Hanokh$96709$ - translation to ισπανικά
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Διαδικτυακό λεξικό

Hanokh$96709$ - translation to ισπανικά

BIBLICAL FIGURE, SON OF JARED, ANTEDILUVIAN PATRIARCH, FIRST WITNESS OF RAPTURE
Hanokh; Enoch, ancestor of Noah; St Enoch; Chanokh; User:力/old/Enoch (disambiguation); St. Enoch; Enoch (Bible); Henosch; Enoch (Biblical figure); Enock; Enochic; Enochic traditions; Enoch (ancestor of Noah); Saint Enoch
  • ''Elijah and Enoch'' – seventeenth-century icon, Historic Museum in Sanok, Poland
  • Patriarch Enoch, a [[fresco]] by [[Theophanes the Greek]], 14th century.
  • Enoch, [[lithograph]] by [[William Blake]], 1807.

Hanokh      
n. Janoj (nombre hebreo)

Βικιπαίδεια

Enoch

Enoch ( (listen)) is a biblical figure and patriarch prior to Noah's flood, and the son of Jared and father of Methuselah. He was of the Antediluvian period in the Hebrew Bible.

The text of the Book of Genesis says Enoch lived 365 years before he was taken by God. The text reads that Enoch "walked with God: and he was no more; for God took him" (Gen 5:21–24), which is interpreted as Enoch's entering heaven alive in some Jewish and Christian traditions, and interpreted differently in others.

Enoch is the subject of many Jewish and Christian traditions. He was considered the author of the Book of Enoch and also called the scribe of judgment. In the New Testament, Enoch is referenced in the Gospel of Luke, the Epistle to the Hebrews, and in the Epistle of Jude, the last of which also quotes from it. In the Catholic Church, Eastern Orthodoxy, and Oriental Orthodoxy, he is venerated as a saint. In Islam, Enoch is identified with Idris (Arabic: إدريس, romanized: ʾIdrīs) and is considered a prophet.

The name of Enoch (Hebrew: חֲנוֹךְ Ḥănōḵ) derives from the Hebrew root חנך (ḥ-n-ḵ), meaning to train, initiate, dedicate, inaugurate, with חֲנוֹךְ/חֲנֹךְ (Ḥănōḵ) being the imperative form of the verb.