V (c) 1932 (through 2006) | THE FOURTH GOSPEL | THE EPISTLE TO THE HEBREWS | | VOLUME VI (c) 1933 (through 2007) | THE GENERAL EPISTLES | THE REVELATION OF JOHN BAKERBOOK HOUSE Grand Rapids, Michigan 49516 Volumes 1-4 (c) 1930 [expired and now Public Domain] by Sunday School Board of the Southern Baptist Convention Six-volume Set ISBN: 0-8010-7710-9 Printed in the United States of America Volumes 5 (c) 1932 Renewal 1960 Broadman Press. All rights reserved. Used by permission. [expires and becomes Public Domain Dec 31, 2006]. Volumes 6 (c) 1933 Renewal 1960 Broadman Press. All rights reserved. Used by permission. [expires and becomes Public Domain Dec 31, 2007].
From index@ENDTIMEPROPHECY.txt@
kjv@Revelation:5:1
Book sealed with - SEVEN SEALS
From index@ENDTIMEPROPHECY.txt@
kjv@Revelation:5:5
Book sealed with opened - SEVEN SEALS
From index@MCGEECOMMENTARYAUDIO.txt@
extra:McGeePsalms Mcgee 19001 Psalm IntroBook I
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extra:McGeePsalms Mcgee 19105 Psalm IntroBook II
From index@MCGEECOMMENTARYAUDIO.txt@
extra:McGeeMatthew Mcgee 40004 Intro - A KeyBook
From index@MCGEECOMMENTARYAUDIO.txt@
extra:McGeeRevelation Mcgee 66002 Revelation - Not a DifficultBook
From index@INDEXEASTON.txt@
dict:easton Book Book
From index@INDEXEASTON.txt@
dict:easton Chronicles, Books of Chronicles, Books of
From index@INDEXEASTON.txt@
dict:easton Daniel, Book of Daniel, Book of
From index@INDEXEASTON.txt@
dict:easton Esther, Book of Esther, Book of
From index@INDEXEASTON.txt@
dict:easton Exodus, Book of Exodus, Book of
From index@INDEXEASTON.txt@
dict:easton Ezekiel, Book of Ezekiel, Book of
From index@INDEXEASTON.txt@
dict:easton Ezra, Book of Ezra, Book of
From index@INDEXEASTON.txt@
dict:easton Haggai, Book of Haggai, Book of
From index@INDEXEASTON.txt@
dict:easton Isaiah, The Book of Isaiah, The Book of
From index@INDEXEASTON.txt@
dict:easton Jeremiah, Book of Jeremiah, Book of
From index@INDEXEASTON.txt@
dict:easton Job, Book of Job, Book of
From index@INDEXEASTON.txt@
dict:easton Joel, Book of Joel, Book of
From index@INDEXEASTON.txt@
dict:easton Jonah, Book of Jonah, Book of
From index@INDEXEASTON.txt@
dict:easton Joshua, The Book of Joshua, The Book of
From index@INDEXEASTON.txt@
dict:easton Judges, Book of Judges, Book of
From index@INDEXEASTON.txt@
dict:easton Kings, The Books of Kings, The Books of
From index@INDEXEASTON.txt@
dict:easton Lamentations, Book of Lamentations, Book of
From index@INDEXEASTON.txt@
dict:easton Maccabees, Books of the Maccabees, Books of the
From index@INDEXEASTON.txt@
dict:easton Micah, Book of Micah, Book of
From index@INDEXEASTON.txt@
dict:easton Nahum, Book of Nahum, Book of
From index@INDEXEASTON.txt@
dict:easton Nehemiah, Book of Nehemiah, Book of
From index@INDEXEASTON.txt@
dict:easton Numbers, Book of Numbers, Book of
From index@INDEXEASTON.txt@
dict:easton Obadiah, Book of Obadiah, Book of
From index@INDEXEASTON.txt@
dict:easton Proverbs, Book of Proverbs, Book of
From index@INDEXEASTON.txt@
dict:easton Revelation, Book of Revelation, Book of
From index@INDEXEASTON.txt@
dict:easton Ruth The Book of Ruth The Book of
From index@INDEXEASTON.txt@
dict:easton Samuel, Books of Samuel, Books of
From index@INDEXEASTON.txt@
dict:easton Wars of the Lord, The Book of the Wars of the Lord, The Book of the
From index@DAILYLIGHT.txt@
FEBRUARY11 AM They that feared the Lord spake often one to another: and the Lord harkened, and heard it, and abook of remembrance was written before him for them that feared the Lord, and that thought upon his name.-kjv@Malachi:3:16 kjv@Luke:24:15. kjv@Matthew:18:20. kjv@Philippians:4:3 kjv@Colossians:3:16. kjv@Hebrews:3:13 kjv@Matthew:12:36-37. kjv@Isaiah:65:6.
