Bill Mounce

For an Informed Love of God

Vocabulary form: 
Definition: 

the

Frequency: 
19,867
GK: 
3836
Mnemonic Singing: 

All hail the power of Jesus' name,
let angels prostrate fall.

Mnemonics

The Lord is my shepherd.

In those days John o Baptist
Matthew 3:1

o Bible is o word of God

Biblical Concordance

Acts 23:13 There were more than forty who (hoi | οἱ | nom pl masc) made this conspiracy.
Acts 23:14 These went to the (tois | τοῖς | dat pl masc) chief priests and elders and said, “We have bound ourselves by an oath to taste no food until we have killed Paul.
Acts 23:15 So now you and the ( | τῷ | dat sg neut) council give notice to the ( | τῷ | dat sg masc) commanding officer to bring him down to you, as though you were going to examine his case (ta | τά | acc pl neut) more accurately; and we will be ready to kill him before he gets there.”
Acts 23:16 But when the (ho | | nom sg masc) son of (tēs | τῆς | gen sg fem) Paul’s sister heard about the (tēn | τήν | acc sg fem) ambush, he went and entered the (tēn | τήν | acc sg fem) barracks and reported it to ( | τῷ | dat sg masc) Paul.
Acts 23:17 Then Paul called one of the (tōn | τῶν | gen pl masc) centurions and said, “Take this young man to the (ton | τόν | acc sg masc) commanding officer, for he has something to report to him.”
Acts 23:18 So he (ho | | nom sg masc) took him and brought him to the (ton | τόν | acc sg masc) commanding officer and said, “The (ho | | nom sg masc) prisoner Paul called me and asked me to bring this young man to you, as he has something to say to you.”
Acts 23:19 The (ho | | nom sg masc) commanding officer took him by the (tēs | τῆς | gen sg fem) hand, drew him aside and asked, “What is it that you have to report to me?”
Acts 23:20 And he said, “The (hoi | οἱ | nom pl masc) Jews have agreed to (tou | τοῦ | gen sg neut) ask you to bring Paul down tomorrow to the (to | τό | acc sg neut) council, as though the case against him was going to be examined more closely.
Acts 23:21 But you should not be persuaded by them, for more than forty of their men are lying in wait for him and have bound themselves by an oath neither to eat nor drink until they kill him. And now they are ready, awaiting your consent.”
Acts 23:22 So the (ho | | nom sg masc) commanding officer dismissed the (ton | τόν | acc sg masc) young man, charging him to tell no one that you have reported these things to me.”
Acts 23:23 Then he called two of the (tōn | τῶν | gen pl masc) centurions and said, “Get ready by the third hour of (tēs | τῆς | gen sg fem) the (tēs | τῆς | gen sg fem) night two hundred soldiers, seventy horsemen, and two hundred spearmen to go as far as Caesarea.”
Acts 23:24 And he told them to provide mounts so that having put Paul on them they might bring him safely to Felix the (ton | τόν | acc sg masc) governor.
Acts 23:25 And he wrote a letter having this form:
Acts 23:26 “Claudius Lysias, to the ( | τῷ | dat sg masc) most excellent governor, Felix, greetings.
Acts 23:27 This man was seized by the (tōn | τῶν | gen pl masc) Jews and was about to be killed by them, when I came upon him and, with the ( | τῷ | dat sg neut) soldiers, rescued him, having learned that he was a Roman citizen.
Acts 23:28 And wanting to know the (tēn | τήν | acc sg fem) charge for which they were accusing him, I brought him down to their council.
Acts 23:29 I found him accused in regard to questions of (tou | τοῦ | gen sg masc) their law, but with no charge deserving death or imprisonment.
Acts 23:30 And when it was disclosed to me that there would be a plot against the (ton | τόν | acc sg masc) man, I sent him to you at once, ordering his (tois | τοῖς | dat pl masc) accusers also to speak against him to you.”
Acts 23:31 So the (hoi | οἱ | nom pl masc) soldiers, according to the (to | τό | acc sg neut) directions given to them, took Paul and brought him by night to Antipatris.
Acts 23:32 The ( | τῇ | dat sg fem) next day they let the (tous | τούς | acc pl masc) horsemen go on with him, and they returned to the (tēn | τήν | acc sg fem) barracks.
Acts 23:33 When the horsemen arrived in Caesarea, they delivered the (tēn | τήν | acc sg fem) letter to the ( | τῷ | dat sg masc) governor and turned over Paul to him.
Acts 23:35 he said, “I will give you a hearing when your accusers arrive.” Then he commanded that Paul be guarded in Herod’s headquarters.
Acts 24:1 And after five days the (ho | | nom sg masc) high priest Ananias went down with some elders and a prosecuting attorney, one Tertullus; and they laid before the ( | τῷ | dat sg masc) governor their case against Paul.
