Romans 14:15 But if thy brother be grieved with thy meat, now walkest thou not charitably. Destroy not him with thy meat, for whom Christ died
English “for” emboldened in Romans 14:15 was translated from Greek preposition 5228 huper meaning “over” in the genitive case as a grammatical subject is “over” their grammatical objects. God came to earth in the embodiment of Jesus Christ and died on a Roman cross and released His Spirit into the atmosphere to be our one and only spiritual grammatical subject. The New Testament did not come into existence until 325 AD so God’s apostles had to bridge that gap until their letters were translated into the spiritual New Testament. Other than being a source of revenue there is no purpose of the word’s 4,351 religions other than displacing God’s Spirit as our flesh grammatical subjects.