Which preposition to use with gentile
He likewise sayd, that there were other Gentiles in the Indies which worship the moone as chiefe, and their reason is.
Their pilgrimages are as far as to the river Ganges (which the Gentiles of those tracts likewise do), to wash themselves, for that river as they hold hath a sovereign virtue to purge them of all sins, and no man can be saved that hath not been washed in it.
They had gone to set up their home in the very Zion that the Gentiles with so much bloodshed had wrested from the Saints.
At Jerusalem and at Antioch he had vindicated the freedom of the Gentile from the yoke of the Levitical Law; in his letters to the Romans and Galatians he had proclaimed both to Jew and Gentile that they were not under the law, but under grace.
These would raise tumults, inflame the minds of the gentiles against them, and follow them from place to place, doing them all the mischief in their power.
They were appalled at the sweeping victories he promised the Saints over the hated Gentiles at an early day.
He's a Gentile by religion, by the way; an ordinary agnostic.
He was indignant to learn that the Gentiles along the route of their march across Iowa had tried to beguile these people from their faith.
Because we, though we are Gentiles like those wise men, have lived so long, we and our forefathers before us, in the light of the Gospel, that we are inclined to take it as a matter of course; forgetting what a wonderful, unspeakable, condescension it was of God, not to spare his only begotten Son, but freely to give him for us.
To Jew and gentile alike the military achievements of the French were a source of satisfaction and admiration; and when the Emperor of the French himself came to town, as Heine saw him do in 1810, we can easily understand how the enthusiasm of the boy surrounded the person of Napoleon, and the idea that he was supposed to represent, with a glamor that never lost its fascination for the man.
And this I know: That He will save a Jew and a Gentile on the same terms; that He will do no better for the Gentile than He will for the Jew, and no better for the Jew than for the Gentile.
Some said that the plan was thus to wipe so many more hated Gentiles out of the way, and wishes were deep and loud that the Mormons might all be buried out of sight in the Great Salt Lake.
He cares for Gentile as for Jew.
The kingdome of Bengala in times past hath bene as it were in the power of Moores, neuerthelesse there is great store of Gentiles among them; alwayes whereas I haue spoken of Gentiles, is to be vnderstood Idolaters, and whereas I speak of Moores