Results 461 - 480 of 1443
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Results from: Notes Author: Emmaus Ordered by Verse |
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Results | Verse | Author | ID# | |||
461 | no sperm upon the ground | Gen 38:9 | Emmaus | 81097 | ||
EdB, One correction to my previous post. The story in Genesis 38 is about Judah and Tamar, not Jacob and Tamar. Emmaus |
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462 | Who was Zipporah father | Ex 2:21 | Emmaus | 111646 | ||
EdB, Moses took a later wife who was Ethopian , I believe and that stirred up some trouble with his people, as I recqll. I suspect Colin just got the two wifes confused. Emmaus |
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463 | Who was Zipporah father | Ex 2:21 | Emmaus | 111648 | ||
EdB, Here are the Notes from th NAB on Num,ber 12:1-2 which indicate in this case that Cushite is synonymous with Midianite and that Miriam was speaking about Ziipporah. So the use of the the word Cushite is confusing here. "1 [1] Cushite woman: apparently Zipporah, the Midianitess, is meant; cf Exodus 2:21. Perhaps the term is used here merely in the sense of "despised foreigner." "2 [2] The real reason for Miriam's quarrel with her brother Moses was her jealousy of his superior position; his Cushite wife served only as an occasion for the dispute. Aaron merely followed his sister in her rebellion; hence she alone was punished." Emmaus |
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464 | Who was Zipporah father | Ex 2:21 | Emmaus | 111649 | ||
EdB, Cush http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/04575c.htm Emmaus |
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465 | Who was Zipporah father | Ex 2:21 | Emmaus | 111659 | ||
Ed, I was surprised when I read the footnote. I always thought of the passage as Moses taking another wife sometime during the years in the desert. Just shows what a good question can turn up. I think Zipporah was a Midianite. The question is are Midianites also being called Cushites here or are we speaking of another wife. Emmaus |
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466 | Who was Zipporah father | Ex 2:21 | Emmaus | 111685 | ||
EdB, "If the conflict spoken about in Numbers is over Zipporah it must have been brewing for a while since Moses had to have been married 40 plus years at this time. " I think you have a point here. What is not mentioned in Numbers 12 is that Jethro had met Moses in the desert and brought Zipporah back to Moses. That is probably when the trrouble started brewing. See Genesis 18:1-27. Emmaus |
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467 | Who was Zipporah father | Ex 2:21 | Emmaus | 111688 | ||
Only if Adam was the father of Cain's wife and not her grandfather. :-) | ||||||
468 | Who was Zipporah father | Ex 2:21 | Emmaus | 111689 | ||
EdB, "If the conflict spoken about in Numbers is over Zipporah it must have been brewing for a while since Moses had to have been married 40 plus years at this time. " I think you have a point here. What is not mentioned in Numbers 12 is that Jethro had met Moses in the desert and brought Zipporah back to Moses. That is probably when the trrouble started brewing. See Genesis 18:1-27. Emmaus |
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469 | Who was Zipporah father | Ex 2:21 | Emmaus | 111690 | ||
Kalos, Sorry. I sent you a post intended for EdB. Emmaus |
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470 | John8:24 and John8:57-58 | Ex 3:14 | Emmaus | 127135 | ||
DBR, I hope you noticed this rule regarding posts on the Forum. "Postings must be Biblically based and not opposing to the authority of the Bible, Christianity, or the deity of Jesus Christ." Emmaus |
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471 | What is the meaning of unleavened bread? | Ex 12:1 | Emmaus | 122584 | ||
Lorenzo, "We are clay vessels, and also bread." Ignatius, bishop of Antioch wrote of this "we are bread" as he was being taken to Rome for martyrdom around 100 A.D. "I write to all the Churches, and impress on them all, that I shall willingly die for God, unless ye hinder me. I beseech of you not to show an unseasonable goodwill towards me. Suffer me to become food for the wild beasts, through whose instrumentality it will be granted me to attain to God. I am the wheat of God, and am ground by the teeth of the wild beasts, that I may be found the pure bread of God. Rather entice the wild beasts, that they may become my tomb, and may leave nothing of my body; so that when I have fallen asleep [in death], I may not be found troublesome to any one. Then shall I be a true disciple of Jesus Christ, when the world shall not see so much as my body. Entreat the Lord for me, that by these instruments I may be found a sacrifice to God." Ignatius of Antioch, Epistle to the Romans dated 98-117 A.D. He died a Martyr in Rome after being taken there in chains for refusing to worship Ceasar as God. http://www.scborromeo.org/ccc/p2s2c1a3.htm#1334 Emmaus |
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472 | What is the meaning of unleavened bread? | Ex 12:1 | Emmaus | 122639 | ||
Lorenzo, You are wlecome. My pleasure. Here is a link to The whole letter to Romans written by Ignatius. http://www.newadvent.org/fathers/0107.htm He wrote a series of letters to seven churches as he was being taken to Rome. There are links to them also at the one to the Romans. They are not very long letters, but give a lot of insight into the early Church. He was the third bishop of Antioch after St. Peter and was martyred during the reign of Emperor Trajan (A.D.98-117). Emmaus |
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473 | One lamb per household | Ex 12:3 | Emmaus | 77744 | ||
Pixie, Do you think the members of the household at the first Passover would have been saved if they were not inside a house marked with blood and eating the passover supper of the lamb? The same question applies to Noah. Would his wife, sons and their wives be saved if they had not obeyed God and entered the ark? Can a person today be saved without entering into the Body of Christ and partaking of the of our Passover feast of the Lamb of God? Romans 6:4-5; John 6:48-56; 1 Corinthians 5:7; 10:16; 11:23-27; Revelation 19:9. Emmaus |
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474 | Did anyone else hear Jack Hayfert today? | Ex 15:22 | Emmaus | 36717 | ||
Makarios, Try this link. I dis mispell his name in my original post. http://broadcasts.wava.com/ministries/living_way/ Emmaus |
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475 | Altar Calls | Ex 17:15 | Emmaus | 97883 | ||
John, Don't you think maybe the people who use altar calls see some biblical connection. I would be interested in hearing what they have to say on the subject. Of course we know where those altars came from. :-) Emmaus |
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476 | Altar Calls | Ex 17:15 | Emmaus | 97882 | ||
John, Don't you think maybe the people who use altar calls see some biblical connection. I would be interested in hearing what they have to say on the subject. Of course we know where those altars came from. :-) Emmaus |
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477 | Altar Calls | Ex 17:15 | Emmaus | 97887 | ||
duplicate | ||||||
478 | When did Christians start to use altars? | Ex 17:15 | Emmaus | 97892 | ||
John, Of course the Levitical system died. What about that order of Melchizadek? Is the Eucharist a sacrificial meal? Is there a connection between sacrifice and altars. And what does the altar in other Christian Churches represent? It is not there by accident. It must have some meaning. I know what it represents in my Church. Emmaus |
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479 | Was a cross used in Apostolic worship? | Ex 17:15 | Emmaus | 97915 | ||
John, The logical trajectory of your train of thought leads to Quaker quietism. That is how the Quakers got there. Emmaus |
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480 | When did Christians start to use altars? | Ex 17:15 | Emmaus | 97919 | ||
John, In Catholic Churches the altar symbolises the cross, which was the altar on which Christ was crucified. In the Eastern Rites it also symbolises the tomb. John , I notice you never indicate that while you were a Catholic, you were an idolaltor or that you worshiped statues or crucifixes. Apparently you knew the difference between an object of art that called to mind a sacred subject and an idol. Yet, you often imply that other Catholics did and do. How odd. Emmaus |
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