This blog collects together various maxims and sayings and facts about words, etc, of interest to me and hopefully to you.
20190726
Regeneration - the knowledge factor
"This
fact must not be abused, but out of ignorance a person may live
contrary to certain Christian teachings and practices and may appear
not to be born again when in fact he is. Of course, if he is
genuinely reborn that will show itself when his errors are pointed
out.
Far from arguing against religious instruction and faithful teaching prior to conversion, this observation argues rather in its favour. The better instructed people are, the better they will be able to discern their standing before God and benefit from being reborn."
Far from arguing against religious instruction and faithful teaching prior to conversion, this observation argues rather in its favour. The better instructed people are, the better they will be able to discern their standing before God and benefit from being reborn."
Born again - date unknown
"On occasions, I have met people who cannot tell you accurately when they were born. I remember a Vietnamese fellow who was picked up on the streets of Saigon (Ho Chi Minh City) as an orphaned toddler, and was eventually brought up in the UK. He only knew more or less how old he was. Many abandoned children share the same sort of ignorance. In certain parts of rural Nigeria, it is common not to know the exact day you were born as records are not kept too strictly. In a similar way, many Christians do not know exactly when they were born again. As Archibald Alexander points out, even those who claim that they do know may well be wrong. ...
A characteristic of regeneration is that it is mysterious and secret so we should not be surprised that it can be difficult to know exactly when it has occurred."
A characteristic of regeneration is that it is mysterious and secret so we should not be surprised that it can be difficult to know exactly when it has occurred."
NB There are apparently some 51 million people wordwide with no birth certificate [63% of them in SubSaharan Africa].
Vɑːz, veɪz or vɔːz
My grandfather would never simply say vase. He was aware of the different pronunciations and so always said vɑːz, veɪz or vɔːz (ie vaas, vaze or vause). My dad would often do it too.
The Century dictionary says
According to the French pron. (väz), and to the time when the word vase appears to have been taken into English (between 1660 and 1700), the reg. E. pron. would be vāz, with a tendency to make it conform to the apparent analogy of base, case, etc. - that is, to pronounce it vās. At the same time, the recency of the word, and its association with art, have tended to encourage the attempts to pronounce it as F., namely väz, in the 18th century absurdly rendered also as vâs, the word being found accordingly in the spelling vause.
If you check this clip on Youtube you will hear Tom Hanks make a referneece tO this about a minute and a half in - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pmNmFpJM3qQ
If you check this clip on Youtube you will hear Tom Hanks make a referneece tO this about a minute and a half in - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pmNmFpJM3qQ
See'd 'em
My grandfather was boorn in Bilston and spent most of his adult life after the Great War working in Lysaght's Steelworks in Newport, South Wales. A tall man with bright blue eyes he was not good at withstanding the heat but thankfully as a checker he was not too near the furnace. My father told me that after he had checked sheets of steal he would mark the top one with chalk - See'd 'em (not quite sure on the spelling, the point is that he had seen them).
20190712
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