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jewel 1
jewels 2
jewish 87
jews 177
jezebel 4
jg 1
jo- 1
Frequency    [«  »]
185 what
182 11
177 6
177 jews
176 our
175 after
173 would
Bishop Alexander (Mileant)
Toward understanding the Bible

IntraText - Concordances

jews

    Part,  Chapter, Paragraph
1 1,1,4 | in Jamnia in 90 A.D., the Jews ceased ~to make use of these 2 1,1,4 | Paul warns. Concerning the Jews he writes that even~unto 3 1,1,5 | practice by the ancient Jews of re-examining the text 4 1,2,1 | from another ~the ancient Jews referred to them by their 5 1,2,2 | their relations toward the Jews. ~There began persecutions 6 1,2,2 | Pharaohs while working ~the Jews as slaves and forcing them 7 1,2,2 | time concerned that the Jews ~would unite with outlying 8 1,2,2 | in Egypt. The exodus of Jews from ~Egypt falls sometime 9 1,2,3 | scorning the unbelieving Jews, remind them of these prophesies: “ 10 1,2,3 | lation] ~ ~Explanation: The Jews always had rulers from their 11 1,2,3 | Je-~ ~Romans 9:5 Of whom [Jews] as concerning the ~flesh 12 1,2,3 | reconciled us with God. Jews therefore said unto him, 13 1,2,3 | prophets which were sent to the Jews not one was as great and ~ 14 1,2,3 | important as Moses. The Jews always expected to see in 15 1,2,3 | that is born King ~of the Jews? for we have seen his star 16 1,2,4 | eighty-three. ~ Each year Jews commemorate the Exodus in 17 1,3,1 | nations on ~earth through the Jews. It was in God.s plan that 18 1,3,1 | the coming of grace. The Jews lived sur-~rounded by antagonistic 19 1,3,1 | Gentile customs pulled the Jews down a path of spiritual 20 1,3,1 | enslave and op-~press the Jews. Throughout its history, 21 1,3,1 | all ages. Even though ~the Jews often sinned no less than 22 1,3,2 | easily bor-~rowed by the Jews and led to apostasy from 23 1,3,2 | While priesthood among the Jews was inherited, yet it was 24 1,3,2 | As centuries passed, the Jews developed a concept of a 25 1,3,3 | It was ~now time for the Jews to inherit the land which 26 1,3,3 | Joshua tells us of how the Jews, led by a disciple of ~Moses, 27 1,3,3 | beginning of the conquest, the Jews had to cross the ~Jordan, 28 1,3,3 | waters stopped, and the Jews were able to walk on the 29 1,3,3 | chosen by God from among the Jews in order to save the nation ~ 30 1,3,4 | land of Canaanites, the Jews ~began to get closer to 31 1,3,4 | cus-~toms. God punished the Jews for these sins. He allowed 32 1,3,4 | Midianite army and delivered the Jews from cruel oppression ~( 33 1,3,4 | who were oppressing the Jews at ~the time (Ch. 13-16). 34 1,3,5 | war broke out between the Jews and the Philistines, and 35 1,3,5 | sulted in a victory for the Jews and made David famous, which 36 1,3,5 | their pagan neighbors, the Jews began to gradually forget 37 1,3,5 | in 539 B.C. The captive Jews were ~spiritually supported 38 1,3,6 | Ezra is the return of the Jews from the Babylonian captiv-~ 39 1,3,6 | which Ezra and any other Jews were ~allowed to return 40 1,3,8 | named ~Haman, who hated the Jews, decided to exterminate 41 1,3,8 | commemorate deliver-~ance of the Jews from Haman, the feast of 42 1,3,9 | Encouraged by this, the Jews drove the Assyrian army 43 1,3,0 | Judea changed hands, and the Jews suffered much under the 44 1,3,0 | every effort to convert the Jews to a pagan religion. The 45 1,3,0 | to a pagan religion. The Jews who believed in ~the true 46 1,3,0 | of the persecution of the Jews by Antiochus Epiphanes ( 47 1,3,0 | fight of the Palestinian Jews against the enemies of the 48 1,3,0 | earlier persecutions of the Jews in ~Egypt that started in 49 1,3,0 | Ptolemy.s plot to destroy the Jews by luring them to the Hip-~ 50 1,3,0 | scared the elephants, and the Jews were thus saved. ~ In conclusion 51 1,3,1 | himself the king of the Jews in 37 B.C. He was the first 52 1,3,1 | call himself a king of the Jews ~without being a Jew. During 53 1,4 | Ps. 19:7-9). ~ ~Among the Jews, the didactic books, together 54 1,4,1 | re-~cord was found by the Jews when they conquered Bashan. 