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Decapolis - ten
cities=deka, ten, and polis, a city, a district on the east and
south-east of the Sea of Galilee containing "ten cities," which were
chiefly inhabited by Greeks. It included a portion of Bashan and
Gilead, and is mentioned three times in the New Testament (Matt.
4:25; Mark 5:20; 7:31). These cities were Scythopolis, i.e., "city
of the Scythians", (ancient Bethshean, the only one of the ten
cities on the west of Jordan), Hippos, Gadara, Pella (to which the
Christians fled just before the destruction of Jerusalem),
Philadelphia (ancient Rabbath-ammon), Gerasa, Dion, Canatha, Raphana,
and Damascus. When the Romans conquered Syria (B.C. 65) they
rebuilt, and endowed with certain privileges, these "ten cities,"
and the province connected with them they called "Decapolis."
Decision, Valley of
- a name given to the valley of Jehoshaphat (q.v.) as the vale
of the sentence. The scene of Jehovah's signal inflictions on Zion's
enemies (Joel 3:14; marg., "valley of concision or threshing").
Decrees of God -
"The decrees of God are his eternal, unchangeable, holy, wise,
and sovereign purpose, comprehending at once all things that ever
were or will be in their causes, conditions, successions, and
relations, and determining their certain futurition. The several
contents of this one eternal purpose are, because of the limitation
of our faculties, necessarily conceived of by us in partial aspects,
and in logical relations, and are therefore styled Decrees." The
decree being the act of an infinite, absolute, eternal,
unchangeable, and sovereign Person, comprehending a plan including
all his works of all kinds, great and small, from the beginning of
creation to an unending eternity; ends as well as means, causes as
well as effects, conditions and instrumentalities as well as the
events which depend upon them, must be incomprehensible by the
finite intellect of man. The decrees are eternal (Acts 15:18; Eph.
1:4; 2 Thess. 2:13), unchangeable (Ps. 33:11; Isa. 46:9), and
comprehend all things that come to pass (Eph. 1:11; Matt. 10:29, 30;
Eph. 2:10; Acts 2:23; 4:27, 28; Ps. 17:13, 14).
The decrees of God are (1) efficacious, as
they respect those events he has determined to bring about by his
own immediate agency; or (2) permissive, as they respect those
events he has determined that free agents shall be permitted by him
to effect.
This doctrine ought to produce in our minds
"humility, in view of the infinite greatness and sovereignty of God,
and of the dependence of man; confidence and implicit reliance upon
wisdom, rightenousness, goodness, and immutability of God's
purpose."
Dedan - low
ground. (1.) A son of Raamah (Gen. 10:7). His descendants are
mentioned in Isa. 21:13, and Ezek. 27:15. They probably settled
among the sons of Cush, on the north-west coast of the Persian Gulf.
(2.) A son of Jokshan, Abraham's son by
Keturah (1 Chr. 1:32). His descendants settled on the Syrian borders
about the territory of Edom. They probably led a pastoral life.
Dedanim - the
descendants of Dedan, the son of Raamah. They are mentioned in Isa.
21:13 as sending out "travelling companies" which lodged "in the
forest of Arabia." They are enumerated also by Ezekiel (27:20) among
the merchants who supplied Tyre with precious things.
Dedication, Feast
of the - (John 10:22, 42), i.e., the feast of the renewing. It
was instituted B.C. 164 to commemorate the purging of the temple
after its pollution by Antiochus Epiphanes (B.C. 167), and the
rebuilding of the altar after the Syrian invaders had been driven
out by Judas Maccabaeus. It lasted for eight days, beginning on the
25th of the month Chisleu (December), which was often a period of
heavy rains (Ezra 10:9, 13). It was an occasion of much rejoicing
and festivity.
But there were other dedications of the
temple. (1) That of Solomon's temple (1 Kings 8:2; 2 Chr. 5:3); (2)
the dedication in the days of Hezekiah (2 Chr. 29); and (3) the
dedication of the temple after the Captivity (Ezra 6:16).
Deep - used to
denote (1) the grave or the abyss (Rom. 10:7; Luke 8:31); (2) the
deepest part of the sea (Ps. 69:15); (3) the chaos mentioned in Gen.
1:2; (4) the bottomless pit, hell (Rev. 9:1, 2; 11:7; 20:13).
Degrees, Song of -
song of steps, a title given to each of these fifteen psalms,
120-134 inclusive. The probable origin of this name is the
circumstance that these psalms came to be sung by the people on the
ascents or goings up to Jerusalem to attend the three great
festivals (Deut. 16:16). They were well fitted for being sung by the
way from their peculiar form, and from the sentiments they express.
"They are characterized by brevity, by a key-word, by epanaphora [i.e,
repetition], and by their epigrammatic style...More than half of
them are cheerful, and all of them hopeful." They are sometimes
called "Pilgrim Songs." Four of them were written by David, one
(127) by Solomon, and the rest are anonymous.
Dehavites -
villagers, one of the Assyrian tribes which Asnapper sent to
repopulate Samaria (Ezra 4:9). They were probably a nomad Persian
tribe on the east of the Caspian Sea, and near the Sea of Azof.
Delaiah - freed
by Jehovah. (1.) The head of the twenty-third division of the
priestly order (1 Chr. 24:18).
(2.) A son of Shemaiah, and one of the
courtiers to whom Jeremiah's first roll of prophecy was read (Jer.
36:12).
(3.) The head of one of the bands of exiles
that returned under Zerubbabel to Jerusalem (Ezra 2:60; Neh. 7:62).
Delilah -
languishing, a Philistine woman who dwelt in the valley of Sorek (Judg.
16:4-20). She was bribed by the "lords of the Philistines" to obtain
from Samson the secret of his strength and the means of overcoming
it (Judg. 16:4-18). She tried on three occasions to obtain from him
this secret in vain. On the fourth occasion she wrung it from him.
She made him sleep upon her knees, and then called the man who was
waiting to help her; who "cut off the seven locks of his head," and
so his "strength went from him." (See
SAMSON.)
Deluge - the name
given to Noah's flood, the history of which is recorded in Gen. 7
and 8.
It began in the year 2516 B.C., and continued
twelve lunar months and ten days, or exactly one solar year.
