ETYMOLOGY, THE ROOT MEANING OF WORDS “stammer ” - from Old English stamerian "to stammer, stutter, hesitate or falter in speaking," "stammering," "utter or pronounce hesitatingly or imperfectly" 🕎Isaiah 28:11-12 KJV
ESDRAS VISION & THE MULTITUDE OF MEN (144,000) : ORLANDO BROWN IS CORRECT, THE ILLUMINATI “ILLUMINATED ONES” ARE THE 144,000 DISCIPLES OF YAHAWASHI. “For if God spared not the angels that sinned, but cast them down to hell”🕎2 Esdras 2;35-48
LAZARUS & THE RICH MAN, COVENANTS & PROMISES, BIRTHRIGHT SOLD TO JACOB: THE SONS OF THE WICKED (AMALEK, ESAU EDOM) “thou slanderest thine own mother's son”🕎2 Esdras 6:9 “Esau is the end of the world & Jacob is the beginning”
STRAIGHT MEANS A POSITION OF DIFFICULTY, THE HOPEFUL ELECTION : WE LIVE A LIFE OF MELANCHOLY, WE ARE UNDER THESE CURSES BECAUSE OF OUR WICKEDNESS!!🕎Hebrews 12:1-13 “If ye endure chastening, God dealeth with you as with sons”
ETYMOLOGY, THE ROOT MEANING OF WORDS “husband ” - Old English husbonda "male head of a household, master of a house, householder," probably from Old Norse husbondi "master of the house," 🕎 1 Corinthians 11:3 KJV
ETYMOLOGY, THE ROOT MEANING OF WORDS “saved” - late 14c., "delivered from damnation, destined for Heaven," past-participle adjective from save (v.). 🕎John 17;9-26 KJV
ETYMOLOGY, THE ROOT MEANING OF WORDS “testament” - late 13c., "last will, expressing the final disposition of one's property," Latin testamentum "a last will, publication of a will," “ be witness to”🕎ROMANS 9;1-18 KJV
ETYMOLOGY, THE ROOT MEANING OF WORDS “elect” - early 15c., "to choose for an office, position, or duty," from Latin electus, "to pick out, "to collect, gather." "those chosen by God" 🕎1 Peter 2:1-6 KJV
ETYMOLOGY, THE ROOT MEANING OF WORDS “spirit” - vital principle in man & animals," "spirit, soul" & from Latin spiritus "a breathing, breath;" & "breath of god, divine mind;" "the Holy Ghost;
ETYMOLOGY, THE ROOT MEANING OF WORDS “revelation” - c. 1300, "disclosure of information or knowledge to man by a divine or supernatural agency,", directly from Latin revelationem "unveil, uncover, lay bare” 🕎Revelation 14;3 KJV
ETYMOLOGY, THE ROOT MEANING OF WORDS “doctrine ” - late 14c., "the body of principles, dogmas, in a religion or field of knowledge," (12c.) from Latin doctrina "a teaching, body of teachings,🕎 Ephesians 4:14 KJV, Titus 1:13 KJV
ETYMOLOGY, THE ROOT MEANING OF WORDS “tongue” - In the "knowledge of a foreign language.”In 16c.-16c. in the classical revival the Tongues (or the Three Tongues) were Hebrew, Greek, Latin.🕎Acts 2;1-17 KJV
ETYMOLOGY, THE ROOT MEANING OF WORDS “lord” - mid-13c., laverd, loverd, from Old English hlaford "master of a household, ruler, feudal lord, superior; husband," also "God," 🕎 1 Corinthians 11:3 & Matthew 22;44-46 KJV
ETYMOLOGY, THE ROOT MEANING OF WORDS “just” - late 14c., "morally upright, righteous in the eyes of God" ("Now chiefly as a Biblical archaism" - This is from "a right," "legal right, law" 🕎Matthew 19:28 KJV
ETYMOLOGY, THE ROOT MEANING OF WORDS “word ” - Old English word "speech, talk, utterance, sentence, statement, news, report, The meaning "promise"🕎Hebrews 4:11-12 KJV, Ephesians 4:29 KJV
ETYMOLOGY, THE ROOT MEANING OF WORDS “saint” - early 12c. as an adjective, seinte, "holy, divinely inspired, worthy of worship," from Old French saint, seinte “devout," "one of the elect”, set apart to the services of God,”
ETYMOLOGY, THE ROOT MEANING OF WORDS “righteous” - an early 16c. rightwise,, of actions, "characterized by justice, morally right," of persons, "just, upright; conforming to divine law," 🕎Luke 5:32 KJV
ETYMOLOGY, THE ROOT MEANING OF WORDS “immortal” - late 14c., "deathless," from Latin immortalis "deathless, undying" (of gods), "imperishable, endless.”🕎1 Corinthians 15;50-53 & 1 Corinthians 15;44-54 KJV
ETYMOLOGY, THE ROOT MEANING OF WORDS “shepherd” - Middle English shep-herd, "man who leads, tends, and guards sheep in a pasture," from Old English sceaphierde. and watch sheep," "watch over or guide" 🕎1 Peter 5:4 KJV
ETYMOLOGY, THE ROOT MEANING OF WORDS “school” - [place of instruction] Middle English scole, from Old English scol, "institution for instruction," from Latin schola "meeting place for teachers and students;" 🕎John 3;1-15 KJV