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  1. Sep 13, 2018 · Often you’ll find a quick introduction to a book in a study Bible laying out its intention. However, you can also research this online. What are the different types of literary genres in the Bible and how should we read them?

  2. The word means, literally, a howler. The English version follows the LXX. and Vulgate versions; but even taking "dragons" in its non-mythical sense as applied to some species of serpent, there is nothing in the word to lead us to assign this meaning.

    • Tobit, written 225-175 BCE. This book tells the story of two Israelite people, a blind man named Tobit living in Nineveh and a woman named Sarah, living in a city called Ecbatana.
    • Judith, written about 100 BCE. Judith, a Jewish widow, attracts and seduces an Assyrian general besieging her city. Having ingratiated herself with him, she waits until he is drunk and then decapitates him, saving the capital Jerusalem from total destruction.
    • Esther, written around 115 BCE. Although the Hebrew version of Esther is canonical, the Greek translation adds six sections to it. Esther is the story of an Israelite woman who saves her people from an anti-Israelite Persian plot.
    • Wisdom of Solomon, written around 50 BCE. This book centers on the importance of Wisdom as related to humans and to God. It may have influenced the famous prologue of the Gospel of John, with wisdom replaced by the “Word.”
  3. Aug 3, 2016 · There are various types of figurative language in the Bible, and these types are found in modern English as well, although the specific examples usually are different.

  4. Sep 5, 2024 · Hyperbole in the Bible was succinctly described by E. W. Bullinger as “when more is said than is literally meant” (Figures of Speech Used in the Bible, Baker, 1968, p. 423). Here are several examples of hyperbole in the teaching of Jesus:

  5. Feb 22, 2017 · Some people point to obvious instances of hyperbole, personification, or metaphor in Scripture and use them to accuse the Bible of not telling the truth. That represents a failure to read the text as it was intended by its original author.

  6. Feb 17, 2008 · A common figure of speech used in the Bible is that of hyperbole. Bullinger defines hyperbole as: “when more is said than is literally meant” (1968, p. 423). He also calls hyperbole “exaggeration.”.

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