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Jesus tells the Parable of the Good Samaritan in order to answer the question, "Who is my neighbor?"

T

Jesus tells the man born blind to wash in the pool of Siloam.

T

Jesus used forms of thought and expression that were prevelant at the time of his teaching.

T

Jesus' comments about destroying the Temple were in reference to His own body.

T

Jesus, to justify what the disciples were doing on the Sabbath, recounts a story of David when he did something that was technically illegal but received no condemnation.

T

Job's wife counsels that he end his suffering by cursing God.

T

John admits that he has not included everything that Jesus did when he wrote the Gospels.

T

John does not give details of the birth of Jesus, but does acknowledge the incarnation of Jesus.

T

Jonah never tells the people of Nineveh that they will be saved if they were only to repent.

T

Jonah only admits to what he has done until after the lot falls to him.

T

Jonah was asleep when the storm struck the ship.

T

Jonah was mad at God since He decided to spare Nineveh.

T

Josiah commanded that the people keep the Passover during his reign; that practice had been lost over the years.

T

Luke recounts the fact John the Baptist and Jesus are related.

T

Luke's version of the Beatitudes also contains woes to those who are well off in this world.

T

Mary Magdalene is reported to be one of the women at the empty tomb.

T

Moses sends 12 scouts into the land to perform reconnaissance; there was one for each tribe.

T

Moses stayed on the Mountain for 40 days and 40 nights.

T

Nehemiah remonstrates the people because they had not been setting apart a portion for the priests.

T

One reason given for the people's request for a king is that they "wanted to be like the other nations."

T

One reason the Hebrews were enslaved was that there was a new king in Egypt who did not know Joseph.

T

Onesimus, who was a slave to Philemon, has become a Christian while he was with Paul.

T

Paul admits that he was scrupulous in keeping the ancestral Law.

T

Paul argues that Circumcision for an individual means keeping the entire Law.

T

Paul argues that even an Angel cannot give to the community another Gospel contrary to the one he presented.

T

Paul calls himself a prisoner in the opening to Philemon.

T

Paul faces opposition in Ephesus from silversmiths.

T

Paul first came to Galatia because he had been sick.

T

Paul makes a strong connection between the nature of Jesus' resurrection and the resurrection of believers.

T

Paul meets in Ephesus followers of John the Baptist.

T

Paul praised the Atheneans since they were seeking after the God who made all.

T

Paul quotes some pagan poetry in his speech in the Areopagus.

T

Paul was a Roman citizen by birth.

T

Peter has his name changed after he recognizes Jesus as Messiah.

T

Peter has to justify baptizing Cornelius' household to the community in Jerusalem.

T

Peter is delivered from prison by an angel.

T

Peter is given the keys to the kingdom of Heaven by Jesus.

T

Peter is married before he is called by Jesus.

T

Peter is proclaimed by the Church mostly as the one to whom Christ said, "Feed my lambs."

T

Philip knows what the eunuch was reading because he was reading the text aloud.

T

Psalm 41, which ends "Book 1" of the Psalms, ends with a statement of praise of God.

T

Psalm 95 begins with a call to prayer.

T

Purim was a feast established after the Exile.

T

Question 3 Many feasts had an agricultural beginning, which then celebrated a historical event.

T

Samuel informs the people that God will do nothing about a king who becomes oppressive.

T

Saul becomes angry at David because he receives more praise about war victories.

T

Saul's mental problems are described in the Bible as resulting from an "evil spirit" which came from the LORD.

T

Simeon was told that he would not die until he had seen the Messiah of the Lord.

T

Solomon gets help in building the Temple from the King of Tyre.

T

Solomon's prayer at the dedication of the Temple asks God to hear prayers of his people.

T

Some of Jesus' comments seem more prophesy than truism, like the superiority of the contemplative life exemplifed by Mary of Bethany.

T

Some of the festivals of Israel came from pagan roots.

T

The Apostles left the presence of the council rejoicing because they had suffered "dishonor for the name."

T

The Atheneans, at first, think that Paul is talking about two new gods.

T

The Biblical Commission admits that some in the academy regard faith as incompatible with historical truth.

T

The Book of Wisdom claims that the ungodly summon Death in all that they do.

T

The Coming of the Son of Man at the End will not be hidden, but rather evident to everyone.

