To the latter, God reveals the reason for which Melchizedek will be considered "without father or mother, without genealogy, without beginning of days or end of life" (
Hebr. 7:3).
(
Hebr. raqiya = "expanse," "something stretched out," i.e.
Press, 2013], 213-36); and Chaim Nissim, "The Historiography of Syria in the Late Mamluk Period and the Beginning of the Ottoman Period: The Historical Writings of Shams al-Din Muhammad Ibn Tulun (1475-1546)" (in
Hebr.), Ph.D.
Hebr. 5 Nec quisquam assumit sibi honorem, nisi qui vocatur a Deo tan?uam Aaron.
69b and Wien--Oesterreichische Nationalbibliothek Cod
hebr. 101, fol.
[33:6], und durch desselben krafft noch alle geschi5pff erhalten werden,
Hebr. 1 [1:3] und am 8.
But, too few grandmothers survived to bear witness and to live on the threshold of Life and Death, on the dividing line, the Rakia (
Hebr. Horizon) (19) between experience and perception, trying to bridge the gap between history, memory and reality.
Considering the exemplary part that martyred saints play in the Christian Church (
Hebr. 12: 1), this component of the sacred in the bullfight is important--and in Hemingway's fiction corridas usually occur in religious fiestas in honor of various saints (DIA 33).