Realize and Reckon:
RE'ALIZE, v.t.
1. To bring into being or act; as, to realize a scheme or project.
We realize what Archimedes had only in hypothesis, weighing a single grain of sand against the globe of earth.
2. To convert money into land, or personal into real estate.
3. To impress on the mind as a reality; to believe, consider or treat as real. How little do men in full health realize their frailty and mortality.
Let the sincere christian realize the closing sentiment.
4. To bring home to one's own case or experience; to consider as one's own; to feel in all its force. Who, at his fire side, can realize the distress of shipwrecked mariners?
This allusion must have had enhanced strength and beauty to the eye of a nation extensively devoted to a pastoral life, and therefore realizing all its fine scenes and the tender emotions to which they gave birth.
5. To bring into actual existence and possession; to render tangible or effective. He never realized much profit from his trade or speculations.
RECKON, v.t. rek'n. [L. rego, rectus, whence regnum, regno, Eng. to reign and right.]
1. To count; to number; that is, to tell the particulars.
The priest shall reckon to him the money, according to the years that remain, even to the year of jubilee, and it shall be abated. Lev. 27.
I reckoned above two hundred and fifty on the outside of the church.
2. To esteem; to account; to repute. Rom. 8.
For him I reckon not in high estate.
3. To repute; to set in the number or rank of.
He was reckoned among the transgressors. Luke 22.
4. To assign in an account. rom. 4.
5. to compute; to calculate.
LIFE LESSONS LEARNED:
EPHESIANS: SIT, WALK, STAND.
WHAT AM I GOING TO DO?
Sit/Spiritual/Worship/Music
Physical/Being/Body/Church
Educate/Teach/Realize/Reckon/Repent
Walk/Word/Finance/Work
Stand/Be/Accountable/Integrity
Matthew 13:58 KJV
And he did not many mighty works there
because of their unbelief.