T

The Evangelists reported some events and summarized others in their presentation of the Christian message.

T

The Four Beasts of Daniel's vision represent four different kings.

T

The Galatians are called foolish by Paul.

T

The Gospel of Mark is the only one to contain the identifying phrase "Son of Mary."

T

The Israelites were not allowed to come onto the Mountain, only Moses.

T

The Jewish notion of Messiah needed to be rethought in terms of the overall ministry, including the ending, of Jesus..

T

The Marriage teaching found in Matthew's Gospel does contain an exception that would render a second marriage not adultery.

T

The Preacher claims that humans are similar to animals in that they all die.

T

The Preacher decided to figure out what the best way one could live a life; one option was to hand himself over to the drinking of wine.

T

The Servant of the Lord in Isaiah gave up his life on behalf of others.

T

The Tent of Meeting was meant to be carried around by the community.

T

The disciples on the Road to Emmaus recognize Jesus in the breaking of the Bread.

T

The dream of the king which Daniel interprets in ch. 2 acknowledges that the king was put on the throne by the God of Israel.

T

The faith the Apostles held in Jesus' divinity after the Resurrection reinforced their memory of the events they witnessed during the public ministry.

T

The fear of the Lord is the beginning of Wisdom.

T

The first recorded martyr of the Church age is Stephen.

T

The flames in the furnace was so great that the guards putting Daniel's companions into it were consumed by them.

T

The genealogy according to Matthew is divided into groups of 14 by our author.

T

The killing of the children by Herod is similar to what happens near the time of Moses' birth.

T

The life and teaching of Jesus were not related in order to be remembered, but "preached" to provide a basis of faith and morals.

T

The opening events (up to the Wedding at Cana) of the Gospel of John take place within one week.

T

The parents of the man born blind were afraid of being expelled from the synagogue.

T

The plant that shaded Jonah was put there by the power of God.

T

The reign of Manasseh was the final straw in causing the Exile.

T

The seven men commissioned in Acts 6 were designated to help the Apostles in the distribution of food.

T

The statement made by Jesus to eat my flesh and drink my blood shocked his audience.

T

The tassels that were to be worn on their cloaks were meant to remind them of the commandments of God.

T

The term "the Prophet" was used to designate the promised "Prophet like Moses."

T

The term kyrios (Lord) in the NT often shows a belief in the divinity of Jesus.

T

The townspeople vouch for the Centurion who asks Jesus to heal his slave.

T

The tribe of Levi was not given a share of the heritage of Israel; thus, they are made dependent upon the offerings made to God.

T

The two candidates to replace Judas have as one of their main qualifications for the job the fact that they were with Jesus from the beginning.

T

The use of "I Am" in John's Gospel is a reference to Yhwh's revelation of his name to Moses.

T

The verse describing Saul's age when he became king and how long he reigned is corrupt in the Hebrew.

T

The words said over Jesus during his baptism are reminiscent of the language spoken to the King in Psalm 2.

T

There seems to be a distinction in the biblical texts between Priests and Levites and their duties.

T

There was more than one deportation from Judah to Babylon.

T

To Chesterton, the multiplicity of pictures of Jesus put forward by different scholars are individually lacking, but together, they point to the more profound truth.

T

When God threatens to destroy the people and start over, Moses reminds Him about what He did for them in Egypt.

T

When Israel is hungry in the wilderness, God provides manna from Heaven.

T

When Jesus cleanses the leper early in Mark''s Gospel, he touches him.

T

When Jesus describes himself as the Good Shepherd, he talks about sheep "not of this fold"; this is an indication of the universality of his mission.

T

When Jesus teaches the Pharisees about the indissolvability of marriage, he quotes the opening chapters of Genesis.

T

When sacrificing to inaugurate the covenant, Moses took half of the blood and sprinkled it onto the people.

T

Wisdom is personified within the Book of Proverbs as a Lady.

