id string | question string | answer string | documents list |
|---|---|---|---|
1_Chronicles_22_4857499 | Explain what '1 Chronicles 22' covers in the 'Solomon anointed to build the temple (22:6โ19)' section. | The section contains two speeches by David, the first one to Solomon (verses 6โ16) and the second to the leaders of Israel (verses 17โ19). The speech to Solomon parallels David's final decrees in 1 Kings 2 and quotes the dynastic promise in 1 Chronicles 17 (cf. 2 Samuel 7), with the explanation why David was not permit... | [
"1 Chronicles 22 โ Verse 5\n\nAnd David said, Solomon my son is young and tender, and the house that is to be builded for the must be exceeding magnifical, of fame and of glory throughout all countries: I will therefore now make preparation for it. So David prepared abundantly before his death. ; \"Solomon\": of Da... |
1_Chronicles_22_4857497 | Describe the 'Verse 4' section of the article about '1 Chronicles 22'. | and cedar logs without number, for the Sidonians and the Tyrians brought much cedar wood to David. ; "Without number" or "in abundance" (KJV) is translated from Hebrew: ืืืื ืืกืคืจ ''lษ-,, also meaning "beyond measure". ; "The Sidonians and Tyrians": were mentioned as those who brought cedar wood, a reminiscent of King H... | [
"1 Chronicles 22 โ Verse 5\n\nAnd David said, Solomon my son is young and tender, and the house that is to be builded for the must be exceeding magnifical, of fame and of glory throughout all countries: I will therefore now make preparation for it. So David prepared abundantly before his death. ; \"Solomon\": of Da... |
1_Chronicles_22_4857494 | From the article on '1 Chronicles 22', restate the 'Textual witnesses' content. | Some early manuscripts containing the text of this chapter in Hebrew are of the Masoretic Text tradition, which includes the Aleppo Codex (10th century), and Codex Leningradensis (1008). Extant manuscripts of a Koine Greek translation known as the Septuagint, made in the last few centuries BCE, include Codex Vaticanus ... | [
"1 Chronicles 22 โ Verse 5\n\nAnd David said, Solomon my son is young and tender, and the house that is to be builded for the must be exceeding magnifical, of fame and of glory throughout all countries: I will therefore now make preparation for it. So David prepared abundantly before his death. ; \"Solomon\": of Da... |
1_Chronicles_22_4857496 | What does the article about '1 Chronicles 22' say regarding 'Verse 1'? | Then David said, This is the house of the God, and this is the altar of the burnt offering for Israel. The verse becomes the climax of the preceding and subsequent sections in that the future site of YHWH's temple (and place for sacrifices) is gloriously announced, regarded 'synonymous' with the desert tabernacle, the ... | [
"1 Chronicles 22 โ Verse 5\n\nAnd David said, Solomon my son is young and tender, and the house that is to be builded for the must be exceeding magnifical, of fame and of glory throughout all countries: I will therefore now make preparation for it. So David prepared abundantly before his death. ; \"Solomon\": of Da... |
1_Chronicles_22_4857501 | What does the article about '1 Chronicles 22' say regarding 'Verse 9'? | Behold, a son shall be born to you who shall be a man of rest. I will give him rest from all his surrounding enemies. For his name shall be Solomon, and I will give peace and quiet to Israel in his days. Using wordplay, "Solomon" (ืฉึฐืืึนืึนืึ,, meaning: "peaceful" ) was to be given "peace" (ืฉึธืืึฅืึนื, ), and, as a "man of... | [
"1 Chronicles 22 โ Verse 5\n\nAnd David said, Solomon my son is young and tender, and the house that is to be builded for the must be exceeding magnifical, of fame and of glory throughout all countries: I will therefore now make preparation for it. So David prepared abundantly before his death. ; \"Solomon\": of Da... |
1_Chronicles_23_5817514 | Explain what '1 Chronicles 23' covers in the 'Verse 2' section. | And he gathered together all the princes of Israel, with the priests and the Levites. David prepared well for his death and the reign of his successor, Solomon, by convening his officials to achieve a smooth transition (without mentioning the events recorded in 2 Samuel 15โ1 Kings 2. The verse parallels 1 Chronicles 28... | [
"1 Chronicles 23 โ Verse 2\n\nAnd he gathered together all the princes of Israel, with the priests and the Levites. David prepared well for his death and the reign of his successor, Solomon, by convening his officials to achieve a smooth transition (without mentioning the events recorded in 2 Samuel 15โ1 Kings 2. T... |
1_Chronicles_23_5817511 | Based on the article about '1 Chronicles 23', describe the 'Textual witnesses' section. | Some early manuscripts containing the text of this chapter in Hebrew are of the Masoretic Text tradition, which includes the Aleppo Codex (10th century), and Codex Leningradensis (1008). Extant manuscripts of a Koine Greek translation known as the Septuagint, made in the last few centuries BCE, include Codex Vaticanus ... | [
"1 Chronicles 23 โ Verse 2\n\nAnd he gathered together all the princes of Israel, with the priests and the Levites. David prepared well for his death and the reign of his successor, Solomon, by convening his officials to achieve a smooth transition (without mentioning the events recorded in 2 Samuel 15โ1 Kings 2. T... |
1_Chronicles_23_5817513 | What information does the article about '1 Chronicles 23' provide on 'Verse 1'? | So when David was old and full of days, he made Solomon his son king over Israel. ; "Full of days": like Abraham (Genesis 25:8), Isaac (Genesis 35:29) and Job (42:17). | [
"1 Chronicles 23 โ Verse 2\n\nAnd he gathered together all the princes of Israel, with the priests and the Levites. David prepared well for his death and the reign of his successor, Solomon, by convening his officials to achieve a smooth transition (without mentioning the events recorded in 2 Samuel 15โ1 Kings 2. T... |
1_Chronicles_23_5817509 | Summarize the following section from the article on '1 Chronicles 23'. | 1 Chronicles 23 is the twenty-third chapter of the Books of Chronicles in the Hebrew Bible or the First Book of Chronicles in the Old Testament of the Christian Bible. The book is compiled from older sources by an unknown person or group, designated by modern scholars as "the Chronicler", and had the final shape establ... | [
"1 Chronicles 23 โ Verse 2\n\nAnd he gathered together all the princes of Israel, with the priests and the Levites. David prepared well for his death and the reign of his successor, Solomon, by convening his officials to achieve a smooth transition (without mentioning the events recorded in 2 Samuel 15โ1 Kings 2. T... |
1_Chronicles_23_5817517 | Explain what '1 Chronicles 23' covers in the 'Duties of the Levites (23:25โ32)' section. | This section covers the duties of the Levites, partly repeating those mentioned in 1 Chronicles 9. The peace granted by YHWH to his people forced changes to be made in the job descriptions (verses 25โ26, 28โ32) in contrast to Deuteronomy 12:8โ12 or 1 Chronicles 22:9. | [
"1 Chronicles 23 โ Verse 2\n\nAnd he gathered together all the princes of Israel, with the priests and the Levites. David prepared well for his death and the reign of his successor, Solomon, by convening his officials to achieve a smooth transition (without mentioning the events recorded in 2 Samuel 15โ1 Kings 2. T... |
1_Chronicles_23_5817512 | Summarize the 'David organizes the Levites (23:1โ24)' part of '1 Chronicles 23'. | This section details David's preparation for his succession as he reached a venerable stage of life, and his priority was to instruct the leaders of Israel, the priests and the Levites, who would help Solomon reigning and building the temple. The census of the Levites (verses 3โ5) does not contradict 1 Chronicles 21:6,... | [
"1 Chronicles 23 โ Verse 2\n\nAnd he gathered together all the princes of Israel, with the priests and the Levites. David prepared well for his death and the reign of his successor, Solomon, by convening his officials to achieve a smooth transition (without mentioning the events recorded in 2 Samuel 15โ1 Kings 2. T... |
1_Chronicles_23_5817515 | From the article on '1 Chronicles 23', restate the 'Verse 3' content. | Now the Levites were numbered from the age of thirty years and above; and the number of individual males was thirty-eight thousand. The minimum age of Levites for holding office varies, perhaps according to the number of people available for the duties: 30 years old and above in Numbers 4:3, 23, 30, as here; 25 in Numb... | [
"1 Chronicles 23 โ Verse 2\n\nAnd he gathered together all the princes of Israel, with the priests and the Levites. David prepared well for his death and the reign of his successor, Solomon, by convening his officials to achieve a smooth transition (without mentioning the events recorded in 2 Samuel 15โ1 Kings 2. T... |
1_Chronicles_24_6248535 | Reconstruct the content about 'Verse 3' from the article on '1 Chronicles 24'. | And David distributed them, both Zadok of the sons of Eleazar, and Ahimelech of the sons of Ithamar, according to their offices in their service. Of the two priestly families (18:16-17; 25:1; cf. ), Zadok represented the family of Eleazar, and Ahimelech represented the family of Ithamar, to help David organizing the pr... | [