The cause of this judgment was the corruption
and violence that filled the earth in the ninth generation from
Adam. God in righteous indignation determined to purge the earth of
the ungodly race. Amid a world of crime and guilt there was one
household that continued faithful and true to God, the household of
Noah. "Noah was a just man and perfect in his generations."
At the command of God, Noah made an ark 300
cubits long, 50 broad, and 30 high. He slowly proceeded with this
work during a period of one hundred and twenty years (Gen. 6:3). At
length the purpose of God began to be carried into effect. The
following table exhibits the order of events as they occurred:
In the six hundredth year of his life Noah is
commanded by God to enter the ark, taking with him his wife, and his
three sons with their wives (Gen. 7:1-10).
The rain begins on the seventeenth day of the
second month (Gen. 7:11-17).
The rain ceases, the waters prevail, fifteen
cubits upward (Gen. 7:18-24).
The ark grounds on one of the mountains of
Ararat on the seventeenth day of the seventh month, or one hundred
and fifty days after the Deluge began (Gen. 8:1-4).
Tops of the mountains visible on the first
day of the tenth month (Gen. 8:5).
Raven and dove sent out forty days after this
(Gen. 8:6-9).
Dove again sent out seven days afterwards;
and in the evening she returns with an olive leaf in her mouth (Gen.
8:10, 11).
Dove sent out the third time after an
interval of other seven days, and returns no more (Gen. 8:12).
The ground becomes dry on the first day of
the first month of the new year (Gen. 8:13).
Noah leaves the ark on the twenty-seventh day
of the second month (Gen. 8:14-19).
The historical truth of the narrative of the
Flood is established by the references made to it by our Lord (Matt.
24:37; comp. Luke 17:26). Peter speaks of it also (1 Pet. 3:20; 2
Pet. 2:5). In Isa. 54:9 the Flood is referred to as "the waters of
Noah." The Biblical narrative clearly shows that so far as the human
race was concerned the Deluge was universal; that it swept away all
men living except Noah and his family, who were preserved in the
ark; and that the present human race is descended from those who
were thus preserved.
Traditions of the Deluge are found among all
the great divisions of the human family; and these traditions, taken
as a whole, wonderfully agree with the Biblical narrative, and agree
with it in such a way as to lead to the conclusion that the Biblical
is the authentic narrative, of which all these traditions are more
or less corrupted versions. The most remarkable of these traditions
is that recorded on tablets prepared by order of Assur-bani-pal, the
king of Assyria. These were, however, copies of older records which
belonged to somewhere about B.C. 2000, and which formed part of the
priestly library at Erech (q.v.), "the ineradicable remembrance of a
real and terrible event." (See NOAH ¯T0002741;
CHALDEA.)
Demas - a companion
and fellow-labourer of Paul during his first imprisonment at Rome
(Philemon 1:24; Col. 4:14). It appears, however, that the love of
the world afterwards mastered him, and he deserted the apostle (2
Tim. 4:10).
Demetrius -
(1.) A silversmith at Ephesus, whose chief occupation was to make
"silver shrines for Diana" (q.v.), Acts 19:24,i.e., models either of
the temple of Diana or of the statue of the goddess. This trade
brought to him and his fellow-craftsmen "no small gain," for these
shrines found a ready sale among the countless thousands who came to
this temple from all parts of Asia Minor. This traffic was greatly
endangered by the progress of the gospel, and hence Demetrius
excited the tradesmen employed in the manufacture of these shrines,
and caused so great a tumult that "the whole city was filled with
confusion."
(2.) A Christian who is spoken of as having
"a good report of all men, and of the truth itself" (3 John 1:12).
Demon - See
DAEMON.
Den - a lair of
wild beasts (Ps. 10:9; 104:22; Job 37:8); the hole of a venomous
reptile (Isa. 11:8); a recess for secrecy "in dens and caves of the
earth" (Heb. 11:38); a resort of thieves (Matt. 21:13; Mark 11:17).
Daniel was cast into "the den of lions" (Dan. 6:16, 17). Some recent
discoveries among the ruins of Babylon have brought to light the
fact that the practice of punishing offenders against the law by
throwing them into a den of lions was common.
Deputy - in 1
Kings 22:47, means a prefect; one set over others. The same Hebrew
word is rendered "officer;" i.e., chief of the commissariat
appointed by Solomon (1 Kings 4:5, etc.).
In Esther 8:9; 9:3 (R.V., "governor") it
denotes a Persian prefect "on this side" i.e., in the region west of
the Euphrates. It is the modern word pasha.
In Acts 13:7, 8, 12; 18:12, it denotes a
proconsul; i.e., the governor of a Roman province holding his
appointment from the senate. The Roman provinces were of two kinds,
(1) senatorial and (2) imperial. The appointment of a governor to
the former was in the hands of the senate, and he bore the title of
proconsul (Gr. anthupatos). The appointment of a governor to the
latter was in the hands of the emperor, and he bore the title of
propraetor (Gr. antistrategos).
Derbe - a small
town on the eastern part of the upland plain of Lycaonia, about 20
miles from Lystra. Paul passed through Derbe on his route from
Cilicia to Iconium, on his second missionary journey (Acts 16:1),
and probably also on his third journey (18:23; 19:1). On his first
journey (14:20, 21) he came to Derbe from the other side; i.e., from
Iconium. It was the native place of Gaius, one of Paul's companions
(20:4). He did not here suffer persecution (2 Tim. 3:11).
Desert - (1.)
Heb. midbar, "pasture-ground;" an open tract for pasturage; a common
(Joel 2:22). The "backside of the desert" (Ex. 3:1) is the west of
the desert, the region behind a man, as the east is the region in
front. The same Hebrew word is rendered "wildernes," and is used of
the country lying between Egypt and Palestine (Gen. 21:14, 21; Ex.
4:27; 19:2; Josh. 1:4), the wilderness of the wanderings. It was a
grazing tract, where the flocks and herds of the Israelites found
pasturage during the whole of their journey to the Promised Land.
The same Hebrew word is used also to denote
the wilderness of Arabia, which in winter and early spring supplies
good pasturage to the flocks of the nomad tribes than roam over it
(1 Kings 9:18).
The wilderness of Judah is the mountainous
region along the western shore of the Dead Sea, where David fed his
father's flocks (1 Sam. 17:28; 26:2). Thus in both of these
instances the word denotes a country without settled inhabitants and
without streams of water, but having good pasturage for cattle; a
country of wandering tribes, as distinguished from that of a settled
people (Isa. 35:1; 50:2; Jer. 4:11). Such, also, is the meaning of
the word "wilderness" in Matt. 3:3; 15:33; Luke 15:4.
