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| Alphabetical [« »] juda 1 judaea 4 judaean 4 judah 77 judaic 1 judaism 1 judaized 1 | Frequency [« »] 79 vers 78 those 77 about 77 judah 76 20 76 after 76 can | H.L. Ellison” Old Testament prophets IntraText - Concordances judah |
Chapter, Paragraph
1 1,8 | the kingdoms of Israel and Judah, and especially the destruction 2 1,8 | lay waste the cities of Judah, so that they shall not 3 1,8 | say unto the cities of Judah, Behold your God! Behold 4 2,2 | in the reign of Joash of Judah (i.e. shortly after 836 5 2,7 | Joel’s vision is limited to Judah and Jerusalem, not even 6 3,3 | ceased to be a people, and Judah until it was brought to 7 4,4 | had bestowed. Such were Judah’s sins (2:4), the rejection 8 4,6 | in the extreme south of Judah was an extreme example of 9 5,7 | time of Israel’s attack on Judah (Isa. 7:1, 2; IIKings 16: 10 6,5 | of revolt. They attacked Judah, presumably to force her 11 6,5 | IIKings 17:5f).~ At that time Judah had remained loyal to Assyria, 12 6,5 | revolt of the Philistines, Judah escaped apparently scot 13 6,5 | invasion were so disastrous for Judah that henceforth she remained 14 6,6 | s “Great Arraignment” of Judah.~ We find the assessors, 15 6,6 | is assured, the blame for Judah’s sufferings must rest on 16 6,6 | suggests the time of Hezekiah. Judah is imagined as pleading 17 6,7 | Judah under Jotham and Ahaz (Chs. 18 6,7 | increasing hardening of Judah until there is no hope; 19 6,7 | is both a condemnation of Judah’s unnatural sin and an 20 6,7 | probably after 10:4. Finally, Judah’s hardness is explained 21 6,7 | of judgment on Israel and Judah (9:8-10:4 and add 5:25-30), 22 6,8 | is from this moment that Judah ceases to function as a 23 6,9 | Shortly after, however, Judah will have been wasted (ver. 24 6,1 | clear-sighted foreign policy when Judah was attacked by her neighbours ( 25 6,2 | oracles of doom on Israel and Judah could well raise the question 26 6,8 | Judah under Hezekiah (Chs. 28- 27 6,8 | comprehensible, as told to his son Judah, which was already partially 28 6,8 | we give the prophecy of Judah fully: “Judah is a lion’ 29 6,8 | prophecy of Judah fully: “Judah is a lion’s whelp: from 30 6,8 | sceptre shall not depart from Judah, nor a lawgiver from between 31 6,8 | be born of the tribe of Judah. The question of the patriarch 32 7,1 | Anger against Samaria and Judah.~2 — Chs. 2, 3. The Sins 33 7,1 | Chs. 2, 3. The Sins of Judah. ~ B. The Messianic Period — 34 7,3 | Anger against Samaria and Judah (Ch. 1). ~ The opening section ( 35 7,3 | introduction to the judgment on Judah, for Micah sees the Assyrian 36 7,3 | armies rolling south over Judah and especially over the 37 7,4 | The Sins of Judah (Chs. 2, 3). ~ Two groups 38 7,5 | contrast to the grim reality in Judah, Mic. 4:1-5 as a contrast 39 7,7 | Jehovah’s controversy with Judah, based this time not so 40 7,7 | a second denunciation of Judah, but this time the stress 41 7,7 | Manasseh. God had spoken to Judah, but she would not hear. 42 8,4 | Philistines to the west of Judah, Moab and Ammon to the east, 43 8,5 | have been recognized in Judah as a sign that Jehovah was 44 9,1 | general religions situation in Judah hardly justifies our assuming 45 9,2 | concern is clearly with Judah, not Israel. The vast majority 46 9,3 | addressed as they are to Judah, they interrupt the address 47 10,2| against the oppression of Judah by the Assyrians, or perhaps 48 11,7| the Northern Kingdom, and Judah. Here, as elsewhere when 49 11,7| Northern Kingdom in contrast to Judah. Its sense has been obscured 50 11,8| to glean the remnant of Judah as a vine, to go over the 51 11,8| and collapsing house of Judah, and there was never any 52 11,0| 7-10 (cf. ch. 1), but as Judah’s prosperity increased under 53 11,2| the unnatural conduct of Judah; it reminds us of Isaiah 54 11,7| deflect the weak king of Judah from it in spite of the 55 11,8| was again detached from Judah, and Jeremiah could no longer 56 11,8| to say that by Israel and Judah he really meant the Church. 57 11,0| That is the tragedy of Judah — and of a religious man. 58 11,1| Jeremiah wants to teach Judah that God has given Judah 59 11,1| Judah that God has given Judah to the Babylonian king as 60 12,2| also explain why the sin of Judah is not mentioned in connexion 61 12,2| the Day of the Lord — for Judah in exile was already under 62 12,4| of God’s wrath, of which Judah and Israel (“ye”) have already 63 13,2| signs of idolatry out of Judah.~ We have no information 64 13,4| 3, so R.Y.), i.e. both Judah and Israel. As the term “ 65 13,4| and Israel. As the term “Judah” is very seldom used in 66 13,6| on his side, the 40 for Judah being coalesced with the 67 13,6| Israel, i.e. especially Judah. Note that here it is the 68 13,6| Israel, i.e. the kingdom of Judah.~ ~ 69 13,4| lament over the kings of Judah: Jehoahaz (19:1-4), Jehoiakim-Jehoiachin, 70 13,0| Israel” (which includes Judah) in ver. 21 seems to suggest 71 13,0| enters in here too? Did Judah in exile make the response 72 15,1| Deliverance of Israel and Judah.~2 — Ch. 11. The Rejection 73 15,4| and scattered Israel and Judah, or who ever will.~ Equally 74 15,7| rulers by God who shall lead Judah and Ephraim back to the 75 15,7| 14:1-15.~ j) 12:10-14. Judah’s repentance. On the basis 76 15,7| 13:1-6. The cleansing of Judah from all taint of sin~and 77 17,7| of the best families of Judah (1:3). After Nebuchadnezzar’