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mickeylee | 16:21 Sun 27th May 2007 | Word Origins
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allthough i can not think of a specific phrase, these words are typically put together but where are they from.
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New Covenant Book of 1 Corinthians v 13: And now abideth faith, hope, charity, these three; but the greatest of these is charity.
(Charity is most often translated as Love, as in The New International Version: And now these three remain: faith, hope and love. But the greatest of these is love.)
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Thanks clannad, but if abideth is in the lives here sense, who or what are they.
Faith Hope and Charity were also saints . Christian martyrs.
Pistis, Elpis, and Agape.
They are also the words denoting the Christian virtues as stated by Clanad .
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Thanks shaneystar2 thats cleared things up.
abideth is not in the sense of lives
but remains, stays, lurks or rests

DId the translators know they were writing great English at the time ?
Well, this bit is from Tyndale, isnt it c. 1526
and about 2/3 they say of the NT in the King James version is from Tyndale.

T was erm very reformist and even these three words are the subject of debate on whether they were the accurate ones even for the time.

FOR example - ekklesia does occur in the NT, but T always translated this as congregation and not Church
[cos he didnt like the Roman Ch see?]

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