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      • "To daub" always has the meaning "to cover," "to smear with" in the Scriptures. Ezekiel compares the flatteries of the false prophets to a slight wall covered with whitewash (literally, "spittle"). See Ezekiel 13:10; 22:28.
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  2. International Standard Bible Encyclopedia - Daub. DAUB. dob: "To daub" always has the meaning "to cover," "to smear with" in the Scriptures. Ezekiel compares the flatteries of the false prophets to a slight wall covered with whitewash (literally, "spittle"). See Ezekiel 13:10; 22:28.

  3. 1. ( v. t.) To smear with soft, adhesive matter, as pitch, slime, mud, etc.; to plaster; to bedaub; to besmear. 2. ( v. t.) To paint in a coarse or unskillful manner. 3. ( v. t.) To cover with a specious or deceitful exterior; to disguise; to conceal. 4. ( v. t.) To flatter excessively or glossy. 5. ( v. t.)

  4. Jan 4, 2022 · Answer. Jesus was referred to as “Jesus of Nazareth” for several reasons. For one thing, in Bible times people were often identified by their native area or place of residence.

  5. Jul 17, 2023 · The village of Nazareth, located in the lower regions of Galilee, is arguably one of the most important cities in the entire New Testament. However, the fame of Nazareth has very little to do with its actual significance in the first century. In those days, Nazareth was nothing more than a tiny, obscure village located 112 kilometers north of ...

    • Thirty Years in Obscuritylink
    • ‘They Came to Nazareth’Link
    • The Glory of Nazarethlink
    • God Grew Up in Nazarethlink

    His parents came to Bethlehem as census travelers. He was born in noble Bethlehem, but this is not where they would stay. Mary and Joseph returned to their hometown (Matthew 2:23). And after they took their child up to Jerusalem to dedicate him, “they returned into Galilee, to their own town of Nazareth” (Luke 2:39). So also, after his memorable vi...

    Among Jews, Nazareth’s reputation was poor enough, but outside Israel, the town wasn’t even known. Which is why each of the Gospel writers had to explain what Nazareth was — a town in Galilee — when they first mentioned it (Matthew 2:23; Mark 1:9; Luke 1:26). Today we sing about the little town of Bethlehem, but Bethlehem, humble as it was compared...

    But Nazareth’s story did not end in dishonor. His Father saw fit not only to redeem a fallen race, but also a disgraced moniker, when he raised the Nazarene from the dead. Now the risen Christ is indeed “Jesus of Nazareth” — not in shame but unparalleled glory. First it came from the angel at the tomb: “Do not be alarmed. You seek Jesus of Nazareth...

    God himself grew up in a forgotten town in Galilee. He came down from Jerusalem, and went down in self-humbling, and down into the tomb, and then took Nazareth up with him in his triumph. And how many of us today, in adolescent immaturity, harbor a kind of mild contempt for our Nazareths, suspecting in our unchastened arrogance that we have ascende...

  6. Sep 26, 2023 · Pamela Palmer. Author. Updated September 26, 2023. The town of Nazareth is mentioned in the New Testament Gospel accounts and the book of Acts. What makes Nazareth significant is that, as Scripture tells, it was the childhood hometown of Jesus. Jesus certainly made this otherwise unimportant village highly significant.

  7. NAZARETH naz’ ə rĭth ( Ναζαρέτ, Ναζαρέθ, and other forms. Meaning uncertain, but perhaps related to Heb. nazir meaning separated or nēṩěr meaning branch. Cf. Matt 2:23 ). A city in Galilee, the home of Joseph, Mary, and Jesus. About halfway between the S end of the Sea of Galilee and Mt. Carmel is the town of Nazareth.

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