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Biblical and critic
* May 13 – Richard Simon, French Biblical critic ( d. 1712 )
* April 11 – Richard Simon, French Biblical critic ( b. 1638 )
* William Robertson Smith ( 1846 – 1894 ), philologist, physicist, archaeologist, and Biblical critic
In his later years, he also became prominent as an historical critic on Biblical subjects.
Baur was a theologian and historian as well as a Biblical critic.
Thomas Kelly Cheyne ( 1841 – 1915 ) was an English divine and Biblical critic.
Heinrich Friedrich Wilhelm Gesenius ( 3 February 1786 – 23 October 1842 ) was a German orientalist and Biblical critic.
* Gordon Fee — Distinguished Professor of New Testament, Biblical scholar, textual critic
The works on which Bengel's reputation rests as a Biblical scholar and critic are his edition of the Greek New Testament, and his Gnomon or Exegeticat Commentary on the same.
* ( Heinrich Friedrich ) Wilhelm Gesenius ( 1786-1842 ), a German orientalist, Biblical critic, theologian and Hebraist
Charles Tilstone Beke ( 10 October 1800 – 31 July 1874 ) was an English traveller, geographer and Biblical critic.

Biblical and is
Much criticism has been leveled at this rather forced analogy, but what is equally significant is Adams' complete acceptance of the Biblical record as `` good and trustworthy history ''.
Certainly, the meaning is clearer to one who is not familiar with Biblical teachings, in the New English Bible which reads: `` Then Jesus arrived at Jordan from Galilee, and he came to John to be baptized by him.
Some of the poetic cadence of the older version certainly is lost in the newer one, but almost anyone, with a fair knowledge of the English language, can understand the meaning, without the necessity of interpretation by a Biblical scholar.
The etymology is uncertain, but a strong candidate has long been some word related to the Biblical פוך ( pūk ), " paint " ( if not that word itself ), a cosmetic eye-shadow used by the ancient Egyptians and other inhabitants of the eastern Mediterranean.
* Throughout Robertson Davies's The Manticore a comparison is repeatedly made between the protagonist's problematic relations with his father and those of between the Biblical Absalom and King David.
Nichola Everitt argues that much moral guidance is unattainable, such as the Biblical command to be Christ-like.
This is because there are three different families of Biblical texts, Byzantine, Western, or Alexandrian.
The great majority of Biblical manuscripts support the Byzantine family, from which a single reading for the New Testament is established.
Abijah ( אביה ' aḆiYaH ) or Abiah or Abia, modern Hebrew Aviya, is a Biblical unisex name that means " my Father is Yahweh ".
The prose version has survived, but the Life is very much a hagiography: many of the stories it contains have obvious Biblical parallels, making them suspect as a historical record.
The Biblical Ark of the Covenant is approximately 52. 5 inches long, 31. 5 inches wide, and 31. 5 inches high in the shape of a rectangular chest.
Furthermore, they claim that in the Bible there's no evidence showing that the office must be conveyed by laying on of hands and no Biblical command that it must be by a special class of bishops ( the laying on of hands is repeatedly used to give a commission to some person in scripture.
The chief Biblical text concerning the rite is: " Is any among you sick?
It is one of the Biblical names taken up after the advent of Zionism and which are not attested in earlier Jewish society.
The disputed books, included in one canon but not in others, are often called the Biblical apocrypha, a term that is sometimes used specifically ( and possibly pejoratively in English ) to describe the books in the Catholic and Orthodox canons that are absent from the Jewish Masoretic Text ( also called the Tanakh or Miqra ) and most modern Protestant Bibles.
His Latin is generally clear, but his Biblical commentaries are more technical.
Biblical scholars believe Bethlehem, located in the " hill country " of Judah, may be the same as the Biblical Ephrath, which means " fertile ", as there is a reference to it in the Book of Micah as Bethlehem Ephratah.
Biblical tradition holds that Bethlehem is the birthplace of David, the second king of Israel, and the place where he was anointed king by Samuel.
Benjamin is treated as a young child in most of the Biblical narrative, but at one point is abruptly described as the father of ten sons.
The book is written in a complex and poetic Hebrew ( apart from verse 10: 11, curiously written in Biblical Aramaic ).

