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| Covenant of commitment to God by the cutting of the foreskin |
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| agreements with stipulations and rewards with God |
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| the migration if Hebrews from Egypt under the leadership of Moses, later understood to mark the birth of the Israelite nation |
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| Jesus, savior/deliever. rescue them from the romans |
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| Hebrew summary of oral law--inherited from the pharisees and ascribed to Moses, arranged by topic; edited by Rabbi Judah ha-Nasi before 220 CE, it has an authority paralleling that of the written Torah |
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the Greek translation of the Hebrew scriptures produced in Alexandria in Hellenistic times. |
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| 4 Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one.[a] 5 Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your strength. Deut. 6:4-5 |
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| an acronmy referring to the entire hebrew bible Torah (or law) Nei'im (or prophets), and Ketuvim (or sacred writings). |
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| a word meaning "teaching" or "instruction"; applied most specifically to the law of Moses but may also refer to the entire scripture, including commentaries |
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| Destruction of Second Temple |
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| Israel established as state |
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| Christianity becomes legal |
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| The church splits East and West |
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| The Protestant Reformation |
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| Islam is officially established |
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| Christians old testament and new testament |
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| the Greek translation of the Hebrew word for messiah 'anointed' |
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| the good news of redemption that the Hebrew prophets had promised. The gospels are the accounts of Jesus' life attributed to his disciples mark, Matthew, Luke, john. |
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| the embodiment of the divine in human form. |
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| Jesus' rising from the dead |
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| the "soultion" confess with your mouth that Jesus is lord,and believe in your heart that he rose from the dead. then you will be saved. |
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| the problem, going against what God says, the 10 commandments. |
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| father son and the holy spirit as one |
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| the movement toward Christian unity |
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| struggle in defence of the faith; some jihads are military, waged; others are spiritual, waged to improve moral conduce in society |
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| the specific regulations of Islamic law |
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| the 'life-example' of Muhammads words and deeds, based mainly on the Hidith literature; the primary source of guidance for Muslims |
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| a chapter of the Qur'an; there are 114 in all, arranged mainly in decreasing order of length except for the first |
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| anyone who serves as the leader of prayer at the mosque |
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