From index@DAILYLIGHT.txt@
JULY13 PM Seek ye out of thebook of the Lord.-kjv@Isaiah:34:16 kjv@Deuteronomy:11:18. kjv@Joshua:1:8 kjv@Psalms:37:31. kjv@Psalms:17:4. kjv@Psalms:119:11. kjv@2Peter:1:19. kjv@Romans:15:4.
From index@BIBLEBYSTORYLINE.txt@
kjv@2Kings:22
TheBook of the Law Found - StorylinesOT
From index@BIBLEBYSTORYLINE.txt@
kjv@2Chronicles:34:14-33
TheBook of the Law Found - StorylinesOT
From index@BIBLEBYSTORYLINE.txt@
kjv@Psalms:1-41
Book I - StorylinesOT
From index@BIBLEBYSTORYLINE.txt@
kjv@Psalms:42-72
Book II - StorylinesOT
From index@BIBLEBYSTORYLINE.txt@
kjv@Psalms:73-89
Book III- StorylinesOT
From index@BIBLEBYSTORYLINE.txt@
kjv@Psalms:90-106
Book IV - StorylinesOT
From index@BIBLEBYSTORYLINE.txt@
kjv@Psalms:107-150
Book V - StorylinesOT
From index@WEBLINKS.txt@
http://www.sermonindex.net Sermon Index Net AUDIOBOOK
From index@WEBLINKS.txt@
http://www.freechristianaudiobooks.com Free Christian Audio Books AUDIOBOOK
From index@WEBLINKS.txt@
http://playmp3.sa-media.com/media/1130182829/1130182829.mp3 FoxesBook of Martyrs at Playmp3 AUDIOBOOK - FOXE
From index@WEBLINKS.txt@
http://www.fordham.edu/Halsall/ancient/asbookfull.asp Internet Ancient History Sourcebook at Fordham BIBLE RESEARCH - DIRECTORY
From index@WEBLINKS.txt@
http://commons.ptsem.edu/ Princeton Theologic Seminary (online texts)- BIBLE RESEARCH - DIRECTORY -EBOOK
From index@WEBLINKS.txt@
http://www.ccel.org Christian Classics Etherial Library - EBOOK
From index@WEBLINKS.txt@
http://www.ntslibrary.com/Christian-PDF-Books.htm NTS Library Northwestern Theological Seminary - EBOOK
From index@WEBLINKS.txt@
http://www.religion-online.org/ Religion Online Articles and Books - EBOOK
From index@WEBLINKS.txt@
http://www.ulib.org/cgi-bin/udlcgi/ULIBSimpleSearch.cgi?listStart=0&url=online&title1=christian&search=Title+Search Universal Digital Library - EBOOK
From index@WEBLINKS.txt@
http://book.google.com Google Books - EBOOK
From index@WEBLINKS.txt@
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=2208949306 Largest Christian Facebook Group Ever
From index@WEBLINKS.txt@
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=6725785484 Not Just Another Facebook Group
From index@WEBLINKS.txt@
http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=13679025366 Christian Bloggers Network
From index@WEBLINKS.txt@
http://christianmusic.org/cmp/facebookgroups.htm Christian Music Place -
From index@WEBLINKS.txt@
http://www.positivechristianwoman.com/facebook.html Facebook Groups for Christian Women -
From index@BIBLEBOOKSUMMARY.txt@
kjv@Genesis:1
GENESIS - The word "genesis" signifies "generation" or "origin" and comes from the Greek translation of Genesis:2:4. It is an appropriate title for the firstbook of the Bible, which contains the record of the origin of the universe, the human race, family life, nations, sin redemption, etc. The first 11 chapters, which deal with primeval or pre-Patriarchal times, present the antecedents of Hebrew history from Adam to Abraham. The remaining chapters (12 - 50) are concerned with God’s dealings with the Patriarchs Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and Jacob’s son Joseph, all "fathers" of the people whom God has chosen to carry out His plan for the redemption of mankind. Thebook closes with these "Chosen People" in Egypt.
