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I see men, for I behold them as trees walking (Βλεπω τους ανθρωπους οτ ως δενδρα ορω περιπατουντας). A vivid description of dawnin…

I see men as trees, walking. I see men walking; but see them so indistinctly, that but for their motion I could not distinguish t…

I see men as trees, walking.—The better manuscripts offer two words expressing different forms of perception: “I beho…

"Your house is outside Bethsaida, so go around, and get home without going into the town; and if any of your neighbors come to see you, say nothing…

Glossa Ordinaria: After the feeding of the multitude, the Evangelist proceeds to the healing of the blind man, saying, And…

Why did Jesus lead the blind man out of the village? Only on three occasions did Jesus withdraw from the people to heal: the raising of Jairus’s da…

I see men. Our Lord had put the question to the blind man for the sake of his disciples, to inform them that the man had received…

And he looked up
This is omitted in the Arabic and Persic versions. The sense is, that he opened his eyelids, and lifted up hi…

Here is a blind man brought to Christ by his friends. In this, the faith of those who brought him appeared. If those who are spiritually blind do n…
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A.T. Robertson
A.T.Robertson