"1 Chronicles 24 โ Verse 3\n\nAnd David distributed them, both Zadok of the sons of Eleazar, and Ahimelech of the sons of Ithamar, according to their offices in their service. Of the two priestly families (18:16-17; 25:1; cf. ), Zadok represented the family of Eleazar, and Ahimelech represented the family of Ithama... |
1_Chronicles_24_6248538 | Based on the article about '1 Chronicles 24', describe the 'Document witnesses for priestly divisions' section. | with the priestly courses (the rest of which had been reconstructed) as follows: 3. In 1970 a stone inscription was found on a partially buried column in a mosque, in the Yemeni village of Bayt al-แธคaแธir, showing ten names of the priestly wards and their respective towns and villages. The Yemeni inscription is the longe... | [
"1 Chronicles 24 โ Verse 3\n\nAnd David distributed them, both Zadok of the sons of Eleazar, and Ahimelech of the sons of Ithamar, according to their offices in their service. Of the two priestly families (18:16-17; 25:1; cf. ), Zadok represented the family of Eleazar, and Ahimelech represented the family of Ithama... |
1_Chronicles_24_6248534 | Based on the article about '1 Chronicles 24', describe the 'Verse 1' section. | Now these are the divisions of the sons of Aaron. The sons of Aaron; Nadab, and Abihu, Eleazar, and Ithamar. Among the four sons of Aaron, Nadab and Abihu died without children (verse 2); and the other two had to supply the "chief men of the house," of which Eleazar had sixteen, and Ithamar eight (verse 4). | [
"1 Chronicles 24 โ Verse 3\n\nAnd David distributed them, both Zadok of the sons of Eleazar, and Ahimelech of the sons of Ithamar, according to their offices in their service. Of the two priestly families (18:16-17; 25:1; cf. ), Zadok represented the family of Eleazar, and Ahimelech represented the family of Ithama... |
1_Chronicles_24_6248533 | Based on the article about '1 Chronicles 24', describe the 'David organizes the priests (24:1โ29)' section. | This section details the organization of the priests, the highest branch of the Levites, in a more advanced and systematic manner than anywhere else in the Hebrew Bible and was adhered rigidly until the Roman period (cf. ). Lists of the priestly families also found partially in ; ; ;. | [
"1 Chronicles 24 โ Verse 3\n\nAnd David distributed them, both Zadok of the sons of Eleazar, and Ahimelech of the sons of Ithamar, according to their offices in their service. Of the two priestly families (18:16-17; 25:1; cf. ), Zadok represented the family of Eleazar, and Ahimelech represented the family of Ithama... |
1_Chronicles_24_6248539 | Based on the article about '1 Chronicles 24', describe the 'Document witnesses for priestly divisions' section. | days, from Sabbath to Sabbath (Antiquities ). Babylonian Talmud has a statement by Rabbi Hama ben Guria that "Moses instituted for Israel eight Mishmaroth ("priestly divisions")โfour from [the family of] Eleazar and four from [the family of] Ithamar; Samuel increased them to sixteen; David increased them to twenty four... | [
"1 Chronicles 24 โ Verse 3\n\nAnd David distributed them, both Zadok of the sons of Eleazar, and Ahimelech of the sons of Ithamar, according to their offices in their service. Of the two priestly families (18:16-17; 25:1; cf. ), Zadok represented the family of Eleazar, and Ahimelech represented the family of Ithama... |
1_Chronicles_24_6248540 | What does the article about '1 Chronicles 24' say regarding 'Document witnesses for priestly divisions'? | of years that have passed since the destruction of Jerusalem, and conclude with the words: Three stone inscriptions were discovered bearing the names of the priestly wards, their order and the name of the locality to which they had moved after the destruction of the Second Temple: This is the oldest inscription mention... | [
"1 Chronicles 24 โ Verse 3\n\nAnd David distributed them, both Zadok of the sons of Eleazar, and Ahimelech of the sons of Ithamar, according to their offices in their service. Of the two priestly families (18:16-17; 25:1; cf. ), Zadok represented the family of Eleazar, and Ahimelech represented the family of Ithama... |
1_Chronicles_24_6248532 | From the article on '1 Chronicles 24', restate the 'Textual witnesses' content. | Some early manuscripts containing the text of this chapter in Hebrew are of the Masoretic Text tradition, which includes the Aleppo Codex (10th century), and Codex Leningradensis (1008). Extant manuscripts of a Koine Greek translation known as the Septuagint, made in the last few centuries BCE, include Codex Vaticanus ... | [
"1 Chronicles 24 โ Verse 3\n\nAnd David distributed them, both Zadok of the sons of Eleazar, and Ahimelech of the sons of Ithamar, according to their offices in their service. Of the two priestly families (18:16-17; 25:1; cf. ), Zadok represented the family of Eleazar, and Ahimelech represented the family of Ithama... |
1_Chronicles_24_6248530 | Describe the content of the article about '1 Chronicles 24'. | 1 Chronicles 24 is the twenty-fourth chapter of the Books of Chronicles in the Hebrew Bible or the First Book of Chronicles in the Old Testament of the Christian Bible. The book is compiled from older sources by an unknown person or group, designated by modern scholars as "the Chronicler", and had the final shape estab... | [
"1 Chronicles 24 โ Verse 3\n\nAnd David distributed them, both Zadok of the sons of Eleazar, and Ahimelech of the sons of Ithamar, according to their offices in their service. Of the two priestly families (18:16-17; 25:1; cf. ), Zadok represented the family of Eleazar, and Ahimelech represented the family of Ithama... |
1_Chronicles_24_6248536 | From the article on '1 Chronicles 24', restate the 'Remaining Levite assignments (24:20โ31)' content. | This section contains the list of Levites which overlaps with the one in. The Levites had similar rotation schedule as the priests (verse 31), and used the same system of drawing lots as the priests with almost the same witnesses, indicating that the Levites are considered as important as the priests. | [
"1 Chronicles 24 โ Verse 3\n\nAnd David distributed them, both Zadok of the sons of Eleazar, and Ahimelech of the sons of Ithamar, according to their offices in their service. Of the two priestly families (18:16-17; 25:1; cf. ), Zadok represented the family of Eleazar, and Ahimelech represented the family of Ithama... |
1_Chronicles_24_6248537 | What does the article about '1 Chronicles 24' say regarding 'Document witnesses for priestly divisions'? | "Today is the holy Sabbath, the holy Sabbath unto the Lord; this day, which is the course? [Appropriate name] is the course. May the Merciful One return the course to its place soon, in our days. Amen." "May the Merciful One build his house and sanctuary, and let them say Amen." 1. In 1920, a marble stone inscription w... | [
"1 Chronicles 24 โ Verse 3\n\nAnd David distributed them, both Zadok of the sons of Eleazar, and Ahimelech of the sons of Ithamar, according to their offices in their service. Of the two priestly families (18:16-17; 25:1; cf. ), Zadok represented the family of Eleazar, and Ahimelech represented the family of Ithama... |
1_Chronicles_25_6248544 | From the article on '1 Chronicles 25', restate the 'Three families of musicians (25:1โ6)' content. | This section details the organization of the temple musicians who strictly belonged to the Levites (1 Chronicles 23:30โ31; cf. 1 Chronicles 15:16โ24; 16:4โ6). There were three main musician families: Asaph, Jeduthun, and Heman, whose members would be organized into divisions. After returning from exile in Babylon occas... | [
"1 Chronicles 25 โ Three families of musicians (25:1โ6)\n\nThis section details the organization of the temple musicians who strictly belonged to the Levites (1 Chronicles 23:30โ31; cf. 1 Chronicles 15:16โ24; 16:4โ6). There were three main musician families: Asaph, Jeduthun, and Heman, whose members would be organi... |
1_Chronicles_25_6248543 | Based on the article about '1 Chronicles 25', describe the 'Textual witnesses' section. | Some early manuscripts containing the text of this chapter in Hebrew are of the Masoretic Text tradition, which includes the Aleppo Codex (10th century), and Codex Leningradensis (1008). Extant manuscripts of a Koine Greek translation known as the Septuagint, made in the last few centuries BCE, include Codex Vaticanus ... | [
"1 Chronicles 25 โ Three families of musicians (25:1โ6)\n\nThis section details the organization of the temple musicians who strictly belonged to the Levites (1 Chronicles 23:30โ31; cf. 1 Chronicles 15:16โ24; 16:4โ6). There were three main musician families: Asaph, Jeduthun, and Heman, whose members would be organi... |
1_Chronicles_25_6248541 | Summarize the following section from the article on '1 Chronicles 25'. | 1 Chronicles 25 is the twenty-fifth chapter of the Books of Chronicles in the Hebrew Bible or the First Book of Chronicles in the Old Testament of the Christian Bible. The book is compiled from older sources by an unknown person or group, designated by modern scholars as "the Chronicler", and had the final shape establ... | [
"1 Chronicles 25 โ Three families of musicians (25:1โ6)\n\nThis section details the organization of the temple musicians who strictly belonged to the Levites (1 Chronicles 23:30โ31; cf. 1 Chronicles 15:16โ24; 16:4โ6). There were three main musician families: Asaph, Jeduthun, and Heman, whose members would be organi... |