T

A story within the Bible should always be considered within the genre of history.

false

Abraham is given the land where he buries Sarah, his wife.

false

All of the texts in the OT which foreshadow the coming of Christ were written explicitly for that purpose.

false

Because the OT contains things which may be incomplete and temporary, they are not intended to be part of the teaching of God.

false

Cain was a shepherd.

false

Enoch was the longest lived of the Patriarchs before Noah.

false

Fear and shame are not related.

false

God calls Abraham while he is living in Ur.

false

In the coveting commands of the Ten Commandments, a wife is considered among the husband's property in both versions.

false

Ishmael was the firstborn of Abraham and his true heir.

false

It is legitimate to refer to moral reasoning as superstition because its contours and scope of its knowledge are not mathematical.

false

It is not possible for human reason to know God from the created reality.

false

Luther did not think the Apocrypha was worth anything and so did not include them in his Bible.

false

Moses was born into the Tribe of Judah.

false

Noah punishes the son who sees him naked.

false

Pope Pius XII began to open up modern research into the Bible with his Encyclical "Providentissimus Deus."

false

Sinful man finds no interior conflict between body and spirit.

false

Sundberg argues that Jerome's arguments for the canon should be used today; they remain valid.

false

Textual Criticism involves identifying important words within a given text.

false

The Apostles were unwilling to hand their teaching authority over to the next generation of leaders after them as Jesus had not told them to.

false

The Bible explicitly gives the reasons as to why God chooses Abram when he does.

false

The Tree of Life along with the Tree of Knowledge was forbidden to the man from the beginning of his creation.

false

The division of the Bible into chapters and verses are original to the text.

false

The final plague strikes only the household of Pharoah.

false

The mark given to Cain was a punishment by God.

false

The texts of the OT were originally addressed to the chosen people at the time; thus, they have no meaning for us at this time.

false

There were only a few languages spoken across the Ancient Near East

false

To maintain their empire, the Egyptians instituted a policy of mass deportation of conquered lands.

false

Whether a book is quoted in New Testament or not is a good argument for the inclusion or exclusion of a book in the Old Testament.

false

A prophet is false if they only fail to produce a sign showing they are from God.

F

A slave who is also a Hebrew would not be released from servitude.

F

According to Proverbs, the beginning of knowledge is advanced school-work.

F

After David was anointed King, God began to move Saul off the throne to make room for David.

F

After the death of Saul, David is anointed king of all Israel immediately.

F

Ahab is defiant when Elijah condemns him and his house; he vows to continue his actions.

F

All the sailors on the ship Jonah took were from Israel.

F

Amos condemned Israel for their crimes against their neighbors in times of war.

F

Amos prophesied in the Kingdom of Judah his whole career.

F

Anyone who kills another, even if it is premeditated, may seek refuge in the Cities of Refuge and there be safe from any kind of consequences.

F

Both Aaron and Miriam are punished when they speak out against their brother.

F

Both Isaiah and Jeremiah eagerly volunteer to be prophet for God.

F

Dathan and Abiram were exiled from the people for their rebellion against Moses.

F

David is allowed by God to build a Temple in Jerusalem.

F

David promotes the man who brings him the news of Saul's death to a high position in his government.

F

Even an accidental death of another person is punishable by the death penalty.

F

Hezekiah is the king whose practices are the "final straw" in triggering the Exile.

F

Hosea sees that the people of Israel have completely broken the covenant; it will never come back.

F

Hosea's wife turned to prostitution only after he divorced her.

F

In Acts, it is Peter that first refers to Jesus as "the Son of God."

F

In Exodus and Deuteromony, the blessing for keeping the commands of God is eternity in Heaven with God.

F

In John's Gospel, Jesus cleanses the Temple around the Feast of the Dedication.

F

In Luke's Gospel, the women's account was immediately believed.

F

In his first speech in Acts (ch. 2), Peter spends most of his presentation on the value of Jesus' teaching.

F

Jesus affirms that Moses is the one who feeds Israel in the wilderness.

F

Jesus claims that he has come to abolish Mosaic Law.

F

Jesus devoted most of his teaching to denouncing war among nations.

F

Jesus is only seen as the "Servant of God" (taken from Isaiah, among other places) after many years of theological reflection.

F

Jesus' moral teachings depended on the Roman Empire for understanding and validity.

F

Jesus' teaching on marriage is appropriate for his time and place in the first century in Galilee.

F

Job sins when he curses the day that he was born.

F

Jonah apologizes in his prayer inside the belly of the fish.

F

Josiah is punished for consulting with a female prophet.

F

Luke admits to being the first one to write a Gospel.

F

Luke focuses his account on Joseph and his actions and reactions to the events.

F

Luke narrates Paul's full argument before the council in Acts 15.

