Year-to-date
From Kristos Vocabulary Booster
English
Adjective phrase
year-to-date (used only before a noun)
- Of or in the year to date.
In article <094.53.13.05.938598000@srcbs.org>, basicallyblues says...
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>> If one dies in
>> their sleep you can say they "did not see death"
>
>If one applies your theory, would he say that blind people who are no
>longer alive, "...did not see death"?
>
>Whatever the case the phrase "did not see death" does not mean "did not
>die", which is what Matthew insisted.
Yes, it does, just as "see death" means "die" in the Psalm you yourself quoted.
How long will you keep up this charade, Blue? "See death" means DIE in Psa
89:48, and it means exactly the same in Heb 11:5.
And yes, it IS a charade. For the two passages both demand this same sense as is
clear when you see them side by side:
What man can live and never SEE DEATH?
Who can deliver his soul from the power of Sheol?(Psa 89:48 RSVA)
And:
By faith Enoch was taken up so that he should not SEE DEATH;
and he was not found, because God had taken him.
Now before he was taken he was attested as having
pleased God. (Heb 11:5 RSVA)
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Subudcat se sibi ut haereat Deo
quidquid boni habet, tribuat illi a quo factus est.
(St. Augustine, Ser. 96)
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