| Table of Contents | Words: Alphabetical - Frequency - Inverse - Length - Statistics | Help | IntraText Library | ||
| Alphabetical [« »] exhausted 1 exhaustive 1 exi 1 exile 40 exiled 1 exiles 22 exilic 1 | Frequency [« »] 41 language 40 40 40 books 40 exile 40 found 40 men 40 taken | H.L. Ellison” Old Testament prophets IntraText - Concordances exile |
Chapter, Paragraph
1 1,5 | evidence for this after the exile. As a result, they could 2 2,2 | B.C.), or to one after the Exile — anything from 500 to 200 3 4,6 | their idols would go into exile together. ~ ~ 4 6,2 | it seems “the Babylonian Exile is not predicted; it is 5 6,2 | position after the return from exile.~ The most obvious interpretation 6 6,3 | religion had perished, and the exile in Babylonia, prophesied 7 6,3 | shock of the Babylonian exile and the peculiar difficulties 8 6,4 | deliverance from the Babylonian exile. In chs. 49-55 (“The Book 9 6,4 | returned from their physical exile, or rather all obstacle 10 6,4 | destruction of Jerusalem and the exile were Jehovah’s doing (42: 11 6,5 | gold. The people whom the exile had not changed, would not 12 6,5 | prophecy of the return from exile; instead, they have applied 13 6,6 | nant; looking out over the exile, he sees the failure there 14 6,6 | through the anguish of the exile, and the failure of the 15 6,2 | the open sin. During the exile, circumcision, Sabbath-keeping, 16 8,6 | especially as the prophecies of exile look normally to the North 17 8,6 | the North as the place of exile, and not Egypt. It is far 18 11,7| addressing himself to those in exile or to those who had been 19 11,1| the people would go into exile.~ Ch. 7:1-15 is a summary 20 11,7| death of Jehoiakim and the exile of Tehoiachin had vindicated 21 12,2| prophesied early in the exile, when the Edomites were 22 12,2| Judaean soil during the exile, and would go a long way 23 12,2| the Lord — for Judah in exile was already under Jehovah’ 24 13,2| elders of the people in exile (8:1; 14:1; 20:1), and his 25 13,2| enough to be taken into exile with Jehoiachin (cf. IIKings 26 13,4| popular explanation of their exile, a view that will have been 27 13,6| placed the duration of the exile at forty years. Jer. 29: 28 13,9| the land. The fruit of the exile should be changed natures. 29 13,0| ended with Jehoiachin’s exile. For the use of “prince” 30 13,0| would take with him into exile (ver. 4, R.V. mg.). Then 31 13,0| blinding and leading into exile (IIKings 25:5ff).~ The second 32 13,9| destruction of Jerusalem and the exile do not mark a merely temporary 33 13,0| Kingdom that had gone into exile, the possibility cannot 34 13,0| in here too? Did Judah in exile make the response God demanded, 35 14,1| was the case before the exile. This was emphasized by 36 15,3| even deeper meaning, for in exile the Jews had become familiar 37 15,4| a call to those still in exile to return (vers. 6-9) and 38 15,6| condition after the return from exile with the future, and gives 39 18,6| the shame of captivity and exile that weigh on the poet, 40 18,7| date some time on in the exile for this the last of the