F

Luke recounts the visit of the Magi to the family after the birth of Jesus.

F

Luke s account has Mary and Joseph living in Bethlehem the entire pregnancy of Mary.

F

Luke's version of the Lord's Prayer is identical to the one prayed by Christians today.

F

Manasseh forbade the practice of child sacrifice.

F

Mark describes in great detail the temptations Jesus undergoes in the Wilderness.

F

Matthew traces Jesus' genealogy back to Adam.

F

Nathan directly confronts David with the accusation of adultery and murder after his sin with Bathsheba.

F

Nehemiah told the people they should weep after the reading of the Law in sorrow for the sins that they had committed.

F

Paul became a follower of Jesus during the public ministry of Jesus.

F

Paul condemns the procedure of baptizing someone in place of those who had died.

F

Paul is asked in his conversion, why he is persecuting "the people of God."

F

Paul thanks God for the graces given to the Churches in Galatia.

F

Paul's overall argument is that righteousness comes from the following of the Jewish Law.

F

Peter is in Jerusalem when he receives the vision of the unclean animals.

F

Sacrifice was not restored in Jerusalem until the entire Temple complex was completed.

F

Simon, who was known as a magician, was able to impart the gift of the Holy Spirit by laying hands on people.

F

Solomon asks God for the blessing of a long life.

F

Solomon was reported to have 300 wives.

F

The Apostles in Jerusalem demanded that Titus, one of Paul's companions, be circumcised.

F

The Biblical Commission argues that the early writers of the church have no value for today's scholars.

F

The Book of Proverbs consists of long wisdom poems throughout the book.

F

The End will immediately follow upon the wars and rumor of wars predicted by Jesus.

F

The High Priest is called a son of God, begotten by the Almighty.

F

The Sabbath Command in the Deuteronomy account links the keeping of the Sabbath to Creation.

F

The crowd around Jesus when he heals the paralytic are wrong when they say only God can forgive sins.

F

The decision of the council of Jerusalem (Acts 15) is that the Gentiles have to follow all part of the Mosaic Law, including circumscision.

F

The design of Solomon's Temple was unique for the Ancient Near East.

F

The early Christians had their Eucharistic Celebrations, "breaking of bread," within the Temple.

F

The few restrictions placed on the Gentiles outside of the moral law are communicated to the community in Antioch by Paul orally.

F

The figure that Daniel sees on the banks of the Great River was actually God.

F

The first disciples ask if they can follow Jesus.

F

The household of Cornelius receives the Holy Spirit immediately following their baptism.

F

The king, Manasseh, was a good king in the eyes of Yhwh.

F

The man of God who condemns the altar erected by Jeroboam was killed on the order of the king for his words of condemnation.

F

The opening scene of Acts is the account of finding Jesus' tomb empty.

F

The original meaning of Jesus' name in Hebrew is "God saves."

F

The prophets condemned the very idea of animal sacrifice.

F

The seventy sent out by Jesus to minister had success in everything but exorcisms.

F

The testimony of one witness is sufficient to convict someone of a crime.

F

The text of the Book of Job claims to have been written by Solomon.

F

The three Gospels, Matthew, Mark, and Luke, when relating the same story, always use identical wording in their telling.

F

The titles of "Master" and "Rabbi" often contained great theological weight.

F

The tone of Psalm 22 is all negative; there is no hope for the speaker.

F

The two listings of the Ten Commandments are completely identical.

F

The wise men and sorcerers of Egypt were able to duplicate all of the plagues called down by Moses and Aaron.

F

There are no restrictions in the Law concerning the behavior of the king.

F

There is clear evidence of continual use of the Tent of Meeting from the time of Moses to the Building of the Temple by Solomon.

F

There is some compromise of the truth value of the Gospels because of the differences in the ordering of events.

F

To bring the Widow's son back to life, Elijah goes to his bed and commands that he gets up.

F

Two of the seventy elders chosen by God did not come to the ceremony, the spirit of God was not given to them.

F

When Jesus appears to the Apostles, he is as insubstantial as a ghost.

F

When the people try to invade the Promised Land after refusing God's instruction, God relents and helps them.

