Updating...
Showing 12 of 535
 
				
				Hebrew Babel. Capital city of Mesopotamia, located on the Euphrates River and neighbor to Assyria. Considered at the time of the prophet Jeremiah to be the greatest and most beautiful city of the Near East. An enormous political and economic power...
MORE 
				
				Roman god of wine, fertility, and vegetation, god of the theater. Son of Zeus and Semele, the Theban princess.
MORE 
				
				To wash, dip, or immerse in water. Baptism shows that a person's sins are washed away. He or she has joined the family of God and is united with Jesus in dying to sin and rising to a new life.
MORE 
				
				Another name for the Second Jewish Revolt against Rome (AD 132-135). The leader of the revolt was a man named Bar Kochba.
MORE 
				
				"From the king"; Roman public hall built with side halls lower than the center hall.
MORE 
				
				Any of the declarations of blessedness pronounced by Jesus in the Sermon on the Mount.
MORE 
				
				Nomads who live mainly in the wilderness areas of the Middle East. They speak Arabic and are generally Muslim. They retain a lifestyle much like that of the early biblical characters Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.
MORE 
				
				Corruption of the word "Beelzebul," meaning "lord of the flies." It was used by Jesus to refer to the prince of demons, the devil.
MORE 
				
				City in the central Negev. It was settled before 3000 BC. Abraham and Isaac lived here. Abraham gave it the name Beersheba, which means "well of the oath" or "well of the seven." Often used to refer to the southern end of the P...
MORE 
				
				Hebrew meaning "useless." Came to be applied to the devil by the Essenes and the early Christians (2 Cor. 6).
MORE