1_Chronicles_25_6248545 | From the article on '1 Chronicles 25', restate the 'Three families of musicians (25:1โ6)' content. | the largest ('according to the promise of God to exalt him', verse 5). The musician families are introduced with their duties, such as to prophecy (verses 1โ3), and instruments, that their singing, playing, and the content of their psalms or music, can be viewed as in 1 Samuel 10:5 and 2 Kings 3:15 as emphasizing the '... | [
"1 Chronicles 25 โ Three families of musicians (25:1โ6)\n\nThis section details the organization of the temple musicians who strictly belonged to the Levites (1 Chronicles 23:30โ31; cf. 1 Chronicles 15:16โ24; 16:4โ6). There were three main musician families: Asaph, Jeduthun, and Heman, whose members would be organi... |
1_Chronicles_25_6248547 | Reconstruct the content about 'Verse 5' from the article on '1 Chronicles 25'. | All these were the sons of Heman the kingโs seer in the words of God, to exalt his horn. For God gave Heman fourteen sons and three daughters. ; "Seer": from Hebrew hลzรจh, literally "gazer". Gad was called "Davidโs seer" in 1 Chronicles 21:9, whereas Jeduthun was called "the kingโs seer" in 2 Chronicles 35:15 (in LXX: ... | [
"1 Chronicles 25 โ Three families of musicians (25:1โ6)\n\nThis section details the organization of the temple musicians who strictly belonged to the Levites (1 Chronicles 23:30โ31; cf. 1 Chronicles 15:16โ24; 16:4โ6). There were three main musician families: Asaph, Jeduthun, and Heman, whose members would be organi... |
1_Chronicles_25_6248548 | Describe the 'Twenty-four divisions of musicians (25:7โ31)' section of the article about '1 Chronicles 25'. | The allocation of 24 divisions of musicians resembles that of the priest, suggesting that 'sacrifice and music are closely intertwined' (cf. 23:29โ30), but, unlike the priests, none of the names in the list can be proved to have existed in other texts. Four divisions from the family of Asaph (numbers 1, 3, 5, 7), six f... | [
"1 Chronicles 25 โ Three families of musicians (25:1โ6)\n\nThis section details the organization of the temple musicians who strictly belonged to the Levites (1 Chronicles 23:30โ31; cf. 1 Chronicles 15:16โ24; 16:4โ6). There were three main musician families: Asaph, Jeduthun, and Heman, whose members would be organi... |
1_Chronicles_26_6248554 | Describe the 'Verse 1' section of the article about '1 Chronicles 26'. | Concerning the divisions of the gatekeepers: of the Korahites, Meshelemiah the son of Kore, of the sons of Asaph. ; "Meshelemiah": written as "Shelemiah" in verse 14. ; "Asaph": written as "Ebiasaph" in 1 Chronicles 6:37; 9:19. | [
"1 Chronicles 26 โ Verse 1\n\nConcerning the divisions of the gatekeepers: of the Korahites, Meshelemiah the son of Kore, of the sons of Asaph. ; \"Meshelemiah\": written as \"Shelemiah\" in verse 14. ; \"Asaph\": written as \"Ebiasaph\" in 1 Chronicles 6:37; 9:19.",
"1 Chronicles 26 โ The gatekeepers (26:1โ19)\n... |
1_Chronicles_26_6248553 | What information does the article about '1 Chronicles 26' provide on 'The gatekeepers (26:1โ19)'? | This section describes the gatekeepers as a part of David's administrative organization, whom are counted as Levites in the Chronicles (cf. Ezra 2:42, 70; Nehemiah 11:19). Verses 1โ12 contain a list of the members, and their assignments by lots are detailed in verses 13โ19 with verses 12โ13 as a transition passage betw... | [
"1 Chronicles 26 โ Verse 1\n\nConcerning the divisions of the gatekeepers: of the Korahites, Meshelemiah the son of Kore, of the sons of Asaph. ; \"Meshelemiah\": written as \"Shelemiah\" in verse 14. ; \"Asaph\": written as \"Ebiasaph\" in 1 Chronicles 6:37; 9:19.",
"1 Chronicles 26 โ The gatekeepers (26:1โ19)\n... |
1_Chronicles_26_6248555 | What does the article about '1 Chronicles 26' say regarding 'Verses 4โ8'? | 4 Moreover the sons of Obed-Edom were Shemaiah the firstborn, Jehozabad the second, Joah the third, Sacar the fourth, Nethanel the fifth, 5 Ammiel the sixth, Issachar the seventh, Peulthai the eighth; for God blessed him. ; 6 Also to Shemaiah his son were sons born who governed their fathers' houses, because they were ... | [
"1 Chronicles 26 โ Verse 1\n\nConcerning the divisions of the gatekeepers: of the Korahites, Meshelemiah the son of Kore, of the sons of Asaph. ; \"Meshelemiah\": written as \"Shelemiah\" in verse 14. ; \"Asaph\": written as \"Ebiasaph\" in 1 Chronicles 6:37; 9:19.",
"1 Chronicles 26 โ The gatekeepers (26:1โ19)\n... |
1_Chronicles_26_6248557 | Reconstruct the content about 'Treasurers, regional officials, and judges (26:20โ32)' from the article on '1 Chronicles 26'. | detail (verses 26โ28), including 'spoils of war' provided by various important persons in a 'democratic' manner which Chronicles probably take from Numbers 31:48, 52, 54 as a literary source. The wars were fought by David and Saul (vastly recorded in the Books of Samuel, Kings and Chronicles), Samuel (probably referrin... | [
"1 Chronicles 26 โ Verse 1\n\nConcerning the divisions of the gatekeepers: of the Korahites, Meshelemiah the son of Kore, of the sons of Asaph. ; \"Meshelemiah\": written as \"Shelemiah\" in verse 14. ; \"Asaph\": written as \"Ebiasaph\" in 1 Chronicles 6:37; 9:19.",
"1 Chronicles 26 โ The gatekeepers (26:1โ19)\n... |
1_Chronicles_26_6248558 | Summarize the 'Verses 31โ32' part of '1 Chronicles 26'. | 31 Jeriah was chief of the Hebronites according to the genealogical records of his fathers. In the fortieth year of the reign of David, mighty men of valor were found in the records among the Hebronites at Jazer of Gilead, 32 and his brothers, able men, two thousand seven hundred heads of the fathers, to them King Davi... | [
"1 Chronicles 26 โ Verse 1\n\nConcerning the divisions of the gatekeepers: of the Korahites, Meshelemiah the son of Kore, of the sons of Asaph. ; \"Meshelemiah\": written as \"Shelemiah\" in verse 14. ; \"Asaph\": written as \"Ebiasaph\" in 1 Chronicles 6:37; 9:19.",
"1 Chronicles 26 โ The gatekeepers (26:1โ19)\n... |
1_Chronicles_26_6248556 | Explain what '1 Chronicles 26' covers in the 'Treasurers, regional officials, and judges (26:20โ32)' section. | Some listed here are also mentioned in 1 Chronicles 23:6-23. The Levites were given board responsibilities such as 'oversight of Israel west of Jordan' and east of Jordan ("the Reubenites, the Gadites, and the half-tribe of Manasseh"; verse 32) as 'officers and judges' (verses 29โ32; cf. 23:3-5; 2 Chronicles 17:2; 19:5... | [
"1 Chronicles 26 โ Verse 1\n\nConcerning the divisions of the gatekeepers: of the Korahites, Meshelemiah the son of Kore, of the sons of Asaph. ; \"Meshelemiah\": written as \"Shelemiah\" in verse 14. ; \"Asaph\": written as \"Ebiasaph\" in 1 Chronicles 6:37; 9:19.",
"1 Chronicles 26 โ The gatekeepers (26:1โ19)\n... |
1_Chronicles_26_6248550 | Describe the content of the article about '1 Chronicles 26'. | 1 Chronicles 26 is the twenty-sixth chapter of the Books of Chronicles in the Hebrew Bible or the First Book of Chronicles in the Old Testament of the Christian Bible. The book is compiled from older sources by an unknown person or group, designated by modern scholars as "the Chronicler", and had the final shape establ... | [
"1 Chronicles 26 โ Verse 1\n\nConcerning the divisions of the gatekeepers: of the Korahites, Meshelemiah the son of Kore, of the sons of Asaph. ; \"Meshelemiah\": written as \"Shelemiah\" in verse 14. ; \"Asaph\": written as \"Ebiasaph\" in 1 Chronicles 6:37; 9:19.",
"1 Chronicles 26 โ The gatekeepers (26:1โ19)\n... |
1_Chronicles_27_6248565 | Describe the 'Comment on the census (27:23โ24)' section of the article about '1 Chronicles 27'. | Mathys considers these verses 'an extremely artistic attempt at twisting the story of the census (1 Chronicles 21) to grant David forgiveness for his deed', as it (implicitly) exonerates David by stating him follow the rules laid down for censuses in (by counting only men older than 20 years) and by giving a justifica... | [
"1 Chronicles 27 โ Comment on the census (27:23โ24)\n\nMathys considers these verses 'an extremely artistic attempt at twisting the story of the census (1 Chronicles 21) to grant David forgiveness for his deed', as it (implicitly) exonerates David by stating him follow the rules laid down for censuses in (by counti... |
1_Chronicles_27_6248562 | Reconstruct the content about 'David's military divisions and their commanders (27:1โ15)' from the article on '1 Chronicles 27'. | The organization of the military was as orderly as that of the priests and Levites. The military forces consisted of 12 divisions of 24,000 men, each subdivided into thousands and hundreds and headed by a divisional leader, reflecting David's standard administrative procedure (1 Chronicles 23:6-23; 24:1-19; 25:8-31; 26... | [
"1 Chronicles 27 โ Comment on the census (27:23โ24)\n\nMathys considers these verses 'an extremely artistic attempt at twisting the story of the census (1 Chronicles 21) to grant David forgiveness for his deed', as it (implicitly) exonerates David by stating him follow the rules laid down for censuses in (by counti... |