(2.) The translation of the Hebrew Aribah',
"an arid tract" (Isa. 35:1, 6; 40:3; 41:19; 51:3, etc.). The name
Arabah is specially applied to the deep valley of the Jordan (the
Ghor of the Arabs), which extends from the lake of Tiberias to the
Elanitic gulf. While midbar denotes properly a pastoral
region, arabah denotes a wilderness. It is also translated
"plains;" as "the plains of Jericho" (Josh. 5:10; 2 Kings 25:5),
"the plains of Moab" (Num. 22:1; Deut. 34:1, 8), "the plains of the
wilderness" (2 Sam. 17:16).
(3.) In the Revised Version of Num. 21:20 the
Hebrew word jeshimon is properly rendered "desert," meaning
the waste tracts on both shores of the Dead Sea. This word is also
rendered "desert" in Ps. 78:40; 106:14; Isa. 43:19, 20. It denotes a
greater extent of uncultivated country than the other words so
rendered. It is especially applied to the desert of the peninsula of
Arabia (Num. 21:20; 23:28), the most terrible of all the deserts
with which the Israelites were acquainted. It is called "the desert"
in Ex. 23:31; Deut. 11:24. (See
JESHIMON.)
(4.) A dry place; hence a desolation (Ps.
9:6), desolate (Lev. 26:34); the rendering of the Hebrew word
horbah'. It is rendered "desert" only in Ps. 102:6, Isa. 48:21,
and Ezek. 13:4, where it means the wilderness of Sinai.
(5.) This word is the symbol of the Jewish
church when they had forsaken God (Isa. 40:3). Nations destitute of
the knowledge of God are called a "wilderness" (32:15, midbar).
It is a symbol of temptation, solitude, and persecution (Isa. 27:10,
midbar_; 33:9, _arabah).
Desire of all nations -
(Hag. 2:7), usually interpreted as a title of the Messiah. The
Revised Version, however, more correctly renders "the desirable
things of all nations;" i.e., the choicest treasures of the Gentiles
shall be consecrated to the Lord.
Desolation,
Abomination of - (Matt. 24:15; Mark 13:14; comp. Luke 21:20), is
interpreted of the eagles, the standards of the Roman army, which
were an abomination to the Jews. These standards, rising over the
site of the temple, were a sign that the holy place had fallen under
the idolatrous Romans. The references are to Dan. 9:27. (See
ABOMINATION.)
Destroyer - (Ex.
12:23), the agent employed in the killing of the first-born; the
destroying angel or messenger of God. (Comp. 2 Kings 19:35; 2 Sam.
24:15, 16; Ps. 78:49; Acts 12:23.)
Destruction -
in Job 26:6, 28:22 (Heb. abaddon) is sheol, the realm of the dead.
Destruction, City
of - (Isa. 19:18; Heb. Ir-ha-Heres, "city of overthrow," because
of the evidence it would present of the overthrow of heathenism),
the ideal title of On or Heliopolis (q.v.).
Deuteronomy -
In all the Hebrew manuscripts the Pentateuch (q.v.) forms one roll
or volume divided into larger and smaller sections called
parshioth_ and _sedarim. It is not easy to say when it was
divided into five books. This was probably first done by the Greek
translators of the book, whom the Vulgate follows. The fifth of
these books was called by the Greeks Deuteronomion, i.e., the second
law, hence our name Deuteronomy, or a second statement of the laws
already promulgated. The Jews designated the book by the two first
Hebrew words that occur, _'Elle haddabharim_, i.e., "These are the
words." They divided it into eleven parshioth. In the English
Bible it contains thirty-four chapters.
It consists chiefly of three discourses
delivered by Moses a short time before his death. They were spoken
to all Israel in the plains of Moab, in the eleventh month of the
last year of their wanderings.
The first discourse (1-4:40) recapitulates
the chief events of the last forty years in the wilderness, with
earnest exhortations to obedience to the divine ordinances, and
warnings against the danger of forsaking the God of their fathers.
The seond discourse (5-26:19) is in effect
the body of the whole book. The first address is introductory to it.
It contains practically a recapitulation of the law already given by
God at Mount Sinai, together with many admonitions and injunctions
as to the course of conduct they were to follow when they were
settled in Canaan.
The concluding discourse (ch. 27-30) relates
almost wholly to the solemn sanctions of the law, the blessings to
the obedient, and the curse that would fall on the rebellious. He
solemnly adjures them to adhere faithfully to the covenant God had
made with them, and so secure for themselves and their posterity the
promised blessings.
These addresses to the people are followed by
what may be called three appendices, namely (1), a song which God
had commanded Moses to write (32:1-47); (2) the blessings he
pronounced on the separate tribes (ch. 33); and (3) the story of his
death (32:48-52) and burial (ch. 34), written by some other hand,
probably that of Joshua.
These farewell addresses of Moses to the
tribes of Israel he had so long led in the wilderness "glow in each
line with the emotions of a great leader recounting to his
contemporaries the marvellous story of their common experience. The
enthusiasm they kindle, even to-day, though obscured by translation,
reveals their matchless adaptation to the circumstances under which
they were first spoken. Confidence for the future is evoked by
remembrance of the past. The same God who had done mighty works for
the tribes since the Exodus would cover their head in the day of
battle with the nations of Palestine, soon to be invaded. Their
great lawgiver stands before us, vigorous in his hoary age, stern in
his abhorrence of evil, earnest in his zeal for God, but mellowed in
all relations to earth by his nearness to heaven. The commanding
wisdom of his enactments, the dignity of his position as the founder
of the nation and the first of prophets, enforce his utterances. But
he touches our deepest emotions by the human tenderness that
breathes in all his words. Standing on the verge of life, he speaks
as a father giving his parting counsels to those he loves; willing
to depart and be with God he has served so well, but fondly
lengthening out his last farewell to the dear ones of earth. No book
can compare with Deuteronomy in its mingled sublimity and
tenderness." Geikie, Hours, etc.
