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Examples
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The image, of course, is the Garden of Eden, and the tree is what the Torah calls the etz chaim, the tree of life.
Rabbi Sid Schwarz: Food Fight: A Kol Nidre Call for Sustainable Consumption 2010
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The image, of course, is the Garden of Eden, and the tree is what the Torah calls the etz chaim, the tree of life.
Rabbi Sid Schwarz: Food Fight: A Kol Nidre Call for Sustainable Consumption 2010
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The image, of course, is the Garden of Eden, and the tree is what the Torah calls the etz chaim, the tree of life.
Rabbi Sid Schwarz: Food Fight: A Kol Nidre Call for Sustainable Consumption 2010
-
The image, of course, is the Garden of Eden, and the tree is what the Torah calls the etz chaim, the tree of life.
Rabbi Sid Schwarz: Food Fight: A Kol Nidre Call for Sustainable Consumption 2010
-
The image, of course, is the Garden of Eden, and the tree is what the Torah calls the etz chaim, the tree of life.
Rabbi Sid Schwarz: Food Fight: A Kol Nidre Call for Sustainable Consumption 2010
-
The image, of course, is the Garden of Eden, and the tree is what the Torah calls the etz chaim, the tree of life.
Rabbi Sid Schwarz: Food Fight: A Kol Nidre Call for Sustainable Consumption 2010
-
The image, of course, is the Garden of Eden, and the tree is what the Torah calls the etz chaim, the tree of life.
Rabbi Sid Schwarz: Food Fight: A Kol Nidre Call for Sustainable Consumption 2010
-
The image, of course, is the Garden of Eden, and the tree is what the Torah calls the etz chaim, the tree of life.
Rabbi Sid Schwarz: Food Fight: A Kol Nidre Call for Sustainable Consumption 2010
-
The image, of course, is the Garden of Eden, and the tree is what the Torah calls the etz chaim, the tree of life.
Rabbi Sid Schwarz: Food Fight: A Kol Nidre Call for Sustainable Consumption 2010
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I've certainly done nothing of the sort, but it has often struck me that the Hebrew translations of Matthew that I have seen cited, as in Hebrew Gospel of Matthew by George Howard (though not these ones) refer to Jesus 'crucifixion as talu oto al etz, or "hanging him on a tree," or gallows, the same expression used in Esther chapter 9 to refer to Haman and his sons being hung on gallows.
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