Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library
Alphabetical    [«  »]
bolical 1
bond 1
bones 1
book 154
books 40
border 1
bore 3
Frequency    [«  »]
158 its
157 jeremiah
155 9
154 book
154 has
153 chs
153 would
H.L. Ellison”
Old Testament prophets

IntraText - Concordances

book

    Chapter, Paragraph
1 Intro | and justification for this book. But why then this book ?~ 2 Intro | book. But why then this book ?~ The Prophets mirror their 3 Intro | I have not written this book as an introduction to modern 4 Intro | Life of Faith. Let this book be my expression of thanks. 5 Intro | The way in which this book has grown has inevitably 6 Intro | likely to spend money on a book to help him with one of 7 Intro | not really understand this book unless you read it with 8 Intro | with the average reference book. They are based on the latest 9 Intro | or IIG. A. Smith: The Book of the Twelve Prophets, 10 1,1 | Former Prophets in this book, we shall profit by grasping 11 1,2 | but two parts of the same book, and speaking the same spiritual 12 1,6 | Shaping of the Prophetic Book. ~ Apart from Jer. 36, there 13 1,6 | prophets dealt with in this book said. It does not take any 14 1,6 | disciples, even though the book may well have been given 15 1,6 | it was he who shaped the book from first to last. A number 16 1,8 | gives in Chapter 53 of his book, which is one of the greatest 17 2,2 | of an early date for the Book of Joel. From the internal 18 2,2 | internal evidence of the book itself we are virtually 19 2,2 | the interpretation of the book is hardly influenced by 20 3,1 | We shall show that the book fits into the needs of the 21 3,2 | historicity and accuracy of the book; the oriental memory does 22 3,2 | be our Lord’s use of the book as historical (Matt. 12: 23 3,2 | against the historicity of the book. A man’s unwillingness to 24 3,3 | The Purpose of the Book. ~ Our estimate of the book’ 25 3,3 | Book. ~ Our estimate of the book’s purpose will to some extent 26 3,3 | words are the climax of the book, “And should I not have 27 4,3 | It is made clear in the Book of the Covenant (Exod. 20- 28 5,2 | The Author and His Book. ~ All that we know of Hosea 29 5,2 | Beeri is gleaned from his book. His prophecies themselves 30 5,2 | of Samaria, and that the book represents the treasured 31 5,2 | These factors make the book peculiarly difficult for 32 5,2 | explanation of the place of the book among the Minor Prophets. 33 5,2 | influenced by the length of the book. Chronologically Amos must 34 5,3 | general background of the book is much the same as that 35 6,1 | Introduction to section and whole book. (b) Chs. 2-6. Growth of 36 6,2 | The Unity of the Book. ~ The structure of Isaiah 37 6,2 | Kirkpatrick, p. 359.). The book ends with a less homo­geneous 38 6,2 | they were taken from the book which circulated under that 39 6,2 | that the phenomena of the book are examined more closely, 40 6,3 | authorship of the whole book, we are not likely to question 41 6,3 | chapters which divide the book in two. They stand rather 42 6,6 | that capacity for the whole book. It consists in all probability 43 6,7 | outline structure of the book, there is a break between 44 6,0 | authorship of the whole book, Isaiah is just as likely 45 6,4 | exile. In chs. 49-55 (“The Book of the Servant”), not only 46 6,5 | Professor North in his standard book shows that Continental scholars 47 6,8 | and a half chapters of his book (the end of the 52nd and 48 6,8 | the third chapter of his book the prophet Zechariah describes 49 6,8 | the 53rd chapter of the book of Isaiah. We present here 50 6,8 | writes in the Midrash (the book, interpreting the Holy Scripture):~ ~“ 51 6,8 | from discussions on the book of Genesis).~ ~These testimonies 52 6,6 | ination.~ Note that the book ends, not with the new heavens 53 7,2 | The Author and His Book. ~ Micah, or Micaiah (Jer. 54 7,2 | the closing section of the book (chs. 6, 7) Micah’s de­nunciations 55 7,2 | first three chapters of the book to place the closing section 56 7,2 | for the structure of the book suggests that these chapters 57 7,3 | indication in the rest of the book that Micah was addicted 58 8,2 | In no other prophetic book except Zechariah do we go 59 8,6 | sense of the Hebrew.~ The book ends with a picture of the 60 10,2 | springs directly from the book itself.~ The prophet begins ( 61 10,2 | are the oldest part of the book and are possibly quoted 62 10,2 | 12-17. In this case the book may well extend over a period 63 11,2 | The present form of the book is peculiar, and demands 64 11,2 | Baruch, indubitably the book’s chief editor, may have 65 11,3 | The Compiling of the Book. ~ A careful study of Jeremiah 66 11,3 | 34-45 (see structure of book), but is to be found also 67 11,3 | Ch. 36 tells us how the book began. It is impossible 68 11,3 | first two sections of the book and some of those in the 69 11,3 | third (see structure of book).~ Later, perhaps in Egypt, 70 11,3 | earlier sections of the book owe their present position 71 11,4 | within which to study the book as a whole. It so happens 72 11,4 | modern scholar that the book found (IIKings 22:8) was 73 11,5 | easily imitated, because book knowledge can so easily 74 11,5 | inquired of Huldah about the book of tnc law is not clear ( 75 11,8 | Jerusalem the collec­tion, The Book of Hope, was enlarged to 76 11,9 | Relative silence in a book of the Bible on a matter 77 12,1 | its early position in the Book of the Twelve, and indeed 78 12,1 | See ISBE, article Obadiah, Book of; Young, p. 252f; Kirkpatrick, 79 12,1 | see HDD, article, Obadiah, Book of.). It agrees with the 80 13,1 | Isaiah. Still less does the book contain structural difficulties 81 13,1 | would seem to have put his book together himself, and he 82 13,1 | prophets; for the most part the book consists of full-length 83 13,1 | interpretation of some parts of his book.