
Text -- Leviticus 11:21 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Lev 11:21-22
JFB: Lev 11:21-22 - -- Nothing short of a scientific description could convey more accurately the nature "of the locust after its kind." They were allowed as lawful food to ...
Nothing short of a scientific description could convey more accurately the nature "of the locust after its kind." They were allowed as lawful food to the Israelites, and they are eaten by the Arabs, who fry them in olive oil. When sprinkled with salt, dried, smoked, and fried, they are said to taste not unlike red herrings.
Clarke -> Lev 11:21
Clarke: Lev 11:21 - -- Which have legs above their feet - This appears to refer to the different kinds of locusts and grasshoppers, which have very remarkable hind legs, l...
Which have legs above their feet - This appears to refer to the different kinds of locusts and grasshoppers, which have very remarkable hind legs, long, and with high joints, projecting above their backs, by which they are enabled to spring up from the ground, and leap high and far.

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Lev 11:21
Barnes: Lev 11:21 - -- Legs above their feet, to leap withal upon the earth - The families of the Saltatoria, of which the common cricket, the common grasshopper, and...
Legs above their feet, to leap withal upon the earth - The families of the Saltatoria, of which the common cricket, the common grasshopper, and the migratory locust, may be taken as types.
Poole -> Lev 11:21
Poole: Lev 11:21 - -- Which have legs above their feet The truth of this translation may seem evident, both from the following clause, to
leap withal and especially from...
Which have legs above their feet The truth of this translation may seem evident, both from the following clause, to
leap withal and especially from the next verse, where one of this kind is the locusts , which, as it is manifest, have two legs wherewith they leap, besides the four feet upon which they walk. The adverb lo is here put for the pronoun lo , as it is also 1Ch 11:20 , compared with 2Sa 23:18 . Others take the words as they lie, and read them negatively, which have not legs upon their feet , and so the sense may be this, That they might eat the locusts, grasshoppers, &c. when they were very young, and therefore more wholesome for food; for they are born without legs, Plin. Nat. Hist. 11.29, or their legs at first are very small, and scarce to be discerned, and in effect none. And the canon of the Jews in this matter is this, Those which yet have not wings and legs may be eaten, though they be such as afterward would have them .
Haydock -> Lev 11:21
Haydock: Lev 11:21 - -- Walketh. Hebrew adds lo, "not." But the Massorets read lu, "to it," agreeably to the Vulgate. (Calmet) ---
Protestant version, "Yet these may...
Walketh. Hebrew adds lo, "not." But the Massorets read lu, "to it," agreeably to the Vulgate. (Calmet) ---
Protestant version, "Yet these may ye eat, of every flying creeping thing that goeth upon all four, which have legs above their feet, to leap withal upon the earth."
Gill -> Lev 11:21
Gill: Lev 11:21 - -- Yet these may ye eat,.... Which are after described and named:
of every flying creeping thing that goeth upon all four; even though it is a creepi...
Yet these may ye eat,.... Which are after described and named:
of every flying creeping thing that goeth upon all four; even though it is a creeping thing that flies and goes upon four feet, provided they be such:
which have legs above their feet, to leap withal upon the earth; there is a double reading of this clause; the textual reading is, "which have not legs", and is followed by several interpreters and translators; and the marginal reading, which we follow, is, "which have legs"; and both are to be regarded as true, and written by Moses, as Ainsworth observes; for locusts are born without legs, and yet creep low, as Pliny asserts z, and they have them afterwards; and it is a canon of the Jews, that what have not legs or wings now, or have not wings to cover the greatest part of them, but shall have after a time when grown up, these are as free (to eat) now, as when grown up a. Dr. Shaw thinks b the words may bear this construction, "which have knees upon" or "above their hinder legs, to leap withal upon the earth"; and applying this to the locust afterwards, and only instanced in, he observes, that this has the two hindermost of its legs and feet much stronger, larger, and longer than any of the foremost. In them the knee, or the articulation of the leg and thigh, is distinguished by a remarkable bending or curvature, whereby it is able, whenever prepared, to jump, to spring, or raise itself up with great force and activity. And these Aristotle c calls the leaping parts; and though he attributes to the locust six feet, as does also Pliny d, yet he takes the two leaping parts into the account; whereas Moses distinguishes those two from the four feet; and so Austin e observes, that Moses does not reckon among the feet the two hinder thighs with which locusts leap, which he calls clean, and thereby distinguishes them from such unclean flying creatures which do not leap with their thighs, such as beetles; and so the Jewish writers always describe a clean locust as having four feet, and two legs, thighs, or knees. Maimonides f gives three signs of them, which are these, whatsoever has four feet and four wings, which cover the greatest part of its body in length, and the greatest part of the compass of it, and has two thighs or knees to leap with, they are of the clean kind; and although its head is long, and it hath a tail, if its name is "chagob" (a locust) it is clean.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

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 11:20-42
Matthew Henry: Lev 11:20-42 - -- Here is the law, 1. Concerning flying insects, as flies, wasps, bees, etc.; these they might not eat (Lev 11:20), nor indeed are they fit to be eate...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Lev 11:20-23
Keil-Delitzsch: Lev 11:20-23 - --
(cf. Deu 14:19). To the birds there are appended flying animals of other kinds: " all swarms of fowl that go upon fours, "i.e., the smaller winged a...
Constable: Lev 1:1--16:34 - --I. The public worship of the Israelites chs. 1--16
Leviticus continues revelation concerning the second of three...

Constable: Lev 11:1--15:33 - --C. Laws relating to ritual cleanliness chs. 11-15
A change of subject matter indicates another major div...

Constable: Lev 11:1-47 - --1. Uncleanness due to contact with certain animals ch. 11
"This chapter contains a selected list...
