A plaine and compendious exposition of Christs Sermon in the Mount contayned in the 5.6.7. chapters of Saint Matthew. Being the substance of sundry sermons. By Iohn Carter minister at Belstead neare Ipswych:

Carter, John, 1554-1635
Publisher: Printed by W S tansby for Samuel Man dvvelling in Paules Church yard at the signe of the Svvanne
Place of Publication: London
Publication Year: 1627
Approximate Era: CharlesI
TCP ID: A18052 ESTC ID: S116220 STC ID: 4695
Subject Headings: Sermon on the Mount;
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Segment 1423 located on Page 83

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Location Text Standardized Text Parts of Speech
In-Text and not be disappointed? And shall not we, made after Gods owne Image, redeemed by the bloud of his onely begotten Sonne, sealed by his Spirit vnto the day of Redemption, to whom it is his good pleasure to giue the Kingdome, doe it much more? The third Reason, propounded also with a vehement Interroation, doth demonstrate the vanitie and vnprofitablenesse of taking thought about outward supplyes, Which of you by taking thought, can adde one Cubit to his stature? What manner of reasoning this is, Christ himselfe sheweth elsewhere, If then yee be not able to doe that which is least, and not be disappointed? And shall not we, made After God's own Image, redeemed by the blood of his only begotten Son, sealed by his Spirit unto the day of Redemption, to whom it is his good pleasure to give the Kingdom, do it much more? The third Reason, propounded also with a vehement Interroation, does demonstrate the vanity and unprofitableness of taking Thought about outward supplies, Which of you by taking Thought, can add one Cubit to his stature? What manner of reasoning this is, christ himself shows elsewhere, If then ye be not able to do that which is least, cc xx vbi vvn? cc vmb xx pns12, vvn p-acp n2 d n1, vvn p-acp dt n1 pp-f po31 av-j vvn n1, vvn p-acp po31 n1 p-acp dt n1 pp-f n1, p-acp ro-crq pn31 vbz po31 j n1 pc-acp vvi dt n1, vdb pn31 av-d av-dc? dt ord n1, vvd av p-acp dt j n1, vdz vvi dt n1 cc n1 pp-f vvg n1 p-acp j vvz, r-crq pp-f pn22 p-acp vvg n1, vmb vvi crd n1 p-acp po31 n1? q-crq n1 pp-f vvg d vbz, np1 px31 vvz av, cs av pn22 vbb xx j pc-acp vdi d r-crq vbz av-ds,
Note 0 Verse 27. Verse 27. n1 crd
Note 1 Luke 12. 26. Luke 12. 26. zz crd crd




Quotations and Paraphrases (QP)

Adjacent References with Relevance: Luke 12.25 (Geneva); Luke 12.26; Luke 12.26 (AKJV); Matthew 10.29; Verse 27
Only the top predictions per textual unit are considered for adjacency. An adjacent reference is located either in the same or an immediately neighboring segment/note as a given query reference. A reference is relevant to the query if they are identical, parallel texts of each other, or one is a known cross references of the other.
Verse & Version Verse Text Text Is a Partial Textual Segment/Note Cosine Similarity Score Cross Encoder Score Okapi BM25 Score
Luke 12.25 (Geneva) luke 12.25: and which of you with taking thought, can adde to his stature one cubite? the third reason, propounded also with a vehement interroation, doth demonstrate the vanitie and vnprofitablenesse of taking thought about outward supplyes, which of you by taking thought, can adde one cubit to his stature True 0.7 0.934 1.799
Luke 12.25 (AKJV) luke 12.25: and which of you with taking thought can adde to his stature one cubite? the third reason, propounded also with a vehement interroation, doth demonstrate the vanitie and vnprofitablenesse of taking thought about outward supplyes, which of you by taking thought, can adde one cubit to his stature True 0.692 0.93 1.799
Luke 12.25 (Tyndale) luke 12.25: which of you with takynge thought can adde to his stature one cubit? the third reason, propounded also with a vehement interroation, doth demonstrate the vanitie and vnprofitablenesse of taking thought about outward supplyes, which of you by taking thought, can adde one cubit to his stature True 0.688 0.93 2.043
Matthew 6.27 (AKJV) matthew 6.27: which of you by taking thought, can adde one cubite vnto his stature? the third reason, propounded also with a vehement interroation, doth demonstrate the vanitie and vnprofitablenesse of taking thought about outward supplyes, which of you by taking thought, can adde one cubit to his stature True 0.682 0.937 1.709
Matthew 6.27 (Tyndale) matthew 6.27: which of you (though he toke thought therfore) coulde put one cubit vnto his stature? the third reason, propounded also with a vehement interroation, doth demonstrate the vanitie and vnprofitablenesse of taking thought about outward supplyes, which of you by taking thought, can adde one cubit to his stature True 0.642 0.84 1.544
Matthew 6.27 (Geneva) matthew 6.27: which of you by taking care is able to adde one cubite vnto his stature? the third reason, propounded also with a vehement interroation, doth demonstrate the vanitie and vnprofitablenesse of taking thought about outward supplyes, which of you by taking thought, can adde one cubit to his stature True 0.632 0.922 1.017
Luke 12.26 (AKJV) luke 12.26: if yee then bee not able to doe that thing which is least, why take yee thought for the rest? what manner of reasoning this is, christ himselfe sheweth elsewhere, if then yee be not able to doe that which is least, True 0.628 0.876 0.736
Luke 12.25 (ODRV) luke 12.25: and which of you by caring can adde to his stature one cubite? the third reason, propounded also with a vehement interroation, doth demonstrate the vanitie and vnprofitablenesse of taking thought about outward supplyes, which of you by taking thought, can adde one cubit to his stature True 0.608 0.908 0.713
Matthew 6.27 (ODRV) matthew 6.27: and which of you by caring, can adde to his stature one cubite? the third reason, propounded also with a vehement interroation, doth demonstrate the vanitie and vnprofitablenesse of taking thought about outward supplyes, which of you by taking thought, can adde one cubit to his stature True 0.601 0.913 0.713




Citations
i
The index of citation indicates its position within the text of the segment or a particular note of the segment. For example, if 'Note 0' (i.e., the first note) of this segment has three citations, the citation with index 0 is its first citation, inclusive of all its parsed components.

Location Phrase Citations Outliers
Note 0 Verse 27. Verse 27
Note 1 Luke 12. 26. Luke 12.26