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Smith's Bible Dictionary.pdf - Online Christian Library

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<strong>Smith's</strong> <strong>Bible</strong> <strong>Dictionary</strong><br />

They were placed at the bend of the left arm. Those worn on the forehead were written on four<br />

strips of parchment, and put into four little cells within a square case on which the letter was written.<br />

The square had two thongs, on which Hebrew letters were inscribed. That phylacteries were used<br />

as amulets is certain, and was very natural. The expression “they make broad their phylacteries,”<br />

(Matthew 23:5) refers not so much to the phylactery itself, which seems to have been of a prescribed<br />

breadth, as to the case in which the parchment was kept, which the Pharisees, among their other<br />

pretentious customs, (Mark 7:3,4; Luke 5:33) etc., made as conspicuous as they could. It is said<br />

that the Pharisees wore them always, whereas the common people only used them at prayers.<br />

Fuller<br />

The trade of the fullers, so far as it is mentioned in Scripture, appears to have consisted chiefly<br />

in cleansing garments and whitening them. The process of fulling or cleansing clothes consisted<br />

in treading or stamping on the garments with the feet or with bats in tubs of water, in which some<br />

alkaline substance answering the purpose of soap had been dissolved. The substances used for this<br />

purpose which are mentioned in Scripture are natron, (Proverbs 25:20; Jeremiah 2:22) and soap.<br />

(Malachi 3:2) Other substances also are mentioned as being employed in cleansing, which, together<br />

with alkali, seem to identify the Jewish with the Roman process, as urine and chalk. The process<br />

of whitening garments was performed by rubbing into them calk or earth of some kind. Creta<br />

cimolia (cimolite) was probably the earth most frequently used. The trade of the fullers, as causing<br />

offensive smells, and also as requiring space for drying clothes, appears to have been carried on at<br />

Jerusalem outside the city.<br />

Fullers Field, The<br />

a spot near Jerusalem, (2 Kings 8:17; Isaiah 7:3; 36:2) so close to the walls that a person speaking<br />

from there could be heard on them. (2 Kings 18:17,26) One resort of the fullers of Jerusalem would<br />

seem to have been below the city on the southeast side. But Rabshakeh and his “great host” must<br />

have come from the north; and the fuller’s field was therefore, to judge from this circumstance, on<br />

the table-land on the northern side of the city.<br />

Funerals<br />

[Burial, Sepulchres]<br />

Furlong<br />

[Weights And Measures AND Measures]<br />

Furnace<br />

Various kinds of furnaces are noticed in the <strong>Bible</strong>, such as a smelting or calcining furnace,<br />

(Genesis 19:28; Exodus 9:8,10; 19:18) especially a lime-kiln, (Isaiah 33:12; Amos 2:1) a refining<br />

furnace, (Proverbs 17:3) Nebuchadnezzar’s furnace, a large furnace built like a brick-kiln, (Daniel<br />

3:22,23) with two openings one at the top for putting in the materials, and another below for<br />

removing them; the potter’s furnace, Ecclus. 27:5; The blacksmith’s furnace. Ecclus. 38:28. The<br />

Persians were in the habit of using the furnace as a means of inflicting punishment. (Daniel 3:22,23;<br />

Jeremiah 29:22)<br />

Gaal<br />

(contempt), son of Ebed, aided the Shechemites in their rebellion against Abimelech. (Judges<br />

9:1) ... (B.C. 1206.)<br />

218<br />

William Smith

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