1_Chronicles_27_6248567 | Based on the article about '1 Chronicles 27', describe the 'David's advisers (27:32โ34)' section. | This section lists David's closest officials, but not a parallel to the list of David's state officials in 1 Chronicles 18:15-17. With historical information given as an aside, it seems not to be an official list. | [
"1 Chronicles 27 โ Comment on the census (27:23โ24)\n\nMathys considers these verses 'an extremely artistic attempt at twisting the story of the census (1 Chronicles 21) to grant David forgiveness for his deed', as it (implicitly) exonerates David by stating him follow the rules laid down for censuses in (by counti... |
1_Chronicles_27_6248561 | What information does the article about '1 Chronicles 27' provide on 'Textual witnesses'? | Some early manuscripts containing the text of this chapter in Hebrew are of the Masoretic Text tradition, which includes the Aleppo Codex (10th century), and Codex Leningradensis (1008). Extant manuscripts of a Koine Greek translation known as the Septuagint, made in the last few centuries BCE, include Codex Vaticanus ... | [
"1 Chronicles 27 โ Comment on the census (27:23โ24)\n\nMathys considers these verses 'an extremely artistic attempt at twisting the story of the census (1 Chronicles 21) to grant David forgiveness for his deed', as it (implicitly) exonerates David by stating him follow the rules laid down for censuses in (by counti... |
1_Chronicles_27_6248568 | Explain what '1 Chronicles 27' covers in the 'Verse 33' section. | And Ahithophel was the king's counsellor: and Hushai the Archite was the king's companion: A specific account related to Ahitophel and Hushai is recorded in, 23โ37. | [
"1 Chronicles 27 โ Comment on the census (27:23โ24)\n\nMathys considers these verses 'an extremely artistic attempt at twisting the story of the census (1 Chronicles 21) to grant David forgiveness for his deed', as it (implicitly) exonerates David by stating him follow the rules laid down for censuses in (by counti... |
1_Chronicles_27_6248564 | Describe the 'Leaders of the tribes (27:16โ22)' section of the article about '1 Chronicles 27'. | The list following the army leaders is of the (political) leaders of the tribes. (cf. 1 Chronicles 5:6). These leaders are presumed to be involved in carrying out the census reported in verse 23. The twelve tribes are not listed according to a consistent system in the Hebrew Bible, nor using the same names (some tribal... | [
"1 Chronicles 27 โ Comment on the census (27:23โ24)\n\nMathys considers these verses 'an extremely artistic attempt at twisting the story of the census (1 Chronicles 21) to grant David forgiveness for his deed', as it (implicitly) exonerates David by stating him follow the rules laid down for censuses in (by counti... |
1_Chronicles_28_6248571 | Based on the article about '1 Chronicles 28', describe the 'Textual witnesses' section. | Some early manuscripts containing the text of this chapter in Hebrew are of the Masoretic Text tradition, which includes the Aleppo Codex (10th century), and Codex Leningradensis (1008). Extant manuscripts of a Koine Greek translation known as the Septuagint, made in the last few centuries BCE, include Codex Vaticanus ... | [
"1 Chronicles 28 โ Textual witnesses\n\nSome early manuscripts containing the text of this chapter in Hebrew are of the Masoretic Text tradition, which includes the Aleppo Codex (10th century), and Codex Leningradensis (1008). Extant manuscripts of a Koine Greek translation known as the Septuagint, made in the last... |
1_Chronicles_28_6248573 | Summarize the 'David delivered the plan of the temple to Solomon (28:9โ21)' part of '1 Chronicles 28'. | David addressed Solomon briefly in verses 9โ10 with an 'adapted tone of a Deuteronomistic theologoumenon', calling his son to serve YHWH with single (undivided) mind and willing heart. In verses 11โ19, David transferred to Solomon his plans for the temple's construction, its materials, and all matters related to it, ba... | [
"1 Chronicles 28 โ Textual witnesses\n\nSome early manuscripts containing the text of this chapter in Hebrew are of the Masoretic Text tradition, which includes the Aleppo Codex (10th century), and Codex Leningradensis (1008). Extant manuscripts of a Koine Greek translation known as the Septuagint, made in the last... |
1_Chronicles_28_6248569 | Summarize the following section from the article on '1 Chronicles 28'. | 1 Chronicles 28 is the twenty-eighth chapter of the Books of Chronicles in the Hebrew Bible or the First Book of Chronicles in the Old Testament of the Christian Bible. The book is compiled from older sources by an unknown person or group, designated by modern scholars as "the Chronicler", and had the final shape estab... | [
"1 Chronicles 28 โ Textual witnesses\n\nSome early manuscripts containing the text of this chapter in Hebrew are of the Masoretic Text tradition, which includes the Aleppo Codex (10th century), and Codex Leningradensis (1008). Extant manuscripts of a Koine Greek translation known as the Septuagint, made in the last... |
1_Chronicles_28_6248572 | Describe the 'David's address to the leaders of Israel (28:1โ8)' section of the article about '1 Chronicles 28'. | This section apparently continues from 1 Chronicles 23:1โ2. After organizing the administration of his kingdom, David gathers a 'large national convocation' to prepare the reign of Solomon, to enlist the support of the leaders for the new king and to witness his final messages. Such gathering or assembly is often recor... | [
"1 Chronicles 28 โ Textual witnesses\n\nSome early manuscripts containing the text of this chapter in Hebrew are of the Masoretic Text tradition, which includes the Aleppo Codex (10th century), and Codex Leningradensis (1008). Extant manuscripts of a Koine Greek translation known as the Septuagint, made in the last... |
1_Chronicles_28_6248574 | What information does the article about '1 Chronicles 28' provide on 'Verse 20'? | And David said to Solomon his son, Be strong and of good courage, and do it: fear not, nor be dismayed: for the Lord God, even my God, will be with thee; he will not fail thee, nor forsake thee, until thou hast finished all the work for the service of the house of the Lord. The transitional message from David to Solomo... | [
"1 Chronicles 28 โ Textual witnesses\n\nSome early manuscripts containing the text of this chapter in Hebrew are of the Masoretic Text tradition, which includes the Aleppo Codex (10th century), and Codex Leningradensis (1008). Extant manuscripts of a Koine Greek translation known as the Septuagint, made in the last... |
1_Chronicles_29_6248581 | Summarize the 'The close of Davidโs reign (29:26โ30)' part of '1 Chronicles 29'. | The summary of an individual king's reign is a standard practice in the books of Kings, with that of David differing from the usual pattern in 1 Kings 2:10-12, but closer to the other kings' concluding formulae in the Chronicles. The Chronicles cite three prophets (with their differing titles) who provide the records o... | [
"1 Chronicles 29 โ Text\n\nThis chapter was originally written in the Hebrew language. It is divided into 30 verses.",
"1 Chronicles 29 โ The close of Davidโs reign (29:26โ30)\n\nThe summary of an individual king's reign is a standard practice in the books of Kings, with that of David differing from the usual pat... |
1_Chronicles_29_6248578 | What information does the article about '1 Chronicles 29' provide on 'Offerings for the Temple (29:1โ9)'? | This section records David's collections of materials for the temple construction, which encouraged other leaders of Israel to offer generous ('willing') donation, far more than David's, in parallel to Israel's gifts for the construction of the Tabernacle. David contributed tothe costs of the temple's construction both... | [
"1 Chronicles 29 โ Text\n\nThis chapter was originally written in the Hebrew language. It is divided into 30 verses.",
"1 Chronicles 29 โ The close of Davidโs reign (29:26โ30)\n\nThe summary of an individual king's reign is a standard practice in the books of Kings, with that of David differing from the usual pat... |
1_Chronicles_29_6248575 | Summarize the following section from the article on '1 Chronicles 29'. | 1 Chronicles 29 is the twenty-ninth chapter of the Books of Chronicles in the Hebrew Bible or the final chapter in the First Book of Chronicles in the Old Testament of the Christian Bible. The book is compiled from older sources by an unknown person or group, designated by modern scholars as "the Chronicler", and had t... | [
"1 Chronicles 29 โ Text\n\nThis chapter was originally written in the Hebrew language. It is divided into 30 verses.",
"1 Chronicles 29 โ The close of Davidโs reign (29:26โ30)\n\nThe summary of an individual king's reign is a standard practice in the books of Kings, with that of David differing from the usual pat... |
1_Chronicles_29_6248577 | What does the article about '1 Chronicles 29' say regarding 'Textual witnesses'? | Some early manuscripts containing the text of this chapter in Hebrew are of the Masoretic Text tradition, which includes the Aleppo Codex (10th century), and Codex Leningradensis (1008). Extant manuscripts of a Koine Greek translation known as the Septuagint, made in the last few centuries BCE, include Codex Vaticanus ... | [
"1 Chronicles 29 โ Text\n\nThis chapter was originally written in the Hebrew language. It is divided into 30 verses.",
