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Alborosie
3 years ago
13

How was the education Athenian boys received different from that of boys in Sparta?

History
1 answer:
andrezito [222]3 years ago
6 0

Answer:

Spartans were eductated to be just soldiers and to fight for the state, instead Athenian boys were educated in the Arts but also as soldiers like a democratic city state they were.

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What was the most common form of political organization used by early governments?
snow_lady [41]

Answer:

<h3>Constitutional Monarchy </h3>

Explanation:

constitutional Monarchy was the most common form of political organization used by early governments .

hope it is helpful to you ☺️

4 0
3 years ago
9. How did Jeroboam lead his people away from God?
ivanzaharov [21]

It began with the Age of the Judges, when Israel was a loose conglomerate of tribes, led by local judges. This led into the 120-year period of the united kingdom, when the 12 tribes were united together under a secession of monarchs (Saul, David, and Solomon). And then the country was split into two separate kingdoms, the southern nation of Judah, led by the Davidic kings, and the northern nation of Israel.

The king responsible for tearing the northern tribes away from the southern tribes was Jeroboam. He, with God’s blessing, successfully led a rebellion against Solomon’s son Rehoboam. However, despite God’s grace in his life, Jeroboam was not a faithful follower of God. Indeed, the Old Testament scriptures make it clear that following his coronation, Jeroboam quickly led the northern tribes into great sin and apostasy.

Jeroboam’s sins are spoken about in no uncertain terms. During Jeroboam’s life, it was prophesied that God would abandon Israel, “because of the sins of Jeroboam, who sinned and who made Israel sin.” (1 Kings 14:16) Later, when other kings of Israel sinned, it would be said about them that they did “evil in the sight of the Lord, and walked in the way of Jeroboam, and in his sin by which he had made Israel sin.” (1 Kings 15:34, 16:19, 16:26, etc.)

So what was the sin of Jeroboam? What was this great evil that he committed that doomed the northern nation of Israel to destruction, having made it forever unclean in the sight of God? Essentially, Jeroboam changed the worship God had commanded under the Law of Moses.

God had established a certain priesthood of the line of Aaron the Levite (cf. Exodus 28:1). He had established a pattern of worship in a single location, that location being originally the Tabernacle, and then later the Temple at Jerusalem. God had ordained that at the single altar consecrated under the Law, the Israelites should worship and make sacrifices to Him. He had further commanded that the Israelites, in their religion, never try to make a statue, or graven image, of Him; nor that they should ever worship or bow down to the same. (cf. Exodus 20:4-5) It is important to note that this command is distinct from the command not to worship other gods. (cf. Exodus 20:3)

Jeroboam, however, understanding that the Temple of God was in the southern nation of Judah, the nation he had split off of; and being of such little faith as to trust God to work things out for him; he decided that the wise course of action would be to build a new temple. Two actually, one in Bethel, on the border with Judah, and another in the northern city of Dan. (cf. 1 Kings 12:25-28). He went a step further and consecrated new priests, who were not Levites (1 Kings 12:31). He then made up new religious holidays (cf. 1 Kings 12:32-33).

We should note that in all of this, Jeroboam kept a semblance of remaining true to the religious heritage of his people. He continued to call on the name of God. He continued to believe in the exodus out of Egypt, and the nations salvation from slavery (cf. 1 Kings 12:28). There is even evidence that the northern nation continued to observe the sabbath day, and other such ceremonial customs from the Law. (cf. Amos 8:5). But still, in changing a part of God’s law, Jeroboam was held, by God, to be guilty of a great sin. God did not want His people to add to His word, or take away from His word, and He certainly did not want them deliberately breaking His commands to suit themselves (cf. Deuteronomy 5:32).

Christians today are not under the Law of Moses; we are under the Law of Christ (cf. Romans 8:2; Galatians 6:2) but the principle remains — God does not want us changing what He has given us (cf. Revelation 22:18-19; Galatians 1:8-9) We cannot simply add new offices to the church, create councils, holidays, manners of worship and the like. When we take what God has given us in Christ, and change it to suit ourselves, we are, like the kings of old, walking in the sins of Jeroboam, who made Israel to sin. Rather we must be true to the Gospel of Christ, without adding to it, or taking away from it. We must learn to speak where the Bible speaks and to be silent where the Bible is silent, lest, like Jeroboam we bring condemnation on ourselves.

Explanation:

4 0
3 years ago
Museum experience essay​
stich3 [128]
<h2>museums is a place of memory for most people go to museum to see some interesting things .mostly some go to museum to see some historical things early on the 70s and 60s etcetera .but the advantage of museum is some people are not allowed in other museum </h2>

8 0
3 years ago
What was the result of the battles at Lexington and Concord for the British and the colonists? ​
Oksana_A [137]

Answer:

The British wanted to destroy the weapons that the colonists hid, but the colonists fought back. This caused people to take either the side of patriots or loyalists. More people supported the patriots and loyalists started to fear the patriots because there were more of them and they were burning people's houses down.

8 0
3 years ago
How was a person’s job decided in the castle system?
Sergeeva-Olga [200]

Answer: it was passed down by the the father

Explanation: For thousands of years on the Indian subcontinent, a person's social class was determined by birth. Historians later called this the caste system. Caste members lived, ate, married, and worked with their own group. ... Members of each caste were obligated to look after one another, so each caste had its own support system

8 0
3 years ago
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