It is still KIM - Native languages do not have self describing nouns which is a Christian / European tradition. Using its origin, KIM is short for KIMBERLY, KIMBERLY is short for Lord Kimberly, and his name is tied to a place (Cyneburga's field) which would have no definition in any Native Language.
lord macaulay
Away from our lord our owner Jesus Christ
Lord Curzon introduced civil services in India
Lord Dufferin
Jesus is lord of lord and king of kings.
Jesus did follow the Lord's Prayer.
To confess Jesus Christ as Lord is simply as it says; to confess that Jesus IS in fact LORD! It doesn't say "if you MAKE Jesus Lord", but rather it says "confess that Jesus IS LORD". Many Arminians, but even some Calvinists seem to believe that Jesus must be made Lord of one's life, but the truth of the matter is that He is Lord over all, and we are to submit to His Lordship.
Jesus Is Lord Church was created in 1978.
It is still KIM - Native languages do not have self describing nouns which is a Christian / European tradition. Using its origin, KIM is short for KIMBERLY, KIMBERLY is short for Lord Kimberly, and his name is tied to a place (Cyneburga's field) which would have no definition in any Native Language.
think of jesus like a lord and God/Father as a king
Exactly as your question has asked. "May our Lord Jesus Christ be always your strength and your guide" There is no need to change it as it cannot be said any better in any other language of phrasing. It is perfectly acceptable.
Church of the Lord Jesus Christ was created in 1933.
The JML initials most commonly stand for Just My Luck; however, they can also stand for Java Modeling Language, Jonas Macro Language, Juggling Markup Language, Jesse Mccartney Language, or Jesus My Lord.
Jesus is Lord.
Yes i know Jesus as Lord. Yes, I do. (Jeremiah 9:23, 24)
The original - i.e. as spoken by Jesus - would have been in Aramaic. As the questioner asks about "The Lord's Prayer" then the answer is that it is in English. In other languages it has other names - e.g. in Latin it is Pater Noster.