The main account in the Old Testament of food miraculously provided to people is in the story of the Exodus, when God provided manna from heaven and quail for the fleeing Israelites. As it is now the consensus of almost all scholars that there was no Exodus from Egypt as described in The Bible, this account should probably not be regarded as a real miracle.
1 Kings 17:1-6 has ravens bring food to Elijah when he fled from the presence of King Ahab, with vague similarities to the quail brought for the fleeing Israelites. This is not quite miraculous in the same way, except that the ravens understood Elijah's need and responded.
In Mark's Gospel, largely followed by the other gospels, there are two related events in which Jesus miraculously fed 5000 and soon afterwards 4000, then implicitly fed the disciples who were hungry and only had one loaf. The close relationship of these miracles to each other and to other several miracles and discourses in Mark 6:33-8:21 can be seen in the following list, with at least ten separate references to food and an underlying theme of the disciples not understanding:
B .The baptism of Jesus (1:9)
C . The voice of God from heaven, "Thou art my beloved son" (1:11)
D . The forty days in the wilderness as an allusion to Elijah and Moses (1:13)
E . The people were astonished at what Jesus taught (1:22)
F . Jesus casts out an unclean spirit (1:23-26)
G . Pharisees took counsel with the Herodians how they might destroy Jesus (3:6)
H . Demons, whenever they see Jesus, fall down and say that he is the Son of God.
-- Jesus commands that they tell no one of this (3:11-12)
I .. Jesus calls the 12 disciples (3:13-19)
J .. Jesus rejects his own family: he has a new family, his followers (3:31-35)
K . Jesus rebukes the wind (4:36-41)
L . The demoniac, wearing no clothes (5:15), cries out that Jesus not torment him and Jesus sends out the demons (5:1-20)
M . Jesus comes into his own country (6:1)
-- Where he was brought up
N . The people misunderstand Jesus and he can do no mighty work (6:2-6)
O . Jesus sends out the disciples and curses those who will not receive them (6:7-11)
-- in sending the disciples with authority and expecting all to receive them, Jesus is asserting his own authority
P . Herod thinks that Jesus is John the Baptist risen from the dead (6:14)
Q . Herodias and her daughter conspire to kill John the Baptist (6:16-29)
R . Feeding the thousands, and related miracles and discourses (6:33-8:21)
S . Who do people say that I am (8:27)
T . Peter affirms faith in Jesus as the Christ (8:29)
U . Whosoever shall be ashamed of me: of him also shall the Son of man be ashamed (8:38)
V . The Son of Man must suffer many things and be rejected by the elders, chief priests and scribes (8:31a)
W . Be killed and after three days rise again (8:31b)
X . Prophecy of second coming (9:1)- Jesus tells the disciples that some of them would not taste death until they saw the kingdom of God coming with power.
B' .The Transfiguration of Jesus (9:2-3)
C' .The voice of God from heaven, "This is my beloved son" (9:7)
D' . Jesus talks to Elijah and Moses then to the disciples about Elijah (9:4-13)
E' .A great multitude was amazed at Jesus (9:15)
F' .Jesus cast out a dumb spirit (9:17-27)
G' .They shall kill the Son of man and he shall rise on the third day (9:31)
H' .Jesus clarifies his divine status, saying that he is not God: "Why call me good? There is none good but God" (10:18)
I' . Peter says the disciples have left all and followed Jesus (10:28)
J' . Those who have left their family for Jesus have a new family: all Jesus' followers (10:29-30)
K'. Jesus rebukes the 'sons of thunder', James and John (10:35-45 - cf 3:17)
L' .Blind Bartimaeus cries out for mercy and casts off his clothes, then Jesus heals him (10:46-52)
M' .Jesus comes into Jerusalem (11:1-10)
-- Where he will die
N' .Jesus misunderstands the fig tree that can provide no fruit (11:13-14)
O' .Jesus casts out them that sold and bought in the Temple and curses them for making the Temple a den of thieves (11:15-17)
-- Jesus is asserting his authority
P' .Jesus asks whether the baptism of John is from heaven or of men, and the priests, scribes and elders can not answer (11:30-33)
Q' .Parable of husbandmen who conspire to kill the vineyard owner's son (12:1-9)
X' .Prophecy of second coming (chapter 13)
-- on clouds of glory, within the lifetimes of some of those to whom he was speaking
R' .The Last Supper (14:17-25)
S' .Art thou the Christ, Son of God (14:61)
T' .Peter denies Jesus three times (14:66-72a)
U' .And when he thought thereon, Peter wept (14:72b)
V' .The chief priests, elders and scribes delivered Jesus to Pontius Pilate (15:1)
-- Delivering Jesus is a similar concept to rejecting him.
-- Both parts of the pair involve chief priests, elders and scribes
W' .Jesus dies and on the third day rises again (15:37, 16:6)
A' .The young man explains the departure of Jesus(16:6-8)
The consequence of this analysis is that the separate incidents reported in Mark might really have only been just one incident, which was repeated for emphasis, or even that the miracles did not really occur.
The Gideon Bible is provided in hotels.
There are two main incidents where Jews are mentioned in the bible were taken into slavery, in Egypt and in Babylon.
How many people are mnetioned in the bible? my name is mentioned in the bible
If you can trust The Biographical Bible there are 3237 people mentioned in the Bible. Ruth A. Tucker provides a chronological account of the Bible's people and events from Adam and Eve to John of Patmos.
In the entire bible there are 38 books named after people.
Manna is a type of food that, according to the Bible, was miraculously provided by God to the Israelites during their time in the desert after escaping from Egypt. It is significant in biblical history as a symbol of God's provision and care for his people, as well as a test of their faith and obedience.
The Gideon Bible is provided in hotels.
The bible says that Moses and the people had no food, so they were provided Manna.
No, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego were not eunuchs in the Bible. They were three Jewish men who were thrown into a fiery furnace by King Nebuchadnezzar but miraculously survived.
The English word manna (as in manna from Heaven) comes originally from Hebrew man, meaning a fluid exuded from a tamarisk tree; it came to mean spiritual nourishment because the word was used in the Bible for a food substance miraculously provided to the Children of Israel when wandering in the wilderness.
There are two main incidents where Jews are mentioned in the bible were taken into slavery, in Egypt and in Babylon.
Yes, according to the Bible, Jesus miraculously had access to water in the desert by turning water into wine at the wedding in Cana.
Elijah did.
It is not. A lot of "scare-you-into-salvation" Christians try to convince people that 9/11 occurred because Americans are wicked and that this heinous act of terrorists was punishment handed down from God. Do not be misled by such nonsense. 9/11 was a hate filled attack on American ideals and nothing else.
In the Bible story where Jesus heals a blind man by putting mud in his eye and his sight is miraculously restored (Mark 8)
At least these and perhaps more:Jesus' descent into hellJonah in the whale
The literal meaning of the word "manna" is "What is it?" It refers to the food that miraculously appeared to feed the Israelites during their time in the wilderness as described in the Bible.