~ ~ 84 13,3 | beyond the limits of this book (but see note on 28:14 below). 85 13,2 | is not the same as in the book of Daniel.~ The warning 86 13,1 | have appeared as a separate book. It is therefore much wiser 87 13,1 | the symbolic nature of the book in general, to look upon 88 14,2 | relevant to the purpose of this book, and since the latest scholarly 89 14,3 | prophetic revelation in the book, that caused Haggai to use 90 14,3 | formula is used (2:20).~ The book is divided into four dated 91 15,2 | as follows:~ 1) The whole book is by Zechariah (So ISBE, 92 15,2 | ISBE, article Zechariah, Book of; Young, pp. 269-273; 93 15,2 | HDB, article Zechariah, Book of; Driver, LOT, pp. 348- 94 15,2 | there are, the end of the Book of the Twelve would be the 95 15,3 | the former section of the book the transcendent power of 96 16,2 | correct in re­garding the book as anonymous, and Malachi 97 16,2 | name here and regard the book as anonymous. In addition 98 16,2 | Malachipersonally. His book is entirely in prose and 99 17,1 | complicate matters, the book seems to invite attack and 100 17,1 | and the exegesis of the book with such bias that they 101 17,2 | un-historical statements in the book. Those who are interested 102 17,2 | authorship are agreed that the book in its present form was 103 17,2 | see HDB, article Daniel, Book of; Driver, LOT, ch. XI. 104 17,2 | see ISBE, article Daniel, Book of; Young, ch. XXIV; Lattey: 105 17,2 | Young, ch. XXIV; Lattey: The Book of Daniel and the Bibliography.). 106 17,2 | prophetic Canon was closed, no book of a prophetic character 107 17,2 | have succeeded, if the new book had contradicted the already 108 17,2 | diffi­culties. Were the book a second-century production, 109 17,2 | same argument holds if the book is dated earlier. Fiction 110 17,3 | language is compatible with the book’s having been written in 111 17,3 | for ever…”) to 7:28 the book is not written in Hebrew 112 17,3 | preclude any idea that the book was to be widely circulated. 113 17,3 | problem. It is that the book was translated into Aramaic 114 17,4 | ship on the fact that the book is not certainly referred 115 17,4 | be dismissed offhand. The book is unique in the Old Testament; 116 17,4 | of certain parts of the book in the time of Antiochus 117 17,4 | should have entered after the book had been recognized as canonical.~ 118 17,6 | according to this view He took a book which had only been intended 119 17,6 | and liberal must be, the book is true! Here, as so often 120 17,6 | first written in 1864, “The book of Daniel is … either divine 121 17,7 | of Daniel apart from his book. The man mentioned by Ezekiel ( 122 17,7 | while the hero of our book spells his Daniyye’l, and 123 17,9 | Daniel.~ à) Daniel is a booksealed even to the time 124 17,9 | have to do with a “sealed book,” this is rather remarkable, 125 17,9 | we can now understand the book because we are in the end-time. 126 17,9 | any other passage in this book. This seems to confirm the 127 17,9 | exegetical exposition of the Book of Daniel must take into 128 17,9 | part of the mystery’of the book, and is not fully expounded 129 17,9 | expounded in it… (Lattey: The Book of Daniel, p. vii.). The 130 17,9 | so fully understand the book, when it refers to the past, 131 17,9 | meaning of any part of the book, or that the past is a sure 132 17,9 | the understanding of the book in its future aspect.~ e) 133 17,9 | sure that this is not the book’s chief value. Still less 134 17,1 | which make everything in the book end with Antiochus Epiphanes, 135 17,1 | people. As early as the Book of Enoch (c. 100 B.C.) it 136 17,1 | the seventh chapter of his book. “I saw in the night visions, 137 17,3 | the 25th chapter of his book), was coming to an end. 138 17,3 | in the 2nd chapter of his book. The enumeration of Daniel’ 139 17,4 | historical detail. If the book was not considered canonical 140 17,4 | suggests an early date for the book. In the days of Daniel very 141 17,4 | cannot be decided from the book itself, nor would it be 142 17,5 | on Some Problems in the Book of Daniel (Tyndale Press).~ ~ ~ 143 18,1 | Vulgate. In Hebrew, the book is occasionally called Oinot, 144 18,1 | and 4th lamen­tation.~ The book is composed of five lamentations, 145 18,1 | temple. Authorship.~ The book is anonymous, and it is 146 18,1 | on the anonymity of the book comes from no mere scholarly 147 18,1 | out by the evidence of the book, that we do not hesitate 148 18,6 | contrast with the rest of the book. Were it elsewhere, e.g. 149 18,6 | reminiscent of portions of the book of Job.~ ~ 150 18,7 | Fifth Lament.~ Fittingly the book closes with an appeal to 151 18,7 | ending the reading of the book on even a qualified minor 152 18,8 | be expected that in this book of the suffering for sin, 153 18,9 | reason why any particular book is included in the Canon 154 18,9 | is not illumined by some book of the Bible.~ Grief, great


Best viewed with any browser at 800x600 or 768x1024 on Tablet PC
IntraText® (V89) - Some rights reserved by EuloTech SRL - 1996-2007. Content in this page is licensed under a Creative Commons License