| Edward Young - 1811 - 316 pages
...then calls for our compassion, and wit for our contempt. jOf how many might the names have slept in safety, had not their unlucky parts awakened a just...viz. When the sons of God came in to the daughters of Ment they begot giants. So when great talents fall in love with mean purposes, they beget errors of... | |
| John Timbs - 1829 - 354 pages
...then calls for our compassion, and wit for our contempt. Of how many might the names have slept in safety, had not their unlucky parts awakened a just clamour against them? — Letters on Pleasure — Young. DCXLI. There is a lust in man no charm can tame, Of loudly publishing... | |
| Isaac Nordheimer - 1841 - 392 pages
...man rules over another, Eccl. 8:9.; or without any antecedent, eg D^SH m':ab$ ITrfbsn-^a ISa? 1108 when the sons of God came in to the daughters of men, Gen. 6 : 4. 30 : 38., Da"1?!! "pb^O11 when your children shall ask, Josh. 4:21., "IflOa when I was... | |
| Samuel Abraham Walker - 1852 - 276 pages
...God of his fathers, Ps. i. 1. " There were giants in the earth in those days ; and also after that when the sons of God came in to the daughters of men, and they bare children to them, the same became mighty men, which were of old men of renown." These... | |
| Edward Young - 1854 - 692 pages
...then calls for our compassion, and wit for our contempt. Of how many might the names have slept in safety, had not their unlucky parts awakened a just...a certain text of which I shall make a serious use ; namely, " When the sons of God came in to the daugh* Lord Bolingbroke. ters of men, they begot giants."... | |
| Philip Schaff - 1864 - 694 pages
...be an hundred and twenty years. There were giants' in the earth in those days ; and also after that, when the sons of God came in to the daughters of men, and they bare children to them ; the same became mighty 5 men, which were of old, men of renown. And... | |
| Carl Friedrich Keil, Franz Delitzsch - 1866 - 516 pages
...if, according to the simple meaning of the passage, the Nephilim were in existence at the very time when the sons of God came in to the daughters of men, the appearance of the Nephilim cannot afford the slightest evidence that the " sons of God" were angels,... | |
| Melancthon Williams Jacobus - 1869 - 310 pages
...if according to the simple meaning of the passage, the Nephilim were in existence at the very time when the sons of God came in to the daughters of men, the appearance of the Nephilim can not afford the slightest evidence that the sons of God were angels,... | |
| John Fleming (incumbent of Ventry.) - 1879 - 236 pages
...Nephilim to have been otherwise than of human origin : that their existence in the world, at the time when the Sons of God came in to the daughters of men, cannot therefore " afford the slightest evidence that the Sons of God were angels, by whom a family... | |
| Julia Wedgwood - 1894 - 328 pages
...than that which we may discover or imagine in the name and functions of Tubalcain and his brothers. " When the sons of God came in to the daughters of men and they bare children to them, the same were the mighty men which were of old, the men of renown,"*... | |
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