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| Alphabetical [« »] religion 48 religions 3 religiosity 1 religious 145 religiously 3 relinquish 3 relinquishing 2 | Frequency [« »] 146 get 146 meet 146 psalmist 145 religious 145 speaks 145 vision 144 introduction | New American Bible 2002 11 11 IntraText - Concordances religious |
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Part, Book Chapter:Verse grey = Comment text
1 PreNAB | Genesis contains many religious teachings of basic importance:
2 Pent, Gen 28: 18(4) | usually intended for some religious purpose. Since the custom
3 Pent, Exo 21: 1(1) | collection of civil and religious laws (Exodus 21-23) which
4 Pent, Exo 23: 24(5) | Sacred pillars: objects of religious veneration at Canaanite
5 Pent, Lev 11: 1(1) | are here given a moral, religious basis: the inedible varieties
6 Pent, Lev 21: 6(3) | and therefore treated with religious reverence.~
7 Pent, Num 16: 1(1) | rebellion of Korah was of a religious nature, against the religious
8 Pent, Num 16: 1(1) | religious nature, against the religious leadership of both Moses
9 Pent, Deu Int | the Psalms a preeminent religious influence among the Old
10 Pent, Deu 21: 1(1) | Genesis 4:10. Therefore a religious ceremony of propitiation
11 Pent, Deu 26: 14(3) | These are allusions to pagan religious practices. ~
12 Pent, Jos 22: 12(2) | were political as well as religious.~
13 Pent, Jud 14: 1(1) | 7:1-4. But national and religious sentiment was against any
14 Pent, Rut 2: 4(2) | be with you: courtesy and religious feeling characterize the
15 His | developed.~In 1 and 2 Kings the religious history of Israel extends
16 His | formation of the Jewish religious community after the Babylonian
17 His, 0 0: 23 | established for a time the religious and political independence
18 His, 0 0: 23 | of free composition - the religious novel used for purposes
19 His, 1Sam 10: 5(2) | due to strong feelings of religious enthusiasm induced by a
20 His, 1Sam 20: 26(1) | of the month would have religious overtones, and a ritual
21 His, 2Sam 14: 14(2) | possible allusion to the religious institution of cities of
22 His, 1Kin Int | combined work is designed as a religious history; hence in Kings
23 His, 2Kin 2: 12(3) | 12] My father: a religious title accorded prophetic
24 His, 1Chr Int | worship as the center of religious life for the Jewish community
25 His, 1Chr Int | more interested in David's religious and cultic influence than
26 His, 1Chr Int | s Hebrew as well as his religious and political outlook points
27 His, 2Chr Int | tribes of Israel were in religious schism as long as they worshiped
28 His, 2Chr Int | Babylonian exile. Thus, religious and political cooperation
29 His, 2Chr 13: 4(1) | to show that this was a religious, rather than a political,
30 His, Ezr Int | formation of the Jewish religious community after the Babylonian
31 His, Ezr Int | restored community. It was in religious and cultic reform rather
32 His, Neh Int | Ezra in turn was the great religious reformer who succeeded in
33 His, Neh 2: 20(3) | any of the rights of the religious community in Jerusalem.~
34 His, Tob Int | insights into the faith and the religious milieu of its unknown author.
35 His, Tob Int | used the literary form of religious novel (as in Jonah and Judith)
36 His, Tob 1: 15(6) | that the Book of Tobit is a religious novel (see Introduction;
37 His, Est Int | servant Mordecai, who for religious motives refuses to render
38 His, Est F: 7(1) | text, which gives a more religious interpretation of the feast,
39 His, 1Mac Int | established for a time the religious and political independence
40 His, 1Mac 1: 10(3) | the Syrian calendar but religious events by the temple calendar.
41 His, 1Mac 1: 10(3) | September or October, the religious New Year in March or April.~
42 His, 1Mac 2: 29 | according to righteousness and religious custom went out into the
43 His, 1Mac 2: 42(5) | hasidim, "pious ones," a religious group devoted to the strict
44 His, 1Mac 8: 6(5) | the policy of political, religious and cultural unification
45 WisdB | fundamentally moral, and essentially religious and monotheistic. Under
46 WisdB, Psa 4: 5(3) | Tremble: be moved deeply with religious awe. The Greek translation
