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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 />

water-pipes with their rubbish, build in the windows and under the beams of the roof, and would<br />

stuff your hat full of stubble in half a day if they found it hanging in a place to suit them.”<br />

Sparta<br />

a celebrated city of Greece, between whose inhabitants and the Jews a relationship was believed<br />

to subsist. Between the two nations a correspondence ensued.—Whitney. The act of the Jews and<br />

Spartans, 2 Macc. 5:9 is an ethnological error, which it is difficult to trace to its origin.<br />

Spear<br />

[Arms, Armor]<br />

Spearmen<br />

(Acts 23:23) These were probably troops so lightly armed as to be able to keep pace on the<br />

march with mounted soldiers.<br />

Spice, Spices<br />

•Heb.<br />

basam, besem or bosem . In (Song of Solomon 5:1) “I have gathered my myrrh with my<br />

spice,” the word points apparently to some definite substance. In the other places, with the exception<br />

perhaps of (Song of Solomon 1:13; 6:2) the words refer more generally to sweet aromatic odors,<br />

the principal of which was that of the balsam or balm of Gilead; the tree which yields this substance<br />

is now generally admitted to be the Balsam-odendron opobalsamum . The balm of Gilead tree<br />

grows in some parts of Arabia and Africa, and is seldom more than fifteen feet high, with straggling<br />

branches and scanty foliage. The balsam is chiefly obtained from incisions in the bark, but is<br />

procured also from the green and ripe berries.<br />

•Necoth . (Genesis 37:25; 43:11) The most probable explanation is that which refers the word to<br />

the Arabic naku’at i.e. “the gum obtained from the tragacanth” (Astragalus).<br />

•Sammim, a general term to denote those aromatic substances which were used in the preparation<br />

of the anointing oil, the incense offerings, etc. The spices mentioned as being used by Nicodemus<br />

for the preparation of our Lord’s body, (John 19:39,40) are “myrrh and aloes,” by which latter<br />

word must be understood not the aloes of medicine, but the highly-scented wood of the Aquilaria<br />

agallochum .<br />

Spider<br />

The Hebrew word ’accabish in (Job 8:24; Isaiah 59:5) is correctly rendered “spider.” Put<br />

semamith is wrongly translated “spider” in (Proverbs 30:28) it refers probably to some kind of<br />

lizard. (But “there are many species of spider in Palestine: some which spin webs, like the common<br />

garden spider; some which dig subterranean cells and make doors in them, like the well-known<br />

trap-door spider of southern Europe; and some which have no web, but chase their prey upon the<br />

ground, like the hunting-and the wolf-spider.”—Wood’s <strong>Bible</strong> Animals.)<br />

Spikenard<br />

(Heb. nerd) is mentioned twice in the Old Testament viz. in (Song of Solomon 1:12; 4:13,14)<br />

The ointment with which our Lord was anointed as he sat at meat in Simon’s house at Bethany<br />

consisted of this precious substance, the costliness of which may be inferred from the indignant<br />

surprise manifested by some of the witnesses of the transaction. See (Mark 14:3-5; John 12:3,5)<br />

(Spikenard,from which the ointment was made, was an aromatic herb of the valerian family<br />

(Nardostachys jatamansi). It was imported from an early age from Arabia India and the Far East.<br />

The costliness of Mary’s offering (300 pence=) may beat be seen from the fact that a penny (denarius,<br />

15 to 17 cents) was in those days the day-wages of a laborer. (Matthew 20:2) In our day this would<br />

equal at least or .-ED.)<br />

709<br />

William Smith

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