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Text -- Leviticus 11:16 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB: Lev 11:13-19 - -- All birds of prey are particularly ranked in the class unclean; all those which feed on flesh and carrion. No less than twenty species of birds, all p...
All birds of prey are particularly ranked in the class unclean; all those which feed on flesh and carrion. No less than twenty species of birds, all probably then known, are mentioned under this category, and the inference follows that all which are not mentioned were allowed; that is, fowls which subsist on vegetable substances. From our imperfect knowledge of the natural history of Palestine, Arabia, and the contiguous countries at that time, it is not easy to determine exactly what some of the prohibited birds were; although they must have been all well known among the people to whom these laws were given.
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JFB: Lev 11:13-19 - -- Hebrew, "bone-breaker," rendered in the Septuagint "griffon," supposed to be the Gypœtos barbatus, the Lammer Geyer of the Swiss--a bird of the eagle...
Hebrew, "bone-breaker," rendered in the Septuagint "griffon," supposed to be the Gypœtos barbatus, the Lammer Geyer of the Swiss--a bird of the eagle or vulture species, inhabiting the highest mountain ranges in Western Asia as well as Europe. It pursues as its prey the chamois, ibex, or marmot, among rugged cliffs, till it drives them over a precipice--thus obtaining the name of "bone-breaker."
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The black eagle, among the smallest, but swiftest and strongest of its kind.
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It is generally supposed the ostrich is denoted by the original word.
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JFB: Lev 11:16 - -- A very small bird, with which, from its nocturnal habits, many superstitious ideas were associated.
A very small bird, with which, from its nocturnal habits, many superstitious ideas were associated.
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JFB: Lev 11:16 - -- Evidently some other bird is meant by the original term, from its being ranged among rapacious birds. DR. SHAW thinks it is the safsaf; but that, bein...
Evidently some other bird is meant by the original term, from its being ranged among rapacious birds. DR. SHAW thinks it is the safsaf; but that, being a graminivorous and gregarious bird, is equally objectionable. Others think that the sea mew, or some of the small sea fowl, is intended.
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JFB: Lev 11:16 - -- The Hebrew word includes every variety of the falcon family--as the goshawk, the jerhawk, the sparrow hawk, &c. Several species of hawks are found in ...
The Hebrew word includes every variety of the falcon family--as the goshawk, the jerhawk, the sparrow hawk, &c. Several species of hawks are found in Western Asia and Egypt, where they find inexhaustible prey in the immense numbers of pigeons and turtledoves that abound in those quarters. The hawk was held pre-eminently sacred among the Egyptians; and this, besides its rapacious disposition and gross habits, might have been a strong reason for its prohibition as an article of food to the Israelites.
Clarke: Lev 11:16 - -- The owl - בת היענה bath haiyaanah , the daughter of vociferation, the female ostrich, probably so called from the noise they make. "In the l...
The owl -
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Clarke: Lev 11:16 - -- The night hawk - תחמס tachmas , from חמס chamas , to force away, act violently and unjustly; supposed by Bochart and Scheuchzer to signify ...
The night hawk -
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Clarke: Lev 11:16 - -- The cuckoo - שחף shachaph , supposed rather to mean the sea mew; called shachaph, from שחפת shachepheth , a wasting distemper, or atrophy, ...
The cuckoo -
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Clarke: Lev 11:16 - -- And the hawk - נץ nets , from the root נצה natsah , to shoot forth or spring forward, because of the rapidity and length of its flight, the h...
And the hawk -
TSK -> Lev 11:16
TSK: Lev 11:16 - -- Deu 14:15-18; Psa 102:6; Isa 13:21, Isa 13:22, Isa 34:11-15; Joh 3:19-21; Eph 2:2, Eph 2:3, Eph 4:18, Eph 4:19, Eph 5:7-11; Phi 3:18, Phi 3:19; 1Th 5:...
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Lev 11:13-19
Barnes: Lev 11:13-19 - -- As far as they can be identified, the birds here mentioned are such as live upon animal food. They were those which the Israelites might have been t...
As far as they can be identified, the birds here mentioned are such as live upon animal food. They were those which the Israelites might have been tempted to eat, either from their being easy to obtain, or from the example of other nations, and which served as types of the entire range of prohibited kinds.
The eagle - Rather, the great vulture, which the Egyptians are known to have ranked as the first among birds. Compare 2Sa 1:23; Psa 103:5; Pro 23:5, etc.
The Ossifrage, or bone-breaker, was the lammer-geyer, and the "ospray"(a corruption of ossifrage) the sea-eagle.
The vulture - Rather, the (black) kite Isa 34:15 : "the kite,"rather the red kite, remarkable for its piercing sight Job 28:7.
Every raven after his kind - i. e. the whole family of corvidae.
And the owl ... - Rather, "and the ostrich, and the owl, and the gull, and the hawk,"etc.
The swan - More probably the ibis, the sacred bird of the Egyptians. "The gier eagle"is most likely the Egyptian vulture, a bird of unprepossessing appearance and disgusting habits, but fostered by the Egyptians as a useful scavenger.
The heron ... the lapwing - Rather, the great plover the hoopoe, so called from its peculiar cry.