The whole style and method of this book, its
tone and its peculiarities of conception and expression, show that
it must have come from one hand. That the author was none other than
Moses is established by the following considerations: (1.) The
uniform tradition both of the Jewish and the Christian Church down
to recent times. (2.) The book professes to have been written by
Moses (1:1; 29:1; 31:1, 9-11, etc.), and was obviously intended to
be accepted as his work. (3.) The incontrovertible testimony of our
Lord and his apostles (Matt. 19:7, 8; Mark 10:3, 4; John 5:46, 47;
Acts 3:22; 7:37; Rom. 10:19) establishes the same conclusion. (4.)
The frequent references to it in the later books of the canon (Josh.
8:31; 1 Kings 2:9; 2 Kings 14:6; 2 Chr. 23:18; 25:4; 34:14; Ezra
3:2; 7:6; Neh. 8:1; Dan. 9:11, 13) prove its antiquity; and (5) the
archaisms found in it are in harmony with the age in which Moses
lived. (6.) Its style and allusions are also strikingly consistent
with the circumstances and position of Moses and of the people at
that time.
This body of positive evidence cannot be set
aside by the conjectures and reasonings of modern critics, who
contended that the book was somewhat like a forgery, introduced
among the Jews some seven or eight centuries after the Exodus.
Devil - (Gr.
diabolos), a slanderer, the arch-enemy of man's spiritual interest
(Job 1:6; Rev. 2:10; Zech. 3:1). He is called also "the accuser of
the brethen" (Rev. 12:10).
In Lev. 17:7 the word "devil" is the
translation of the Hebrew sair, meaning a "goat" or "satyr" (Isa.
13:21; 34:14), alluding to the wood-daemons, the objects of
idolatrous worship among the heathen.
In Deut. 32:17 and Ps. 106:37 it is the
translation of Hebrew shed, meaning lord, and idol, regarded
by the Jews as a "demon," as the word is rendered in the Revised
Version.
In the narratives of the Gospels regarding
the "casting out of devils" a different Greek word (daimon) is used.
In the time of our Lord there were frequent cases of demoniacal
possession (Matt. 12:25-30; Mark 5:1-20; Luke 4:35; 10:18, etc.).
Dew - "There is
no dew properly so called in Palestine, for there is no moisture in
the hot summer air to be chilled into dew-drops by the coldness of
the night. From May till October rain is unknown, the sun shining
with unclouded brightness day after day. The heat becomes intense,
the ground hard, and vegetation would perish but for the moist west
winds that come each night from the sea. The bright skies cause the
heat of the day to radiate very quickly into space, so that the
nights are as cold as the day is the reverse, a peculiarity of
climate from which poor Jacob suffered thousands of years ago (Gen.
31:40). To this coldness of the night air the indispensable watering
of all plant-life is due. The winds, loaded with moisture, are
robbed of it as they pass over the land, the cold air condensing it
into drops of water, which fall in a gracious rain of mist on every
thirsty blade. In the morning the fog thus created rests like a sea
over the plains, and far up the sides of the hills, which raise
their heads above it like so many islands. At sunrise, however, the
scene speedily changes. By the kindling light the mist is
transformed into vast snow-white clouds, which presently break into
separate masses and rise up the mountain-sides, to disappear in the
blue above, dissipated by the increasing heat. These are 'the
morning clouds and the early dew that go away' of which Hosea (6:4;
13:3) speaks so touchingly" (Geikie's The Holy Land, etc., i., p.
72). Dew is a source of great fertility (Gen. 27:28; Deut. 33:13;
Zech. 8:12), and its withdrawal is regarded as a curse from God (2
Sam. 1:21; 1 Kings 17:1). It is the symbol of a multitude (2 Sam.
17:12; Ps. 110:3); and from its refreshing influence it is an emblem
of brotherly love and harmony (Ps. 133:3), and of rich spiritual
blessings (Hos. 14:5).
Diadem - the
tiara of a king (Ezek. 21:26; Isa. 28:5; 62:3); the turban (Job
29:14). In the New Testament a careful distinction is drawn between
the diadem as a badge of royalty (Rev. 12:3; 13:1; 19:12) and the
crown as a mark of distinction in private life. It is not known what
the ancient Jewish "diadem" was. It was the mark of Oriental
sovereigns. (See
CROWN.)
Dial - for the
measurement of time, only once mentioned in the Bible, erected by
Ahaz (2 Kings 20:11; Isa. 38:8). The Hebrew word (ma'aloth) is
rendered "steps" in Ex. 20:26, 1 Kings 10:19, and "degrees" in 2
Kings 20:9, 10, 11. The ma'aloth was probably stairs on which
the shadow of a column or obelisk placed on the top fell. The shadow
would cover a greater or smaller number of steps, according as the
sun was low or high.
Probably the sun-dial was a Babylonian
invention. Daniel at Babylon (Dan. 3:6) is the first to make mention
of the "hour."
Diamond - (1.)
A precious gem (Heb. yahalom', in allusion to its hardness),
otherwise unknown, the sixth, i.e., the third in the second row, in
the breastplate of the high priest, with the name of Naphtali
engraven on it (Ex. 28:18; 39:11; R.V. marg., "sardonyx.")
(2.) A precious stone (Heb. shamir', a sharp
point) mentioned in Jer. 17:1. From its hardness it was used for
cutting and perforating other minerals. It is rendered "adamant"
(q.v.) in Ezek. 3:9, Zech. 7:12. It is the hardest and most valuable
of precious stones.
Diana - so
called by the Romans; called Artemis by the Greeks, the "great"
goddess worshipped among heathen nations under various
modifications. Her most noted temple was that at Ephesus. It was
built outside the city walls, and was one of the seven wonders of
the ancient world. "First and last it was the work of 220 years;
built of shining marble; 342 feet long by 164 feet broad; supported
by a forest of columns, each 56 feet high; a sacred museum of
masterpieces of sculpture and painting. At the centre, hidden by
curtains, within a gorgeous shrine, stood the very ancient image of
the goddess, on wood or ebony reputed to have fallen from the sky.
Behind the shrine was a treasury, where, as in 'the safest bank in
Asia,' nations and kings stored their most precious things. The
temple as St. Paul saw it subsisted till A.D. 262, when it was
ruined by the Goths" (Acts 19:23-41)., Moule on Ephesians: Introd.
Diblaim -
doubled cakes, the mother of Gomer, who was Hosea's wife (Hos. 1:3).
Diblathaim -
two cakes, a city of Moab, on the east of the Dead Sea (Num. 33:46;
Jer. 48:22).
