The ancientIsraelites ate the sacrificed lamb-allof it, from head to feet.
2
That grace which the ancientIsraelites had forfeited was offered anew to their children.
3
If you were a nomad-asmany ancientIsraelites were-theaging parents would be cumbersome.
4
The ancientIsraelites lived in great moderation and quiet.
5
The ancientIsraelites saw clearly that righteousness was the road to happiness; [Footnote: Cf.
6
He was leading them to the Holy Land as he had once led the ancientIsraelites.
7
This system of justice through reparation was practiced by the ancientIsraelites and also the Anglo-Saxons.
8
The ancientIsraelites were surrounded by unbelievers.
9
Now, then, what do these stones, with their significant name, teach us, as they taught the ancientIsraelites?
10
Numerous authorities are quoted by Bourke to prove the alleged use of ordure in food by the ancientIsraelites.
11
Archaeologists in the last two decades have discovered a type of snail that the ancientIsraelites used for blue dye.
12
This Babylonian tradition also affected the mythology and religion of Canaan, which would become the Promised Land of the ancientIsraelites.
13
Some have supposed, that judges among the ancientIsraelites resembled the Archons among the Athenians, and the Dictators among the Romans.
14
He found it occupied by a mixed Syrian and Greek population in which were probably a few descendants of the ancientIsraelites.
15
Those long lost descendants of the ten tribes of That grace, which the ancientIsraelites had forfeited, was offered anew to their children.
16
According to scholars, many of the ancientIsraelites lived a subsistencelevel nomadic life, and the elderly-whocouldn't do much heavy lifting-wereseen as a liability.