In an earlier incarnation many, many years ago, I would be getting ready to celebrate Passover . This is the holiday that commemorates Yahweh's liberation of the children of Israel from enslavement in Egypt (long before the Arabs got there). Yahweh did this, according to the Good Book, by inflicting collective punishments on the Egyptian people -- ranging from turning the Nile River and other water sources into blood, to sending swarms of frogs, gnats, flies, and locusts throughout the land, to killing all first-born persons and cattle, even those of slaves (non-Israelites, presumably) -- 10 "plagues" in all. As unjust as that collective punishment seems, it was Yahweh's response to the recalcitrance of Egypt's absolute ruler, the Pharaoh. According to the story, he repeatedly changed his mind about "letting [the Israelite] people go" after promising Moses he would do so. That's why Egypt, that is, all Egyptians, kept getting hit with plagues. Howe...
Interesting question. You should do a couple of searches say on google.com and ecosia.com. There are of course answers from "the usual suspects" such as christianity.com and crosswalk.com, but also discussion threads on reddit.com and quora.com. Merriam-webster.com says the adjective god-fearing was first used in 1548 but doesn't provide a quote or citation, whereas etymonline.com notes it's from 1759 but also without a reference.
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