79 results found.
... to you, the rams of Nebaioth shall minister to you; they shall come up with acceptance on my altar; and I will glorify the house of my glory. Encyclopedia NEBAIOTH ne-ba' ...
https://bibleatlas.org/nebaioth.htm
... ), and in modern times to the fact that a large minority of the population has accepted the Ottoman religion along with Ottoman government, have kept Crete in a position of political inferiority ...
https://bibleatlas.org/crete.htm
... passages of the Pentateuch, favor the identification with the traditional site, which has become generally accepted by all those explorers who have carefully considered the subject, though two other theories may need ...
https://bibleatlas.org/mount_sion.htm
... passages of the Pentateuch, favor the identification with the traditional site, which has become generally accepted by all those explorers who have carefully considered the subject, though two other theories may need ...
https://bibleatlas.org/mount_horeb.htm
... her husband, it has been conjectured that she was a widow of some property. She accepted the apostolic message and was baptized with her household ( Acts 16:15 ), and ...
https://bibleatlas.org/philippi.htm
... found in Alexandria a common citizenship. Indeed in several cities, under the Ptolemies, who accepted this policy, foreigners were even given superiority to natives. Egyptians and Greeks were conciliated by ...
https://bibleatlas.org/alexandria.htm
... Biblical references to Lachish seem to indicate, but the mound called Tell el-Hesy is now generally accepted as the site. This was first suggested by Conder in 1877 (PEFS, 1878, ...
https://bibleatlas.org/mizpeh_2.htm
... downward. Eusebius, Onomasticon (s.v. Hor) favors this identification, which has been accepted by many travelers and scholars. In HDB, while noting the fact that it has been ...
https://bibleatlas.org/mount_hor_2.htm
... with the worship of this goddess. Ashteroth-karnaim is mentioned only once in canonical Scripture unless we accept Gratz's restoration, when Karnaim appears as a city taken by Israel: "Have we not ...
https://bibleatlas.org/beeshterah.htm
... site, now close to the Church of Anne, has been rediscovered, excavated and popularly accepted. This pool is a rock-cut, rain-filled cistern, 55 ft. long X 12 ft ...
https://bibleatlas.org/bethesda.htm
... fourfold capital. The meaning of the name is unknown, but if a Sumerian etymology be accepted, some such signification as "Holy Gate" (Ka-lah) or the like-a parallel to ...
https://bibleatlas.org/calah.htm
... 58 ) . 1. The Meaning of the Name: (1 ) Debir is usually accepted as meaning "back," but this is doubtful; the word debhir is used to ...
https://bibleatlas.org/debir.htm
... , Cheyne translates "Kir undermineth, and Shoa is at the mount," but others accept Delitzsch's emendation, Winckler conjecturing that the rendering should be "Who stirreth up Koa` and ...
https://bibleatlas.org/king's_highway.htm
... the churches of Galatia) . The view that these churches were in South Galatia is now accepted by the majority of English and American scholars, and a traveler passing through the Cilician Gates ...
https://bibleatlas.org/derbe.htm
... , a boat harbor between Ras Mohammad and `Aqaba. Cheyne gets over the difficulty by accepting a suggestion of Sayee that Di-zahab corresponds to Me-zahab ( Genesis 36:39 ); this ...
https://bibleatlas.org/dizahab.htm
... , Cheyne translates "Kir undermineth, and Shoa is at the mount," but others accept Delitzsch's emendation, Winckler conjecturing that the rendering should be "Who stirreth up Koa` and ...
https://bibleatlas.org/kir.htm
... Eleutheropolis." Kh. Umm er Rumamin, 9 miles North of Beersheba is the usually accepted site. See PEF, 398 ; Sh XXIV. E. W. G. Masterman ...
https://bibleatlas.org/en-rimmon.htm
... generally regarded as a mistake for Phut), Tubal, Javan, and the isles. Accepting this emendation, the passage agrees with Jeremiah 46:9 , where the Ludim are spoken ...
https://bibleatlas.org/lud.htm
... a sanctuary. This may have been "the dwelling place of Baal"; or, accepting Kittel's emendation (Tur ba`al), "the rock" or "mountain of ...
https://bibleatlas.org/gurbaal.htm
... ; and if so, it must have been its older name. If this identification be accepted, then Hazazon may survive in the name Wady Husasah, Northwest of `Ain Jidy. ...
https://bibleatlas.org/hazazon-tamar.htm
... see LADDER OF TYRE) . Though the name hardly suggests Misrephoth-maim, the identification may be accepted until some better one is found. H. Porter Strong's Hebrew H4956: Misrephoth Mayim " ...
https://bibleatlas.org/misrephoth-maim.htm
... , oppressed Israel ( Judges 10:12 ) . The Septuagint "Midian" has been accepted by some scholars as restoring the original text, since, otherwise, the Midianites remain unmentioned ...
https://bibleatlas.org/maon.htm
... ; or at least that they cannot both apply to the same place. But if we accept the identification of Zorah with Surah, and of Eshtaol with Eshu`, which there seems ...
https://bibleatlas.org/mahaneh-dan.htm
... which the road from Nazareth to Tiberias passes, has also many advocates. This identification is accepted by the Greek and Latin churches, which have both built extensively in the village; the ...
https://bibleatlas.org/kanah_2.htm
... be considered as meaning "of the cedars." The Hebrew word has been very generally accepted as from qadhar, "to become black," but it is an attractive suggestion ( ...
https://bibleatlas.org/kidron.htm