Dibon - pining;
wasting. (1.) A city in Moab (Num. 21:30); called also Dibon-gad
(33:45), because it was built by Gad and Dimon (Isa. 15:9). It has
been identified with the modern Diban, about 3 miles north of the
Arnon and 12 miles east of the Dead Sea. (See Moabite Stone.)
(2.) A city of the tribe of Judah, inhabited
after the Captivity (Neh. 11:25); called also Dimonah (Josh. 15:22).
It is probably the modern ed-Dheib.
Didymus - (Gr.
twin = Heb. Thomas, q.v.), John 11:16; 20:24; 21:2.
Dimnah -
dunghill, a city of Zebulun given to the Merarite Levites (Josh.
21:35). In 1 Chr. 6:77 the name "Rimmon" is substituted.
Dinah - judged;
vindicated, daughter of Jacob by Leah, and sister of Simeon and Levi
(Gen. 30:21). She was seduced by Shechem, the son of Hamor, the
Hivite chief, when Jacob's camp was in the neighbourhood of Shechem.
This led to the terrible revenge of Simeon and Levi in putting the
Shechemites to death (Gen. 34). Jacob makes frequent reference to
this deed of blood with abhorrence and regret (Gen. 34:30; 49:5-7).
She is mentioned among the rest of Jacob's family that went down
into Egypt (Gen. 46:8, 15).
Dine - (Gen.
43:16). It was the custom in Egypt to dine at noon. But it is
probable that the Egyptians took their principal meal in the
evening, as was the general custom in the East (Luke 14:12).
Dinhabah -
robbers' den, an Edomitish city, the capital of king Bela (Gen.
36:32). It is probably the modern Dibdiba, a little north-east of
Petra.
Dionysius - the
Areopagite, one of Paul's converts at Athens (Acts 17:34).
Diotrephes -
Jove-nourished, rebuked by John for his pride (3 John 1:9). He was a
Judaizer, prating against John and his fellow-labourers "with
malicious words" (7).
Disciple - a
scholar, sometimes applied to the followers of John the Baptist
(Matt. 9:14), and of the Pharisees (22:16), but principally to the
followers of Christ. A disciple of Christ is one who (1) believes
his doctrine, (2) rests on his sacrifice, (3) imbibes his spirit,
and (4) imitates his example (Matt. 10:24; Luke 14:26, 27, 33; John
6:69).
Dish - for
eating from (2 Kings 21:13). Judas dipped his hand with a "sop" or
piece of bread in the same dish with our Lord, thereby indicating
friendly intimacy (Matt. 26:23). The "lordly dish" in Judg. 5:25 was
probably the shallow drinking cup, usually of brass. In Judg. 6:38
the same Hebrew word is rendered "bowl."
The dishes of the tabernacle were made of
pure gold (Ex. 25:29; 37:16).
Dishan -
antelope, the youngest son of Seir the Horite, head of one of the
tribes of Idumaea (Gen. 36:21, 28, 30).
Dispensation -
(Gr. oikonomia, "management," "economy"). (1.) The method or scheme
according to which God carries out his purposes towards men is
called a dispensation. There are usually reckoned three
dispensations, the Patriarchal, the Mosaic or Jewish, and the
Christian. (See COVENANT ¯T0000916, Administration of.) These were
so many stages in God's unfolding of his purpose of grace toward
men. The word is not found with this meaning in Scripture.
(2.) A commission to preach the gospel (1 Cor.
9:17; Eph. 1:10; 3:2; Col. 1:25).
Dispensations of Providence are providential
events which affect men either in the way of mercy or of judgement.
Dispersion -
(Gr. diaspora, "scattered," James 1:1; 1 Pet. 1:1) of the Jews. At
various times, and from the operation of divers causes, the Jews
were separated and scattered into foreign countries "to the outmost
parts of heaven" (Deut. 30:4).
(1.) Many were dispersed over Assyria, Media,
Babylonia, and Persia, descendants of those who had been transported
thither by the Exile. The ten tribes, after existing as a separate
kingdom for two hundred and fifty-five years, were carried captive
(B.C. 721) by Shalmaneser (or Sargon), king of Assyria. They never
returned to their own land as a distinct people, although many
individuals from among these tribes, there can be no doubt, joined
with the bands that returned from Babylon on the proclamation of
Cyrus.
(2.) Many Jews migrated to Egypt and took up
their abode there. This migration began in the days of Solomon (2
Kings 18:21, 24; Isa. 30:7). Alexander the Great placed a large
number of Jews in Alexandria, which he had founded, and conferred on
them equal rights with the Egyptians. Ptolemy Philadelphus, it is
said, caused the Jewish Scriptures to be translated into Greek (the
work began B.C. 284), for the use of the Alexandrian Jews. The Jews
in Egypt continued for many ages to exercise a powerful influence on
the public interests of that country. From Egypt they spread along
the coast of Africa to Cyrene (Acts 2:10) and to Ethiopia (8:27).
(3.) After the time of Seleucus Nicator (B.C.
280), one of the captains of Alexander the Great, large numbers of
Jews migrated into Syria, where they enjoyed equal rights with the
Macedonians. From Syria they found their way into Asia Minor.
Antiochus the Great, king of Syria and Asia, removed 3,000 families
of Jews from Mesopotamia and Babylonia, and planted them in Phrygia
and Lydia.
(4.) From Asia Minor many Jews moved into
Greece and Macedonia, chiefly for purposes of commerce. In the
apostles' time they were found in considerable numbers in all the
principal cities.
From the time of Pompey the Great (B.C. 63)
numbers of Jews from Palestine and Greece went to Rome, where they
had a separate quarter of the city assigned to them. Here they
enjoyed considerable freedom.
Thus were the Jews everywhere scattered
abroad. This, in the overruling providence of God, ultimately
contributed in a great degree toward opening the way for the spread
of the gospel into all lands.
Dispersion, from the plain of Shinar. This
was occasioned by the confusion of tongues at Babel (Gen. 11:9).
They were scattered abroad "every one after his tongue, after their
families, in their nations" (Gen. 10:5, 20,31).
