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Does the Bible ever speak of the sun moving backwards?
Question 1:
Does the Bible ever speak of the sun moving backwards?
A.
No
B.
Yes
These questions are from this test. Would you like to take a practice test?
Trivial Practice Quiz religion-faith - Test 9 | Englishfreetest.com
30 minutes
15 questions
Do test
Some questions from the same exam
How many letters are in the hebrew alphabet?
How many vowels are in the Hebrew alphabet ?
We consider there to be three Patriarchs in Judaism. Who were they?
In Judaism, who was Joshuas father?
On the first day of which month do Jews celebrate New Year?
Which Hebrew phrase is most commonly associated with the English expression Good Luck and/or Congratulations?
Who was the Baal Shem Tov ?
According to the second half of the Acts of the Apostles, what was Pauls name before God changed it?
The second chapter of the Gospel of Luke, Luke 2, tells us the story of Christs birth.
In the Old Testament, a man is said to have lived to be 969 years old.
There is a man in the Bible named Rehoboam who had 88 children.
There was an army mentioned in the Old Testament that consisted of men who were all left-handed and numbered 700.
Does the Bible ever speak of the sun moving backwards?
Which line gives the correct order of the first 5 books of the Old Testament?
What tribe of Israel was Moses born into?
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A Long-Lasting Love for Books
February 29 - Both in and around Pine Hill, Alfred Carlson,who has been teaching Russian literature at Pine Hill State University for twenty years, is probably best known as the owner of The Treasure Box, the town's oldest bookstore. The store has two unique features: it specializes in rare books and is open for business on Saturdays only. Evidently, walk-in sales make up only a small percentage of Mr. Carlson’s business; the bulk of the store’s revenue is generated by orders placed over the telephone or online by universities, museums, and private collectors.
On Sunday The Treasure Box will be celebrating its sixtieth anniversary. “When my mother, Willisa, opened the bookstore all those years ago on Green Edge Road, two blocks from here, she probably had no idea it would still be serving the public six decades later,” Mr. Carlson said. The store still displays the original sign over the doorway. The interior
retains
the living-room atmosphere it always had, with its mismatched tables and chairs. One section of the store is filled with books about baseball, an abiding passion of the Carlson family. On Friday nights the store becomes an informal social club. Not surprisingly, members tend to enjoy conversation about rare books, literature, and baseball.
Later this month Mr. Carlson will mark another milestone: he will be retiring from his teaching position. His retirement does not mean, however, that The Treasure Box will see extended business hours; it will continue to be open once a week. “I am not retiring from one job just so that I can spend more time on another,” Mr. Carlson said. “Rather, the fact that I no longer will have to prepare for classes or grade students’ papers means that I will be able to dedicate more time to my children and grandchildren.”