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Daniel 3: Under God’s sovereignty, it meets us gently—magnifies grace and summons covenant faithfulness to God’s glory.
Daniel 3: Within the deposit of faith, it draws us into grace through the Church’s sacramental life.
Daniel 3: On the path of theosis, it invites healing communion with God and a transfigured life.
Daniel 3: By prevenient grace, it meets us gently—invites a real response that grows into holy love.
Daniel 3: In context, it meets us gently—calls us to live the text’s core truth with integrity.
Daniel 3: In the red thread, it meets us gently—leads us to Jesus—the center and fulfillment of Scripture.
Daniel 3: With Scripture, Tradition, and Reason, it doesn’t flatter us—forms faithful worship and thoughtful public witness.
Daniel 3: As Law and Gospel, it meets us gently—exposes our need and comforts us with Christ’s gift.
Daniel 3: By the Spirit’s power, it awakens expectation for gifts, healing, and bold witness.
Daniel 3: By the Spirit’s power, it doesn’t flatter us—awakens expectation for gifts, healing, and bold witness.
Daniel 3: With Scripture, Tradition, and Reason, it forms faithful worship and thoughtful public witness.
Daniel 3: From the struggle for freedom, it proclaims hope, dignity, and God’s liberating justice.
Daniel 3: On the path of theosis, it doesn’t flatter us—invites healing communion with God and a transfigured life.
Daniel 3: Within the deposit of faith, it meets us gently—draws us into grace through the Church’s sacramental life.
Returning from his cousins' home, young Joseph carried a pin.
Daniel 3: In soul liberty before God, it calls for personal faith that bears public fruit.
He acted with decisive speed, beginning reforms in his first month, calling the priests to immediate work.
To gird oneself is to prepare for action, yet Maclaren expands this to something far richer: the faculty of bright imaginations about one's future course.
Daniel 3: In the way of Jesus, it meets us gently—calls the community to costly discipleship and peaceable witness.
The first four ring out 'sharp and short like pistol-shots'—watch, stand fast, quit you like men, be strong—a military cadence that marshals the believer for spiritual combat.
Daniel 3: In God’s unfolding plan, it meets us gently—clarifies the times and calls us to readiness and hope.
Daniel 3: In God’s mission, it meets us gently—sends the Church to embody the Kingdom in word and deed.
Titus Vespasian, the Roman general, claimed he stood above false reports; if accusations were true, he had more reason for anger with himself than with the relator.
Daniel 3: In the way of Jesus, it calls the community to costly discipleship and peaceable witness.