The tenth chapter of Genesis gives us an
account of the principal nations of the earth in their migrations
from the plain of Shinar, which was their common residence after the
Flood. In general, it may be said that the descendants of Japheth
were scattered over the north, those of Shem over the central
regions, and those of Ham over the extreme south. The following
table shows how the different families were dispersed:
| - Japheth | - Gomer | Cimmerians, Armenians
| - Magog | Caucasians, Scythians | - Madal | Medes and Persian
tribes | - Javan | - Elishah | Greeks | - Tarshish | Etruscans,
Romans | - Chittim | Cyprians, Macedonians | - Dodanim | Rhodians |
- Tubal | Tibareni, Tartars | - Mechech | Moschi, Muscovites | -
Tiras | Thracians | | - Shem | - Elam | Persian tribes | - Asshur |
Assyrian | - Arphaxad | - Abraham | - Isaac | - Jacob | Hebrews | -
Esau | Edomites | - Ishmael | Mingled with Arab tribes | - Lud |
Lydians | - Aram | Syrians | | - Ham | - Cush | Ethiopans | -
Mizrain | Egyptians | - Phut | Lybians, Mauritanians | - Canaan |
Canaanites, Phoenicians
Return
To Dictionary
Distaff - (Heb.
pelek, a "circle"), the instrument used for twisting threads by a
whirl (Prov. 31:19).
Divination - of
false prophets (Deut. 18:10, 14; Micah 3:6, 7, 11), of necromancers
(1 Sam. 28:8), of the Philistine priests and diviners (1 Sam. 6:2),
of Balaam (Josh. 13:22). Three kinds of divination are mentioned in
Ezek. 21:21, by arrows, consulting with images (the teraphim), and
by examining the entrails of animals sacrificed. The practice of
this art seems to have been encouraged in ancient Egypt. Diviners
also abounded among the aborigines of Canaan and the Philistines (Isa.
2:6; 1 Sam. 28). At a later period multitudes of magicians poured
from Chaldea and Arabia into the land of Israel, and pursued their
occupations (Isa. 8:19; 2 Kings 21:6; 2 Chr. 33:6). This
superstition widely spread, and in the time of the apostles there
were "vagabond Jews, exorcists" (Acts 19:13), and men like Simon
Magus (Acts 8:9), Bar-jesus (13:6, 8), and other jugglers and
impostors (19:19; 2 Tim. 3:13). Every species and degree of this
superstition was strictly forbidden by the law of Moses (Ex. 22:18;
Lev. 19:26, 31; 20:27; Deut. 18:10, 11).
But beyond these various forms of
superstition, there are instances of divination on record in the
Scriptures by which God was pleased to make known his will.
(1.) There was divination by lot, by which,
when resorted to in matters of moment, and with solemnity, God
intimated his will (Josh. 7:13). The land of Canaan was divided by
lot (Num. 26:55, 56); Achan's guilt was detected (Josh. 7:16-19),
Saul was elected king (1 Sam. 10:20, 21), and Matthias chosen to the
apostleship, by the solem lot (Acts 1:26). It was thus also that the
scape-goat was determined (Lev. 16:8-10).
(2.) There was divination by dreams (Gen.
20:6; Deut. 13:1, 3; Judg. 7:13, 15; Matt. 1:20; 2:12, 13, 19, 22).
This is illustrated in the history of Joseph (Gen. 41:25-32) and of
Daniel (2:27; 4:19-28).
(3.) By divine appointment there was also
divination by the Urim and Thummim (Num. 27:21), and by the ephod.
(4.) God was pleased sometimes to vouch-safe
direct vocal communications to men (Deut. 34:10; Ex. 3:4; 4:3; Deut.
4:14, 15; 1 Kings 19:12). He also communed with men from above the
mercy-seat (Ex. 25:22), and at the door of the tabernacle (Ex.
29:42, 43).
(5.) Through his prophets God revealed
himself, and gave intimations of his will (2 Kings 13:17; Jer.
51:63, 64).
Divorce - The
dissolution of the marriage tie was regulated by the Mosaic law
(Deut. 24:1-4). The Jews, after the Captivity, were reguired to
dismiss the foreign women they had married contrary to the law (Ezra
10:11-19). Christ limited the permission of divorce to the single
case of adultery. It seems that it was not uncommon for the Jews at
that time to dissolve the union on very slight pretences (Matt.
5:31, 32; 19:1-9; Mark 10:2-12; Luke 16:18). These precepts given by
Christ regulate the law of divorce in the Christian Church.
Dizahab -
region of gold, a place in the desert of Sinai, on the western shore
of the Elanitic gulf (Deut. 1:1). It is now called Dehab.
Doctor - (Luke
2:46; 5:17; Acts 5:34), a teacher. The Jewish doctors taught and
disputed in synagogues, or wherever they could find an audience.
Their disciples were allowed to propose to them questions. They
assumed the office without any appointment to it. The doctors of the
law were principally of the sect of the Pharisees. Schools were
established after the destruction of Jerusalem at Babylon and
Tiberias, in which academical degrees were conferred on those who
passed a certain examination. Those of the school of Tiberias were
called by the title "rabbi," and those of Babylon by that of
"master."
Dodai - loving,
one of David's captains (1 Chr. 27:4). (See DODO ¯T0001053 [2].)
Dodanim -
leaders, a race descended from Javan (Gen. 10:4). They are known in
profane history as the Dardani, originally inhabiting Illyricum.
They were a semi-Pelasgic race, and in the ethnographical table
(Gen. 10) they are grouped with the Chittim (q.v.). In 1 Chr. 1:7,
they are called Rodanim. The LXX. and the Samaritan Version also
read Rhodii, whence some have concluded that the Rhodians, the
inhabitants of the island of Rhodes, are meant.
Dodo - amatory;
loving. (1.) A descendant of Issachar (Judg. 10:1).
(2.) An Ahohite, father of Eleazar, who was
one of David's three heroes (2 Sam. 23:9; 1 Chr. 11:12). He was the
same with Dodai mentioned in 1 Chr. 27:4.
(3.) A Bethlehemite, and father of Elhanan,
who was one of David's thirty heroes (2 Sam. 23:24).
Doeg - fearful,
an Edomite, the chief overseer of Saul's flocks (1 Sam. 21:7). At
the command of Saul he slew the high priest Ahimelech (q.v.) at Nob,
together with all the priests to the number of eighty-five persons.
(Comp. Ps. 52, title.)
