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"A Walk to Caesarea" (Hebrew: הליכה לקיסריה, Halikha LeKeisarya), also commonly known by the opening words "Eli, Eli" (Hebrew: אֵלִי, אֵלִי, "My God, My God") in the song version, is a poem in Hebrew written in 1942 by Hungarian Jewish WWII resistance fighter Hannah Szenes, [1] which Israeli composer David Zehavi set to ...
“There was writing on the inside and the outside of the scroll” [ἔσωθεν] esōthen ‘within’, ‘on the inside’ [ὄπισθεν] opisthen ‘outside’, ‘behind’ ‘backside’. A scroll written on both sides is a rarity among Hebrew scrolls.
They had chosen to live on God’s highway, and as a result, were clearing out the stumbling blocks for others. And it will be said: “Build up, build up, prepare the road! Remove the obstacles out of the way of my people.” (Isaiah 57:14) Literal, spiritual, or metaphorical?
mesillah: Highway, road, path, way. Original Word: מְסִלָּה. Part of Speech: Noun Feminine. Transliteration: mesillah. Pronunciation: meh-see-LAH. Phonetic Spelling: (mes-il-law') Definition: Highway, road, path, way. Meaning: a thoroughfare, a viaduct, a staircase. Word Origin: Derived from the root סָלַל (salal), meaning "to lift ...
Pronunciation: DEH-rek. Phonetic Spelling: (deh'-rek) Definition: Way, road, path, journey, manner, conduct. Meaning: a road, a course of life, mode of action. Word Origin: From the root verb דָּרַךְ (darakh), meaning "to tread" or "to walk."
Methodology. Base Text: Base text and orthography is the Nestle 1904 Greek New testament, courtesy of: https://sites.google.com/ site/nestle1904/. Paragraph formatting has been adapted from Westcott and Hort, 1881.
17 lip 2021 · Left carries hope – that if you continue your journey with God it will come to pass in due course. Hebrew writing reads from the right to the left, so maybe that’s another reason why right symbolically comes before left in terms of timing.