55 1,4,1 | they conquered Bashan. The Jews copied it into a collection ~ 56 1,4,2 | which resembled a harp. The Jews call this ~book Tehillim, 57 1,4,6 | revealed religion of the Jews on one hand, and the meaninglessness 58 1,4,6 | beliefs and morals of the ~Jews who, being righteous worshippers 59 1,5,2 | capital. The law allowed the Jews to have only one temple, 60 1,5,2 | Together with idol worship, the Jews borrowed rude and immoral 61 1,5,2 | Edomites did not bother the Jews. Peace and prosperity accompanied 62 1,5,2 | he did not preach to the Jews, but ~did it in Nineveh, 63 1,5,2 | and God would save the ~Jews. Indeed, during the following 64 1,5,2 | Babylonian captivity. The Jews spent in captivity about 65 1,5,3 | That is why teaching~the Jews to believe and live correctly 66 1,5,3 | tist. ~ While among the Jews the priesthood was inheritable, 67 1,5,3 | God developed among the Jews: a man ~fully unselfish, 68 1,5,5 | God's judgment over the Jews and all people. ~ The main 69 1,5,5 | punishment, and called the Jews to sincere ~repentance, 70 1,5,5 | Apostle Peter reminded the Jews of this prophecy of Joel 71 1,5,5 | preaching addressed to the Jews, but de-~scribes Jonah's 72 1,5,5 | Jesus Christ reminded the Jews of the miracle of Jonah 73 1,5,5 | gods'. In a like way, some Jews ~saw God Jehovah as their 74 1,5,5 | nothing. All peoples, not the Jews only, were respon-~sible 75 1,5,5 | mercy to them. Therefore the Jews were to ~set good examples 76 1,5,5 | pagan traditions that the Jews had adopted from the neighboring 77 1,5,5 | the covenant that the Jews broke and dishonored when 78 1,5,5 | of the prophet that the Jews would be re-~jected, and 79 1,5,5 | to invade Judaea, and the Jews had to either defend themselves 80 1,5,5 | predict the fate of the Jews and their neighbors, and 81 1,5,5 | The place of the rejected Jews ~in the Kingdom of the Messiah 82 1,5,5 | Babylonian captivity of the Jews; re-~pentance of the Jews 83 1,5,5 | Jews; re-~pentance of the Jews and their return to their 84 1,5,5 | forthcoming disasters from the Jews. ~Zephaniah as well predicted 85 1,5,5 | depicted the punishment of the Jews by the ~Assyrians in the 86 1,5,5 | desperation and blindness of the Jews. That's why Jeremiah's prophetic 87 1,5,5 | contemporaries, as well as the Jews in the seventies A.D., when 88 1,5,5 | force the judgment on the Jews and Gentiles in order to 89 1,5,5 | After the captivity, the Jews would return to their land 90 1,5,5 | city, and the grief of the ~Jews. The original text of this 91 1,5,5 | out of the desire of the Jews from Babylon to encourage ~ 92 1,5,5 | king Jehoiachin with the Jews that lived in Babylon, and 93 1,5,5 | Baruch explained to the Jews that the disasters that 94 1,5,5 | were the disasters for the Jews: many admitted their share 95 1,5,5 | related by blood to the Jews. Nothing is said about the 96 1,5,5 | brothers. The ~grief of the Jews over this behavior of the 97 1,5,5 | foretold the return of the Jews from the captivity. ~ ~Book 98 1,5,5 | Je-~hoiachin and 10,000 Jews he was led captive to Babylon 99 1,5,5 | not only to the captive Jews, but also to the .rebellious 100 1,5,5 | symbol of the grief of the Jews, and her death was ~made 101 1,5,5 | best of the Old Testament Jews did, but they ~would be 102 1,5,5 | reproving ~speeches against the Jews and the symbolic acts mimicking 103 1,5,5 | Gentiles: the neighbors of the Jews (25), people of Tyre (26- 104 1,5,5 | Son of Man to remind the Jews about this prophecy of Daniel. 105 1,5,5 | Cyrus ruled to free the Jews from the captivity. The 106 1,5,5 | Jehovah and commanded the Jews to build a ~Temple in Jerusalem 107 1,5,5 | pro-~liferated among the Jews and the Gentiles during 108 1,5,5 | nations that surrounded the Jews, and about the fu-~ture 109 1,5,5 | is unpleasant to those Jews who reject Christ and continue 110 1,5,5 | That was the time when many Jews, led by Zerubbabel, returned 111 1,5,5 | return from the captivity the Jews started the construction 112 1,5,5 | following words to convince the Jews to carry on the building ~ 113 1,5,5 | Gethsemane. God called the ~Jews to genuine piety, saying 114 1,5,5 | prophet further denounced the Jews for mixed marriages, irregular 115 1,5,5 | Malachi does not rebuke ~the Jews for the sin of idol worship, 116 1,5,7 | or authors addressed the Jews with the adjectives that 117 1,5,7 | become a part. Of course, the Jews were the first to be called 118 1,5,7 | that the majority of the Jews would break away from the ~ 119 1,Add,0| For salvation is of the Jews” (John 4:22). The redeeming 120 1,Add,0| no longer belonged to the Jews, as they had not believed ~ 121 1,Add,0| economic organization of the ~Jews through the ages. All that 122 2,1 | conquered Babylon, permitted Jews~under Zerubbabel to return 123 2,1 | Persians were ruling over the Jews~who had resettled in Palestine; 124 2,1 | the cleavage between the Jews and Samaritans. Also, the~ 125 2,1 | Palestine. Under Alexander the Jews lived in comparative peace 126 2,1 | Antichrist.