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(1) “Shibboleth” (Jud. 12:6): A “test” or password for entrance; (2) “Washed my hands of the matter (Mat. 27:24): An attempt to avoid guilt for a culpable deed; (3) “Touch the hem of the garment” (Mat. 14:36): Referring to a bare minimum of effort or information; (4) “Apple of your eye” (Pro. 7:2, et al.): That which is greatly prized; (5) “No room in the Inn” (Luke 2:7): The unavailability of accommodation or space (hotel, restaurant, parking, et al.); (6) “Physician, heal thyself” (Luke 4:23): One should take his own advice or tend to his own affairs; (7) “Eye for an eye” (Exo. 21:24, et al.): The penalty for injury of a neighbor under the law of Moses; retribution in kind; (8) “Armageddon” (Rev. 16:15): Any catastrophic, climactic event; (9) “Skin of my teeth” (Job 19:20): The finest or smallest of margins, especially in avoiding or escaping some peril; (10) “A little bird told me” (Ecc. 10:20): Ascribed source of rumor/information when one does not want to disclose the actual source; (11) “David and Goliath” (1 Sam. 17:50, et al.): One who succeeds in the face of overwhelming odds or forces; (12) “Weighed in the balances and found wanting” (Dan. 5:27): When one is put to the test
and comes up short; (13) “Fly in the ointment” (Ecc. 10:1): That which spoils, corrupts, pollutes, or renders an otherwise good thing useless; (14) “Casting your pearls before swine” (Mat. 7:6): Spending one’s time, effort, or money in a vain attempt to influence another person; (15) “Drop in the bucket” (Isa. 40:15): Amounting to very little or nothing; (16) “The right hand knows not what the left hand is doing” (Mat. 6:3): Indicating great confidentiality or lack of communication; (17) “As old as Methuselah” (Gen. 5:27): He lived 969 years, so this expression is a hyperbole of advanced age; (18) “Good Samaritan” (Luke 10:33): One who aids someone in distress; (19) “Going the second mile” (Mat. 5:41): Doing more than is expected/required; (20) “If the blind lead the blind…” (Mat. 15:14): False teachers/leaders who have naïve followers; (21) “A kingdom divided against itself…” (Mat. 12:25): Description of any entity that experiences inner conflict; (22) “Judas kiss” (Luke 22:48): Any act of betrayal; (23) “Handwriting on the wall” (Dan. 5:5): That which is strongly implied or expected, often with a dire consequence.
The foregoing are but samples of likely many others. Such expressions, drawn directly from the Bible, will not easily or quickly be erased from speech and literature. After all, the Bible is “the word of God, which liveth and abideth forever” (1 Pet. 1:23), and Jesus said: “Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my words shall not pass away” (Mat. 24:35). ---Dub McClish, The Scripturecache.com
---Mike Riley, Gospel Snippets
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