[4.28] Mark xvi. 17. It must be remembered that in the ancient Hebrew, as in all the other ancient languages (see my Origin of Language, p. 177, et seq.), the words meaning “stranger,” “strange language,” were derived from the words which signified “to stammer,” “to sob,” an unknown dialect always appearing to a simple people, as it were, an indistinct stammering. See Isaiah xxviii. 11; xxxiii. 19; I. Cor. xiv. 21.
[4.29] I. Cor. viii. 1, remembering what precedes.
[4.30] I. Cor. xii. 28, 30; xiv. 2, et seq.
[4.31] I. Sam. xix. 23, et seq.
[4.32] Plutarch, Of the Pythian Oracles, 24. Compare the prediction of Cassandra in the Agamemnon of Æschylus.
[4.33] I. Cor. xii. 3; xvi. 22; Rom. viii. 15.
[4.34] Rom. viii. 23, 26, 27.
[4.35] I. Cor. vii. 1; xiv. 7, et seq.
[4.36] Rom. viii. 26, 27.
[4.37] I. Cor. xiv. 13, 14, 27, et seq.