Matthew is not in the Jewish Bible.
If your Faith was not higher than that of the Pharisees you would not go to Heaven
It is not found in the bible worded this way, however, it is derived from Matthew 7:12: 12 So in everything, do to others what you would have them do to you, for this sums up the Law and the Prophets. New International Version Luke 6:31 Do unto others as you would have them do to you.
One meaningful first communion Bible verse that is often recommended for a child's special day is Matthew 26:26-28, where Jesus says, "Take and eat; this is my body... Drink from it, all of you. This is my blood of the covenant, which is poured out for many for the forgiveness of sins." This verse highlights the significance of the Eucharist and the sacrifice Jesus made for our salvation.
King Herod was told that the ruler would come from Bethleham in Judea. In Matthew chapter 2 verse 6.
Matthew 12:25, Mark 3:25, Luke 11:17
Matthew did! Lol
There is no first color to learn. I would say let your kids learn through learning in real life.
In music Binary, Ternary and Rondo are like the layout of a song. So say A represents a verse, B a chorus and C would represent a Bridge! Binary would be A,B (Verse, chorus) Ternary would be A,B,A (Verse, chorus, verse) Then Rondo would be A,B,A,C,A (Verse, chorus, verse, bridge, verse)
No verse is Father of the Israelites. It can be argued that Jacob is, however Abraham was the first called by God and it was he who was promised that God would make his descendants as many as the stars.
The wording of your question is somewhat confusing. Perhaps this answer will suffice: Matthew and John were among Jesus' original "chosen twelve," so, of the gospel writers, they would have been the first to evangelize when Jesus sent the disciples out under the "limited commission" (see Matthew chapter 10, beginning with verse 5). However, none of the gospels were written in Hebrew. The original language of all the gospels is Greek.
First, I would learn to spell 'smarter' and learn when to use 'than' and 'then' correctly.
There is, of course, no hidden verse in Matthew's genealogy of Jesus, but there is arguably a hidden meaning. Matthew wanted to demonstrate that Jesus was destined for greatness. To do this, he produced a genealogy that demonstrated that there were 14 generations: from Abraham to David; from David to Josiah; from Josiah to Jesus. To do this, he had to ignore 3 kings in the Old Testament and have David in the preceding (as 14) and following (as 1) groups, but not so Josiah. This continued from the time of the Exile to Jesus, but during these generations we have no other genealogy with which to compare Matthew's. Fourteen was regarded as a magic number, and the apparent coincidence that each fourteenth generation in this genealogy was a great man in Jewish history, meant that Jesus would also be a great man. Matthew wrote; ".....in all, forty-two generations (1: 17) but only 41 are listed, so there must be a missing or hidden verse somewhere.