Guidelines

Which is proper thank God or thanks God?

Which is proper thank God or thanks God?

Thank God she could help. If we’re thanking people directly, so talking to them in person, we say ‘Thanks’ or ‘Thank you’. But if we want to say we’re pleased about something we say ‘Thank God’, with no s on thank. If you say ‘Thanks God’, it sounds funny because it sounds like you’re talking to God directly.

How do you thank God in a sentence?

1. Thank God nobody was hurt in the accident. 2. Thank God you found the key.

Can I say thanks to God?

The same way it’s technically possible to say: Thanks, God! as an informal way of saying ‘thank you’ to God, as though you were speaking with him/her in person. Note the use of the comma.

How do you use God’s grace in a sentence?

Let us give thanks for God’s grace. By the grace of God, no one was seriously hurt. She tried to live her life in God’s grace.

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Why is it thank God not thanks God?

3 Answers. “Thanks” is an abbreviation of “thank you”, so “Thanks, God” would be saying thank you as if speaking to God itself. “Thank God” is a phrase spoken to someone else, suggesting that they are thankful to God for their good fortune.

Why do we thank God?

We do, however, thank God for everything wholesome and godly. God is the author of every good gift we experience in life and we thank him for these gifts. The Bible says, “give thanks in all circumstances ” (1 Thessalonians 5:16). God’s Word also teaches us to “rejoice in the Lord always ” (Philippians 4:4).

Is it correct to say by God’s grace?

By the direction, blessings, or assistance of a higher power (e.g., God). By the grace of God, let me never have to go through something like that again! We never need question our purpose, for we are led by the grace of God.

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Can I say by God’s grace?

God’s grace empowers us to service. God wants us to be so full of His grace in our lives that we can say with Paul: “But by the grace of God I am what I am, and His grace toward me did not prove vain; but I labored even more than all of them, yet not I, but the grace of God with me” (1 Corinthians 15:10).