Figures of Speech of Comparison

How God’s Word Interprets Itself Integrity of the Word Cinardo Home (Rutherford, NJ) Young, Michael 11/09/2010 11/09/2010

How do you describe a paper clip to an alien using only words? You try to compare it to something they already know and understand. This teaching covers five figures of comparison God uses in the Bible to help us understand and add emphasis: (1) simile, which is a comparison using “like” or “as”, (2) metaphor, a compressed simile where the explicit part is removed, (3) hypocatastasis, which is when the subject is implied, (4) prosopopoeia or personification, where human characteristics or traits are applied to inanimate objects or ideas, and (5) condescensio, where human or animal characteristics or traits are applied to God. It is important to read the context of the verse when identifying a figure of speech so we do not take things literally that are meant to be figurative.

Figures of Speech

Figures of Speech of Repetition

How God’s Word Interprets Itself Integrity of the Word Cinardo Home (Rutherford, NJ) Carr, Jesse 11/04/2010 11/04/2010

The goal of this teaching is to help people learn how to identify figures of speech, specifically regarding repetition, so they can further understand and believe the Bible in their personal lives. Figures of speech are like what condiments or spices are to food to help accentuate the flavor. Explanations and examples are provided for the four figures of speech: anaphora, polysyndeton, asyndeton, and polyptoton. The point of recognizing figures of speech is not to be able to identify the formal name of each figure, but, instead, to understand what God wants highlighted. Misunderstanding figures of speech can and has caused issues leading to wrong practice and division. In the Bible, repetition helps drive home what God wants to be emphasized including how to renew our minds, what the love of God does, the profit of each manifestation of the spirit, and so much more.

An Introduction to Figures of Speech Used in the Bible

How God’s Word Interprets Itself Integrity of the Word Cinardo Home (Rutherford, NJ) Zolezzi, Steve 11/04/2010 11/04/2010

In this first teaching of the series some different types of figures of speech are briefly looked at, including exaggeration, euphemism, and repetition, to begin to learn how to spot them and how they work in the Scriptures.

Figures of Speech

An Introduction to Figures of Speech Used in the Bible

An Introduction to Figures of Speech Used in the Bible How God’s Word Interprets Itself Integrity of the Word Cinardo Home (Rutherford, NJ) Various Teachers 11/04/2010 11/11/2010

We want to understand God’s Word so we can believe it and please God and we are to take God’s Word literally whenever and wherever possible, the exceptions being when He uses figures of speech and orientalisms to communicate His truth. The use of figures of speech – places where something is said which is not literal or goes outside of the normal rules of language – is a key to the Word’s interpretation in the verse because it is how God highlights what is important in His Word. This series is a simple introduction to some figures of speech used in the Bible so we can learn to spot them as we read.

Romans 12:9 – 12:23 and Romans Chapter 14

Romans 12:9 – 12:23 and Romans Chapter 14 Leadership and Service Love Cinardo Home (Rutherford, NJ) Zolezzi, Steve 11/15/2007 11/15/2007

In this part of Romans 12 we see the love of God without hypocrisy and practical things we can do in order to manifest that love among the believers. Romans chapter 14 handles not judging one another by carnal judgments because all believers respond to the same lord, the Lord Jesus Christ. We have great freedom in Christ, but we’re not to use our freedom in ways that might cause another believer to stumble in his or her walk with God.

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