~Many thousands of Jews were slain, and other thousands 127 2,1 | persecution inflicted on the Jews by~Antiochus could not do 128 2,1 | assumed the title King of the Jews~with royal pomp, at the 129 2,1 | the little kingdom~of the Jews to escape. A quarrel between 130 2,1 | reportedly born King of the Jews, is well known.~Herod was 131 2,1 | and at the request of many~Jews, Judaea was put under a 132 2,1,1 | Herod as king, many devout Jews, losing all hope that their 133 2,1,3 | times of worship for the Jews of New Testament days were 134 2,1,3 | Intertestamental~Period, the Jews had great reverence for 135 2,1,4 | The Feasts.~The Jews of New Testament times observed 136 2,1,4 | New Testament times the Jews had made changes in the 137 2,1,5 | The Scriptures.~The Jews of New Testament times, 138 2,1,5 | time of the captivity the Jews must~have been permitted 139 2,1,5 | our Old Testament.~Many Jews in the days of Jesus had 140 2,1,6 | people. The publicans were Jews who collected~those taxes 141 2,1,6 | around Mt. Gerazim. The Jews despised them~because of 142 2,1,8 | 1-10; Jer. 23:5-6). The Jews of the Intertestamental 143 2,2,5 | by his compatriots, the Jews. The Jews scorned and hated 144 2,2,5 | compatriots, the Jews. The Jews scorned and hated the publicans 145 2,2,5 | It was customary for the Jews~to have several names.~Moved 146 2,2,5 | spite of the scorn from the~Jews and especially from their 147 2,2,5 | Gospel preeminently for the Jews. There is a basis for~assuming 148 2,2,5 | objective was to prove to the Jews that~Jesus Christ is precisely 149 2,2,5 | s genealogy, showing the~Jews His descent from David and 150 2,2,5 | first Gospel as “for the Jews” can be seen also in the 151 2,2,5 | Kingdom (the unbelieving Jews) will be cast out (ch. 8: 152 2,2,5 | to earth not only for the Jews but also for the~gentiles 153 2,2,5 | salvation~not only of the Jews, but also of the gentiles, 154 2,3,2 | Paul’s activities among the Jews of Palestine; ch. 13-28 155 2,3,2 | asserted itself among the Jews~in Palestine (in accordance 156 2,3,2 | Gamaliel’s counsel to the Jews about not persecuting Christ’ 157 2,3,3 | Jerusalem and earned from the Jews the nameJust.” In contrast 158 2,3,3 | Epistle was directed at the Jews, scattered throughout the 159 2,3,3 | great respect from all the~Jews (including the non-faithful), 160 2,3,3 | could regard all~Christian Jews, wherever they may be, as 161 2,3,3 | that the~Lord punished the Jews for killing James the Just. 162 2,3,3 | James was reserved for the Jews: “To the twelve tribes which~ 163 2,3,3 | which did not exclude the Jews living in Palestine. The 164 2,3,3 | sorrows which the scattered Jews endured at the~hands of 165 2,3,3 | converted an additional 5000 Jews to Christianity (Acts ch. 166 2,3,3 | Peter preached also to the Jews and Proselytes (pagans that~ 167 2,3,3 | in the main, be converted Jews as well as converted heathens 168 2,4,2 | in deaths often. From the~Jews five times I received forty 169 2,4,3 | city~and descended from Jews freed from Roman slavery, 170 2,4,3 | the accepted custom~of the Jews, young Saul learned the 171 2,4,3 | Christ, the vehemence of the Jews forced him to~flee to Jerusalem ( 172 2,4,3 | came to earth to save the Jews only, and~therefore gentiles 173 2,4,3 | Savior of all humanity — for Jews just as~well as for gentiles — 174 2,5,3 | later from the unbelieving Jews and pagans.~Even during 175 2,5,8 | especially ruinous for the Jews. The~third phase of the 176 2,5,8 | the scattering of captive Jews throughout the Roman Empire. 177 2,5,9 | Epyphanes' demanding that the Jews bow to the statue of Jupiter


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