Act 27:14 \v 14 After a short time, however, a stormy wind blew down from the shore. It blew across the island from the north side and hit the ship. People call that stormy wind "the Northeast Wind."

This commit is contained in:
TomWarren 2019-02-13 10:13:04 -05:00
parent bdeb0d40a0
commit 5be596cba1
1 changed files with 2 additions and 2 deletions

View File

@ -1510,7 +1510,7 @@
\s5
\v 26 You know that Paul has taught many people who live in Ephesus to no longer buy the statues that we make. Now even the people from many other towns in our province no longer want to buy what we make. Paul tells people that the gods that we worship are not gods and that we should not worship them.
\v 27 If people listen to him, they will stop our business. People will not think that they should come any longer to the temple of Artemis (also known as Diana) to worship her. People will no longer think that Artemis is great. Yet all the province of Asia and even the whole world worship her!"
\v 27 So our business of making idols for Artemis and many other gods that people worship might now be seen as dishonorable. Not only that, but the temple of the great goddess Artemis might be rejected as a place that has no meaning at all and she might be forgotten, even though many people in the province of Asia and all over the world worship her.
\p
\s5
@ -2061,7 +2061,7 @@
\v 13 Because there was only a gentle wind blowing from the south, the ship's crew thought that they could travel like they wanted to. So they lifted the anchor up out of the sea, and the ship sailed close along the coastline of the island of Crete.
\s5
\v 14 After a short time, however, a stormy wind blew down from the shore. It blew across the island from the north side and hit the ship. That wind is called Euroclydon, "the Northeast Wind."
\v 14 After a short time, however, a stormy wind blew down from the shore. It blew across the island from the north side and hit the ship. People call that stormy wind "the Northeast Wind."
\v 15 It blew strongly against the front of the ship, and we could not sail against it. So the sailors let the wind move the ship in the direction that the wind was blowing.
\v 16 The ship then sailed along the coastline of a small island named Cauda. We were able with difficulty to fasten the lifeboat securely to the ship.