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2) Of whom did Jesus say, "Here is a true Israelite in whom
there is no guile?

3) In which land was the city of Enoch?

2007-07-14 06:39:45 · 5 answers · asked by bethybug 5 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

specific book in the Bible for 1st answer

2007-07-14 06:56:04 · update #1

4:30 EST No one has all 3 correct yet.

2007-07-14 09:28:36 · update #2

6 PM no winners yet...1st question hint....research the Dead Sea scrolls for specific book.

2007-07-14 10:54:03 · update #3

5 answers

1Isaiah
2Nathanael
3Nod

About now???

2007-07-14 07:48:05 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

1. Dead Sea scrolls.

2. Nathanael.

3. East of Eden, in the land of Nod.

2007-07-14 13:47:46 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

1. Septuagint, the greek translation of the old testemant
2. Nathaenal
3. East of Eden in the land of Nod

2007-07-14 13:53:02 · answer #3 · answered by honshu01 3 · 0 1

the book of Job.

Nathanael.John 1:47

east of Eden in land called nob

2007-07-14 13:53:37 · answer #4 · answered by rap1361 6 · 0 1

Jews were banned from Britian for over 300 years, until Oliver Cromwell allowed their return.

In the Middle Ages, lending money with interest - usury - was considered a sin and forbidden to Christians. But medieval monarchs found it useful that Jews were allowed to engage in the practice. The outsiders financed royal consumption, adventures and wars - and made themselves rich in the process. By 1168, the value of the personal property of the Jews (around £60,000) was regarded as a quarter of the entire wealth of England. And when Aaron of Lincoln died not long after - all property obtained by usury passing to the king on the death of the usurer - Henry II inherited the then massive sum of £15,000.

During Henry II's reign, Jews lived on good terms with their Christian neighbours. They helped fund a large number of the abbeys and monasteries and were allowed to take refuge there in times of commotion which came from time to time for religious or commercial reasons.

They needed the refuge. Clerics and Popes routinely stirred up ill-feeling against the Jews as the "killers of Christ". Ill will was fed by the Crusades, in which the Jews were as much a target of the righteous sword-wielders as were the infidel Saracens(MUSLIMS). One of the most popular - and heinous - myths was that known by Jews as "the blood libel", which appears to have originated in England in an accusation against one William of Norwich in 1144.

It suggested that he and other Jews killed a young Christian boy to use his blood in the ritual preparation of unleavened bread for the Passover ritual - a claim which spread from England to France and Spain and throughout Europe in medieval times and which resurfaced in Nazi propaganda in the 20th century.

In 1218, in what became the precursor of anti-Jewish laws all over the world, Stephen Langton, Archbishop of Canterbury, made Jews wear a badge - an oblong white patch of two finger-lengths by four - to identify them. Barons, to whom Jews lent money, encouraged the mob responses to such claims, in which Jewish homes were ransacked and records of their debts were destroyed.

2007-07-14 13:42:22 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

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