NETBible KJV GRK-HEB XRef Names Arts Hymns

Job 9:31

9:31

plunge <02881> [shalt.]

clothes <08008> [mine.]

abhor <08581> [abhor me. or, make me to be abhorred.]


Job 30:19

30:19

He ... flung ..... mud <03384 02563> [cast me.]

dust <06083> [dust.]


Psalms 38:5-7

38:5

wounds <02250> [My wounds.]

The soul being invisible, its distempers are also so; therefore the sacred writers describe them by the distempers of the body. (See the Parallel Texts on these verses.) On reading these and similar passages, say Bp. Lowth, some, who were but little acquainted with the genius of Hebrew poetry, have pretended to enquire into the nature of the disease with which the poet was afflicted; not less absurdly, in my opinion, than if they had perplexed themselves to discover in what river he was plunged, when he complains that "the deep waters had gone over his soul."


38:6

dazed <05753> [troubled. Heb. wearied. bowed.]

mourning <06937> [mourning.]


38:7

<03689> [my loins.]

sick <04974> [no.]

3


Lamentations 3:16

3:16

ground <01638> [broken.]

gravel <02687> [gravel.]

ground ....... trampled <01638 03728> [he hath.]

trampled ..... dust <0665 03728> [covered me with ashes. or, rolled me in the ashes.]


Malachi 2:2

2:2

listen <08085> [ye will not hear.]

take ...................................... taking <07760> [if ye will not lay.]

need <05414> [to give.]

judgment <0779> [and I.]

judgment <0779> [I have cursed. By sending them unfruitful seasons.]


Malachi 2:1

2:1


Colossians 4:13

4:13

I can testify <3140> [I bear.]

Laodicea <2993> [Laodicea.]

Laodicea and Hierapolis were both cities of Phrygia in Asia Minor, between which, and equidistant from each, was situated Colosse. Laodicea was seated near the Lycus, about 63 miles east of Ephesus; and became one of the largest and richest towns in Phrygia, vying in power with the maritime cities. It is now called Eski-hissar, the old castle; and besides the whole surface within the city's wall being strewed with pedestals and fragments, the ruins of an amphitheatre, a magnificent odeum, and other public buildings, attest its former splendour and magnificence. But, when visited by Dr. Chandler, all was silence and solitude; and a fox, first discovered by his ears peeping over a brow, was the only inhabitant of Laodicea. Hierapolis, now Pambouk-Kaiesi, was situated, according to the Itinerary, six miles N. of Laodicea; and its ruins are now about a mile and a half in circumference.




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