Dictionary: Face
Synonyms: countenance, physiognomy, profile, features, expression, facial expression, look, appearance, air, manner, bearing, guise, cast, aspect, impression, grimace, scowl, wry face, wince, frown, glower, smirk, pout, moue, side, flank, vertical, surface, plane, facet, wall, elevation, dial, display, (outward) appearance, nature, image, front, show, act, false front, facade, exterior, mask, masquerade, pretence, charade, pose, illusion, smokescreen, veneer, camouflage, respect, honour, esteem, regard, admiration, approbation, acclaim, approval, favour, appreciation, popularity, estimation, veneration, awe, reverence, deference, recognition, prestige, standing, status, dignity, glory, kudos, cachet, effrontery, audacity, nerve, gall, brazenness, brashness, shamelessness, look out on, front on to, look towards, be facing, have/afford/command a view of, look over/across, open out over, look on to, overlook, give on to, give over, be opposite (to), accept, come to accept, become reconciled to, reconcile oneself to, reach an acceptance (of), get used to, become accustomed to, adjust to, accommodate oneself to, acclimatize oneself to, be confronted by, be faced with, encounter, experience, come into contact with, run into, come across, meet, come up against, be forced to contend with, beset, worry, distress, cause trouble to, trouble, bother, confront, burden, brave, face up to, meet head-on, dare, defy, oppose, resist, withstand, cover, clad, skin, overlay, dress, pave, put a facing on, laminate, inlay, plate, coat, line
Showing 3201 to 3225 of 4069 results

1 Corinthians 14:26-40, 1 Corinthians 14:1-25
Teach the Text
Preben Vang
... and harmony that surpass what any one player could accomplish. Then, a single player gets an idea in his head. Perhaps he wants to be noticed, or he wants the king to hear him above all others. Maybe he wants the other players to respect his overlooked abilities, or he wants to feel fully free and unshackled in his playing. Whatever the reason, he goes off the page and begins to dance around wildly, knocking over others’ music stands, playing different rhythms, and making a horrendous noise. Soon the ...

Teach the Text
J. Scott Duvall
... his message through angels who often assist the person receiving the visions (e.g., Rev. 17:1, 7; 21:9; Dan. 7–12; Ezek. 40–48; Zech. 1–6; 1 En. 1:2; 72:1; Jub. 32:21; 3 Bar. 1:8; 6:1). Although the apostle John was well respected as an early Christian leader, he is characterized here only as a “servant” (doulos) among servants. Interestingly, “servants” is one of the most prominent terms for Christians throughout the book (Rev. 1:1; 2:20; 7:3; 10:7; 11:18; 15:3; 19:2, 5; 22:3, 6). John ...

Revelation 2:8-11
Teach the Text
J. Scott Duvall
... was a great tumult when they heard that Polycarp had been arrested. Therefore, when he was brought before him, the proconsul asked if he were Polycarp. And when he confessed that he was, the proconsul tried to persuade him to recant, saying, “Have respect for your age,” and other such things as they are accustomed to say: “Swear by the Genius of Caesar; repent; say, ‘Away with the atheists!’” So Polycarp solemnly looked at the whole crowd of lawless heathen who were in the stadium, motioned ...

Teach the Text
J. Scott Duvall
... things, and by your will they were created and have their being. The elders now join the living creatures in praising God. Here the word “worship” (proskyne?) suggests the common Eastern custom of prostrating oneself before a deity to show honor and respect. They submit their delegated authority to God in the act of laying their crowns before him. Their praise contrasts sharply with the worship of the emperor cult. The greeting “you are worthy,” often used to welcome the emperor into the city, is ...

Teach the Text
J. Scott Duvall
... : the beast from the sea (13:1–10) and the beast from the earth (13:11–18). The dragon, the beast from the sea (antichrist), and the beast from the earth (false prophet) comprise the “unholy trinity” (paralleling Father, Son, and Spirit, respectively). This unit describes the beast’s origin, relationship to the dragon, actions against God and his people, and influence on the world. Through it all, God remains in control since the beast operates within the divine limits (“was given” occurs five ...

Leviticus 2:1-16
Teach the Text
Joe M. Sprinkle
... meal to a chief of state, so how can people expect to impress and find favor from God when they are offering him a meal of sickly animals that they would never dare serve to anyone whom they regarded as important? They clearly have more respect for their human governor than for their divine King. God deserves the best, not the dregs. Sacrifices are supposed to be costly. David, presenting burnt offerings to appease God for his sin, comments, “I will not sacrifice to the Lord my God burnt offerings that ...

