You have to understand that The Bible is a collection of books, an anthology. There was no unifying attempt in the creation of the bible merely a uniting of all the books deemed holy. So if content was repeated in two or more books it remained repeated in the compilation. Much can be said for the book of Daniel and the Revelation of John.
Psalm 14 and Psalm 53 Also 2 Kings 19 and Isaiah 37
Yes. 2 Kings 19 and Isaiah 37 are identical. If you see the context and follow from previous chapters i.e. (2 Kings 18 & Isaiah 36) the two chapters continue the story of the Kings (of Judah) and the Prophet (Isaiah) and they both intersect at this particular chapter where the King (Hezekiah) and the Prophet speak about the same event, in further Chapters of (2 Kings 20) the events are said to be recorded and most likely retrieved by both the writers (i.e. Kings & Isaiah) from the same source. This further establishes Bible as inerrant as being accurate because the writings were inspired from true historical accounts.
These two sets of chapters are nearly identical word-for-word in KJV: * Psalm 14 and Psalm 53 * 2 Kings 19 and Isaiah 37
The word "Saviour" is in the King James Version of the Bible 37 times. It is in 37 verses.
What happened in Genesis chapter 37.
If you are looking for two chapters in the Bible that are the same, try looking in I and II Kings and compare to I and II Chronicles in the Old Testament. They are historical accounts of the same things.AdditionallyPsalms 14 and 53; 40:13-17 and 70; 57:7-11 and 108:1-5. * 2 Kings 19 and Isaiah 37
Psalm 14 and Psalm 53 Also 2 Kings 19 and Isaiah 37
There are none. There are chapter repeated for some reason which are 2 Kings 19 and Isaiah 37 and Psalms 14 and 53.
Joshua 14:10 1 Samuel 22:18 2 Kings 19:35 Isaiah 37:36
Yes. 2 Kings 19 and Isaiah 37 are identical. If you see the context and follow from previous chapters i.e. (2 Kings 18 & Isaiah 36) the two chapters continue the story of the Kings (of Judah) and the Prophet (Isaiah) and they both intersect at this particular chapter where the King (Hezekiah) and the Prophet speak about the same event, in further Chapters of (2 Kings 20) the events are said to be recorded and most likely retrieved by both the writers (i.e. Kings & Isaiah) from the same source. This further establishes Bible as inerrant as being accurate because the writings were inspired from true historical accounts.
Its not in the bible. The account has been taken from ancient texts such as the Talmud. The only account that can be referenced to the sawing in half is in Hebrews 11:37.
These two sets of chapters are nearly identical word-for-word in KJV: * Psalm 14 and Psalm 53 * 2 Kings 19 and Isaiah 37
Not directly and maybe not at all. There is a tradition that states that Isaiah was executed by the wicked King Manasseh by sawing him in half (Manasseh was not a very nice man). We may note in this regard that Isaiah's prophecy ceases with Hezekiah and Manasseh succeeded him. (Isaiah 1:1 contains the list of Kings of Judah under which Isaiah prophesied) We also know that Manasseh 'shed innocent blood very much.' Most certainly this refers to the passing of living children into the outstretched arms of the idol Moloch. But it may also refer to the execution of people like Isaiah who was obviously innocent. If the tradition is accurate - and it is certainly possible from what we know of Manasseh plus the historical time-frame - then Hebrews 11:37 '....they were sawn asunder..' is a reference to this murderous crime. If Hebrews 11:37 is not a reference to Isaiah then it is not mentioned. In any case the Bible itself does not, without recourse to tradition, mention it.
In the Bible. Page 37
The word "crucified" is in the King James Version of the Bible 37 times. It is in 37 verses.
The word "Saviour" is in the King James Version of the Bible 37 times. It is in 37 verses.
What happened in Genesis chapter 37.