WINE, NEW Neh 10:39; Neh 13:5; Hos 4:11; Mat 9:17; Mat 26:29; Mar 2:22; Act 2:13 –SEE New Things, NEW THINGS Fuente: Thompson Chain-Reference Bible
Author: Administrador
Wine, Ecclestastical Use Of
Wine, Ecclestastical Use Of In the celebration of the Lord’s Supper, the common wine was ordinarily used. Such was probably that which our Savior used at the last supper. The ancients mixed water with the wine; and this practice seems at one period to have been general, and is abundantly authorized by canons of the … Continue reading “Wine, Ecclestastical Use Of”
Wine-cup
Wine-cup ( , cup of the wine). Wine, or the cup in which it is contained, often represents in Scriptutre the anger of God: “Thou hast made us drink the wine of astonishment” (Psa 60:3). “In the hand of the Lord there is a cup, and the wine is red; it is full of mixture, … Continue reading “Wine-cup”
Wine And Strong Drink
Wine And Strong Drink WINE AND STRONG DRINK.Taken together in this order, the two terms wine and strong drink are continually used by OT writers as an exhaustive classification of the fermented beverages then in use (Lev 10:9, 1Sa 1:15, Pro 20:1, and oft.). The all but universal usage in OTin NT strong drink is … Continue reading “Wine And Strong Drink”
Wine, Altar
wine, altar Wine made from the genuine juice of the grape, used as one of the Eucharistic elements . Fuente: New Catholic Dictionary Wine, Altar Wine is one of the two elements absolutely necessary for the sacrifice of the Eucharist. For valid and licit consecration vinum de vite, i.e. the pure juice of the grape … Continue reading “Wine, Altar”
Wine (given To)
Wine (given To) * For GIVEN TO WINE see BRAWLER, No. 1 Fuente: Vine’s Dictionary of New Testament Words
Wine
WINE The vine being natural to the soil of Canaan and its vicinity, wine was much used as a beverage, especially at festivals, Gen 1:7 5:6 Da 5:1-4 Joh 2:3 . As one of the staple products of the Holy Land, it was employed for drink-offerings in the temple service, Exo 20:26 Num 15:4-10 ; … Continue reading “Wine”
Windthorst, Ludwig
Windthorst, Ludwig Born near Osnabruck, 17 January, 1812; died 14 March, 1891. He came from a family of lawyers of Lower Saxony. As a pupil at the gymnasium he was industrious, shrewd and cautious, quiet, not carried away by the tendencies of his time, and these qualities he retained throughout life. He studied at Gottingen … Continue reading “Windthorst, Ludwig”
Windsor, Councils Of
Windsor, Councils Of (Concilium Windoriense, or Windleshorense). Windsor is a town in Berkshire, England, on the right bank of the Thames, twenty-three miles south-west of London. Its castle is the residence of the queen of England. Old Windsor is a mile and a half east-south-east of this, and was the royal residence during the Saxon … Continue reading “Windsor, Councils Of”
Windsor
Windsor A town of great antiquity, on the Thames, in Berkshire, England; quaintly rendered Ventus Morbidus in some medieval documents, the name being really from the Saxon Windels-or, “winding shore”. The manor was granted by St. Edward the Confessor to the Abbey of Westminster, and the town became a free borough under Edward I. The … Continue reading “Windsor”