Leviticus 5:14--6:7
Teach the Text
Joe M. Sprinkle
... God is even more offended when his holy things are profaned. It is his displeasure that really counts. Deliberate desecration of the holy is an expression of contempt for God. And yet all of us may inadvertently defile God’s holy things. Not showing proper respect for the elements in taking the Lord’s Supper could be an act of sacrilege: “For those who eat and drink without discerning the body of Christ eat and drink judgment on themselves” (1 Cor. 11:29). Christians too need to be careful about how ...

Leviticus 11:1-47
Teach the Text
Joe M. Sprinkle
... 20; 31:19–24; Ezek. 44:25–26); touching the carcass of an unclean animal (Lev. 11:24–28) or of a clean animal that has died on its own (Ezek. 44:31). Leviticus 11 treats impurity through contact with unclean animals. Its purpose concerns respecting the holiness of God (Lev. 11:44–45). Deuteronomy 14:1–21 gives a parallel list of unclean animals. Historical and Cultural Background Israel’s neighbors did not have food laws like Israel’s. Pork (v. 7) was a staple meat among gentiles. It appears ...

Teach the Text
Joe M. Sprinkle
... First, not eating blood acknowledges the value of animal life and God’s permission to take life. “Eating blood” is eating meat without first pouring out the blood to God (see “Teaching the Text” at Lev. 3:1–17). This requirement shows God’s respect even for animal life. It is only by special divine permission that people are permitted to kill and eat animal flesh, something not permitted to humankind until after the flood (Gen. 9:3–4). Offering the blood back to God is a way of acknowledging ...

Leviticus 20:1-27
Teach the Text
Joe M. Sprinkle
... to obeying God’s commands, is the key theme of Leviticus 17–27. On “I am the Lord,” see “Additional Insights” following the unit on Leviticus 19:1–37. 20:9  Anyone who curses their father or mother. Contrast “respect” for parents (Lev. 19:3). “Curses” is too specific a rendering. Hebrew qalal can mean “treat with disrespect,” “abuse,” “derogate,” “denigrate,” “repudiate,” but rarely “curse.”2 Formally, it means “to treat as light” and is the opposite of ...

Teach the Text
Joe M. Sprinkle
... never meant to be taken literally. Assyrian texts appear to inflate numbers to give importance to the deeds narrated.5In some places in Indonesia, one’s age is a statement not about how long a person has lived but about that person’s status and respect in the community. Hence, someone who is thirty-five might be described as a “fifty-year-old” based on that person’s status. This is not lying or deceiving, but rather a rhetorical device versus a strict quantifier. Perhaps the numbers in the census ...

Teach the Text
Joe M. Sprinkle
... system. On the basis of my academic and professional experience, I believe that no felony is committed more frequently in this country than the genre of perjury and false statements. Perjury during civil depositions and trials is so endemic that a respected appellate judge once observed that “experienced lawyers say that, in large cities, scarcely a trial occurs in which some witness does not lie.” He quoted a wag to the effect that cases often are decided “according to the preponderance of perjury ...

Teach the Text
Joe M. Sprinkle
... of the time of Moses. The silver one is 58.2 cm in length (23 inches), and its bell is 8.2 cm (3.5 inches) wide and the tube between 1.7 cm near the mouthpiece and 2.6 cm at the bell joint (.66 inches and 1 inch, respectively). It is made of beaten silver with a thin gold band of decoration around the edge of the bell and a mouthpiece of plain thin gold, both beaten onto the silver. The conical tube and the bell were made in two separate pieces and then soldered together with silver.1In ...

Teach the Text
Joe M. Sprinkle
... month of the first year (Exod. 19:1), Israel has been there for nearly a year. the cloud. That is, the visible presence of God that guides them in the wilderness (Num. 9:15–23). 10:11–12  lifted . . . came to rest. These are signs that Israel is, respectively, to depart and to camp (Num. 9:17). Desert of Paran. This seems to be the east central region of the Sinai Peninsula, north and east of the traditional site of Mount Sinai (see map). On the location of Sinai, see comments at Numbers 33:15. 10:13 ...

Teach the Text
Joe M. Sprinkle
... the public that Aaron is dead and Eleazar is the new high priest. 20:29  mourned for him thirty days. Aaron’s death is mourned for an unusually long period of thirty days, as would later be done for Moses (Deut. 34:8). This is done out of special respect for him and his office. Formal mourning periods in Israel more typically were seven days, as after the deaths of Jacob (Gen. 50:10) and of Saul (1 Sam. 31:13). Theological Insights In order for God’s work to go on, God must pass on to new generations ...

Teach the Text
Joe M. Sprinkle
... agrees with the women: “If a man dies and leaves no son, give his inheritance to his daughter” (Num. 27:8). Note the many virtues of the daughters of Zelophehad. They demonstrate faith that God will in fact fulfill his land promise. They also show respect for the leadership of Moses and the others at the entrance to the tent of meeting. They are not rebels. They are not contentious. They give proper deference to the male court and its authority. Yet they are assertive and bold. They come with confidence ...