F

A smoking firepot and flaming torch, representing God, pass between the halves of the animals sacrificed by Abram.

true

A word forms a bridge between two people.

true

Abraham convinces God to not destroy Sodom and Gomorrah if they were to find ten righteous people there.

true

Addressing God as "my Father" would have been unheard of at the time of Jesus.

true

All firstborn sons of Israel should have a sacrifice offered in their place as they are dedicated to God.

true

An image goes beyond itself and manifests something that it is not.

true

Ancient exegetes found a spiritual sense in the smallest details of the biblical text, a practice that we do not follow today.

true

Archeology studies the physical human remains of civilization.

true

At the time of Jesus, the Jewish canon was closed only with regard to the Law and the Prophets.

true

Christ is not only the mediator but also the fullness of revelation.

true

Christianity cannot use the Theological justification of the Rabbis for canonicity since it argues for the inspiration of the NT.

true

Each human being is willed by God; each is made in the image and likeness of God.

true

Esau was supposed to be the heir of Isaac.

true

Fragments of pottery can be dated based on discoveries put into a system of a pottery clock.

true

Fundamentalism does not take into account the historical character of biblical revelation.

true

God keeps repeating throughout the creation account that creation is good.

true

God laid the groundwork for the Gospel beginning with Abraham and the other Patriarchs.

true

God's order to take and sacrifice Isaac is presented as a test of Abraham.

true

Gunkel tried to find the genre and the setting within the life of the community of various texts in his research in the OT.

true

In taking and eating the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge, the man and woman question the gift of creation and the love through which it was given.

true

In the Bible, God creates by forming the world from pre-existing matter.

true

In the song sung after crossing the Sea, Israel affirms that God is a warrior fighting on their side.

true

It is through Sacred Tradition that the canon of Sacred Scripture is known.

true

Jacob is specifically told to not marry any woman from among the Canaanites.

true

Luther had to confront the issue that the case for Purgatory was based on a text from Second Maccabees.

true

Melchizedek is both a priest and king.

true

Metzger argued that the Rabbinic decision at Jamnia was determined by long usage and acceptance of what was canonical.

true

Moses appoints judges to help him based on the advice of his father-in-law.

true

One oddity of the Creation account in Genesis 1 is the unexpected shift to the plural pronoun in the divine discussion about creating humans.

true

One thing which convinced believers that the texts should be preserved was that they continue to be the bearers of meaning for generations to come.

true

Scripture has as authors both God and human beings.

true

Semitic groups called the Hyksos held control over the Delta region in Egypt during the Second Intermediate Period.

true

Since the 18th Century more and more scholars argued against Mosaic authorship of the Pentateuch.

true

The Alexandrian Canon has been used to explain why Christianity accepted more books that Israel.

true

The Amarna Tablets were letters written from small city states in Canaan asking for help from Egypt.

true

The Babylonians and Assyrians had a shared culture and language.

true

The Christian Church at the beginning mostly used the Greek version of the OT.

true

The Church does allow for translations to be produced in cooperation with other churches for the benefit of all Christians.

true

The Churches of the Reformation believed that the Bible was the only source of religious authority.

true

The Historical-Critical method is historical because it seeks to explain the process by which a text came about.

true

The Siloam Inscription seems to confirm the accounts of Hezekiah's perparations for a siege of Jerusalem.

true

The Ten Commandments can be divided between duties to God and duties to neighbor.

true

The best way to view the OT texts is as the written religious heritage of Ancient Israel.

true

The books of the OT sometimes debate topics with each other.

true

The city and tower of Babel are built so the people will not be scattered across the face of the earth.

true

The core of the Septuagint was a Greek translation of the Hebrew Scriptures.

true

The covering of the couple's nakedness hides the visible signs of their masculinity and femininity.

true

The languages of Israel's smaller neighbors (Edom, Moab and Ammon) were essentially dialects of Hebrew.

true

The name "Eve" means "mother of all the living."

true

The name "Israel" means "you have striven against God and man and have prevailed."

true

The serpent in the Garden does not tempt by denying the existence of God.

true

The serpent was a creature made by the LORD God.

true

The sign of water into blood was originally intended to prove to Israel that Moses came from God.

true

The text in its final form is the expression of the word of God.

true

The three major periods into which the ancient world is divided are based on the tools used at the time.

true

Theological speculation on Inspiration was not started until the years following the Reformation.

true

We cannot simply approach the Bible as we would any other historical book.

true

When Noah leaves the Ark, God gives him commands similar to those given to humans in chapter 1.

true

When the debate began on the contents of the Bible at the Council of Trent, the question on the biblical books was still being debated.

true

Ezekiel is told he would be held responsible for the sins of someone that he is told to warn, but does not.

