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  1. We tend to use this word “plague” to describe worldwide pandemic outbreaks, but that is not the way it is used in Mark 5:29, which tells of a woman who had an issue of blood for 12 years. Specifically, Mark 5:29 says that when this woman touched Jesus, she was healed of her “plague.”

  2. 3 paź 2021 · Moses, Israelites, Pharoah, Egyptians, and ten plagues that ultimately ended up with the Israelites being set free and delivered from Egypt--this is an epic story that showcases God's power and...

  3. Mark 5:29-30. She felt in her body that she was healed of that plague — Or distemper, with which she had been chastised; for this is the plain meaning of the word μαστιγος here used, which properly means a stroke, scourge, or correction.

  4. 3 lip 2021 · The description of the vision continues. The Devil rages against the woman and the rest of her offspring. It is very likely that the woman symbolizes Israel, and ‘the rest of her offspring’ are described in v. 17 as ‘those who keep the commandments of God and hold the testimony of Jesus’.

  5. King James Version. 30 Then the priest shall see the plague: and, behold, if it be in sight deeper than the skin; and there be in it a yellow thin hair; then the priest shall pronounce him unclean: it is a dry scall, even a leprosy upon the head or beard.

  6. 4 wrz 2023 · The term “plague” is used in the Bible for highly contagious diseases that can spread quickly, reach epidemic proportions and be fatal. The Hebrew word for plague (dēver) comes from a root word meaning “to destroy” or exterminate, (2 Chronicles 22:10) and is translated in English literature to: pestilence, plague, murrain, cattle ...

  7. A woman who has had an issue of blood for twelve years has just touched Jesus' cloak. She does not want to be noticed, and she certainly doesn't want Jesus to know that her touch has made Him ceremonially unclean.

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