Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

  2. den, dwelling-place, habitation. Or maiyn (1 Chronicles 4:41) {maw-een'}; from the same as ownah; an abode, of God (the Tabernacle or the Temple), men (their home) or animals (their lair); hence, a retreat (asylum) -- den, dwelling ( (-)place), habitation. see HEBREW ownah. Forms and Transliterations.

  3. Oct 13, 2019 · Connected with the word dwelling, is the concept of purpose. If you dwell somewhere, you have a purpose to be there! God is a Dwelling Place of Refuge. In the Torah, the Hebrew people had no dwelling place of their own, so God became the place of refuge where Israel could dwell: Deuteronomy 33:27-28

  4. Vine's Expository Dictionary of OT Words. https://www.studylight.org/ dictionaries/ eng/ vot/ d/dwell.html. 1940. A. Verbs. ;Yâshab (יָשַׁב, Strong's #3427), “to dwell, sit, abide, inhabit, remain.”. The word occurs over 1,100 times throughout the Old Testament, and this root is widespread in other ancient Semitic languages.

  5. DWELL. dwel: (1) In the Old Testament "dwell" is a translation of 9 words, of which by far the most frequent is yashabh, "to sit down," translated "dwell" over 400 times ( Genesis 4:20; Joshua 20:4; 1 Chronicles 17:1,4,5, etc.); also very frequently "sit," and sometimes "abide," "inhabit," "remain." Another word often rendered "dwell" is ...

  6. Mishkan comes from the Hebrew root meaning “to dwell”; the tabernacle was considered to be the earthly dwelling place of God. In Exodus 25:8-9, God instructs Moses to tell the Israelites to build a mikdash (sanctuary) where God may dwell, specifying exactly how the tabernacle should be designed.

  1. People also search for