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Alphabetical [« »] ozone 1 p 5 pa- 3 pagan 46 pagan- 1 paganism 7 paganizing 1 | Frequency [« »] 46 glory 46 moral 46 nature 46 pagan 46 period 46 purpose 46 seven | Bishop Alexander (Mileant) Toward understanding the Bible IntraText - Concordances pagan |
Part, Chapter, Paragraph
1 1,2,2| as we see, a blow to the pagan, polytheistic, mythological 2 1,2,2| new, third blow ~against pagan mythology. According to 3 1,2,4| against the worship of false, pagan ~gods: Thou shalt not make 4 1,2,4| probably had contemporary pagan idol worship in mind. ~Their 5 1,2,4| from their often hostile pagan persecutors and non-Christian 6 1,2,4| to draw people away from pagan ~idol-worship. Only later 7 1,3,4| idolatry and disgusting pagan cus-~toms. God punished 8 1,3,5| those of all palaces ~and pagan temples of the time. Under 9 1,3,5| polygamy ~and construction of pagan shrines around Jerusalem. 10 1,3,5| Israelite kings began to ~build pagan shrines in various parts 11 1,3,5| who was a daughter of a pagan priest from Sidon, ~put 12 1,3,5| the land of Israel with pagan priests of Baal. To ~teach 13 1,3,5| Elijah ~invited the king, the pagan priests and all the people 14 1,3,5| declined. Influenced by their pagan neighbors, the Jews began 15 1,3,5| started building altars to pagan deities. These altars were 16 1,3,5| cut down groves devoted to pagan gods ~and destroyed everything 17 1,3,0| to convert the Jews to a pagan religion. The Jews who believed 18 1,3,0| During his reign, the Greek pagan cult was declared to be 19 1,4,6| of God.s Wisdom, whereas pagan idol worship is considered 20 1,4,6| inevitable punishment of pagan persecutors, if not here 21 1,5,2| Jeru-~salem. They built pagan sanctuaries in different 22 1,5,2| was mostly superficial. Pagan traditions and super-~stitions 23 1,5,5| even greater in-~crease of pagan superstitions and subsequent 24 1,5,5| scribes Jonah's embassy to pagan Nineveh. Jonah initially 25 1,5,5| entire Universe, and the pagan deities were nothing. All 26 1,5,5| especially ~the obscene pagan traditions that the Jews 27 1,5,5| Creator's perfection, the pagan ~deities are trifling and 28 1,5,5| and getting captivated by pagan superstitions. ~ However, 29 1,5,5| clean off their idolatry and pagan iniq-~uity. After the captivity, 30 1,5,5| inclination of the Israelites to pagan ~traditions, their hypocrisy 31 1,5,5| feared the abomination of the pagan meals from the king's table, ~ 32 1,5,5| from the formerly mighty pagan empires. ~ The third chapter 33 1,5,5| the Median kingdom. ~The pagan officials slandered Daniel 34 1,5,7| hostile hordes of ancient pagan tribes with the persecutors 35 2,2,3| the~poetical works of the pagan author Celsus, written in 36 2,2,5| Philo, and elements of those pagan religions known as the mystery 37 2,3,3| Christianity, and various pagan teachings. (In essence, 38 2,4,3| became familiar with the pagan~culture, since his acquaintance 39 2,5,3| century) informs us that pagan writers contemporary to 40 2,5,4| of the Christians by the pagan emperors. The~third tries 41 2,5,5| elaborate cult of deified pagan emperors. On~a hill close 42 2,5,5| Pergamos towered a magnificent pagan sacrificial monument that 43 2,5,6| rejuvenation of the apathetic pagan world. The ancient writer 44 2,5,7| heresies and schisms, and the pagan community forces upon it~ 45 2,5,8| the Gospel in a hostile pagan world and often seal their 46 2,5,9| personified~the four ancient pagan empires (Daniel ch. 7).