Teach the Text
Joe M. Sprinkle
... the Transjordan innocent. 32:23  your sin will find you out. If they violate their vow, their punishment is sure. 32:25–27  We your servants will do as our lord commands . . . fight before the Lord. The Gadites and Reubenites show humility and respect for Moses’s authority. Their oath is made in God’s presence (the tabernacle?). They will fight aware that God is watching. 32:28  Eleazar . . . Joshua . . . the family heads. Moses will die soon (Num. 20:12; 27:12–14), so he passes instructions ...

Numbers 35:6-34, Numbers 35:1-5
Teach the Text
Joe M. Sprinkle
... has been there since Numbers 22 (Num. 22:1; 26:3; 31:12; 33:50). 35:2  towns . . . pasturelands. Levites have strictly limited land outside their towns for livestock. 35:4–5  a thousand cubits . . . two thousand cubits. 1,500 feet and 3,000 feet, respectively. Each town appears to be a square measured from the center of the city (see figure), making each city about 0.6 mile squared. These numbers have puzzled commentators since they leave little room for a town in the center. Milgrom takes the text to ...

Teach the Text
Joe M. Sprinkle
... . In a way, it would keep their father alive for them. Heaven is our inheritance. Human Experience: Many significant moments mark the period after a loved one has died. Of course, there is the funeral, with family and friends from all points coming to pay respects. There is the first time we dial the person’s phone number, forgetting that he or she will not be on the other end. There is the first Thanksgiving, Christmas, New Year’s Day, birthday. One of the moments many people remember is sitting down ...

Teach the Text
Robert B. Chisholm Jr.
... humiliating in a culture where beards are a source of male identity and public nudity is considered shameful (Isa. 20:4). But what makes the action particularly insulting is the fact that messengers represent the one who sends them and are to be treated with the same respect as their master. This is why the angel of the Lord at times speaks as God (Gen. 31:11–13; Judg. 2:1–3), while humans who encounter the angel sometimes react as if they have seen God himself (Gen. 16:13; Judg. 6:22; 13:22 ...

Teach the Text
Robert B. Chisholm Jr.
... , and commits adultery with her; drunken Uriah resists the temptation to sleep with his wife and sleeps with the servants “in the evening” (v. 13). 11:11  As surely as you live, I will not do such a thing! Uriah’s words are ironic in two respects and, from the reader’s perspective, serve to condemn David: (1) Uriah disobeys the king’s command (vv. 8–9), but his defense is a reminder that loyalty to the Lord and his cause (v. 11a) supersedes even royal authority. (2) While Uriah considers it ...

Teach the Text
Robert B. Chisholm Jr.
... leader of anti-apartheid movements. In this novel (1953), whose strange name belies its importance and fascinating theme, Paton presents us with a compelling protagonist, Pieter van Vlaanderen, who seems to have it all but is a divided soul. He is a good-looking and respected person, a natural leader, an athlete, and more. Yet he has within him a darkness—an anger born of his father’s rigid handling of him—that he will not discuss with anyone. Those who see its shadows do not confront him about it. As ...

1 Sam 1:1-20–2:11
Teach the Text
Robert B. Chisholm Jr.
... s God-given right to rule as Israel’s king. The narrator demonstrates that God rejects Saul and chooses David. Though he does exhibit some political ambition, David does not usurp the throne and then claim divine authority to justify his power play. He respects Saul as God’s anointed ruler and waits for God to remove Saul from the throne, rather than taking matters into his own hands. Samuel has an important role to play in this regard: after anointing Saul as king, Samuel with prophetic authority also ...

Teach the Text
Robert B. Chisholm Jr.
... elevate David over Saul. Historical and Cultural Background According to verses 3–4, the Israelites are worshiping the Baals and Ashtoreths at this time. The plural forms likely refer to various local manifestations and idols of the deities Baal and Astarte, respectively, though it is also possible that the phrase refers in a general way to Canaanite male and female deities.1 Astarte appears as a female consort of Baal in the mythological texts from Ugarit, sometimes in association with Anat, another of ...

Teach the Text
Robert B. Chisholm Jr.
... the Deuteronomic ideal of a king who promotes the law by his teaching and example (Deut. 17:18–20).10 This will entail regulating the cult, ensuring social justice, and unifying the nation.11 As noted above, the Deuteronomic model of kingship differs in several respects from the cultural model of kingship that the people are demanding. Israelite kingship may seem like a thing of the past for the exiles. After all, they are under the rule of a powerful empire. Yet the prophets have kept the hope of a ...