47 WisdB, Psa 19: 5(3) | 5] The sun: in other religious literature the sun is a
48 WisdB, Psa 22: 27(8) | anawim) came to include the religious sense of "humble, pious,
49 WisdB, Pro Int | to most lofty moral and religious truths, such as God's omniscience (
50 WisdB, Pro Int | book is placed on a firm religious foundation by the principle
51 WisdB, Pro Int | the first nine chapters, a religious sage familiar with the earlier
52 WisdB, Pro 25: 1(1) | was a reformer of national religious life (2 Chron 29:25-30). ~
53 WisdB, Pro 28: 4(2) | 4] The law: religious and moral teaching.~
54 WisdB, Pro 31: 30(5) | of the ideal wife is her religious spirit, for she fears the
55 WisdB, Wisd Int | outstanding representative of religious devotion and learning among
56 WisdB, Wisd Int | use of the most popular religious themes of his time, namely
57 WisdB, Sir Int | helping them to maintain religious faith and integrity through
58 WisdB, Sir Int | poverty and wealth, the law, religious worship, and many other
59 WisdB, Sir Int | matters which reflect the religious and social customs of the
60 WisdB, Sir 37: 12 | Instead, associate with a religious man, who you are sure keeps
61 WisdB, Sir 49: 11(2) | constructions signify, namely, religious worship and civil authority
62 ProphB, Isa Int | his father and undertook a religious reform which Isaiah undoubtedly
63 ProphB, Isa Int | last days of this great religious leader, whose oracles, of
64 ProphB, Isa 45: 20(11)| bear wooden idols: in their religious processions. The gods of
65 ProphB, Jer 13: 1(1) | prophet symbolizing the religious corruption of Judah at the
66 ProphB, Amo Int | back to the high moral and religious demands of Yahweh's revelation.
67 ProphB, Amo 2: 8(5) | god: under the guise of a religious ceremony they drink the
68 ProphB, Hab Int | chapter is a magnificent religious lyric, filled with reminiscences
69 ProphB, Zep Int | Zephaniah was a time of religious degradation, when the old
70 ProphB, Mal Int | criticism of abuses and religious indifference in the community
71 Gosp, Mat Int | controversies with the Jewish religious leaders (Matthew 21:23-27;
72 Gosp, Mat 21: 12(10)| claim to authority over the religious practices of Israel and
73 Gosp, Mat 21: 23(18)| controversies between Jesus and the religious authorities of Judaism in
74 Gosp, Mat 21: 27(22)| and fear on the other the religious authorities claim ignorance
75 Gosp, Mat 21: 28(23)| represent, respectively, the religious leaders and the religious
76 Gosp, Mat 21: 28(23)| religious leaders and the religious outcasts who followed John'
77 Gosp, Mat 23: 13(7) | enhance their reputation as religious persons (Matthew 23:5).~
78 Gosp, Mar 1: 40(14)| reinstate the cured man into the religious community. See also the
79 Gosp, Mar 8: 31(7) | authority over the Jews in religious matters. See the note on
80 Gosp, Mar 12: 1(1) | The tenant farmers are the religious leaders of Israel. God is
81 Gosp, Mar 12: 1(1) | the tenants refers to the religious leaders, and the transfer
82 Gosp, Luk 3: 1(2) | Jewish population and their religious practices (see Luke 13:1).
83 Gosp, Luk 3: 2(3) | period, Luke now mentions the religious leadership of Palestine (
84 Gosp, Luk 6: 20(11)| Matthew emphasizes the religious and spiritual values of
85 Gosp, Luk 9: 52(26)| Jordan river. For ethnic and religious reasons, the Samaritans
86 Gosp, Luk 10: 31(12)| Priest . . . Levite: those religious representatives of Judaism
87 Gosp, Luk 13: 1(2) | that Pilate had disrupted a religious gathering of the Samaritans
88 Gosp, Luk 20: 1(1) | 1-47] The Jerusalem religious leaders or their representatives,
89 Gosp, Luk 20: 9(2) | whom it was entrusted (the religious leadership of Judaism that
90 Gosp, Luk 20: 22(5) | agents of the Jerusalem religious leadership hope to force
91 Gosp, Luk 20: 41(10)| position and authority as the religious leaders of the people because
92 Gosp, Luk 20: 41(10)| controversies between the religious leadership of Jerusalem
93 Gosp, Luk 22: 66(18)| priest's leadership to decide religious and legal questions that
94 Gosp, Joh Int | convince Christians that their religious belief and practice must
95 Gosp, Joh 4: 27(12)| Talking with a woman: a religious and social restriction that