T

Ezra was disturbed that some, including some Levites had taken wives from among the local, non-Jewish population.

T

God asks Job whether or not he is claiming knowledge equal to divine knowledge.

T

God has set his king on the holy Mountain, Zion.

T

God identifies himself to Moses as the God of his ancestors.

T

God is called the shepherd of the people.

T

Hezekiah's kingdom is saved from the army of Sennacherib after the Angel of the LORD strikes down many of the men of the invading army.

T

In John, the asking of Peter, "Do you love me?" is in response to Peter's three denials.

T

In Psalm 22, the speaker will Praise the Name of the LORD for his salvation.

T

In an animal sacrifice, Israel gave back the life given as gift by God.

T

In chapter 11 of John, Caiaphas utters a prophesy because he is the High Priest.

T

In the early period of Israelite worship, places of significant encounters with God were important and became places of Sacrifice.

T

In the parable, when the invited guests refuse to come, the Master sends out his servants to bing in anyone, including those found in the streets.

T

Israel did not know that the bounty that they thought came from the idols really came from the LORD.

T

Israel is commanded to love the LORD.

T

Israel is told not to oppress foreigners living in their land because of their experience in Egypt.

T

Jesus is accused of driving out demons by the power of Be-elzebul.

T

Jesus often corrects the disciples' view of the coming Messiah.

T

Jesus teaches that who ever divorces his wife makes her an adulteress.

T

A person is blessed who can meditate on the Law day and night so as to avoid the evil-doers.

T

A rumor had arisen that John, the "beloved disciple," would not die.

T

A woman raped in "open country" is presumed innocent of any crime and should not be punished.

T

After Paul arries in Jerusalem, he is asked to help four Nazarites fulfil the requirements of their vow.

T

After performing a miracle, the people of Lystra thought Paul and Barnabus were gods and almost offered a sacrifice to them.

T

After returning to Jesusalem after Jesus appeared to them in Emmaus, the two disciples are told that Simon-Peter had seen Jesus.

T

After the people refuse to invade the land, God sends them back into the wilderness so that the generation who left Egypt would not enter the Promised Land.

T

All the Gospels report that the tomb was empty of Jesus' body.

T

All traditional worship sites are to be destroyed; the LORD is to be worshipped in one location to be set in the future.

T

Amos refers to the noble women of Samaria as "cows of Bashan."

T

Amos takes offense to being called a prophet by Amaziah the Priest.

T

Ananias is at first relunctant to see Paul.

T

Any prophet who tells the people to worship other gods is to be put to death.

T

Anyone executed by "hanging from a tree" must be removed before nightfall.

T

At the end of John 6, Jesus loses some of his disciples because of the "hard saying."

T

At the orders of Josiah, the High Priest and others go consult a prophetess about the implications of finding the Book of the Law.

T

Before the covenant is presented to the people, they are reminded about what God did for them during the Exodus.

T

Believers in Jesus are first called Christians in the city of Antioch.

T

Both John and Paul argue that Jesus was divine even though he became a human being.

T

Chapter 12 of Daniel teaches that the dead would be raised at the end.

T

Chesterton characterizes Jesus as very practical person in his work as an exorcist.

T

Clean land animals must have a cloven hoof and chew the cud.

T

Cornelius is a Gentile who believes in the God of Israel but who has not been circumcised.

T

Cyrus not only allowed Israel to rebuild the Temple, he also returned sacred vessels seized by the Babylonians.

T

Daniel and his companions were given their wisdom, which surpassed those of the Babylonians, by God.

T

Daniel is nearly executed along with all of the Wise Men of Babylon.

T

Daniel resolved not to eat the food given to him by the king because it was unclean.

T

Daniel, in his vision of the four beasts, sees one coming like a son of man who is presented to the Ancient of Days and given authority over all.

T

During the ceremony to confess their sins, Ezra recites the history of the people up to that time.

T

Each Psalm is a separate, distinct poem.

T

Elijah challenges the prophets of Ba'al to show which deity had true power in Israel.

T

Even though Jesus praises John the Baptist, he says that John is lower than any in the Kingdom of God.

T


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