A teacher and prophet born in Bethlehem and active in Nazareth; his life and sermons form the basis for Christianity (circa 4 BC - AD 29)
1So saying, the Nazarene went back joyfully to Mary and the Beth-Dagonite.
2Carefully, tenderly, the Nazarene walked by the woman's side, leading-strap in hand.
3If I rebuild it, the Nazarene will be proved a false prophet.
4Now which is right: Suzon or Father Hallon-Aphrodite or the Nazarene?
5He thinks the Nazarene is John the Baptizer risen from the dead!
6By the power of Jesus Christ the Nazarene, stand up and walk!
7To the Nazarene they were hours of insult, provocation, and slow dying.
8Would the Nazarene but speak these few words, what a tumult would follow!
9Already the forbidden tenets of the Nazarene faith had entered into his words.
10That was spoken six centuries before the birth of the Nazarene.
11But while men forgot the Nazarene and His troubles, Grod did not forget.
12To each other they said that they would go to see the Nazarene-
13Yet Porphyry's eloquent case against the Nazarene was now lodged in my head.
14Some men put a paralytic in front of the Nazarene while he was teaching.
15None of my party except the Nazarene knew the country.
16A faltering voice spelled out the sufferings of the Nazarene.
Translations for the Nazarene