Dog -
frequently mentioned both in the Old and New Testaments. Dogs were
used by the Hebrews as a watch for their houses (Isa. 56:10), and
for guarding their flocks (Job 30:1). There were also then as now
troops of semi-wild dogs that wandered about devouring dead bodies
and the offal of the streets (1 Kings 14:11; 16:4; 21:19, 23; 22:38;
Ps. 59:6, 14).
As the dog was an unclean animal, the terms
"dog," "dog's head," "dead dog," were used as terms of reproach or
of humiliation (1 Sam. 24:14; 2 Sam. 3:8; 9:8; 16:9). Paul calls
false apostles "dogs" (Phil. 3:2). Those who are shut out of the
kingdom of heaven are also so designated (Rev. 22:15). Persecutors
are called "dogs" (Ps. 22:16). Hazael's words, "Thy servant which is
but a dog" (2 Kings 8:13), are spoken in mock humility=impossible
that one so contemptible as he should attain to such power.
Doleful creatures -
(occurring only Isa. 13:21. Heb. ochim, i.e., "shrieks;" hence
"howling animals"), a general name for screech owls (howlets), which
occupy the desolate palaces of Babylon. Some render the word "hyaenas."
Door-keeper -
This word is used in Ps. 84:10 (R.V. marg., "stand at the threshold
of," etc.), but there it signifies properly "sitting at the
threshold in the house of God." The psalmist means that he would
rather stand at the door of God's house and merely look in, than
dwell in houses where iniquity prevailed.
Persons were appointed to keep the street
door leading into the interior of the house (John 18:16, 17; Acts
12:13). Sometimes females held this post.
Door-posts -
The Jews were commanded to write the divine name on the posts (mezuzoth')
of their doors (Deut. 6:9). The Jews, misunderstanding this
injunction, adopted the custom of writing on a slip of parchment
these verses (Deut. 6:4-9, and 11:13-21), which they enclosed in a
reed or cylinder and fixed on the right-hand door-post of every room
in the house.
Doors - moved
on pivots of wood fastened in sockets above and below (Prov. 26:14).
They were fastened by a lock (Judg. 3:23, 25; Cant. 5:5) or by a bar
(Judg. 16:3; Job 38:10). In the interior of Oriental houses,
curtains were frequently used instead of doors.
The entrances of the tabernacle had curtains
(Ex. 26:31-33, 36). The "valley of Achor" is called a "door of
hope," because immediately after the execution of Achan the Lord
said to Joshua, "Fear not," and from that time Joshua went forward
in a career of uninterrupted conquest. Paul speaks of a "door
opened" for the spread of the gospel (1 Cor. 16:9; 2 Cor. 2:12; Col.
4:3). Our Lord says of himself, "I am the door" (John 10:9). John
(Rev. 4:1) speaks of a "door opened in heaven."
Dophkah -
knocking, an encampment of the Israelites in the wilderness (Num.
33:12). It was in the desert of Sin, on the eastern shore of the
western arm of the Red Sea, somewhere in the Wady Feiran.
Dor - dwelling,
the Dora of the Romans, an ancient royal city of the Canaanites
(Josh. 11:1, 2; 12:23). It was the most southern settlement of the
Phoenicians on the coast of Syria. The original inhabitants seem
never to have been expelled, although they were made tributary by
David. It was one of Solomon's commissariat districts (Judg. 1:27; 1
Kings 4:11). It has been identified with Tantura (so named from the
supposed resemblance of its tower to a tantur, i.e., "a horn"). This
tower fell in 1895, and nothing remains but debris and foundation
walls, the remains of an old Crusading fortress. It is about 8 miles
north of Caesarea, "a sad and sickly hamlet of wretched huts on a
naked sea-beach."
Dorcas - a
female antelope, or gazelle, a pious Christian widow at Joppa whom
Peter restored to life (Acts 9:36-41). She was a Hellenistic Jewess,
called Tabitha by the Jews and Dorcas by the Greeks.
Dothan - two
wells, a famous pasture-ground where Joseph found his brethren
watching their flocks. Here, at the suggestion of Judah, they sold
him to the Ishmaelite merchants (Gen. 37:17). It is mentioned on
monuments in B.C. 1600.
It was the residence of Elisha (2 Kings
6:13), and the scene of a remarkable vision of chariots and horses
of fire surrounding the mountain on which the city stood. It is
identified with the modern Tell-Dothan, on the south side of the
plain of Jezreel, about 12 miles north of Samaria, among the hills
of Gilboa. The "two wells" are still in existence, one of which
bears the name of the "pit of Joseph" (Jubb Yusuf).
Dough - (batsek,
meaning "swelling," i.e., in fermentation). The dough the Israelites
had prepared for baking was carried away by them out of Egypt in
their kneading-troughs (Ex. 12:34, 39). In the process of baking,
the dough had to be turned (Hos. 7:8).
Dove - In their
wild state doves generally build their nests in the clefts of rocks,
but when domesticated "dove-cots" are prepared for them (Cant. 2:14;
Jer. 48:28; Isa. 60:8). The dove was placed on the standards of the
Assyrians and Babylonians in honour, it is supposed, of Semiramis (Jer.
25:38; Vulg., "fierceness of the dove;" comp. Jer. 46:16; 50:16).
Doves and turtle-doves were the only birds that could be offered in
sacrifice, as they were clean according to the Mosaic law (Ge. 15:9;
Lev. 5:7; 12:6; Luke 2:24). The dove was the harbinger of peace to
Noah (Gen. 8:8, 10). It is often mentioned as the emblem of purity
(Ps. 68:13). It is a symbol of the Holy Spirit (Gen. 1:2; Matt.
3:16; Mark 1:10; Luke 3:22; John 1:32); also of tender and devoted
affection (Cant. 1:15; 2:14). David in his distress wished that he
had the wings of a dove, that he might fly away and be at rest (Ps.
55:6-8). There is a species of dove found at Damascus "whose
feathers, all except the wings, are literally as yellow as gold"
(68:13).
Dove's dung -
(2 Kings 6:25) has been generally understood literally. There are
instances in history of the dung of pigeons being actually used as
food during a famine. Compare also the language of Rabshakeh to the
Jews (2 Kings 18:27; Isa. 36:12). This name, however, is applied by
the Arabs to different vegetable substances, and there is room for
the opinion of those who think that some such substance is here
referred to, as, e.g., the seeds of a kind of millet, or a very
inferior kind of pulse, or the root of the ornithogalum, i.e.,
bird-milk, the star-of-Bethlehem.
