Chapter, Paragraph
1 10,6 | revelation, which takes into account changes brought about by
2 15,1 | of Genesis gives a brief account of God’s creative work.
3 15,3 | Taking all of Scripture into account we see that these existed
4 15,5 | The position that the account of the creation of the universe
5 15,5 | scientific laws are adequate to account for all phenomena. This
6 15,6 | in control. The Biblical account of creation is literal,
7 15,2 | fish. This is a beautiful account of creation, and it is the
8 15,5 | sufficed to read the biblical account of the creation of the world
9 16,2 | efforts to bring the Biblical account into congruence and harmony
10 16,2 | to support the Biblical account. In principle we are con
11 16,2 | Moses' immediate aim in the account of the creation was to instill
12 16,2 | follow directly from the account of the creation. These are:~ ~•
13 16,2 | significance of this short account. If the whole book of Genesis
14 16,2 | of the first page of the account of the world and mankind,
15 19,1 | gives the following brief account of this event. God sees
16 19,1 | territories.~ The Genesis account of the great flood is not
17 19,2 | historicity of the Biblical flood account is confirmed by the tradition
18 19,2 | independent of the Biblical account. R. Andree (Die Flutsagen
19 App,1| discredited the Biblical account. Scripture accuracy has
20 App,1| would match the biblical account that the city was destroyed
21 App,1| archaeology support the biblical account? Over the past century four
22 App,1| the Jordan in the biblical account, caused this collapse. The
23 App,1| consistent with the biblical account that the city was captured
24 App,1| evidence supports the Bible's account of when and how Jericho
25 App,1| facts correspond to the account given in chapters 8 and
26 App,2| John the Theologian, an account of everything that Christ
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