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Serving New Thought is pleased to present

A. B. Fay's

Divine Science Bible Text Book

Book page numbers, along with the number to the left of the .htm extension match the page numbers of the original books to ensure easy use in citations for research papers and books


Genesis - History of Israelites - Exodus - Leviticus - Numbers - Deuteronomy - Joshua - Judges - Ruth - Psalms - Proverbs - Song of Solomon - Prophets - New Testament History - Healing Works of Jesus - The 4 Evangelists - Lord's Prayer - Parables - Lord's [Last] Supper - Jesus after his Resurrection - Paul's Letters - Epistles - Revelation - Glossary - Numbers - Contents - Index


the starting point for redemption, God's judgment the beginning of restoration.

Jer. 50: 2-6

Jer. 51: 8, 42, 64

Jer. 52:

All that Babylon stands for (that which takes us into captivity) shall be wiped out.

Claim of separation has come over Babylon.

Thus far are the words of Jeremiah.

Same as Chapter 22 of II Kings.

LAMENTATIONS. . - p. 253

A pathetic ode, full of tenderness, expresses Jeremiah's grief for the destruction of Jerusalem and its temple. Five distinct poems. Its original Hebrew title was "Ekah" (How), which is its first word, and was a common prefix to a song of wailing.

When we read it in the true light, we can get joy out of it. We see what God is destroying; and if Jeremiah lamented it was because he thought it was the anger of the Lord that was the destructive power.

The book is nearly all summed up in the fifth chapter, the epitome.

EZEKIEL. . - p. 253

Ezekiel, "Strength of God," was a son of Buzi, a priest carried captive with other nobles by Nebuchadnezzar (B. C. 599) before the destruction.

He was settled with a Jewish colony on the banks of Chebar, two hundred miles north of Babylon.

 

page scan

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