Definition: The word "agitator" in Old Testament Greek is translated to English as "agitate" or "distract," which both refers to an action that causes another person to become disεε¨ζεδ½γ The Hebrew term for this word from the Old Testament, however, is "rampant agitator." This term appears twice in the Septuagint Bible: 1. In Deuteronomy 21:26-27, the Israelites were told not to be "agitated" by their leader or king (a reference to Nebuchadnezzar and his reign). The King of Babylon was described as agitate the people and lead them astray. 2. In Numbers 23:4, Jacob, who was a man of the house of Israel but not his father's, said that he "agitated" his brother Esau by his words (the meaning is uncertain). In both cases, the reference to agitate is to cause someone to become disεε¨ζεδ½οΌη±»δΌΌδΊη°δ»£ζ±θ―δΈηβδ½Ώβ¦β¦θ΅·εβεβδ½Ώβ¦β¦ζΏε¨βγ
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