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| Alphabetical [« »] historical 24 historicity 3 histories 4 history 31 hoar 1 hold 3 holds 1 | Frequency [« »] 31 early 31 especially 31 false 31 history 31 kingdom 31 word 31 world | H.L. Ellison” Old Testament prophets IntraText - Concordances history |
Chapter, Paragraph
1 Intro | and through most of its history has distorted what it could 2 Intro | the Department of Biblical History and Literature, University 3 1,2 | slight knowledge of the history and social background of 4 1,3 | History as Prophecy. ~ We can now 5 1,3 | were given to see that the history of Israel was, in itself, 6 1,3 | it sought less to give a history of the doings of Israel 7 1,3 | of Jehovah as the God of history permeates the Latter Prophets. 8 2,5 | most catastrophic in their history for the Jewish people until 9 3,2 | able to distinguish between history and parabolic or allegorical 10 4,2 | indication of his spiritual history or of how God called him ( 11 4,2 | the worst in Palestinian history (1:1) for it was still remembered 12 5,1 | 7-7:7. The Testimony of History.~4 — Chs. 7:8-8:14. Israel’ 13 5,7 | barest outline of Israelite history.~ One of the most tragic 14 5,7 | tragic features of Israel’s history is her frequent superficial 15 5,7 | s conception of Israel’s history is much the same as that 16 6,5 | Hebrew method of writing history — and that Sennacherib had 17 6,5 | discussion see Bright, A History of Israel, pp. 282-287. 18 6,4 | meteor-like through the history of mankind, confounding 19 6,4 | inaugurating a new era in human history. Even What a contrast its 20 6,6 | of Jehovah’s Servant. The history of Israel is not merely 21 8,3 | IIChron. 33:10-19 — the history of Josiah’s reign and passages 22 13,2 | then gives the spiritual history of Israel in a powerful 23 13,5 | its estimate of Israelite history as a whole, with its contrast 24 13,0 | both the Scriptures and history, or is virtually ignored. 25 14,2 | impressed himself on the history of his time, and his conquest 26 14,2 | Oesterley & Robinson: A History of Israel, Vol. II, chs. 27 17,1 | Ch. 7. The End of World History.~2 — Ch. 8. The Enemy of 28 17,2 | hopes to be accepted as history must be meticulous in its 29 17,4 | recognized as inspired. The history of the New Testament canon 30 17,0 | Nebuchadnezzar a preview of human history — why should God give this 31 17,1 | The End of World History (Ch. 7).~ It is a commonplace