Poole -> Lev 11:16
Poole: Lev 11:16 - -- The owl Heb. the daughter of the owl , which he mentions as the best of the kind both for sex and age, and therefore more desired for food than the ...
The owl Heb. the daughter of the owl , which he mentions as the best of the kind both for sex and age, and therefore more desired for food than the elder or males. And it is hereby implied, that the very youngest and best of all the other kinds are forbidden, and much more the rest.
Haydock -> Lev 11:16
Haydock: Lev 11:16 - -- Ostrich; which was served up at the tables of the Persian kings. Hebrew, "the daughter of the hiena;" ( both eiane ) or the swan, Isaias xiii. 21. -...
Ostrich; which was served up at the tables of the Persian kings. Hebrew, "the daughter of the hiena;" ( both eiane ) or the swan, Isaias xiii. 21. ---
Owl, or perhaps the male ostrich, which cruelly abandons its young. ---
Larus, the water-hen. (Calmet) ---
Some have the cuckow. (Haydock)
Gill -> Lev 11:16
Gill: Lev 11:16 - -- And the owl,.... The great and little owls being after mentioned, it seems best, by the word here used, to understand the "ostrich" with the Septuagin...
And the owl,.... The great and little owls being after mentioned, it seems best, by the word here used, to understand the "ostrich" with the Septuagint, Vulgate Latin, the Oriental versions, and the Targums of Onkelos and Jonathan: the account which Pliny p gives of the African and Ethiopic ostriches is this; that they are the largest of birds, and almost of the kind of beasts; that they exceed the height of a horseman on horseback, and are swifter than the horses; that their wings are given them to help them in their running, otherwise they are not flying fowls, nor are they lifted up from the earth. Their hoofs are like to those of harts, with which they fight, and are cloven, and serve to gather up stones, which in their flight they throw with their feet against them that follow them; they have a wonderful concoction, digesting whatever is swallowed down; and, according to Galen q, all the parts of them, their flesh and their eggs, are hard and difficult of digestion, and excermentitious: Aben Ezra says r, their flesh is as dry as a stick, and it is not usual to eat it, for there is no moisture in it; and therefore nothing can be eaten of the whole species, but the daughter or young one, for that being a female and little, there is some moisture in it; but not so the male when little; wherefore as the flesh of this creature is always reckoned by the Jews as unlawful to be eaten, it may the rather be supposed to be intended here, since if not here, it cannot be thought to be any where observed; and yet we find that both the eggs and the flesh of this creature have been eaten by some people: their eggs with the Indians were reckoned delicate eating, as Aelianus s reports; and near the Arabians and Ethiopians were a people, as both Diodorus Siculus t and Strabo u relate, who were called Struthophagi, from their living on ostriches; and they eat them in Peru, where they are common w; and in several parts of Africa, as Nubia, Numidia, and Lybia, as Leo Africanus x relates:
and the night hawk; which, according to Pliny y, is sometimes called "cymindis", and is seldom to be found in woods, sees not so well in the day time, and wages a deadly war with the eagle, and they are often found joined together: Bochart z who thinks that the female ostrich is meant by the preceding bird, is of opinion that the male ostrich is meant here, there being no general name in the Hebrew language to comprehend both sexes:
and the cuckoo; a bird well known by its voice at least: some have thought it to be the same with the hawk, changing its figure and voice; but this has been refuted by naturalists a: but though it is here forbidden to be eaten, yet its young, when fat, are said to be of a grateful savour by Aristotle: and Pliny b says, no bird is to be compared to it for the sweetness of its flesh, though perhaps it may not be here intended: the word is by the Septuagint rendered a "sea gull", and so it is by Ainsworth, and which is approved of by Bochart c:
and the hawk after his kind; a well known bird, of which, according to Aristotle d, there are not less than ten sorts: Pliny e says sixteen; it has its name in Hebrew from flying, it being a bird that flies very swiftly; see Job 39:26 the hawk was a symbol of deity with the Egyptians, and was reverenced and worshipped by them f.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Lev 11:1-47
TSK Synopsis: Lev 11:1-47 - --1 What beasts may;4 and what may not be eaten.9 What fishes.13 What fowls.29 The creeping things which are unclean.
MHCC -> Lev 11:1-47
MHCC: Lev 11:1-47 - --These laws seem to have been intended, 1. As a test of the people's obedience, as Adam was forbidden to eat of the tree of knowledge; and to teach the...
Matthew Henry -> Lev 11:9-19
Matthew Henry: Lev 11:9-19 - -- Here is, 1. A general rule concerning fishes, which were clean and which not. All that had fins and scales they might eat, and only those odd sorts ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Lev 11:16-19
Keil-Delitzsch: Lev 11:16-19 - --
היּענה בּת , i.e., either daughter of screaming ( Bochart ), or daughter of greediness ( Gesenius , etc.), is used according to all the anc...
Constable: Lev 1:1--16:34 - --I. The public worship of the Israelites chs. 1--16
Leviticus continues revelation concerning the second of three...
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Constable: Lev 11:1--15:33 - --C. Laws relating to ritual cleanliness chs. 11-15
A change of subject matter indicates another major div...
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Constable: Lev 11:1-47 - --1. Uncleanness due to contact with certain animals ch. 11
"This chapter contains a selected list...
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