Always the last stone the stone that has
fallen the broken stone for which there is no use.
Not exact matches
Becuase we see in The Book of Daniel with Nebachanezzar's dream where The Hand of God hewns out a ROCK to destroy the «image»»; we also see where Jesus says it is better that you «
Fall upon THE ROCK and be broken (referring to Himself), than for THE ROCK to fall upon you and be crushed; we see Jesus saying THE ROCK (The Stone) that the builders rejected have become THE CHIEF CORNERSTONE (referring to Himself) and in all instances when we see THE ROCK or ROCK OF AGES or CHIEF CORNERSTONE, this is The Lord Jesus Christ being referred to OR referring to Himse
Fall upon THE ROCK and be
broken (referring to Himself), than for THE ROCK to
fall upon you and be crushed; we see Jesus saying THE ROCK (The Stone) that the builders rejected have become THE CHIEF CORNERSTONE (referring to Himself) and in all instances when we see THE ROCK or ROCK OF AGES or CHIEF CORNERSTONE, this is The Lord Jesus Christ being referred to OR referring to Himse
fall upon you and be crushed; we see Jesus saying THE ROCK (The
Stone) that the builders rejected have become THE CHIEF CORNERSTONE (referring to Himself) and in all instances when we see THE ROCK or ROCK OF AGES or CHIEF CORNERSTONE, this is The Lord Jesus Christ being referred to OR referring to Himself).
The
stone wall inside of him has
fallen, the hardness in his heart has
broken down.
In Luke the quotation is followed by a comment, «Every one who
falls on that
stone will be
broken to pieces; but when it
falls on any one it will crush him.»
It obviously doesn't cover normal wear and tear, but if a
stone falls out or a clasp
breaks, they'll replace it for free or give you store credit.
Taking off too many or too much can cause injury to the wing itself, or can cause a bird to
fall like a
stone,
breaking its breastbone or even killing it.
They know that if you enjoy the thrill of swooping around,
falling into the sky and then plunging back up towards the sidewalk,
breaking at the very last second to hover inches from the paving
stones, then they've done their job.
Here, she conjures images of sunlight
breaking through clouds, and
falling rain on weathered
stone..
They spoke last, after the nine coal industry and coal - allied politician witnesses, who bemoaned the burden of following critical clean water regulations and wrongly blamed the Obama administration for its coal - production woes — of course without a single mention of their real problem, which is the subject of a flurry of current news reports: Coal in Appalachia is running out, there is little left to mine (see the AP's report that
broke the story, Jeff Goodell's Rolling
Stone piece «The Coming Decline and
Fall of Big Coal,» and even this energy industry publication story).
Examples of claims that are often overlooked can include: * Accidental holes in walls from moving furniture, trips and
falls, etc * Accidental spills, stains, tears in carpeting or gouges in laminate or hardwood flooring *
Broken windows from flying objects * Puff - back from natural gas furnaces and water heaters * Undetected water damage from underneath cabinets, dishwashers, refrigerators, washing machines * Water pipes that are frozen, cracked, leaking, or have burst * Smoke stained kitchen walls and ceilings from a dinner gone wrong * Bathroom water damage from an overflowing bathtub, sink, or toilet * Damaged
stone, carpet, or tile from a popping fireplace * Damaged decks and siding due to flying play objects or having the bbq grill a little too close * Vandalism of any kind caused by disgruntled former occupants or random strangers * Major damages from fire, wind, hail — yes, we do that too!