[permalink] [id link]
simple: Book of Haggai
from
Wikipedia
Some Related Sentences
simple and Book
Book I holds that the Bible is the ultimate source of religious authority, and its hymns are written to provide the believer, through simple language, with a thorough understanding of its contents.
Carl Sagan in his book Comet ( 1985 ) reproduces Han period Chinese manuscript ( the Book of Silk, 2nd century BC ) that shows comet tail varieties: most are variations on simple comet tails, but the last shows the comet nucleus with four bent arms extending from it, recalling a swastika.
The predecessor of Ralph the Staller owned most of both Skirbeck and Drayton, so it was a relatively simple task to transfer his business from Drayton, but Domesday Book of 1086, still records his source of income in Boston under the heading of Drayton, so Boston ’ s name is famously not mentioned.
Book and Haggai
The Book of Haggai is a book of the Hebrew Bible or Tanakh, and has its place as the antepenultimate of the Minor Prophets or the " Book of the Twelve.
There is no biographical information given about the prophet in the Book of Haggai, so we know no personal information about him.
The Book of Haggai was written in 520 BCE some 18 years after Cyrus had conquered Babylon and issued a decree in 538 BCE allowing the captive Jews to return to Judea.
( Haggai 1: 14-15 ) and the Book of Ezra indicates that it was finished on February 25 516 BCE " The Temple was completed on the third day of the month Adar, in the sixth year of the reign of King Darius.
With Hulsius, Jacob entered into a polemical discussion of the verse in the Book of Haggai: " The latter splendor of this house shall be greater than the former " ( 2: 9 ), which Hulsius attempted to prove was a reference to the Church.
The editors of the 1906 Jewish Encyclopedia implied that he prophesied after Haggai and Zechariah (;, ) and speculated that he delivered his prophecies about 420 BC, after the second return of Nehemiah from Persia ( Book of Nehemiah ), or possibly before his return, comparing with ; with ).
This quotation from the Book of Haggai illustrates the messianic expectations that are often associated with Zerubbabel.
The Book of Haggai includes a prediction that the glory of the second temple would be greater than that of the first.
Thus ( Irenaeus, i. 30, p. 109 ) the first archon sent Moses, Joshua, Amos, and Habakkuk ; the second Samuel, Nathan, Jonah, and Micah ; the third Elijah, Joel, and Zechariah ; the fourth Isaiah, Ezekiel, Jeremiah, and Daniel ; the fifth Book of Tobit and Haggai ; the sixth Micah ( qu.
0.230 seconds.