This book looks into the life of each king in Jerusalem, and those in Samaria in the most logical manner. In the way they were recorded in scripture. Each king fulled one little part in God's prophetic timing. A timing and pattern this world is repeating today. The lives of those kings and the symbols involved either established or called attention to that pattern. Unlike other books of this nature, this book sticks to scripture for the answers. This book shows the world how God recorded answers in other books of the Bible generations before the questions were asked. In short, this book shows how God was in control every step of the way, and knew the outcome of every event long before details began to unfold. If only those kings knew how to go back to scripture for the answers they needed. Think of how the course of this world could have been changed. But human nature has always depended too much on itself, and not enough on the God who created this world.
In her delectable first novel, Housekeeping, Marilynne Robinson's narrator Ruth observes that absence is an intense form of presence. As long as friends and family are physically empirically here, they are localized and circumscribed.
This book uses a verse by verse approach to understand the Tabernacle. When I prayed about starting this book, the answer was, "at the beginning." After I began writing, that made sense.
This fully illustrated, four-color pictorial guide uncovers the significance, services, symbols, and sacrifices of the Tabernacle.
Richard D. Patterson, Hermann J. Austel Tremper Longman III, David E. Garland. When Jeroboam II died in 752 BC, he left behind a ... For the texts themselves, see J. Gibson, Syrian Semitic Inscriptions (Oxford: Clarendon, 1973), 5–15.
This volume, a part of the Old Testament Library series, explores the books of I and II Chronicles.
Furnishing information no one-volume commentary can provide without the clutter or expense of a multi-volume set, this two-volume commentary expands on the critically acclaimed study notes of the Zondervan KJV Study Bible.
V. H. Matthews, B. M. Levinson and T. Frymer-Kensky (JSOTSup 262; Sheffield: Sheffield Academic Press, 1998) 79-96; B. J. Malina and J. H. Neyrey, “Honor and Shame in Luke-Acts: Pivotal Values of the Mediterranean World,” in The Social ...
He argues that the tabernacle was transformed at Sinai into an oracle tent and that it was there brought into connection with ... traveling with the Ark, and both of them were kept together at the temples and sanctuaries they visited.
In Search of Temple Treasures: The Lost Ark and the Last Days (Eugene, OR: Harvest House Publishers, 1994. Price, Randall. “The Temple in the Book of Acts.” A Bible Handbook to the Acts of the Apostles. Edited by Mal Couch.
... 39–40 Hamp, Vinzenz, 90 Handy, Lowell, 14–15 Horton, Fred, 10 Hunt, Melvin, 49 Jefferson, Helen, 81 Jeremias, Alfred, 7 Kraus, Hans-Joachim, 59, 60 Makay, Cameron, 14 Mathews, Joshua, 10 Miller, Patrick, 37 Morschauser, Scott, 31 Noth,