At this site David’s men twice struck down giant Philistine warriors (2 Samuel 21:18, 19)
While in Hebron, this wife of David bore him a son named Ithream (2 Samuel 3:5)
By means of this standard Hebrew weapon, Phinehas pierced through both Zimri and Cozbi and brought a halt to the scourge that killed 24,000 Israelites on the Plains of Moab (Numbers 25:6-15)
Contemptuously described in the Scriptures as harsh, bad, good-for-nothing, and senseless, he was struck dead by Jehovah (1 Samuel 25:3, 17, 25, 36-38)
Ancestor of a family of Nethinim temple slaves (Ezra 2:46)
Answerable (Matthew 5:21)
The largest of the Hebrew units of weight and of monetary value (Ezra 8:26)
A city in the mountainous region of Judah (Joshua 15:49)
Jesus said that “it is easier for a camel to get through” this “than for a rich man to get into the kingdom of God” [3 words] (Matthew 19:24)
One of the seven sons of Noah’s son Japheth (Genesis 10:2)
He and his sons were of “the sons of Gilead” (Numbers 26:30)
To wear away by persistent biting (Revelation 16:10)
Among the things that Agur found too wonderful to comprehend was the way of this bird in the heavens (Proverbs 30:18, 19)
Gideon used this to make sure that Jehovah would keep his promise to save Israel by means of him (Judges 6:36-40)
Bearing or demeanor (Job 36:9)
Used in the Bible to symbolize the authority of parents over their children (Proverbs 29:15)
Borne or put on (Luke 8:27)
A town from which Joshua expelled the giant Anakim (Joshua 11:21)
Moved by feeling this for a man suffering from leprosy, Jesus said: “I want to. Be made clean” (Mark 1:40, 41)
This large wild animal is mentioned only once in the Scriptures (Psalm 80:13)