From index@BIBLEBOOKSUMMARY.txt@
kjv@Exodus:1
EXODUS - The name means "going out" or departure". While it refers to one of the most important events of thebook, the Exodus of the Israelites from Egypt, other highly significant events are also found here, such as the oppression of the Chosen People in Egypt, the flight and call of Moses, and God’s covenant with the nation Israel at Sinai - an experience climaxed by His giving of the moral law (Ten Commandments) through Moses to the people. A code of secular laws is also included, and the latter part of thebook contains an elaborate description of the sacred Ark of the Covenant and its ten (tabernacle), God’s place of dwelling among His people.
From index@BIBLEBOOKSUMMARY.txt@
kjv@Leviticus:1
LEVITICUS - Thisbook was so named because it treats of laws of service and worship of special importance to the Tribe of Levi. It has been aptly called "the Handbook of the Priests". Many basic precepts of the New Testament are foreshadowed in thisbook, such as the seriousness of sin in God’s sight, the necessity of atonement for sin, the holiness of God, and the necessity of a mediator between God and man.
From index@BIBLEBOOKSUMMARY.txt@
kjv@Numbers:1
NUMBERS - The name of thisbook originated from the two numberings of the people related in it: the first at Sinai in the second year of the Exodus and another on the plains of Moab opposite Jericho in the 40th year. A better title is the one give by the Hebrew themselves, Bemidhbar ( "In the Wilderness"), for it describes the locale of the major events of thebook. In all these events, the writer sees the guiding hand of God, sustaining, delivering, and keeping covenant with His people, as He prepares them for entrance into the land promised first to Abraham ( Genesis:12:1 ).
From index@BIBLEBOOKSUMMARY.txt@
kjv@Deuteronomy:1
DEUTERONOMY - The finalbook of the Pentateuch derives its English name from the Greek work deuteronomion, meaning the "second law", or the "law repeated". Deuteronomy is essentially Moses’ farewell address(es) to a new generation in which he summons them to hear the law of God, to be instructed in the application of its principles to the new circumstances awaiting them, and to renew intelligently the covenant God had made with their fathers - a covenant that must be faithfully observed as the condition of God’s blessings upon them in the Promised Land.
From index@BIBLEBOOKSUMMARY.txt@
kjv@Joshua:1
JOSHUA - Thisbook serves as the connecting link between the Pentateuch and the later historical books; it name is derived from the principal character, Joshua. Chapters 1 to 23 describe the conquest of the land and it division among the tribes of Israel. In the final chapters ( Joshua:23-24 ), Joshua, somewhat after the fashion of Moses, exhorts the people in a series of farewell addresses "to keep and to do all that is written in thebook of the law of Moses," and solemnly challenges them to the renewal of their covenant commitment to God.