"1 Chronicles 29 โ The close of Davidโs reign (29:26โ30)\n\nThe summary of an individual king's reign is a standard practice in the books of Kings, with that of David differing from the usual pat... |
1_Chronicles_29_6248579 | What information does the article about '1 Chronicles 29' provide on 'David's farewell prayer and the people's response (29:10โ20)'? | The section records David's prayer, beginning with a doxology, continuing with an interpretation of the voluntary donations and concluding with a wish for people not to forget the past and a wish for the future reign of King Solomon. The form of the prayer (cf. 2 Samuel 23:1-7; 1 Kings 2:1-10) follows the final address... | [
"1 Chronicles 29 โ Text\n\nThis chapter was originally written in the Hebrew language. It is divided into 30 verses.",
"1 Chronicles 29 โ The close of Davidโs reign (29:26โ30)\n\nThe summary of an individual king's reign is a standard practice in the books of Kings, with that of David differing from the usual pat... |
1_Chronicles_29_6248580 | From the article on '1 Chronicles 29', restate the 'Solomon, king of Israel (29:21โ25)' content. | The ascension of Solomon is reported as smooth and without incident, followed by a public endorsement (for the second time; cf. ) of Solomon's enthronement by all people of Israel. | [
"1 Chronicles 29 โ Text\n\nThis chapter was originally written in the Hebrew language. It is divided into 30 verses.",
"1 Chronicles 29 โ The close of Davidโs reign (29:26โ30)\n\nThe summary of an individual king's reign is a standard practice in the books of Kings, with that of David differing from the usual pat... |
1_Chronicles_3_3418135 | Describe the content of the article about '1 Chronicles 3'. | Hebron, verses 1โ4; born in Jerusalem, verses 5โ9); (2) the kings in Jerusalem (apart from the usurper Queen Athaliah, verses 10โ16); (3) the descendants during and after the exile period, verses 17โ24. Together with chapters 2 and 4, it focuses on the descendants of Judah: chapter 2 deals with the tribes of Judah in g... | [
"1 Chronicles 3 โ Old Testament references\n\n1 and 2 Kings 1 and 2 Kings 1 and 2 Kings",
"1 Chronicles 3\n\nHebron, verses 1โ4; born in Jerusalem, verses 5โ9); (2) the kings in Jerusalem (apart from the usurper Queen Athaliah, verses 10โ16); (3) the descendants during and after the exile period, verses 17โ24. To... |
1_Chronicles_3_3418147 | Describe the 'Verse 16' section of the article about '1 Chronicles 3'. | And the sons of Jehoiakim: Jeconiah his son, Zedekiah his son. Two sons of Jehoiakim are listed here: "Jeconiah" (also called "Jehoiachin" in 2 Kings 24:6โ17; 2 Chronicles 36:8โ9, and "Coniah" in Jeremiah 22:24) and "Zedekiah", which confirmed in 2 Chronicles 36:10 as the brother of Jeconiah. 2 Kings 24:17 states that ... | [
"1 Chronicles 3 โ Old Testament references\n\n1 and 2 Kings 1 and 2 Kings 1 and 2 Kings",
"1 Chronicles 3\n\nHebron, verses 1โ4; born in Jerusalem, verses 5โ9); (2) the kings in Jerusalem (apart from the usurper Queen Athaliah, verses 10โ16); (3) the descendants during and after the exile period, verses 17โ24. To... |
1_Chronicles_3_3418144 | Based on the article about '1 Chronicles 3', describe the 'Verse 5' section. | And these were born unto him in Jerusalem; Shimea, and Shobab, and Nathan, and Solomon, four, of Bathshua the daughter of Ammiel: "Bath-shua, the daughter of Ammiel": called "Bathsheba the daughter of Eliam the wife of Uriah the Hittite" in . Nothing is said about the adultery with David, nor about Uriah's murder. Four... | [
"1 Chronicles 3 โ Old Testament references\n\n1 and 2 Kings 1 and 2 Kings 1 and 2 Kings",
"1 Chronicles 3\n\nHebron, verses 1โ4; born in Jerusalem, verses 5โ9); (2) the kings in Jerusalem (apart from the usurper Queen Athaliah, verses 10โ16); (3) the descendants during and after the exile period, verses 17โ24. To... |
1_Chronicles_3_3418140 | What information does the article about '1 Chronicles 3' provide on 'Sons born to David in Hebron (3:1โ4)'? | The house of David is the main focus within the large genealogy of Judah. This section shares almost word for word materials with 2 Samuel 3:2โ5. | [
"1 Chronicles 3 โ Old Testament references\n\n1 and 2 Kings 1 and 2 Kings 1 and 2 Kings",
"1 Chronicles 3\n\nHebron, verses 1โ4; born in Jerusalem, verses 5โ9); (2) the kings in Jerusalem (apart from the usurper Queen Athaliah, verses 10โ16); (3) the descendants during and after the exile period, verses 17โ24. To... |
1_Chronicles_3_3418139 | What does the article about '1 Chronicles 3' say regarding 'Structure'? | A Davidโs royal tribe of Judah (2:3โ4:43) ; B Northern tribes east of Jordan (5:1โ26) ; X The priestly tribe of Levi (6:1โ81) ; B' Northern tribes west of Jordan (7:1โ40) ; A' Saulโs royal tribe of Benjamin (8:1โ40) A Descendants of Judah: Er, Onan, and Shelah (2:3โ8) ; B Descendants of Ram up to David (2:9โ17) ; C Des... | [
"1 Chronicles 3 โ Old Testament references\n\n1 and 2 Kings 1 and 2 Kings 1 and 2 Kings",
"1 Chronicles 3\n\nHebron, verses 1โ4; born in Jerusalem, verses 5โ9); (2) the kings in Jerusalem (apart from the usurper Queen Athaliah, verses 10โ16); (3) the descendants during and after the exile period, verses 17โ24. To... |
1_Chronicles_3_3418145 | Reconstruct the content about 'Davidic royal line (3:10โ16)' from the article on '1 Chronicles 3'. | The kings of Judah are listed here from Solomon up to the period of exile, following a monotonous formulaโ"his son was X"โuntil Josiah, who had several sons succeeding him, so that the Chronicler changes the listing method. The sources could be 2 Kings 22โ24 and Book of Jeremiah (which uses Shallum, the alternative nam... | [
"1 Chronicles 3 โ Old Testament references\n\n1 and 2 Kings 1 and 2 Kings 1 and 2 Kings",
"1 Chronicles 3\n\nHebron, verses 1โ4; born in Jerusalem, verses 5โ9); (2) the kings in Jerusalem (apart from the usurper Queen Athaliah, verses 10โ16); (3) the descendants during and after the exile period, verses 17โ24. To... |
1_Chronicles_3_3418149 | Describe the 'Verse 17' section of the article about '1 Chronicles 3'. | And the sons of Jeconiah; Assir, Salathiel his son, ; "Assir" (ืืกืจ ): means "captive", "bondman", or "prisoner"; it does not appear to be a person's name here, but to signify that Jeconiah was a captive when he had his son, Salathiel (cf. Matthew 1:12). This interpretation 'accords with the Masoretic punctuation, which... | [
"1 Chronicles 3 โ Old Testament references\n\n1 and 2 Kings 1 and 2 Kings 1 and 2 Kings",
"1 Chronicles 3\n\nHebron, verses 1โ4; born in Jerusalem, verses 5โ9); (2) the kings in Jerusalem (apart from the usurper Queen Athaliah, verses 10โ16); (3) the descendants during and after the exile period, verses 17โ24. To... |
1_Chronicles_3_3418148 | What information does the article about '1 Chronicles 3' provide on 'Post-exilic descendants of David (3:17โ24)'? | This section lists the descendants of David โ in particular, the posterity of Jeconiah โ during the exile and into the early part of post-exilic period. Jeconiah was taken away to Babylon in 597 BCE and among his seven sons, Shenazzar (called Shenazzar in ; both names are the transliteration of Babylon name: "Sin-ab-uแนฃ... | [
"1 Chronicles 3 โ Old Testament references\n\n1 and 2 Kings 1 and 2 Kings 1 and 2 Kings",
"1 Chronicles 3\n\nHebron, verses 1โ4; born in Jerusalem, verses 5โ9); (2) the kings in Jerusalem (apart from the usurper Queen Athaliah, verses 10โ16); (3) the descendants during and after the exile period, verses 17โ24. To... |
1_Chronicles_3_3418142 | Explain what '1 Chronicles 3' covers in the 'Verse 4' section. | These six were born unto him in Hebron; and there he reigned seven years and six months: and in Jerusalem he reigned thirty and three years. Verse 4 apparently is a rework of. The move from Hebron to Jerusalem is not explained, assuming the readers' knowledge of the narratives in the earlier materials. | [
"1 Chronicles 3 โ Old Testament references\n\n1 and 2 Kings 1 and 2 Kings 1 and 2 Kings",
"1 Chronicles 3\n\nHebron, verses 1โ4; born in Jerusalem, verses 5โ9); (2) the kings in Jerusalem (apart from the usurper Queen Athaliah, verses 10โ16); (3) the descendants during and after the exile period, verses 17โ24. To... |
1_Chronicles_3_3418134 | What information does the article about '1 Chronicles 3' provide? | 1 Chronicles 3 is the third chapter of the Books of Chronicles in the Hebrew Bible or the First Book of Chronicles in the Old Testament of the Christian Bible. The book is compiled from older sources by an unknown person or group, designated by modern scholars as "the Chronicler", and had the final shape established in... | [
"1 Chronicles 3 โ Old Testament references\n\n1 and 2 Kings 1 and 2 Kings 1 and 2 Kings",
"1 Chronicles 3\n\nHebron, verses 1โ4; born in Jerusalem, verses 5โ9); (2) the kings in Jerusalem (apart from the usurper Queen Athaliah, verses 10โ16); (3) the descendants during and after the exile period, verses 17โ24. To... |
1_Chronicles_4_24294927 | What information does the article about '1 Chronicles 4' provide on 'Descendants of Judah (4:1โ8)'? | Hazzelelponi, daughter of Etam ; Ephrathah, mother of Hur and grandmother of Bethlehem ; Helah and Naarah, the two wives of Asshur (verse 5) ; Unnamed mother of Jabez (verse 9) This section, continued in verses 11โ23, consists of 'many small, seemingly unrelated pieces' with little textual clarity, which potentially co... | [
