Send Close Add comments: (status displays here)
Got it!  This site "creationpie.com" uses cookies. You consent to this by clicking on "Got it!" or by continuing to use this website.  Note: This appears on each machine/browser from which this site is accessed.
A strong case for Valentine's Day
by RS  admin@creationpie.com : 1024 x 640


1. A strong case for Valentine's Day
Verse routeMatthew 9:12 But when Jesus heard that, he said unto them, They that be whole need not a physician, but they that are sick. [kjv]
Verse routeο δε ακουσας ειπεν ου χρειαν εχουσιν οι ισχυοντες ιατρου αλλα οι κακως εχοντες [gnt]
Verse routeat Iesus audiens ait non est opus valentibus medico sed male habentibus [v]

Heart
The Latin word "valentibus""strong" and is the source of the Latin name "Valentine" meaning "strong". From Saint Valentine (there were two of them) comes the holiday known as Saint Valentine's Day an February 14.
Valentine's Day has become a marketing bonanza and commercial celebration of love and romance.

2. Valentine's Day 2023
Valentine's Day 2023

Valentine's Day 2023 was quite a surprise!

3. Matthew 9:12 Words
Verse routeMatthew 9:12 But when Jesus heard that, he said unto them, They that be whole need not a physician, but they that are sick. [kjv]
Verse routeο δε ακουσας ειπεν ου χρειαν εχουσιν οι ισχυοντες ιατρου αλλα οι κακως εχοντες [gnt]
Verse routeat Iesus audiens ait non est opus valentibus medico sed male habentibus [v]

The ancient Greek word "ἰατρός""physician" and is the source of the (second part of the) English word "psychiatry". The Latin word "medico""physician" and is the source of the English word "medical".

The ancient Greek word "κακός""worthless, useless". Jesus uses this word to describe the sick. The KJV (King James Version) often translates this word as "evil". This comes, in part, through the Latin word "male""badly, wrongly".

4. Matthew 9:12-13 Paraphrase
Verse routeMatthew 9:12 But when Jesus heard that, he said unto them, They that be whole need not a physician, but they that are sick. [kjv]

Verse route9:13 But go ye and learn what that meaneth, I will have mercy, and not sacrifice: for I am not come to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance. [kjv]


5. Feast of Saint Valentine
The Feast of Saint Valentine was established on February 14 in 496 AD by Pope Gelasius in honor of Saint Valentine of Rome who was martyred in 269 AD, about 50 years before Christianity became tolerated and then the official religion of the Roman empire.

Saint Valentine's Day become connected with romantic love in the 1300's and 1400's with ideas of "courtly love", "lovebirds" in early spring, etc.

In the 1700's in England it became a time when couples expressed their love for each other with gifts and other tokens of love such as cards, candy, etc.

6. Commercial forces
Chess pieces Nike shoes logo
Commercial forces have taken over the original idea of Valentine's Day.
A similar thing happen with Saint Nicholas after moving his day from December 5 to December 25 in the Middle Ages and, at times since, often emphasizing Santa Claus more than Christ at Christmas. To counter this, Luther introduced the "Christ child" or "Kristkind" whose name, through Dutch, became "Kris Kringle".

Information sign More: The doctrine of Santa Claus

7. Latin
Verse routeMatthew 9:12 But when Jesus heard that, he said unto them, They that be whole need not a physician, but they that are sick. [kjv]
Verse routeο δε ακουσας ειπεν ου χρειαν εχουσιν οι ισχυοντες ιατρου αλλα οι κακως εχοντες [gnt]
Verse routeat Iesus audiens ait non est opus valentibus medico sed male habentibus [v]

This verse is interesting in that some of the words had different meanings in the Greek.

Information sign More: Matthew 9:12 The healthy make a strong case for evil sick time

8. Matthew 9:12
   Matthew 9:12 
 All 
KJV: But when Jesus heard that, he said unto them, They that be whole need not a physician, but they that are sick.
Greek: ο δε ιησους ακουσας ειπεν αυτοις ου χρειαν εχουσιν οι ισχυοντες ιατρου αλλ αλλα οι κακως εχοντες
Latin: at Iesus audiens ait non est opus valentibus medico sed male habentibus
Wessex: & se haelend cweð þe þis ge-hyrde. Nis halen laeches nan þarf. ac seoken.
Wycliffe: And Jhesus herde, and seide, A leche is not nedeful to men that faren wel, but to men that ben yuel at ese.
Tyndale: When Iesus herde that he sayde vnto them: The whole neade not the phisicion but they that are sicke.
Luther: Da das Jesus hörete, sprach er zu ihnen: Die Starken bedürfen des Arztes nicht, sondern die Kranken.
Spanish: Y oyéndolo Jesús, les dijo: Los que están sanos no tienen necesidad de médico, sino los que están enfermos.

9. Emperor Valens and Adrianople
Roman emperor Valens (328-378), whose name meant "strong", ruled from 364 to 378 AD. He was the younger brother of emperor Valentinian I.
Emperor Valens was best known for being defeated and killed (as was much of his Roman army) by the Goths at the Battle of Adrianople in 378.

It is ironic that a Caesar whose name meant "strong" lost the battle (and his life) that is considered the start of the fall (falling apart) of the Western Roman Empire. The Eastern Roman Empire at Constantinople lasted another thousand years. [Daniel and the prophetic statue]

Information sign More: Daniel: world empires
Information sign More: Daniel 2: I have a forgotten dream
The ancient Greek name "Οὐάλης""Valens".

10. Valence
The term "valence" is used in chemistry and is used to refer to the combining power of an atomic element and is measured in terms of the number of hydrogen atoms it can combine with, displace, etc.
In English, the word dates to 1425. William Higgins used the term in 1789 as "valency bonds" for "ultimate particles".

The "combining power of an element" comes from German, first used in 1884, from the German word "Valenz""valence".

In 1927 German physicist Friedrich Hund proposed a set of rules for electron orbitals in electrons that are now collectively called Hund's Rules. Some of the rules taught in chemistry class do not work for certain atoms.

Information sign More: Electron orbitals and Hund's rule

11. Valence
In literature, "valence" refers to some intrinsic goodness.

The term "valence" is often used to refer to moral character - either lack of moral character or having moral character.

12. End of page

by RS  admin@creationpie.com : 1024 x 640