Acts 24:2 And when he was summoned, Tertullus began to accuse him, saying: “Since we have enjoyed a long period of peace through your rule, and since reforms are being made in ( | τῷ | dat sg neut) the nation by your foresight,
Acts 24:4 But, that I may not detain you any longer, I beg you to hear us briefly in ( | τῇ | dat sg fem) your kindness.
Acts 24:5 For we found this man to be a troublemaker, one who stirs up riots among all the (tois | τοῖς | dat pl masc) Jews throughout the (tēn | τήν | acc sg fem) world, and a ringleader of the (tēs | τῆς | gen sg fem) sect of the (tōn | τῶν | gen pl masc) Nazarenes.
Acts 24:6 He even tried to desecrate the (to | τό | acc sg neut) temple, so we laid hold of him.
Acts 24:9 And the (hoi | οἱ | nom pl masc) Jews also joined the attack, saying that it was so.
Acts 24:10 And Paul responded, when the (tou | τοῦ | gen sg masc) governor motioned to him to speak: “Knowing that for many years you have been a judge over ( | τῷ | dat sg neut) this nation, gladly do I make my own defense concerning these things (ta | τά | acc pl neut).
Acts 24:12 and they did not find me arguing with anyone or stirring up a crowd, either in the ( | τῷ | dat sg neut) temple or in the (tais | ταῖς | dat pl fem) synagogues or in the (tēn | τήν | acc sg fem) city.
Acts 24:14 But this I confess to you, that according to the (tēn | τήν | acc sg fem) Way, which they call a sect, thus I worship the ( | τῷ | dat sg masc) God of our fathers, believing all things that (tois | τοῖς | dat pl neut) are according to the (ton | τόν | acc sg masc) Law and written in the (tois | τοῖς | dat pl masc) Prophets,
Acts 24:15 having a hope in God, which these men themselves accept, that there is to be a resurrection both of the just and of the unjust.
Acts 24:16 In view of this I do my best to have a clear conscience toward God and men at all times.
Acts 24:17 “Now, after several years, I came to my people bringing gifts for the poor and presenting offerings,
Acts 24:18 which I was doing when they found me, ritually purified in the ( | τῷ | dat sg neut) temple, without a crowd and without a commotion.
Acts 24:19 But there are some Jews from Asia who ought to be here before you and bring charges, if they have anything against me.
Acts 24:20 Or let these men themselves tell what wrongdoing they found when I stood before the (tou | τοῦ | gen sg neut) council,
Acts 24:22 But Felix, knowing more exactly the (ta | τά | acc pl neut) facts concerning the (tēs | τῆς | gen sg fem) Way, put them off, saying, “When Lysias the (ho | | nom sg masc) commanding officer comes down, I will decide your case.”
Acts 24:23 Then he commanded the ( | τῷ | dat sg masc) centurion to keep him in custody, but to let him have some freedom and not to prevent any of (tōn | τῶν | gen pl masc) his friends from taking care of his needs.
Acts 24:24 After some days Felix arrived with his wife Drusilla, who was Jewish. He sent for Paul and heard him speak about faith in Christ Jesus.
Acts 24:25 And as he reasoned with him about righteousness and self-control and the (tou | τοῦ | gen sg neut) judgment to come, Felix became frightened and said, “For the (to | τό | acc sg neut) present go away, but when I find time I will send for you.”
Acts 24:26 At the same time he hoped that money would be given to him by Paul. So he sent for him frequently and conversed with him.
Acts 24:27 When two years had passed, Felix was replaced by Porcius Festus, and wanting to curry favor with the (tois | τοῖς | dat pl masc) Jews, Felix left Paul in prison.
Acts 25:1 Three days after arriving in the ( | τῇ | dat sg fem) province, Festus went up to Jerusalem from Caesarea.
Acts 25:2 So the (hoi | οἱ | nom pl masc) chief priests and the (hoi | οἱ | nom pl masc) Jewish leaders brought formal charges against Paul, begging him
Acts 25:3 and asking him to do them a favor against Paul; they urged Festus to transfer him to Jerusalem, for they were forming a plot to kill him along the (tēn | τήν | acc sg fem) way.
Acts 25:4 So then Festus replied that Paul was being kept at Caesarea but that he himself intended to go there shortly.
Acts 25:5 “So,” he said, “let your leaders go down there with me, and if there is in this ( | τῷ | dat sg masc) man anything improper, let them bring charges against him.”
Acts 25:6 After he stayed among them not more than eight or ten days, he went down to Caesarea, and the ( | τῇ | dat sg fem) next day he took his seat on the (tou | τοῦ | gen sg neut) judge’s bench and ordered Paul to be brought.
Acts 25:7 When he arrived, the (hoi | οἱ | nom pl masc) Jews who had come down from Jerusalem stood around him, bringing many and serious charges against him, which they were not able to prove.

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