A full account of this initial ceremony of purification is given in the end of the forty-third chapter, and a glance at the details of the ritual may be enough to impress on us the conceptions that underlie the process.
That the idea of a succession of sovereigns is a possible form of the Messianic hope is shown by a passage in the thirty-third chapter of Jeremiah.
This is in accordance with the form of predictive prophecy, as in the fifty-third chapter of Isaiah, where the atoning work of Christ is spoken of as already accomplished, though it remained to be achieved in the future.
We are asked to believe that the author of this fifty-third chapter, the most minute and tender prophecy concerning the Messiah's sufferings for his people, and rejection by them, has dropped out of sight!
The critics have handed this fifty-third chapter over to the Unknown prophet or prophets.
Thence to the nineteenth verse of the twenty-third chapter is a miscellaneous group of laws, chiefly moral, but deeply connected with the civil organisation of the state.
How much it implies will better be discussed in the twenty-third chapter, where a fuller statement is made.
The issue would be decided offhand, if it could be shown that the Angel of this verse is the same who is offered, as a poor substitute for their Divine protector, in the thirty-third chapter.
In the twenty-third chapter, when St. Paul is placed before the same Sanhedrin the Pharisees take his side, while the Sadducees are his bitter opponents.
It has even been urged of late years that our Lord deliberately roused the Jews to action, and hastened His end by His violent language of denunciation against the ruling classes recorded in the twenty-third chapter of St. Matthew.
We perhaps infer from the sixty-third chapter of Isaiah that they suffered during the campaigns of the two Artaxerxes against Egypt.
The last reference indicates the ennobling influence of martyrdom touchingly depicted also in the fifty-third chapter of Isaiah.
Here was another application of the "suffering servant" in Isaiah's fifty-third chapter.
We have said that it appears to have been during these campaigns against the Philistines that the incidents took place which are recorded fully in the twenty-third chapter of this book.
Further, when we turn to the twenty-third chapter of this book, which records some memorable incidents of the war with the Philistines, we find (vers.
We pass to the twenty-third chapter, which tells us of David's mighty men.
Timothy, third chapter, verses 1, 2, we learn of the office of Bishop, with some essential qualifications.
To exhibit the error of many in the religious world on this point read the forty-second and forty-third verses of the twenty-third chapter of Luke.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "third chapter" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.