Although they did keep and use domesticated animals, there are no records of the Hebrews domesticating any animals themselves.
No. The Hebrews worship only God. It is forbidden for the Hebrews to worship men or engage in Human sacrifice.
Hebrews did not hunt. They followed a dietary code that required special slaughtering of animals.
The Hebrews had dogs, goats and donkeys
They walked and rode animals.
The Torah says Abraham and his family were the first Hebrews to arrive. They walked and rode in wagons drawn by animals.
the hebrew had the same animals as today, but the may one were sheep, camels and many more animals farm.
The Hebrews did not keep swine. They only kept kosher animals, such as sheep, goats, cattle, and poultry.
The Hebrews did not use Porpoise skin at all, since porpoises are not kosher animals (not to mention the fact that there were no porpoises in the Middle East at the time.
The Bible tells us Christ's death is a "sacrifice for sins" (Hebrews 10:12). Christ is identified with the Passover Lamb (1 Corinthians 5:7), the sacrifice which initiates the New Covenant (Luke 22:20), and the sin offering (Hebrews 9:14,25-28). Divine love has assumed the shape of the cross (Gal. 2:20). Through sacrifice, sin is forgiven (Eph. 1:70, and the conscience is cleansed (Hebrews 9:14).
The answer is true. The writer of Hebrews points out that Jesus Christ is superior in every way to anything else. And why should He not be superior, He is the Son of the living God.Additional thoughts:Hebrews 9:10,23-26 compares the animal sacrifices under the Mosaic Law to the far superior sacrifice of the promised Messiah, Jesus(Hebrews 7:22-25). The "Law" was a 'shadow of the good things to come' as it prefigured the ultimate sacrifice of God's son (Hebrews 10:1,2,10) which would make the 'old covenant' (the Mosaic Law with it's sacrifices) obsolete (Hebrews 8:6+13/Hebrews 7:18+19).
All the Hebrews and their animals and then Moses and Aaron crossed as well.