"1 Chronicles 4 โ Descendants of Judah (4:1โ8)\n\nHazzelelponi, daughter of Etam ; Ephrathah, mother of Hur and grandmother of Bethlehem ; Helah and Naarah, the two wives of Asshur (verse 5) ; Unnamed mother of Jabez (verse 9) This section, continued in verses 11โ23, consists of 'many small, seemingly unrelated pie... |
1_Chronicles_4_24294930 | Explain what '1 Chronicles 4' covers in the 'More descendants of Judah (4:11โ23)' section. | Bithiah: "daughter of Pharaoh, whom Mered married" (verse 18) ; Miriam, a daughter (verse 17) ; Mered's unnamed Judahite wife (or the name is "Jehudijah" according to KJV and NKJV; verse 18) ; The wife of Hodiah, the sister of Naham (verse 19) Together with verses 1โ8, this section partly refers back to chapter 2. Some... | [
"1 Chronicles 4 โ Descendants of Judah (4:1โ8)\n\nHazzelelponi, daughter of Etam ; Ephrathah, mother of Hur and grandmother of Bethlehem ; Helah and Naarah, the two wives of Asshur (verse 5) ; Unnamed mother of Jabez (verse 9) This section, continued in verses 11โ23, consists of 'many small, seemingly unrelated pie... |
1_Chronicles_4_24294923 | Reconstruct the content from the article about '1 Chronicles 4'. | 1 Chronicles 4 is the fourth chapter of the Books of Chronicles in the Hebrew Bible or the First Book of Chronicles in the Old Testament of the Christian Bible. The book is compiled from older sources by an unknown person or group, designated by modern scholars as "the Chronicler", and had the final shape established i... | [
"1 Chronicles 4 โ Descendants of Judah (4:1โ8)\n\nHazzelelponi, daughter of Etam ; Ephrathah, mother of Hur and grandmother of Bethlehem ; Helah and Naarah, the two wives of Asshur (verse 5) ; Unnamed mother of Jabez (verse 9) This section, continued in verses 11โ23, consists of 'many small, seemingly unrelated pie... |
1_Chronicles_4_24294931 | Describe the 'Descendants of Simeon (4:24โ43)' section of the article about '1 Chronicles 4'. | This section focuses on the tribe of Simeon, which had constant close ties with Judah (such as in, ; ) and historically was quickly engulfed by the descendants of Judah. In contrast to the previous parts in the same chapter, it has an obvious structure: the genealogy (verses 24โ27; drawn from and ) is followed by the l... | [
"1 Chronicles 4 โ Descendants of Judah (4:1โ8)\n\nHazzelelponi, daughter of Etam ; Ephrathah, mother of Hur and grandmother of Bethlehem ; Helah and Naarah, the two wives of Asshur (verse 5) ; Unnamed mother of Jabez (verse 9) This section, continued in verses 11โ23, consists of 'many small, seemingly unrelated pie... |
1_Chronicles_4_24294932 | Summarize the 'Verse 31' part of '1 Chronicles 4'. | Beth Marcaboth, Hazar Susim, Beth Biri, and at Shaaraim. These were their cities until the reign of David. ; "Hazar Susim": is written as "Hazar Susah" in. ; "Until the reign of David": or "until David became king", an emphasis by the Chronicler that the engulfing of the tribe of Simeon by Judah happened during David's... | [
"1 Chronicles 4 โ Descendants of Judah (4:1โ8)\n\nHazzelelponi, daughter of Etam ; Ephrathah, mother of Hur and grandmother of Bethlehem ; Helah and Naarah, the two wives of Asshur (verse 5) ; Unnamed mother of Jabez (verse 9) This section, continued in verses 11โ23, consists of 'many small, seemingly unrelated pie... |
1_Chronicles_4_24294928 | Summarize the 'Verse 2' part of '1 Chronicles 4'. | And Reaiah the son of Shobal begat Jahath; and Jahath begat Ahumai, and Lahad. These are the families of the Zorathites. ; "Reaiah": written as "Haroeh" in ; "Shobal": is called "Shobal the father of Kirjathjearim" in. | [
"1 Chronicles 4 โ Descendants of Judah (4:1โ8)\n\nHazzelelponi, daughter of Etam ; Ephrathah, mother of Hur and grandmother of Bethlehem ; Helah and Naarah, the two wives of Asshur (verse 5) ; Unnamed mother of Jabez (verse 9) This section, continued in verses 11โ23, consists of 'many small, seemingly unrelated pie... |
1_Chronicles_4_24294926 | What information does the article about '1 Chronicles 4' provide on 'Structure'? | A Davidโs royal tribe of Judah (2:3โ4:43) ; B Northern tribes east of Jordan (5:1โ26) ; X The priestly tribe of Levi (6:1โ81) ; B' Northern tribes west of Jordan (7:1โ40) ; A' Saulโs royal tribe of Benjamin (8:1โ40) A Descendants of Judah: Er, Onan, and Shelah (2:3โ8) ; B Descendants of Ram up to David (2:9โ17) ; C Des... | [
"1 Chronicles 4 โ Descendants of Judah (4:1โ8)\n\nHazzelelponi, daughter of Etam ; Ephrathah, mother of Hur and grandmother of Bethlehem ; Helah and Naarah, the two wives of Asshur (verse 5) ; Unnamed mother of Jabez (verse 9) This section, continued in verses 11โ23, consists of 'many small, seemingly unrelated pie... |
1_Chronicles_4_24294929 | Reconstruct the content about 'Prayer of Jabez (4:9โ10)' from the article on '1 Chronicles 4'. | These two verses form a unique passage highlighting the Chronicler's respect for wealth and the effectiveness of prayer. It shows one example of the Chronicler's frequent use of meaningful names: "Jabez" (ืึทืขึฐืึตึผืฅึ, ) was given that name because his mother bore him with sorrow (ืึฐึผืขึนึฝืฆึถื,, meaning "in pain"; verse 9), ... | [
"1 Chronicles 4 โ Descendants of Judah (4:1โ8)\n\nHazzelelponi, daughter of Etam ; Ephrathah, mother of Hur and grandmother of Bethlehem ; Helah and Naarah, the two wives of Asshur (verse 5) ; Unnamed mother of Jabez (verse 9) This section, continued in verses 11โ23, consists of 'many small, seemingly unrelated pie... |
1_Chronicles_5_30377195 | Based on the article about '1 Chronicles 5', describe the 'Verse 6' section. | Beerah his son, whom Tilgathpilneser king of Assyria carried away captive: he was prince of the Reubenites. ; "Tiglath-Pilneser" (ืชืืืช ืคืื ืืกืจ): this form of the name is always used in the Books of Chronicles (also in ; has ืชืืืช ืคืื ืกืจ) for "Tilgath-Pileser" (ืชืืืช ืคืืืกืจ as used in ; or ืชืืืช ืคืืกืจ in ). | [
"1 Chronicles 5 โ Verse 6\n\nBeerah his son, whom Tilgathpilneser king of Assyria carried away captive: he was prince of the Reubenites. ; \"Tiglath-Pilneser\" (ืชืืืช ืคืื ืืกืจ): this form of the name is always used in the Books of Chronicles (also in ; has ืชืืืช ืคืื ืกืจ) for \"Tilgath-Pileser\" (ืชืืืช ืคืืืกืจ as used in ; ... |
1_Chronicles_5_30377191 | Reconstruct the content about 'Structure' from the article on '1 Chronicles 5'. | A David's royal tribe of Judah (2:3โ4:43) ; B Northern tribes east of Jordan (5:1โ26) ; X The priestly tribe of Levi (6:1โ81) ; B' Northern tribes west of Jordan (7:1โ40) ; A' Saul's royal tribe of Benjamin (8:1โ40) The whole chapter belongs to an arrangement comprising 1 Chronicles 2:3โ8:40 with the king-producing tri... | [
"1 Chronicles 5 โ Verse 6\n\nBeerah his son, whom Tilgathpilneser king of Assyria carried away captive: he was prince of the Reubenites. ; \"Tiglath-Pilneser\" (ืชืืืช ืคืื ืืกืจ): this form of the name is always used in the Books of Chronicles (also in ; has ืชืืืช ืคืื ืกืจ) for \"Tilgath-Pileser\" (ืชืืืช ืคืืืกืจ as used in ; ... |
1_Chronicles_5_30377197 | What information does the article about '1 Chronicles 5' provide on 'Verse 16'? | And they dwelt in Gilead in Bashan, and in her towns, and in all the suburbs of Sharon, upon their borders. ; "Suburbs" (ืึดืึฐืจึฐืฉึตืึฅื, ): "pasturelands" (ESV, NASB, NIV, etc.), "common-lands" or "open lands" (NKJV). ; "Sharon": is not the same area as the identically named plain south of Carmel, but a Transjordanian reg... | [
"1 Chronicles 5 โ Verse 6\n\nBeerah his son, whom Tilgathpilneser king of Assyria carried away captive: he was prince of the Reubenites. ; \"Tiglath-Pilneser\" (ืชืืืช ืคืื ืืกืจ): this form of the name is always used in the Books of Chronicles (also in ; has ืชืืืช ืคืื ืกืจ) for \"Tilgath-Pileser\" (ืชืืืช ืคืืืกืจ as used in ; ... |
1_Chronicles_5_30377188 | Summarize the following section from the article on '1 Chronicles 5'. | 1 Chronicles 5 is the fifth chapter of the Books of Chronicles in the Hebrew Bible or the First Book of Chronicles in the Old Testament of the Christian Bible. The book is compiled from older sources by an unknown person or group, designated by modern scholars as "the Chronicler", and had the final shape established in... | [
"1 Chronicles 5 โ Verse 6\n\nBeerah his son, whom Tilgathpilneser king of Assyria carried away captive: he was prince of the Reubenites. ; \"Tiglath-Pilneser\" (ืชืืืช ืคืื ืืกืจ): this form of the name is always used in the Books of Chronicles (also in ; has ืชืืืช ืคืื ืกืจ) for \"Tilgath-Pileser\" (ืชืืืช ืคืืืกืจ as used in ; ... |
1_Chronicles_5_30377189 | Based on the article about '1 Chronicles 5', describe the 'Text' section. | This chapter was originally written in the Hebrew language. It is divided into 26 verses. The verse numbering differs between the English versions and the Hebrew versions as follows: This article generally follows the common numbering in Christian English Bible versions, with notes to the numbering in Hebrew Bible vers... | [
"1 Chronicles 5 โ Verse 6\n\nBeerah his son, whom Tilgathpilneser king of Assyria carried away captive: he was prince of the Reubenites. ; \"Tiglath-Pilneser\" (ืชืืืช ืคืื ืืกืจ): this form of the name is always used in the Books of Chronicles (also in ; has ืชืืืช ืคืื ืกืจ) for \"Tilgath-Pileser\" (ืชืืืช ืคืืืกืจ as used in ; ... |
