Matthew 27:30
Numbers 12:14
spit <03417> [spit.]
Shut .............. brought back <05462 0622> [let her be.]
Deuteronomy 25:9
sandal <05275 02502> [loose his shoe.]
Pulling off the shoe seems to express his being degraded to the situation of slaves, who generally went barefoot; and spitting in or rather before, (biphney) his face, was a mark of the utmost ignominy.
spit <03417> [spit.]
done <06213> [So shall.]
Job 30:9-11
taunt song <05058> [am I.]
detest me ..... distance <08581 07368> [abhor me.]
me ..... distance <07368> [flee far.]
hesitate ... spit .... face <07536 06440 02820> [spare not to spit in my face. Heb. withhold not spittle from my face.]
untied <06605> [loosed.]
throw off <07971> [let loose.]
Isaiah 50:6
offered <05414> [gave.]
jaws <03895> [my cheeks.]
The eastern people always held the beard in great veneration; and to pluck a man's beard is one of the grossest indignities that can be offered. D'Arvieux gives a remarkable instance of an Arab, who, having received a wound in his jaw, chose to hazard his life rather than suffer the surgeon to cut off his beard. See Note on 2 Sa 10:4.
out ... beard <04803> [that plucked.]
hide <05641> [I hid.]
Another instance of the utmost contempt and detestation. Throughout the East it is highly offensive to spit in any one's presence; and if this is such an indignity, how much more spitting in the face?
Isaiah 52:14
many <07227> [many.]
sight <04758> [his visage.]
Isaiah 53:3
despised ....................... despised <0959> [despised.]
people one <0376> [a man.]
hid ... faces <06440 04564> [we hid as it were our faces from him. or, he hid as it were, his face from us. Heb. as a hiding of faces from him or from us. we esteemed.]
Mark 14:65
Mark 15:19
they struck <5180> [they smote.]
and ............ and ..... Then ... knelt down <2532 5087> [and bowing.]
Mark 15:1
<2112> [straightway.]
and ....... and ........... and handed ... over <2532 3860> [and delivered.]
Colossians 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.
Hebrews 12:2
keeping ... eyes fixed <872> [Looking.]
pioneer <747> [the author. or, the beginner.]
perfecter <5051> [finisher.]
For <473> [for.]
he endured <5278> [endured.]
disregarding <2706> [despising.]
and ..................... has taken ... seat <2532 5037 2523> [and is.]