Get Free Checker

Ephesian

ADJECTIVE
  1. of or relating to ancient Ephesus or its people or language or culture
NOUN
  1. a resident of the ancient Greek city of Ephesus

How To Use Ephesian In A Sentence

  • Now St. Paul had seen the gift conferred at Ephesus and St. Luke does not distinguish Ephesian glossolaly from that of Jerusalem. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 14: Simony-Tournon
  • With Clytemnestra the assassinator of Agamemnon, king of men; with Ravaillac, who slew the best king that France ever knew; with "him who fired Ephesian's dome;" with the murderers of our The Uniter and Liberator of America
  • The very resemblance of the Epistle to the Ephesians, to that to the Colossians, is against the theory; for if the former were really the one addressed to Laodicea (Col 4: 16), Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
  • Most of these sacred marriage myths are ancient and archetypal, from millennia before the era of Ephesians.
  • Pastafari Pasta Romans Satanism Ethiopia Orthodox JAH Rastafari Jesus Christ YESUS KRISTOS HAILE SELASSIE Black Hebrews BETA ISRAEL Jews Lion JUDAH Falashas binghi nyahbinghi Rastas Rastafarianism Church Satan Roberto Munzo Spiritual Warfare EPHESIANS Ethiopian Catholic Abesha Habesha Blasphemy Pope Papal 666 Chi Xi Stigma Occult New Age E Pluribus Unum Slander One Dollar Bill Evil Eye Buda Ayin Sof WN.com - Articles related to SOUTHERN AFRICA: Competing for Limpopo water
  • And the common life of the Body of Christ, which is discussed in this chapter of Ephesians, is clearly manifest in the unity of our hope. Germany - 'One Church, One Hope' - Freiburg Lecture
  • The passage in Ephesians that compares the union of husband and wife to that of Christ and the church is a favorite ecclesial image, yet it has always been problematic.
  • For they had seen before with him in the city Trophimus an Ephesian, whom they supposed that Paul had brought into the temple.
  • Quartodeciman practice; nevertheless the Ephesian Church soon conformed in this particular to the practice of all the other The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 5: Diocese-Fathers of Mercy
  • Most probably St. Paul's use of the terms pleroma, the æon of this world, the archon of the power of the air, in Ephesians and Colossians, was suggested by the abuse of these terms by the Gnostics. The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume 6: Fathers of the Church-Gregory XI
View all