1_Chronicles_5_30377200 | Describe the 'The exile of Transjordanian tribes (5:25โ26)' section of the article about '1 Chronicles 5'. | This passage combines the two-phases of the northern Israel kingdom ( and ; ) into a single exile of the Transjordanian tribes, by taking the name of the king from the first, whilst using the deportation place-names of the second phase. Historical documents only record that Tiglath-pileser conquered Gilead in the east ... | [
"1 Chronicles 5 โ Verse 6\n\nBeerah his son, whom Tilgathpilneser king of Assyria carried away captive: he was prince of the Reubenites. ; \"Tiglath-Pilneser\" (ืชืืืช ืคืื ืืกืจ): this form of the name is always used in the Books of Chronicles (also in ; has ืชืืืช ืคืื ืกืจ) for \"Tilgath-Pileser\" (ืชืืืช ืคืืืกืจ as used in ; ... |
1_Chronicles_5_30377192 | Based on the article about '1 Chronicles 5', describe the 'Descendants of Reuben (5:1โ10)' section. | This section begins with explanation (a kind of midrash) that Reuben did not receive the rights of a firstborn son of Jacob because he slept with Bilhah, his father's concubine (cf. ). The firstborn rights were passed on to the two sons of Joseph, whereas the leadership was given to Judah (underlined in verse 2 and ref... | [
"1 Chronicles 5 โ Verse 6\n\nBeerah his son, whom Tilgathpilneser king of Assyria carried away captive: he was prince of the Reubenites. ; \"Tiglath-Pilneser\" (ืชืืืช ืคืื ืืกืจ): this form of the name is always used in the Books of Chronicles (also in ; has ืชืืืช ืคืื ืกืจ) for \"Tilgath-Pileser\" (ืชืืืช ืคืืืกืจ as used in ; ... |
1_Chronicles_5_30377190 | Based on the article about '1 Chronicles 5', describe the 'Textual witnesses' section. | Some early manuscripts containing the text of this chapter in Hebrew are of the Masoretic Text tradition, which includes the Aleppo Codex (10th century), and Codex Leningradensis (1008). There is also a translation into Koine Greek known as the Septuagint, made in the last few centuries BCE. Extant ancient manuscripts ... | [
"1 Chronicles 5 โ Verse 6\n\nBeerah his son, whom Tilgathpilneser king of Assyria carried away captive: he was prince of the Reubenites. ; \"Tiglath-Pilneser\" (ืชืืืช ืคืื ืืกืจ): this form of the name is always used in the Books of Chronicles (also in ; has ืชืืืช ืคืื ืกืจ) for \"Tilgath-Pileser\" (ืชืืืช ืคืืืกืจ as used in ; ... |
1_Chronicles_5_30377199 | Based on the article about '1 Chronicles 5', describe the 'Descendants of Manasseh (5:23โ24)' section. | This section focuses on the half-tribe of Gad, which settled in the area east of the Jordan river ("Transjordan"), along with the tribes of Reuben and Gad. The close releationship among these tribes is noted in ; ;,. | [
"1 Chronicles 5 โ Verse 6\n\nBeerah his son, whom Tilgathpilneser king of Assyria carried away captive: he was prince of the Reubenites. ; \"Tiglath-Pilneser\" (ืชืืืช ืคืื ืืกืจ): this form of the name is always used in the Books of Chronicles (also in ; has ืชืืืช ืคืื ืกืจ) for \"Tilgath-Pileser\" (ืชืืืช ืคืืืกืจ as used in ; ... |
1_Chronicles_5_30377198 | Reconstruct the content about 'The war against the Hagrites (5:18โ22)' from the article on '1 Chronicles 5'. | This section elaborates the conflict against the Hagrites (descendants of Hagar) during the reign of Saul, as briefly mentioned in verse 10 (also in, where the group was mentioned along with Edom, Ishmael, and Moab), over pastureland. | [
"1 Chronicles 5 โ Verse 6\n\nBeerah his son, whom Tilgathpilneser king of Assyria carried away captive: he was prince of the Reubenites. ; \"Tiglath-Pilneser\" (ืชืืืช ืคืื ืืกืจ): this form of the name is always used in the Books of Chronicles (also in ; has ืชืืืช ืคืื ืกืจ) for \"Tilgath-Pileser\" (ืชืืืช ืคืืืกืจ as used in ; ... |
1_Chronicles_5_30377196 | What information does the article about '1 Chronicles 5' provide on 'Descendants of Gad (5:11โ17)'? | This section focuses on the tribe of Gad, which settled in the area east of the Jordan river ("Transjordan"), along with the tribes of Reuben and Manasseh (half of the tribe). The close releationship among these tribes is noted in ; ;. The sources of the genealogies of the descendants of Gad are the documents compiled ... | [
"1 Chronicles 5 โ Verse 6\n\nBeerah his son, whom Tilgathpilneser king of Assyria carried away captive: he was prince of the Reubenites. ; \"Tiglath-Pilneser\" (ืชืืืช ืคืื ืืกืจ): this form of the name is always used in the Books of Chronicles (also in ; has ืชืืืช ืคืื ืกืจ) for \"Tilgath-Pileser\" (ืชืืืช ืคืืืกืจ as used in ; ... |
1_Chronicles_5_30377193 | From the article on '1 Chronicles 5', restate the 'Verse 1' content. | Now the sons of Reuben the firstborn of Israelโhe was indeed the firstborn, but because he defiled his father's bed, his birthright was given to the sons of Joseph, the son of Israel, so that the genealogy is not listed according to the birthright; ; Cross references: ; ; "Given to the sons of Joseph": Some ancient Heb... | [
"1 Chronicles 5 โ Verse 6\n\nBeerah his son, whom Tilgathpilneser king of Assyria carried away captive: he was prince of the Reubenites. ; \"Tiglath-Pilneser\" (ืชืืืช ืคืื ืืกืจ): this form of the name is always used in the Books of Chronicles (also in ; has ืชืืืช ืคืื ืกืจ) for \"Tilgath-Pileser\" (ืชืืืช ืคืืืกืจ as used in ; ... |
1_Chronicles_6_31314521 | Describe the 'Descendants of Levi (6:1โ30; Hebrew: 5:27โ6:15)' section of the article about '1 Chronicles 6'. | successors of Aaron from the time of his death to the Babylonian exile, but the abridged version of the same list in Ezra 7:1โ7 only has 15 names instead of 22. The list apparently serves as a legitimizing role, that the high priests in office during Chronicler's time could genealogically be traced back to Zadok and ev... | [
"1 Chronicles 6 โ Descendants of Aaron (6:49โ53; Hebrew: 6:34โ38)\n\nThis section lists only the Aaronid priests until Zadok and his son, Ahimaaz, in the time of David.",
"1 Chronicles 6 โ Descendants of Levi (6:1โ30; Hebrew: 5:27โ6:15)\n\nsuccessors of Aaron from the time of his death to the Babylonian exile, bu... |
1_Chronicles_6_31314518 | Based on the article about '1 Chronicles 6', describe the 'Textual witnesses' section. | Some early manuscripts containing the text of this chapter in Hebrew are of the Masoretic Text tradition, which includes the Aleppo Codex (10th century), and Codex Leningradensis (1008). There is also a translation into Koine Greek known as the Septuagint, made in the last few centuries BCE. Extant ancient manuscripts ... | [
"1 Chronicles 6 โ Descendants of Aaron (6:49โ53; Hebrew: 6:34โ38)\n\nThis section lists only the Aaronid priests until Zadok and his son, Ahimaaz, in the time of David.",
"1 Chronicles 6 โ Descendants of Levi (6:1โ30; Hebrew: 5:27โ6:15)\n\nsuccessors of Aaron from the time of his death to the Babylonian exile, bu... |
1_Chronicles_6_31314533 | Describe the 'Dwelling Places of the Levites (6:54โ81; Hebrew: 6:39โ66)' section of the article about '1 Chronicles 6'. | This section contains the list of living and grazing areas for the Levites, corresponding to that in Joshua 21:9โ42, with some differences in the arrangement of its elements. The purpose is to show the areas where Levites actually settled among the those designated in Joshua 21. The tribe of Levi was not given allotmen... | [
"1 Chronicles 6 โ Descendants of Aaron (6:49โ53; Hebrew: 6:34โ38)\n\nThis section lists only the Aaronid priests until Zadok and his son, Ahimaaz, in the time of David.",
"1 Chronicles 6 โ Descendants of Levi (6:1โ30; Hebrew: 5:27โ6:15)\n\nsuccessors of Aaron from the time of his death to the Babylonian exile, bu... |
1_Chronicles_6_31314524 | From the article on '1 Chronicles 6', restate the 'Verse 1' content. | The sons of Levi; Gershon, Kohath, and Merari. ; Cross references: ; ; ; "Gershon": or "Gershom" in verse 16 | [
"1 Chronicles 6 โ Descendants of Aaron (6:49โ53; Hebrew: 6:34โ38)\n\nThis section lists only the Aaronid priests until Zadok and his son, Ahimaaz, in the time of David.",
"1 Chronicles 6 โ Descendants of Levi (6:1โ30; Hebrew: 5:27โ6:15)\n\nsuccessors of Aaron from the time of his death to the Babylonian exile, bu... |
1_Chronicles_6_31314517 | Summarize the 'Text' part of '1 Chronicles 6'. | This chapter was originally written in the Hebrew language. It is divided into 81 verses. The verse numbering differs between the English versions and the Hebrew versions as follows: This article generally follows the common numbering in Christian English Bible versions, with notes to the numbering in Hebrew Bible vers... | [
"1 Chronicles 6 โ Descendants of Aaron (6:49โ53; Hebrew: 6:34โ38)\n\nThis section lists only the Aaronid priests until Zadok and his son, Ahimaaz, in the time of David.",
"1 Chronicles 6 โ Descendants of Levi (6:1โ30; Hebrew: 5:27โ6:15)\n\nsuccessors of Aaron from the time of his death to the Babylonian exile, bu... |
1_Chronicles_6_31314529 | What information does the article about '1 Chronicles 6' provide on 'Verse 49'? | But Aaron and his sons offered upon the altar of the burnt offering, and on the altar of incense, and were appointed for all the work of the place most holy, and to make an atonement for Israel, according to all that Moses the servant of God had commanded. burnt offerings ; incense offerings ; all the work of the "holy... | [
