A sermon preached before the Right Honorable House of Lords, in the Abbey Church at Westminster, Wednesday the 25. day of Iune, 1645. Being the day appointed for a solemne and publique humiliation. / By Samuel Rutherfurd Professor of Divinitie at St. Andrews.

Rutherford, Samuel, 1600?-1661
Publisher: Printed by R C for Andrew Crook and are to be sold at his shop at the signe of the Greene Dragon in Pauls Church yard
Place of Publication: London
Publication Year: 1645
Approximate Era: CivilWar
TCP ID: A92145 ESTC ID: R200125 STC ID: R2393
Subject Headings: Fast-day sermons -- 17th century; Sermons, English -- 17th century;
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Segment 612 located on Page 35

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Location Text Standardized Text Parts of Speech
In-Text and holdest mee for thine enemy? The Reasons are: and holdest me for thine enemy? The Reasons Are: cc vv2 pno11 p-acp po21 n1? dt n2 vbr:




Quotations and Paraphrases (QP)

Adjacent References with Relevance: Job 13.24 (AKJV)
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
Job 13.24 (AKJV) job 13.24: wherefore hidest thou thy face, and holdest me for thine enemie? and holdest mee for thine enemy? the reasons are False 0.654 0.93 0.781
Job 13.24 (Geneva) job 13.24: wherefore hidest thou thy face, and takest me for thine enemie? and holdest mee for thine enemy? the reasons are False 0.646 0.873 0.002
Job 13.24 (Douay-Rheims) job 13.24: why hidest thou thy face, and thinkest me thy enemy? and holdest mee for thine enemy? the reasons are False 0.613 0.574 0.813




Citations
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