| 1900 - 676 sider
...you worthy of great reward, as if you had wrought it all yourselves. (3.) Be on your guard against the ruling power ; for they who exercise it draw no...to their own advantage, they stand not by a man in the hour of his need. (4.) He used to say, Do His will as if it were thy will, that He may do thy will... | |
| 1914 - 960 sider
...worthy of great •reward, as if you had wrought it all yourselves. (3.) Be -on your guard against the ruling power ; for they who exercise it draw no...to their own advantage, they stand not by a man in the hour of his need. (4.) He used to say, Do His will as if it were thy will, that He may do thy will... | |
| 1986 - 154 sider
...(God will then say,) I account you worthy of great reward, as if you had wrought it all yourselves. 3. Be ye guarded in your relations with the ruling power...to their own advantage, they stand not by a man in the hour of his need. 4. He used to say, Do His will as if it were thy will, that He may do thy will... | |
| Behrman House - 1968 - 134 sider
...(God will then say,) I account you worthy of great reward, as if you had wrought it all yourselves. 3. Be ye guarded in your relations with the ruling power...to their own advantage, they stand not by a man in the hour of his need. 4. He used to say, Do His will as if it were thy will, that He may do thy will... | |
| Alan Mittleman - 2003 - 350 sider
...another warned "Be on your guard against the ruling power, for they who exercise it draw no person near to them except for their own interests; appearing...as friends when it is to their own advantage, they do not stand by a person in his hour of need."1 As Jefferson and Madison knew so well, religion's entanglement... | |
| David E. Guinn - 2006 - 456 sider
...ruling power," and "Be on your guard against the ruling power, for they who exercise it draw no person near to them except for their own interests; appearing...as friends when it is to their own advantage, they do not stand by a person in his hour of need."4 The respect for authority but the simultaneous wariness... | |
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