96 Gosp, Act Int | with its roots in Jewish religious tradition, to a series of
97 Gosp, Act 2: 1(1) | immediate reprisal from those religious authorities in Jerusalem
98 Gosp, Act 2: 42(8) | and the centering of its religious life in the eucharistic
99 Gosp, Act 3: 1(1) | and John publicly teach religious doctrine in the temple (
100 Gosp, Act 3: 14(5) | emphasizes his sinlessness and religious dignity that are placed
101 Gosp, Act 5: 17(3) | motive is the jealousy of the religious authorities over the popularity
102 Gosp, Act 9: 8(3) | Acts 9:18) symbolizing the religious blindness of Saul as persecutor (
103 Gosp, Act 14: 23(5) | communities are given their own religious leaders by the traveling
104 Gosp, Act 17: 22 | every respect you are very religious. ~
105 Gosp, Act 19: 1(1) | other people at the same religious stage as Apollos, though
106 NTLet, Rom Int | Christians. Each of these religious faiths claimed to be the
107 NTLet, Rom Int | Christians to adopt the religious practices of Judaism. For
108 NTLet, Rom Int | For him, the purity of the religious understanding of Jesus as
109 NTLet, Rom Int | obligated to amalgamate the two religious faiths.~Still others find
110 NTLet, Rom Int | the content of the given religious system to which a human
111 NTLet, Rom 3: 1(1) | humanity detracts from the religious prerogatives of Israel.
112 NTLet, Rom 3: 27(9) | without the Old Testament religious culture symbolized by circumcision (
113 NTLet, Rom 11: 33(6) | and Gentile, despite the religious recalcitrance of each, have
114 NTLet, Rom 16: 1(1) | barriers of nationality, religious ceremony, or racial status.~
115 NTLet, 1Cor Int | may have participated in religious prostitution (1 Cor 6:12-
116 NTLet, 1Cor 6: 15(6) | reference may be specifically to religious prostitution, an accepted
117 NTLet, 1Cor 8: 1(2) | have passed through pagan religious ceremonies before finding
118 NTLet, 1Cor 9: 4(3) | from natural equity (7) and religious custom (1 Cor 9:13) designed
119 NTLet, Eph 2: 11(6) | through Christ all these religious barriers between Jew and
120 NTLet, Eph 2: 11(6) | and Gentile into a single religious community (Eph 2:15-16),
121 NTLet, Eph 4: 1(1) | into a single harmonious religious community (one body, Eph
122 NTLet, Phi 2: 17(14)| 17] Libation: in ancient religious ritual, the pouring out
123 NTLet, Phi 3: 2(4) | who slashed themselves in religious frenzy.~
124 NTLet, Col 2: 4(2) | Col 2:7). They must reject religious teachings originating in
125 NTLet, Col 2: 4(2) | need no other source of religious knowledge or virtue (Col
126 NTLet, Col 2: 4(2) | drink or to keep certain religious festivals or engage in certain
127 NTLet, Col 2: 16(8) | observances determined by religious powers associated with a
128 NTLet, Col 3: 1(1) | will be free from false religious evaluations of the things
129 NTLet, 1The 2: 15(4) | pride in his own ethnic and religious background (Romans 9:1-5;
130 NTLet, 1Tim Int | hierarchical order in a religious community existed in Israel
131 NTLet, 1Tim 1: 3(2) | outlined: to suppress the idle religious speculations, probably about
132 NTLet, 1Tim 5: 4 | first learn to perform their religious duty to their own family
133 NTLet, 1Tim 6: 3 | Lord Jesus Christ and the religious teaching ~
134 NTLet, Tit Int | 8); those who engage in religious controversy are, after suitable
135 NTLet, Tit 1: 1 | ones and the recognition of religious truth, ~
136 NTLet, Tit 3: 8(3) | matters of good conduct and religious doctrine, Titus is to stand
137 NTLet, Heb 2: 5(2) | death (Hebrews 2:15) is a religious fear based on the false
138 NTLet, Heb 11: 1(1) | an inspiring portrait of religious faith, firm and unyielding
139 NTLet, Heb 13: 1(1) | community remain apart from the religious doctrines of Judaism (Hebrews
140 CathL, Jam 1: 26 | If anyone thinks he is religious and does not bridle his
141 CathL, Jam 4: 5(4) | had in mind an apocryphal religious text that echoes the idea
142 CathL, 1Pet Int | alienation from their previous religious roots and the society around
143 CathL, 1Joh Int | argument but one of intense religious conviction expressed in
144 CathL, Rev 2: 1(3) | commercial, cultural, and religious center of Asia. The other
145 CathL, Rev 2: 14(14)| biblical prototype of the religious compromiser (cf Numbers