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Alphabetical    [«  »]
greece 4
greed 2
greediness 1
greek 72
greeks 6
green 4
greet 1
Frequency    [«  »]
74 wisdom
73 beginning
72 daniel
72 greek
72 order
72 sacred
72 thus
Bishop Alexander (Mileant)
Toward understanding the Bible

IntraText - Concordances

greek

   Part,  Chapter, Paragraph
1 1,1,2 | Bible. (ta biblia) is a ~Greek word meaning .books.. ~ ~ 2 1,1,4 | books written during the Greek reign . with the exception 3 1,1,4 | Latin . were authored in Greek. ~ Books of the Holy Scripture 4 1,1,4 | sacred Hebrew books in the Greek translation of the Septua-~ 5 1,1,4 | wrote their own epistles in Greek. The canon also contained 6 1,1,4 | however were extant only in Greek. The Orthodox Christian 7 1,1,5 | from the translations of 70 Greek interpret-~ers (Septuagint). 8 1,1,5 | Early Church. In fact, the Greek Bible ~known as the Septuagint, 9 1,1,6 | Bible translations.~ ~The Greek translation by 70 interpreters ( 10 1,1,6 | translate these books into Greek, the most widespread language ~ 11 1,1,6 | missionaries, requested the Greek king Michael to send him 12 1,2,1 | the Pentateuch (from the Greek word ~pente, .five,. and 13 1,2,1 | Septuagint — a third-century BC Greek ~translation of Old Testament, 14 1,2,2 | in the beginning.. The Greek name for this book . .genesis. 15 1,2,2 | the times of Joseph. The Greek name, Exodus, indicates 16 1,2,2 | century BC. ~ ~Leviticus.~ The Greek name of this book indicates 17 1,2,2 | Canaan. ~ ~Deuteronomy.~ The Greek name for this book indicates 18 1,2,4 | and honorable reverence [Greek: timitiki proskynisis], 19 1,2,4 | true worship of ~faith [Greek: latreia] which pertains 20 1,3,5 | Septuagint, which is the Greek translation, as well as 21 1,3,6 | one book of Ezra. In the Greek Bible of the Seventy (Septuagint), 22 1,3,6 | after Ezra, were written in Greek which was commonly used ~ 23 1,3,0 | replaced by ~that of the Greek Empire founded by Alexander 24 1,3,0 | During his reign, the Greek pagan cult was declared 25 1,4 | Ketubim (or Hagiographa in Greek), i.e. Sacred Scriptures. ~ ~ 26 1,4,2 | the book derives from the Greek psalo which means to play 27 1,4,2 | kathismas (kathizo is the Greek for sit). ~ Now the Psalter 28 1,4,3 | Mishle Shlomo, the Seventy (Greek translation of ~the Bible 29 1,4,4 | book of Ecclesiastes.~The Greek word Ecclesiastes derives 30 1,4,6 | Solomon. It was written in Greek and is not found in the ~ 31 1,4,6 | book was familiar with the Greek philosophy and customs of 32 1,4,7 | translate Sacred Scriptures into Greek. ~Jesus was among those 33 1,4,7 | Sirach is preserved in the Greek translation. The Hebrew 34 1,5,5 | Sicily, Xenophon and other Greek authors, colorfully portrayed 35 1,Add,0| distinction between a Jew and a Greek ~. all are indiscriminately 36 2,1 | epochs: the~Persian, the Greek, the Maccabaean, and the 37 2,1 | class during this epoch.~The Greek Epoch. This era lasted from 38 2,1 | first made a part of the Greek~kingdom in Egypt whose capital 39 2,1 | translated from Hebrew into Greek, which translation is known 40 2,1 | homeland were seized by the Greek~kings of Syria whose capital 41 2,1 | offer sacrifices~to the Greek gods.~The Maccabaean Epoch. 42 2,1 | fellow-townsmen, turned~on the Greek officers and slew them all. 43 2,1 | power in the face of the Greek sympathizers, this ruler 44 2,1,5 | B.C. a translation into Greek was made at Alexandria ( 45 2,1,6 | the closing years of~the Greek period. They took their 46 2,1,7 | New Testament, but in the Greek~original repeated mention 47 2,2,2 | written in the vernacular Greek, an~Alexandrian dialect, 48 2,2,2 | The Evangelists wrote in Greek rather than in~Hebrew, in 49 2,2,2 | the capital letters of the Greek alphabet were used in writing,~ 50 2,2,2 | the New Testament texts in Greek: the “Complete Book of Writings” 51 2,2,2 | original and unadulterated~Greek text of the Gospels. It 52 2,2,2 | translated directly from the Greek original rather than from 53 2,2,2 | Hebrew Masoretic text, the~Greek Septuagint, the Dead Sea 54 2,2,2 | Sea Scrolls, and accepted Greek and Aramaic New Testament~ 55 2,2,2 | an editorial board of 54 Greek and Hebrew~scholars and 56 2,2,2 | Bible. It is based~on the Greek text used by Greek speaking 57 2,2,2 | on the Greek text used by Greek speaking churches for many 58 2,2,5 | synoptic, stemming from the Greek word~syn-opticos meaning, 59 2,2,5 | later had it~translated into Greek for the rest of the Church.~ 60 2,2,5 | teachings some elements of Greek philosophy, some of the 61 2,4,1 | words in the contemporary Greek lexicon to do this, Apostle~ 62 2,4,3 | was then renowned for its~Greek academy and for the scholarship 63 2,4,3 | 5:34) and an admirer of Greek wisdom. Here, according 64 2,4,4 | There is neither Jew nor~Greek, there is neither slave 65 2,4,4 | where there is neither Greek nor Jew, circumcised nor 66 2,5,1 | Apocalypse (“apocalupsis” in Greek, means revelation) of St. 67 2,5,2 | manner, according to the Greek translation of the “Seventy” ( 68 2,5,2 | having a command of the Greek language, finding himself 69 2,5,2 | away from living, spoken Greek, naturally imprinted on 70 2,5,5 | a~speculative method of Greek philosophy, fermented various 71 2,5,9 | meaning. For instance, in the Greek language (and in Church 72 2,5,9 | the name Jesus written in Greek equals 888~(possibly denoting


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