From index@BIBLEBOOKSUMMARY.txt@
kjv@Judges:1
JUDGES - Named after the "Judges of Israel," the heroic leaders whose deeds it records, thisbook covers a period of time from the death of Joshua to the birth of Samuel, an era often called "the dark ages" of Hebrew history. Here is a story, on the human side, of disobedience and disaster, and on the divine side, of direction and deliverance. Of the 13 judges named, only 3 are well known: Deborah, Gideon, and Samson.
From index@BIBLEBOOKSUMMARY.txt@
kjv@Ruth:1
RUTH - TheBook of Ruth offers a striking contrast to theBook of Judges, but its story is associated with the same period. In Judges, national sin and corruption portray a dark picture. The story of Ruth the Moabitess and her loyalty and devotion to Naomi, her Hebrew mother-in-law, presents the reader with a picture of the nobler side of Hebrew life in the days of the judges.
From index@BIBLEBOOKSUMMARY.txt@
kjv@1Samuel:1
1SAMUEL - These books were named after Samuel, not only because he is the principal figure in the first part, but also because he anointed the two other principal characters, Saul and David. Originally a singlebook which was divided when translated into Greek, the books of Samuel cover a period of time in Israel’s history from the birth of Samuel to the close of the reign of David. First Samuel presents the transition from Israel’s judges to the monarchy. Second Samuel deals almost exclusively with the history of David and presents a vivid picture of the theocratic monarchy in which the king represents God’s rule over the people.
From index@BIBLEBOOKSUMMARY.txt@
kjv@2Samuel:1
2SAMUEL - These books were named after Samuel, not only because he is the principal figure in the first part, but also because he anointed the two other principal characters, Saul and David. Originally a singlebook which was divided when translated into Greek, the books of Samuel cover a period of time in Israel’s history from the birth of Samuel to the close of the reign of David. First Samuel presents the transition from Israel’s judges to the monarchy. Second Samuel deals almost exclusively with the history of David and presents a vivid picture of the theocratic monarchy in which the king represents God’s rule over the people.
From index@BIBLEBOOKSUMMARY.txt@
kjv@1Kings:1
1KINGS - These books are the sequel to I and II Samuel and should be read as a continuation of the history of the Hebrew nation contained in the former work. Originally onebook, I and II kings relate the history of Israel form the last days of David to the destruction of the northern kingdom, Israel, in 721 B.C., and to the fall of the southern kingdom, Judah, in 586 B.C. This is the period of Israel’s glory, division, decline, and fall.
From index@BIBLEBOOKSUMMARY.txt@
kjv@2Kings:1
2KINGS - These books are the sequel to I and II Samuel and should be read as a continuation of the history of the Hebrew nation contained in the former work. Originally onebook, I and II kings relate the history of Israel form the last days of David to the destruction of the northern kingdom, Israel, in 721 B.C., and to the fall of the southern kingdom, Judah, in 586 B.C. This is the period of Israel’s glory, division, decline, and fall.
From index@BIBLEBOOKSUMMARY.txt@
kjv@1Chronicles:1
1CHRONICLES - In the Hebrew Canon these books formed a single volume called "Things of the days" (i.e., annals). The translators of the Greek Septuagint Version gave them the title, Paraleipomena, meaning "things left over", implying their use as a supplement to Samuel and Kings. Jerome (c. A.D. 340-420) called them "a chronicle of the whole and sacred history" from Adam to Cyrus (538 B.C.), hence their English name. Actually, Chronicles is a summary of Hebrew history that duplicates much of Samuel and Kings.
From index@BIBLEBOOKSUMMARY.txt@
kjv@2Chronicles:1
2CHRONICLES - In the Hebrew Canon these books formed a single volume called "Things of the days" (i.e., annals). The translators of the Greek Septuagint Version gave them the title, Paraleipomena, meaning "things left over", implying their use as a supplement to Samuel and Kings. Jerome (c. A.D. 340-420) called them "a chronicle of the whole and sacred history" from Adam to Cyrus (538 B.C.), hence their English name. Actually, Chronicles is a summary of Hebrew history that duplicates much of Samuel and Kings.
