This book has been designed to help answer the questions such as: How are the manifestations of God alike in both the Tanakh (Old Testament) and the Brit Chadashah (New Testament)? Do both reveal how Jews and Gentiles have equal access to the Rock of Salvation? Did Yeshua (Jesus) quote and teach from the Tanakh? Did women follow Yeshua from town to town during His itinerant ministry?
Tracing all the pre-colonial representations of "Hottentots" and "Hottentotism" operative in early-modern England allows us to see the birth and the development of a prejudice that became central to the nation. In their constructions of "Hottentots" the English found a way to vent their own fear, anger, and conflict about themselves and their society, particularly as they were transforming and redefining their nation as imperial Great Britain. The very invention of the "Hottentots" shows that the English needed to envision a worst people in order to imagine themselves as the world's most advanced people."--BOOK JACKET.
This book has been designed to help answer the questions such as: How are the manifestations of God alike in both the Tanakh (Old Testament) and the Brit Chadashah (New Testament)? Do both reveal how Jews and Gentiles have equal access to the Rock of Salvation? Did Yeshua (Jesus) quote and teach from the Tanakh? Did women follow Yeshua from town to town during His itinerant ministry?
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