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PARALLEL HISTORY BIBLE - Genesis 3:18


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LXX- Greek Septuagint - Genesis 3:18

ακανθας 173 και 2532 τριβολους 5146 ανατελει σοι 4671 4674 και 2532 φαγη 5315 5632 τον 3588 χορτον 5528 του 3588 αγρου 68

Douay Rheims Bible

Thorns and thistles shall it bring forth to thee; and thou eat the herbs of the earth.

King James Bible - Genesis 3:18

Thorns also and thistles shall it bring forth to thee; and thou shalt eat the herb of the field;

World English Bible

Thorns also and thistles will it bring forth to you; and you will eat the herb of the field.

Early Church Father Links

Anf-03 v.iv.iii.xi Pg 4, Npnf-105 x.iv.liii Pg 3, Npnf-108 ii.CIII Pg 48, Npnf-114 v.x Pg 50, Npnf-114 vi.x Pg 50, Npnf-203 vi.xiii.xxiii Pg 10, Npnf-206 v.XXII Pg 24, Npnf-206 v.CXXV Pg 44, Npnf-206 v.XXII Pg 152, Npnf-207 ii.xvii Pg 104

World Wide Bible Resources


Genesis 3:18

Early Christian Commentary - (A.D. 100 - A.D. 325)

Anf-03 v.iv.iii.xi Pg 4
Gen. iii. 18.

which before was blessed. Immediately spring up briers and thorns, where once had grown grass, and herbs, and fruitful trees. Immediately arise sweat and labour for bread, where previously on every tree was yielded spontaneous food and untilled2846

2846 Secura.

nourishment. Thenceforth it is “man to the ground,” and not as before, “from the ground”; to death thenceforth, but before, to life; thenceforth with coats of skins, but before, nakedness without a blush. Thus God’s prior goodness was from2847

2847 Secundum.

nature, His subsequent severity from2848

2848 Secundum.

a cause. The one was innate, the other accidental; the one His own, the other adapted;2849

2849 Accommodata.

the one issuing from Him, the other admitted by Him. But then nature could not have rightly permitted His goodness to have gone on inoperative, nor the cause have allowed His severity to have escaped in disguise or concealment.  God provided the one for Himself, the other for the occasion.2850

2850 Rei.

You should now set about showing also that the position of a judge is allied with evil, who have been dreaming of another god as a purely good one—solely because you cannot understand the Deity to be a judge; although we have proved God to be also a judge. Or if not a judge, at any rate a perverse and useless originator of a discipline which is not to be vindicated—in other words, not to be judged.  You do not, however, disprove God’s being a judge, who have no proof to show that He is a judge. You will undoubtedly have to accuse justice herself, which provides the judge, or else to reckon her among the species of evil, that is, to add injustice to the titles of goodness. But then justice is an evil, if injustice is a good. And yet you are forced to declare injustice to be one of the worst of things, and by the same rule are constrained to class justice amongst the most excellent. Since there is nothing hostile2851

2851 Æmulum.

to evil which is not good, and no enemy of good which is not evil. It follows, then, that as injustice is an evil, so in the same degree is justice a good.  Nor should it be regarded as simply a species of goodness, but as the practical observance2852

2852 Tutela.

of it, because goodness (unless justice be so controlled as to be just) will not be goodness, if it be unjust. For nothing is good which is unjust; while everything, on the other hand, which is just is good.

Treasury of Scriptural Knowledge, Chapter 3

VERSE 	(18) - 

Jos 23:13 Job 5:5; 31:40 Pr 22:5; 24:31 Isa 5:6; 7:23; 32:13


PARALLEL VERSE BIBLE

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