stauros उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
- In applying the word " stauros " to the crossbeam, these writers indicate that the complete structure on which Jesus died was not a single upright post but formed what is normally called a cross.
- Their " New World Translation " of the Bible therefore uses the phrase " torture stake " to translate the Greek word ??????? ( " stauros " ) at Matthew 27 : 40, Mark 15 : 30 and Luke 23 : 26.
- Considering the old english of Brenton's translation, there is also a revision of the Brenton Septuagint available through Stauros Ministries, called " The Complete Apostles'Bible ", translated by Paul W . Esposito, Th . D, and released in 2007.
- The cross can also stand for the wondrous Aeon on whom depends the ordering and life of the world, and thus Horos-Stauros appears here as the first redeemer of Sophia from her passions, and as the orderer of the creation of the world which now begins.
- In Homeric and classical Greek, until the early 4th century BC, " stauros " meant an upright stake, pole, or piece of paling, " on which anything might be hung, or which might be used in impaling [ fencing in ] a piece of ground ."
- The diocese was named in the Ecthesis of Pseudo-Epiphanius in 640; again, under the name of a nearby location, Stauros, in the " Notitiae Episcopatuum " of Leo the Philosopher; and again in the " Notitiae " of Constantine Porphyrogenitus in about 940.
- However, W . E . Vine and E . W . Bullinger, as well as Henry Dana Ward, considered that the " cross " ( Greek " stauros ", in its original sense literally an upright pale or stake ) had no crossbar, and that the traditional picture of Jesus on a cross with a crossbar was incorrect.
- James B . Torrance in the article " Cross " in the " New Bible Dictionary " writes that the Greek word for " cross " ( stauros; verb stauroM; Lat . crux, crucifigo, " I fasten to a cross " ) means primarily an upright stake or beam, but also allows the construction that Jesus and Simon of Cyrene carried a patibulum to Golgotha.
- But besides, this Aeon has a sixth name, which in the version of Hippolytus is made his primary title " Stauros; " and it is explained ( Irenaeus, i . 3 ) that besides his function as a separator, in respect of which he is called Horos, this Aeon does the work of stablishing and settling, in respect of which he is called Stauros.
- But besides, this Aeon has a sixth name, which in the version of Hippolytus is made his primary title " Stauros; " and it is explained ( Irenaeus, i . 3 ) that besides his function as a separator, in respect of which he is called Horos, this Aeon does the work of stablishing and settling, in respect of which he is called Stauros.