Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Jan 4, 2022 · The Kenites were an ancient people living near the land of Canaan around the time of Abraham (Genesis 15:18–21). The Bible mentions several dealings between the Israelites and the Kenites, who were always on friendly terms with each other.

    • Deborah and Barak

      Books of the Bible. Judges. Deborah and Barak. Question....

    • Midian

      Abraham had more sons than just Isaac (by Sarah) and Ishmael...

    • Who Were The Gibeonites

      People in the Bible. Old Testament Groups. Gibeonites....

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › RechabitesRechabites - Wikipedia

    The Rechabites (/ ˈrɛkəbaɪts /) are a biblical clan, the descendants of Rechab through Jehonadab. Biblical sources. One theory is the Rechabites belonged to the Kenites, who accompanied the Israelites into the Holy Land and dwelt among them; the sources of information are few and unclear.

  3. Jan 4, 2022 · The Rechabites were descendants of Rechab (or Recab or Rekab), a Kenite and thus related to the Midianites and Moses’ family by marriage (see Judges 1:16). According to Jeremiah 35:6, the Rechabites’ strict rules were put in place by a son (or descendant) of Rechab named Jehonadab (or Jonadab).

  4. —An Arab race, found both among the Amalekites in the south (1Samuel 15:6) and among the tribes of Naphtali and Zebulon in the north (Judges 4:11), and even in Midian, as Jethro, the father-in-law of Moses, is called a Kenite (Judges 1:16).

  5. Table of Contents. A tribe of Palestine, mentioned in the time of Abraham as possessing a part of the promised land (Gen. xv. 19). At the Exodus it inhabited the vicinity of Sinai and Horeb; and to it belonged Jethro, the father-in-law of Moses (Judges i. 16).

  6. Jun 13, 2020 · A quick list of the 12 tribes of Israel. 1. Judah. The tribe of kings, and the most preeminent of the 12 tribes in the biblical narrative. Judah “prevailed over his brothers,” (1 Chronicles 5:2), and the tribe’s territory included the city of Jerusalem and the holy temple.

  7. People also ask

  8. The Jews. The Jews, in contrast to the Hellenists, are those Jews that remained faithful to the Torah and rejected the Greek culture and language. Proselytes. Only mentioned four times in the New Testament are the "proselytes" (Matthew 23:15, Acts 2:11, 6:5 and 13:43).

  1. People also search for