Citations:Chronist


 * 1862, Samuel Davidson, An Introduction to the Old Testament: Critical, Historical and Theological, Containing a Discussion of the Most Important Questions Belonging to the Several Books, page 144:
 * 13) are also like the Chronist. The Persian kings are again called Kings of Assyria (ix. 32) as in Ezra vi. 22.
 * 1877, Johann Peter Lange, Philip Schaff, A Commentary on the Holy Scriptures: Chronicles, page 19:
 * b, the circumstance that the Chronist presents a mass of accounts for which we look in vain in the books of Kings; and c, the statement contained in 2 Chron. xxxiii.18 concerning Manasseh, that his prayer to God, and the words of ...
 * 1880, James Gracey Murphy, The Books of Chronicles, page 48:
 * ... as the former omits to state that they fastened his head in the temple of Dagon, and the latter does not mention that they fastened his body to the wall of Bethshan. The variations in the diction arise partly from the brevity at which the Chronist ...
 * 2013, Thomas Hartwell Horne, Samuel Davidson, An Introduction to the Critical Study and Knowledge of the Holy Scriptures, Cambridge University Press (ISBN 9781108068215), page 696:
 * 6-73., neither altering it in such a way as to make it appear a new document, nor having it so uniform as one might expect from the same author in the same work, and asks, Where in the Chronist can we find a similar example of a document ...