From index@BIBLEBOOKSUMMARY.txt@
kjv@Ezra:1
EZRA - NEHEMIAH - Written originally as onebook, these two books describe the return of the Jewish exiles after more than a half-century of bondage in Babylon, and the subsequent restoration of Jerusalem, its Temple and it walls. Ezra and Nehemiah are of special importance, since they contain nearly all of the direct information known of the post-Exilic period of Hebrew history.
From index@BIBLEBOOKSUMMARY.txt@
kjv@Nehemiah:1
EZRA - NEHEMIAH - Written originally as onebook, these two books describe the return of the Jewish exiles after more than a half-century of bondage in Babylon, and the subsequent restoration of Jerusalem, its Temple and it walls. Ezra and Nehemiah are of special importance, since they contain nearly all of the direct information known of the post-Exilic period of Hebrew history.
From index@BIBLEBOOKSUMMARY.txt@
kjv@Esther:1
ESTHER - TheBook of Esther, in the form of a short story similar to theBook of Ruth, has its setting in the palace of Shushan, or Susa, one of the three capitals of the Persian Empire. The story gives us a vivid picture of the Jews in exile, of the hostility of their non-Jewish enemies in Persia, and of how Esther became the queen of Ahasuerus (Xerxes), subsequently risking her life in order to save her people, the Jews, from total destruction. God’s providential care of His people is magnified throughout, though the word "God" never appears in thebook.
From index@BIBLEBOOKSUMMARY.txt@
kjv@Job:1
JOB - So named from Job, its chief character, thebook deals with an ageless question, one that is puzzling to every generation - the problem of human suffering, particularly the affliction of the righteous. The reader is given an account of the sufferings of the pious Patriarch Job, of the argument carried on between Job and his friends as to the cause of his sufferings, and finally, of the solution to his difficulty,. Thebook’s principal aim is to refute the popular view that all suffering is the result of sin in the life of the sufferer.
From index@BIBLEBOOKSUMMARY.txt@
kjv@Psalms:1
PSALMS - A collection of 150 psalms, who Hebrew name is "TheBook of Praise". Authors of individual psalms include David, Solomon, Moses, Asaph, and others who are anonymous. The variety and unity of Psalms have given thisbook a unique place in the devotional life of the individual and the Church. Almost every aspect of man’s relation to God is depicted in these poems: simple trust, the sense of sin, appeals to a higher power in time of trouble, and the conviction that the world is in the hands of a loving God.
From index@BIBLEBOOKSUMMARY.txt@
kjv@Proverbs:1
PROVERBS - Thisbook is a compendium of proverb collections. Although Solomon inspired the development of thebook, its entire content did not derive from him. A proverb is a short, pithy saying with practical implications. The ones included here cover a variety of subjects, for example, chastity, control of the tongue, laziness, knowledge, relations with others, justice. Perhaps above everything else in Proverbs there is the reiterated assertion that the source of true wisdom is "the fear of the Lord".
From index@BIBLEBOOKSUMMARY.txt@
kjv@Ecclesiastes:1
ECCLESIASTES - In English, the title means "Preacher". Traditionally held to have been written by Solomon, thisbook is now almost universally recognized as about him rather than by him. The author’s purpose is to prove the vanity of everything "under the sun". This truth is first announced a fact, then proved from the "Preacher’s" experience and observations. Finally, the author shows that the fullness of life is found only in the recognition of things "above the sun", things spiritual as well as material.
From index@BIBLEBOOKSUMMARY.txt@
kjv@Songs:1
THE SONG OF SOLOMON - Thisbook, the only one in the Bible that has love for its sole theme, is a collection or cycle of marriage songs. Again, as with Ecclesiastes, the composition is about Solomon, and not by him. The Song is didactic and moral in its purpose, and has traditionally been interpreted as showing God’s love for His Chosen People and Christ’s love for His Bride, the Church.
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