"1 Chronicles 6 โ Descendants of Aaron (6:49โ53; Hebrew: 6:34โ38)\n\nThis section lists only the Aaronid priests until Zadok and his son, Ahimaaz, in the time of David.",
"1 Chronicles 6 โ Descendants of Levi (6:1โ30; Hebrew: 5:27โ6:15)\n\nsuccessors of Aaron from the time of his death to the Babylonian exile, bu... |
1_Chronicles_6_31314516 | Describe the content of the article about '1 Chronicles 6'. | 1 Chronicles 6 is the sixth chapter of the Books of Chronicles in the Hebrew Bible or the First Book of Chronicles in the Old Testament of the Christian Bible. The book is compiled from older sources by an unknown person or group, designated by modern scholars as "the Chronicler", and had the final shape established in... | [
"1 Chronicles 6 โ Descendants of Aaron (6:49โ53; Hebrew: 6:34โ38)\n\nThis section lists only the Aaronid priests until Zadok and his son, Ahimaaz, in the time of David.",
"1 Chronicles 6 โ Descendants of Levi (6:1โ30; Hebrew: 5:27โ6:15)\n\nsuccessors of Aaron from the time of his death to the Babylonian exile, bu... |
1_Chronicles_6_31314523 | What does the article about '1 Chronicles 6' say regarding 'Descendants of Levi (6:1โ30; Hebrew: 5:27โ6:15)'? | (vese 15), a witness to the destruction of Solomon's temple, therefore these two priests bracket the entire First Temple Period. The high-priestly lineage here ends with Jehozadak, but Nehemiah 12:10-11 continues where the list leaves off, with Joshua son of Jehozadak (cf. Haggai 1:1; 2:2, 4) and his line down to Jaddu... | [
"1 Chronicles 6 โ Descendants of Aaron (6:49โ53; Hebrew: 6:34โ38)\n\nThis section lists only the Aaronid priests until Zadok and his son, Ahimaaz, in the time of David.",
"1 Chronicles 6 โ Descendants of Levi (6:1โ30; Hebrew: 5:27โ6:15)\n\nsuccessors of Aaron from the time of his death to the Babylonian exile, bu... |
1_Chronicles_6_31314522 | What does the article about '1 Chronicles 6' say regarding 'Descendants of Levi (6:1โ30; Hebrew: 5:27โ6:15)'? | three Azariahs are listed here but one from the reign of Uzziah (2 Chronicles 26:20) and another from the reign of Hezekiah (2 Chronicles 31:10) are apparently overlooked. However, the narrative of the histories in the book and the writings of Josephus who provides a longer list (Antiquities 10:152-153) help to reconst... | [
"1 Chronicles 6 โ Descendants of Aaron (6:49โ53; Hebrew: 6:34โ38)\n\nThis section lists only the Aaronid priests until Zadok and his son, Ahimaaz, in the time of David.",
"1 Chronicles 6 โ Descendants of Levi (6:1โ30; Hebrew: 5:27โ6:15)\n\nsuccessors of Aaron from the time of his death to the Babylonian exile, bu... |
1_Chronicles_6_31314519 | Summarize the 'Old Testament references' part of '1 Chronicles 6'. | (Hebrew: 5:27โ30): (Hebrew: 6:1, 3); ; ; ; (Hebrew: 6:1โ4): ; ; (Hebrew: 6:7โ8): ; ; (Hebrew: 6:9โ13): ; (Hebrew: 6:11โ12): 1 Samuel 1:1 ; (Hebrew: 6:13): ; (Hebrew: 6:40โ62): ; (Hebrew: 6:65โ66): | [
"1 Chronicles 6 โ Descendants of Aaron (6:49โ53; Hebrew: 6:34โ38)\n\nThis section lists only the Aaronid priests until Zadok and his son, Ahimaaz, in the time of David.",
"1 Chronicles 6 โ Descendants of Levi (6:1โ30; Hebrew: 5:27โ6:15)\n\nsuccessors of Aaron from the time of his death to the Babylonian exile, bu... |
1_Chronicles_6_31314526 | From the article on '1 Chronicles 6', restate the 'Temple Musicians (6:31โ48; Hebrew: 6:16โ33)' content. | Heman of Kohathites (verses 33โ38), contributing Psalm 88 ; Asaph of Gershonites (verses 39โ43), contributing Psalms 50, 73โ83 ; Ethan of Merarites (verses 44โ48), contributing Psalm 89 This section focus on the genealogy of the temple singers whose roles are explained extensively in 1 Chronicles 15โ16. Until the const... | [
"1 Chronicles 6 โ Descendants of Aaron (6:49โ53; Hebrew: 6:34โ38)\n\nThis section lists only the Aaronid priests until Zadok and his son, Ahimaaz, in the time of David.",
"1 Chronicles 6 โ Descendants of Levi (6:1โ30; Hebrew: 5:27โ6:15)\n\nsuccessors of Aaron from the time of his death to the Babylonian exile, bu... |
1_Chronicles_6_31314520 | What does the article about '1 Chronicles 6' say regarding 'Descendants of Levi (6:1โ30; Hebrew: 5:27โ6:15)'? | The genealogy of priestly tribe of Levi, apart from that of Judah, is longer than any of other tribes, showing the focus of the Chronicler on the temple and temple workers, preserved by David's line. The list first names Levi and his three sons, apparently taken from Genesis 46:11 (also Exodus 6:16; Numbers 26:57). Sub... | [
"1 Chronicles 6 โ Descendants of Aaron (6:49โ53; Hebrew: 6:34โ38)\n\nThis section lists only the Aaronid priests until Zadok and his son, Ahimaaz, in the time of David.",
"1 Chronicles 6 โ Descendants of Levi (6:1โ30; Hebrew: 5:27โ6:15)\n\nsuccessors of Aaron from the time of his death to the Babylonian exile, bu... |
1_Chronicles_6_31314530 | Summarize the 'Genetic studies on descendants of Aaron' part of '1 Chronicles 6'. | A present-day Jewish priestly caste known as Kohanim (singular "Kohen", also spelled "Cohen") claims to be the direct descendants of Aaron. Genetic studies on the members of this group reveals that a majority of them share a pattern of values for six Y-STR markers, which researchers named the Cohen Modal Haplotype (CMH... | [
"1 Chronicles 6 โ Descendants of Aaron (6:49โ53; Hebrew: 6:34โ38)\n\nThis section lists only the Aaronid priests until Zadok and his son, Ahimaaz, in the time of David.",
"1 Chronicles 6 โ Descendants of Levi (6:1โ30; Hebrew: 5:27โ6:15)\n\nsuccessors of Aaron from the time of his death to the Babylonian exile, bu... |
1_Chronicles_6_31314532 | Explain what '1 Chronicles 6' covers in the 'Genetic studies on descendants of Aaron' section. | as in 33.8% of other R1a Ashkenazi Jewish males, and 5.9% of 303 R1a Near Eastern males, where it shows considerably higher diversity." Therefore, Rootsi, Behar, et al., concluded that this marker most likely originates in the pre-Diasporic Hebrews in the Near East. The Samaritan community in the Middle East maintained... | [
"1 Chronicles 6 โ Descendants of Aaron (6:49โ53; Hebrew: 6:34โ38)\n\nThis section lists only the Aaronid priests until Zadok and his son, Ahimaaz, in the time of David.",
"1 Chronicles 6 โ Descendants of Levi (6:1โ30; Hebrew: 5:27โ6:15)\n\nsuccessors of Aaron from the time of his death to the Babylonian exile, bu... |
1_Chronicles_7_32165006 | Reconstruct the content about 'Verse 15' from the article on '1 Chronicles 7'. | And Machir took to wife the sister of Huppim and Shuppim, whose sister's name was Maachah; and the name of the second was Zelophehad: and Zelophehad had daughters. ; "Zelophehad had daughters": Five daughters are named and play a significant role in Numbers 27:1โ11 and 36:1โ12 for the reinterpretation of laws of heredi... | [
"1 Chronicles 7 โ Verse 15\n\nAnd Machir took to wife the sister of Huppim and Shuppim, whose sister's name was Maachah; and the name of the second was Zelophehad: and Zelophehad had daughters. ; \"Zelophehad had daughters\": Five daughters are named and play a significant role in Numbers 27:1โ11 and 36:1โ12 for th... |
1_Chronicles_7_32164999 | Based on the article about '1 Chronicles 7', describe the 'Verse 1' section. | Now the sons of Issachar were Tola, Puah, Jashub, and Shimron, four in all. ; Cross references: ; ; "Jashub": from ืึธืฉืึฅืึผื yฤ-shลซแธ (as the reading (qere); in writing: ืืฉืื yฤ-shรฎแธ) is written as "Job" in Genesis 46:13. Rashi notes that Job was the original name, but when the brothers settled themselves (ื ึดืชึฐืึทืฉึฐึผืืืึผ)... | [
"1 Chronicles 7 โ Verse 15\n\nAnd Machir took to wife the sister of Huppim and Shuppim, whose sister's name was Maachah; and the name of the second was Zelophehad: and Zelophehad had daughters. ; \"Zelophehad had daughters\": Five daughters are named and play a significant role in Numbers 27:1โ11 and 36:1โ12 for th... |
1_Chronicles_7_32165008 | Reconstruct the content about 'Verse 22' from the article on '1 Chronicles 7'. | And Ephraim their father mourned many days, and his brothers came to comfort him. This verse recalls the opening of the story of Job (Job 2:11) suggesting that the Chronicler wished to draw a parallel between Job and Ephraim, | [
"1 Chronicles 7 โ Verse 15\n\nAnd Machir took to wife the sister of Huppim and Shuppim, whose sister's name was Maachah; and the name of the second was Zelophehad: and Zelophehad had daughters. ; \"Zelophehad had daughters\": Five daughters are named and play a significant role in Numbers 27:1โ11 and 36:1โ12 for th... |
1_Chronicles_7_32164997 | Reconstruct the content about 'Structure' from the article on '1 Chronicles 7'. | A Davidโs royal tribe of Judah (2:3โ4:43) ; B Northern tribes east of Jordan (5:1โ26) ; X The priestly tribe of Levi (6:1โ81) ; B' Northern tribes west of Jordan (7:1โ40) ; A' Saulโs royal tribe of Benjamin (8:1โ40) The whole chapter belongs to an arrangement comprising 1 Chronicles 2:3โ8:40 with the king-producing tri... | [
"1 Chronicles 7 โ Verse 15\n\nAnd Machir took to wife the sister of Huppim and Shuppim, whose sister's name was Maachah; and the name of the second was Zelophehad: and Zelophehad had daughters. ; \"Zelophehad had daughters\": Five daughters are named and play a significant role in Numbers 27:1โ11 and 36:1โ12 for th... |
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