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  1. Etymology and Definition. The name "Alger" has origins that can be traced back to Old French, meaning "a person who is a steward" or "a guardian." While not explicitly mentioned in the Bible, the underlying themes of stewardship and guardianship resonate with various biblical principles.

  2. Oct 4, 2013 · Modern-day Algiers. For starters Alger (in French) or Algiers (in English) is a name deriving from the Catalan Alguère, which itself comes from Djezaïr, name given by Bologhine ibn Ziri, founder of the Berber Zirid dynasty who built the city in 944 on the ruins of the ancient Roman city Icosium (or the seagull island), Djezaïr Beni Mezghenna ...

  3. Mar 6, 2022 · Torah. The books of the Torah—Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy—are named in Hebrew after their first word or phrase: “These are the names of…”. “And He [the Lord] called…”. The English names of these books comes from the Septuagint, sometimes called the LXX 1, a Greek translation of the Bible completed in the ...

  4. Mar 13, 2019 · By the 20th century, Algeria was no mere colony; it was an integral part of metropolitan France, making Algiers in some ways as much a French city as Rouen or Marseille. European settlers, mainly Catholics, flooded into the land, so that by the 1950s they made up a million of Algeria’s 11 million people. If the Algerian venture began as a ...

  5. Jul 5, 2016 · The various books get their names in different ways. Most of the Old Testament books are named for their theme. For example, the book of Genesis tells of the beginning (or genesis) of the world, and human history. The book of Exodus tells of the story of the Israelites' exodus out of Egypt.

  6. The prayer known as the Lord’s Prayer appears twice in the gospels, in differing versions, in both Luke and Matthew. Commonly among Protestant congregations, the prayer includes the doxology; “For thine is the Kingdom, and the power, and the glory, forever. Amen.”. It appears thus in the KJV, Matthew 6:13.

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  8. Jan 31, 2019 · The word Bible itself is simply a transliteration of the Greek word bíblos (βίβλος), meaning "book." So the Bible is, quite simply, The Book. However, take a step further back and the same Greek word also means "scroll" or "parchment." Of course, the first words of Scripture would have been written on parchment, and then copied to ...

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