Second+book+of+Moses

  • 81The Urantia Book —   Cover of the …

    Wikipedia

  • 82David Moses — Personal information Full name David Moses Nickname Dai Playing information Rugby union Club …

    Wikipedia

  • 83LEVITICUS, BOOK OF — (Heb. וַיִּקְרָא; LXX Λευιτικόν leuitikon), more aptly described by its tannaitic name, Torat Kohanim, the Priests Manual, the third book of the Pentateuch. Leviticus is thematically an independent entity. exodus contains the story of the… …

    Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • 84CHRONICLES, BOOK OF — CHRONICLES, BOOK OF, one of the books of the Hagiographa section of the Bible. In the printed Jewish editions of the Bible, it appears last. In Christian Bibles Chronicles follows II Kings and precedes Ezra. book of chronicles contents Book of… …

    Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • 85Maimonides, Moses — (1135–1204)    Moses ben Maimon, known as Maimonides throughout Europe, was the most important Jewish philosopher of the Middle Ages, one of the most important thinkers in the entire history of Judaism, and one of the most influential religious… …

    Encyclopedia of medieval literature

  • 86Blessing of Moses — Luca Signorelli s fresco in the Sistine Chapel depicts the final episodes in Moses life. At the right of picture, Moses is speaking to the people. Not to be confused with Song of Moses. The Blessing of Moses is the name sometimes given to a poem …

    Wikipedia

  • 87Numbers, Book of —    The fourth of the books of the Pentateuch, called in the Hebrew be midbar, i.e., in the wilderness. In the LXX. version it is called Numbers, and this name is now the usual title of the book. It is so called because it contains a record of the …

    Easton's Bible Dictionary

  • 88The Book of Abramelin — tells the story of an Egyptian mage named Abramelin, or Abra Melin, who teaches a system of magic to Abraham of Worms, a German Jew presumed to have lived from c.1362 c.1458. The magic described in the book was to find new life in the 19th and… …

    Wikipedia

  • 89ABRAHAM BEN MOSES BEN MAIMON — (1186–1237), theologian, exegete, communal leader, mystical pietist, and physician. Little was known about him prior to the discovery of the cairo genizah , which has preserved many of his writings, in part autographic. Born in Fustat, Egypt, on… …

    Encyclopedia of Judaism

  • 90JONAH, MOSES — (16th century), kabbalist and one of the most important disciples of isaac luria . Ḥayyim Vital places him in the second group of Luria s pupils (Sha ar ha Gilgulim) and states that this is his first transmigration as a human being, and therefore …

    Encyclopedia of Judaism