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  2. Jan 4, 2017 · ( Genesis 28:18-19) (3) The place is named after the people who founded the site or who made it famous. Rabbath-Ammon (רבת-עמון), or simply Rabbah, the capital city of the Ammonite kingdom, means “the capital of Ammon”. Over time, the name was shortened to Ammon, from which the present name in Arabic (Amman) derives.

  3. Apr 2, 2019 · Because of this association, the Greeks likely took the name of this city and adapted it to create their word for book. Application to the Scriptures, Old and New Testament: The collection of these writings, including the New Testament, were first called the Bible somewhere around the fourth century in the writings of John Chrysostom ...

  4. Dec 8, 2023 · Question. What is the significance of the city of Tyre in the Bible? Answer. Tyre is thought to be one of the oldest cities on the Phoenician coast, established long before the Israelites entered the land of Canaan. Isaiah affirms Tyre’s ancient origins as “from days of old” ( Isaiah 23:5–7 ).

  5. All know that the end of Elijah’s life is near. When they get to the Jordan, Elijah rolls up his mantle and strikes the water, which miraculously divides so that the two men cross on dry land. On the other side of the Jordan, a fiery horse-drawn chariot sweeps Elijah up to heaven in a whirlwind (2 Kings 2:4–14).

  6. Mar 14, 2016 · The center of the Egyptian world in the first millennium was a Mediterranean coastal city not referenced in the Hebrew Bible and only referenced in passing in the New Testament: Alexandria. This city, where the Hebrew Bible was translated from Hebrew (and Aramaic) into Greek, made it possible for the Hebrew Bible to live beyond Persian-period ...

  7. The original KJV Old Testament names for the following cities were changed and then recorded in the New Testament. Accho (Judges 1:31) changed to Ptolemais (Acts 21:7). Ashdod (Joshua 11:22) changed to Azotus (Acts 8:40). The city Aphek (Joshua 12:18) had its name changed to Antipatris (Acts 23:31). The sea of Chinnereth (Numbers 34:11, Joshua ...

  8. These discoveries in Jordan reveal Iron Age kingdoms that, like Israel and Judah, formed on the basis of tribal structures, named their own kings and worshiped their own national gods. We know them in the Bible and increasingly in archaeology as Ammon, Moab and Edom.