book of joel การใช้
- It fell open to the book of Joel.
- This particular fresco imagines the person of Joel, a prophet from the Hebrew Bible, whose teachings appear in the Book of Joel.
- (Note : the Book of Joel's division verses differs greatly between editions of the Bible; some editions have three chapters, others four .)
- "' Joel 2 "'is the second chapter of the Book of Joel in the Hebrew Bible or the Old Testament of the Christian Bible.
- "' Joel 1 "'is the first chapter of the Book of Joel in the Hebrew Bible or the Old Testament of the Christian Bible.
- "' Joel 3 "'is the third ( and last ) chapter of the Book of Joel in the Hebrew Bible or the Old Testament of the Christian Bible.
- The preservation of the book of Joel indicates that it was accorded special status by its contemporaries as the word of the Lord ( 1 : 1 ).
- There are several references in the novel to the title phrase, which has Biblical origins in three cited passages : Song of Solomon 3 : 6; Book of Joel 2 : 30, 31; and Exodus 33 : 9, 10.
- The ladies were not at first given mourning clothes, and Janet quoted in Latin a phrase from the Book of Joel to the English diplomat Privy Council for permission to leave Scotland with her son " Lord Hary de Valoys " on 22 August 1560.
- Among his major academic publications were an extensive commentary on " 2 Chronicles " published as part of the Word Biblical Commentary, a commentary on the Book of Joel, and his magnum opus, " An Introduction to the Old Testament ", which he wrote together with Tremper Longman and which was published posthumously, three months after his death.
- After completing his commentaries on the " Book of Hosea " ( 1868 ) and " Book of Joel " ( 1872 ), he wrote " Neue Beitr鋑e zur Erl鋟terung der Evangelien aus Talmud und Midrasch " ( 1878 ), the most complete collection of the parallel passages of the Talmud and the New Testament since the works of John Lightfoot and Johann Christian Sch鰐tgen.
- The idea of a " blood moon " serving as an omen of the coming of the end times comes from the Book of Joel, where it is written " the sun will turn into darkness, and the moon into blood, before the great and terrible day of the Lord comes . " This phrase is again mentioned by Saint Peter during Pentecost, as recorded in Joel's prophecy.