{"query": "Easton: Incarnation", "count": 4, "results": [{"id": "card_n_10ddbb145fb2", "title": "Easton: Incarnation", "shelf": "dictionary", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "That act of grace whereby Christ took our human nature into union with his Divine Person, became man. Christ is both God and man. Human attributes and actions are predicated of him, and he of whom the"}, {"id": "card_c_ce730a34ed1d", "title": "Easton: Incarnation cites Acts", "shelf": "connections", "surface": null, "snippet": "Cites Acts 20:28 — a chapter:verse reference found in the card text."}, {"id": "card_n_cfb764498518", "title": "Easton: Angel", "shelf": "dictionary", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "A word signifying, both in the Hebrew and Greek, a “messenger,” and hence employed to denote any agent God sends forth to execute his purposes. It is used of an ordinary messenger (Job 1:14: 1 Sam. 11"}, {"id": "card_n_ac10a439bca1", "title": "Easton: Son of God", "shelf": "dictionary", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "The plural, “sons of God,” is used (Gen. 6:2, 4) to denote the pious descendants of Seth. In Job 1:6; 38:7 this name is applied to the angels. Hosea uses the phrase (1:10) to designate the gracious re"}]}