Hebdomada magna, or The great weeke of Christs passion. Handled by way of exposition upon the fourth article of the Apostles Creed: He suffered under Pontius Pilate; was crucified, dead, buried. / By John Crompe, Master of Arts of C.C.C. in Cambridge, and vicar of Thornham in Kent. First preached in his parish church, and now enlarged as here followes for more publike use.

Crompe, John
Publisher: Printed by Stephen Bulkley for Henry Twyford and are to be sold at the three Daggers in Fleetstreet neare the Inner Temple Gate
Place of Publication: London
Publication Year: 1641
Approximate Era: CharlesI
TCP ID: B02484 ESTC ID: R175851 STC ID: C7027B
Subject Headings: Apostles' Creed -- Commentaries -- 17th century; Jesus Christ -- Passion; Sermons, English -- 17th century;
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Location Text Standardized Text Parts of Speech
In-Text And the heavenly Proverbs of Gods Word affirme, That the bitter wounds of a lover are better than the sweet and sugred kisses of an enemy that hates thee to the death, And the heavenly Proverbs of God's Word affirm, That the bitter wounds of a lover Are better than the sweet and sugared Kisses of an enemy that hates thee to the death, cc dt j n2 pp-f npg1 n1 vvi, cst dt j n2 pp-f dt n1 vbr av-jc cs dt j cc j-vvn n2 pp-f dt n1 cst vvz pno21 p-acp dt n1,




Quotations and Paraphrases (QP)

Adjacent References with Relevance: Proverbs 27.6 (Douay-Rheims); Proverbs 7.13
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
Proverbs 27.6 (Douay-Rheims) proverbs 27.6: better are the wounds of a friend, than the deceitful kisses of an enemy. and the heavenly proverbs of gods word affirme, that the bitter wounds of a lover are better than the sweet and sugred kisses of an enemy that hates thee to the death, False 0.75 0.536 1.175
Proverbs 27.6 (Geneva) proverbs 27.6: the wounds of a louer are faithful, and the kisses of an enemie are pleasant. and the heavenly proverbs of gods word affirme, that the bitter wounds of a lover are better than the sweet and sugred kisses of an enemy that hates thee to the death, False 0.717 0.446 0.244
Proverbs 27.6 (AKJV) proverbs 27.6: faithfull are the woundes of a friend: but the kisses of an enemy are deceitfull. and the heavenly proverbs of gods word affirme, that the bitter wounds of a lover are better than the sweet and sugred kisses of an enemy that hates thee to the death, False 0.685 0.251 0.244




Citations
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