Biblical and sometimes
The Biblia pauperum (" Paupers ' Bible "), a tradition of picture Bibles beginning in the later Middle Ages, sometimes depicted Biblical events with words spoken by the figures in the miniatures written on scrolls coming out of their mouths — which makes them to some extent ancestors of the modern cartoon strips.
Christians embracing aspects of Judaism are sometimes criticized as Biblical Judaizers by Christians when they pressure Gentile Christians to observe Old Testament teachings rejected by many modern Christians.
However, Zionism was created mainly by non-religious ( sometimes anti-religious ) people who re-evaluated many Biblical characters ( as well as characters from later Jewish history ) according to the criteria of a secular national movement in need of National Heroes.
Full preterism is sometimes viewed as heretical, based upon the historic creeds of the church ( which would exclude this view ), and also from Biblical passages that condemn a past view of the Resurrection or the denial of a physical resurrection or transformation of the body — doctrines which most Christians believe to be essential to the faith.
The statement is then analyzed and compared with other statements used in different approaches to Biblical exegesis in rabbinic Judaism ( or-simpler-interpretation of text in Torah study ) exchanges between two ( frequently anonymous and sometimes metaphorical ) disputants, termed the ( questioner ) and ( answerer ).
It is sometimes claimed, however, that the Jewish analogue of Christian theological discussion would more properly be Rabbinical discussion of Jewish law and Jewish Biblical commentaries.
Dei Verbum has sometimes been compared to the Chicago Statement on Biblical Inerrancy, which expounds similar teachings, characteristic of many evangelical Protestants.
In 1977, Word Books, Inc. commissioned Hank Ketcham Enterprises, Inc. to produce a series of ten comic books under the title Dennis and the Bible Kids, with the usual cast of characters reading ( and sometimes partly acting out ) the stories of Joseph, Moses, David, Esther, Jesus, and other Biblical characters.
Both the Tanakh and the New Testament ( sometimes called the " B ’ rit Chadasha ", from the Hebrew for " new covenant ") are usually considered to be the established and divinely inspired Biblical scriptures by Messianic Jews.
For example, many of the remaining undeciphered Mayan glyphs are hapax legomena, and Biblical ( particularly Hebrew ) hapax legomena pose sometimes difficult issues in translation.
In Mesopotamian mythology Ningishzida, a prototype of the Biblical serpent in the Garden of Eden, is sometimes depicted as a serpent with horns.
These views sometimes interpreted him as a solar deity, popularized by " solar hero " theorists and Biblical scholars alike.
It was sometimes referred to as the Webster – Mahn edition, because it featured revisions by Dr. C. A. F. Mahn, who replaced unsupportable etymologies which were based on Webster's attempt to conform to Biblical interpretations of the history of language.
These principles of Biblical law are sometimes called connections or commandments ( mitzvot ) and referred to collectively as the " Law of Moses " ( Torat Mosheh, ), " Mosaic Law ," " Sinaitic Law ," or simply " the Law ".
Belshazzar (; Biblical Hebrew בלשאצר ; Akkadian: Bēl-šarra-uṣur ), sometimes called Balthazar (), was a 6th century BC prince of Babylon, the son of Nabonidus and the last king of Babylon according to the Book of Daniel ( 2nd century BC ).
Aphoristic collections, sometimes known as wisdom literature, have a prominent place in the canons of several ancient societies, such as the Sutra literature of India, the Biblical Ecclesiastes, Islamic Hadith, The Golden Verses of Pythagoras, Hesiod's Works and Days, the Delphic maxims, and Epictetus ' Handbook.
* The words are treated as indeclinable, like some Biblical names ; Connecticut is sometimes treated this way.
Reconstructionist postmillennialism, on the other hand, sees that along with grass roots preaching of the Gospel and explicitly Christian education, Christians should also set about changing society's legal and political institutions in accordance with Biblical, and also sometimes Theonomic, ethics ( see Dominion theology ).
The chronology is sometimes associated with young Earth creationism, which holds that the universe was created only a few millennia ago by God as described in the first two chapters of the Biblical book of Genesis.
Medieval Christians identified the sphere of stars with the Biblical firmament and sometimes posited an invisible layer of water above the firmament, to accord with Genesis.
" Fanmi Lavalas " may be roughly translated into English as " Avalanche Family " or " Waterfall Family " ( referring to the Biblical flood ), but the name is almost never completely translated from Kréyòl, although it is sometimes given as " Lavalas Family ".
Shuʿayb, or Shoaib, (; meaning Who shows the right path ), was an ancient Midianite prophet, sometimes identified with the Biblical Jethro ( though Islam attributes to him many deeds not attested in the Bible ).
This idea sometimes is attributed to Biblical verses that describe the Jews as " a kingdom of priests and a holy nation " () and " a light of the nations " or " a light to the nations " ( and ).

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