Chapter, Paragraph
1 15,3| creatures with skeletons such as fish spread throughout the ocean
2 15,3| them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the
3 15,3| and have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the
4 15,7| them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the
5 15,7| fowl of the air, and the fish of the sea, and whatsoever
6 15,1| another, birds another and fish another” (1 Cor 15:37-39
7 15,1| man, animal, bird, and fish. Genesis follows this same
8 15,1| pattern with plants on day 3, fish and birds on day 5, then
9 15,1| is not a gill-breathing fish, and it is hard to imagine
10 15,1| five limitations: plants, fish, birds, animals, and man.~ ~
11 15,2| five limitations: plants, fish, birds, animals, and man.~ ~
12 15,2| stocking the waters with fish. This is a beautiful account
13 15,2| anything remotely resembling a fish.~Note that until recently
14 15,2| correct.~ ~The Flesh of Fish.~ ~“And God said, Let the
15 15,2| not specifically mention fish. We use fish as a general
16 15,2| specifically mention fish. We use fish as a general term in agreement
17 15,2| listed here (which aren't fish anyway), and of course because
18 15,2| vertebrate life. The flesh of fish is symbolic, representing
19 15,2| relationship applies to fish obviously, but also to amphibians
20 15,2| day five, but the flesh of fish is only part of this work.
21 15,2| eggs and abandon them. Some fish, such as the male betta,
22 15,2| birds from the flesh of “fish.” But there is another point
23 15,2| them have dominion over the fish of the sea, and over the
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