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Software Vault: The Gold Collection
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Software Vault - The Gold Collection (American Databankers) (1993).ISO
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SCOFIELD.001
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V05400
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1992-09-08
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05417
[1] {without}
The expression is peculiar and might be literally rendered, " not
lawless toward God, but inlawed to Christ." See "Law (of Christ),"
# Ga 6:2 2Jo 1:5
It is another way of saying, "not under the law, but
under [the rule of] grace."
# Ro 6:14
05423
[1] {castaway}
Gr. adokimos, "disapproved." Dokimos, without the private a, is
translated "approved" in
# Ro 14:18 16:10 1Co 11:19 2Co 10:18 2Ti 2:15 Jas 1:12
by the word "tried." The prefix simply changes the word to a negative,
i.e. not approved, or, disapproved. The apostle is writing of service,
not of salvation. He is not expressing fear that he may fail of
salvation but of his crown. See "Rewards"
# Da 12:3 1Co 3:14
05431
[2] {fell in one day}
Cf.
# Nu 25:9
A discrepancy has been imagined.
# 1Co 10:8
gives the number of deaths in "one day";
# Nu 25:9
the total number of deaths "in the plague." Some discrepant statements
concerning numbers are, however, found in the existing manuscripts of
the Hebrew Scriptures. These are most naturally ascribed to the fact
that the Hebrews used letters in the place of numerals. The letters
for Koph to Tau express hundreds up to four hundred. Five certain
Hebrew letters, written in a different form, carry hundreds up to nine
hundred, while thousands are expressed by two dots over the proper
unit letter: e.g. the letter Teth, used alone, stands for 9; with two
dots it stands for nine thousand. Error in transcription of Hebrew
numbers thus becomes easy, preservation of numerical accuracy
difficult.