Dowry - (mohar;
i.e., price paid for a wife, Gen. 34:12; Ex. 22:17; 1 Sam. 18:25), a
nuptial present; some gift, as a sum of money, which the bridegroom
offers to the father of his bride as a satisfaction before he can
receive her. Jacob had no dowry to give for his wife, but he gave
his services (Gen. 29:18; 30:20; 34:12).
Dragon - (1.)
Heb. tannim, plural of tan. The name of some unknown creature
inhabiting desert places and ruins (Job 30:29; Ps. 44:19; Isa.
13:22; 34:13; 43:20; Jer. 10:22; Micah 1:8; Mal. 1:3); probably, as
translated in the Revised Version, the jackal (q.v.).
(2.) Heb. tannin. Some great sea monster (Jer.
51:34). In Isa. 51:9 it may denote the crocodile. In Gen. 1:21 (Heb.
plural tanninim) the Authorized Version renders "whales," and the
Revised Version "sea monsters." It is rendered "serpent" in Ex. 7:9.
It is used figuratively in Ps. 74:13; Ezek. 29:3.
In the New Testament the word "dragon" is
found only in Rev. 12:3, 4, 7, 9, 16, 17, etc., and is there used
metaphorically of "Satan." (See
WHALE.)
Dragon well - (Neh.
2:13), supposed by some to be identical with the Pool of Gihon.
Dram - The
Authorized Version understood the word 'adarkonim (1 Chr. 29:7; Ezra
8:27), and the similar word darkomnim (Ezra 2:69; Neh. 7:70), as
equivalent to the Greek silver coin the drachma. But the Revised
Version rightly regards it as the Greek dareikos, a Persian gold
coin (the daric) of the value of about 1 pound, 2s., which was first
struck by Darius, the son of Hystaspes, and was current in Western
Asia long after the fall of the Persian empire. (See
DARIC.)
Draught-house - (2
Kings 10:27). Jehu ordered the temple of Baal to be destroyed, and
the place to be converted to the vile use of receiving offal or
ordure. (Comp. Matt. 15:17.)
Drawer of water -
(Deut. 29:11; Josh. 9:21, 23), a servile employment to which the
Gibeonites were condemned.
Dream - God has
frequently made use of dreams in communicating his will to men. The
most remarkable instances of this are recorded in the history of
Jacob (Gen. 28:12; 31:10), Laban (31:24), Joseph (37:9-11), Gideon (Judg.
7), and Solomon (1 Kings 3:5). Other significant dreams are also
recorded, such as those of Abimelech (Gen. 20:3-7), Pharaoh's chief
butler and baker (40:5), Pharaoh (41:1-8), the Midianites (Judg.
7:13), Nebuchadnezzar (Dan. 2:1; 4:10, 18), the wise men from the
east (Matt. 2:12), and Pilate's wife (27:19).
To Joseph "the Lord appeared in a dream," and
gave him instructions regarding the infant Jesus (Matt. 1:20; 2:12,
13, 19). In a vision of the night a "man of Macedonia" stood before
Paul and said, "Come over into Macedonia and help us" (Acts 16:9;
see also 18:9; 27:23).
Dredge - (Job
24:6). See
CORN.
Dregs - (Ps. 75:8;
Isa. 51:17, 22), the lees of wine which settle at the bottom of the
vessel.
Dress - (1.)
Materials used. The earliest and simplest an apron of fig-leaves
sewed together (Gen. 3:7); then skins of animals (3:21). Elijah's
dress was probably the skin of a sheep (2 Kings 1:8). The Hebrews
were early acquainted with the art of weaving hair into cloth (Ex.
26:7; 35:6), which formed the sackcloth of mourners. This was the
material of John the Baptist's robe (Matt. 3:4). Wool was also woven
into garments (Lev. 13:47; Deut. 22:11; Ezek. 34:3; Job 31:20; Prov.
27:26). The Israelites probably learned the art of weaving linen
when they were in Egypt (1 Chr. 4:21). Fine linen was used in the
vestments of the high priest (Ex. 28:5), as well as by the rich
(Gen. 41:42; Prov. 31:22; Luke 16:19). The use of mixed material, as
wool and flax, was forbidden (Lev. 19:19; Deut. 22:11).
(2.) Colour. The prevailing colour was the
natural white of the material used, which was sometimes rendered
purer by the fuller's art (Ps. 104:1, 2; Isa. 63:3; Mark 9:3). The
Hebrews were acquainted with the art of dyeing (Gen. 37:3, 23).
Various modes of ornamentation were adopted in the process of
weaving (Ex. 28:6; 26:1, 31; 35:25), and by needle-work (Judg. 5:30;
Ps. 45:13). Dyed robes were imported from foreign countries,
particularly from Phoenicia (Zeph. 1:8). Purple and scarlet robes
were the marks of the wealthy (Luke 16:19; 2 Sam. 1:24).
(3.) Form. The robes of men and women were
not very much different in form from each other.
(a) The "coat" (kethoneth), of wool, cotton,
or linen, was worn by both sexes. It was a closely-fitting garment,
resembling in use and form our shirt (John 19:23). It was kept close
to the body by a girdle (John 21:7). A person wearing this "coat"
alone was described as naked (1 Sam. 19:24; Isa. 20:2; 2 Kings 6:30;
John 21:7); deprived of it he would be absolutely naked.
(b) A linen cloth or wrapper (sadin) of fine
linen, used somewhat as a night-shirt (Mark 14:51). It is mentioned
in Judg. 14:12, 13, and rendered there "sheets."
(c) An upper tunic (meil), longer than the
"coat" (1 Sam. 2:19; 24:4; 28:14). In 1 Sam. 28:14 it is the mantle
in which Samuel was enveloped; in 1 Sam. 24:4 it is the "robe" under
which Saul slept. The disciples were forbidden to wear two "coats"
(Matt. 10:10; Luke 9:3).
(d) The usual outer garment consisted of a
piece of woollen cloth like a Scotch plaid, either wrapped round the
body or thrown over the shoulders like a shawl, with the ends
hanging down in front, or it might be thrown over the head so as to
conceal the face (2 Sam. 15:30; Esther 6:12). It was confined to the
waist by a girdle, and the fold formed by the overlapping of the
robe served as a pocket (2 Kings 4:39; Ps. 79:12; Hag. 2:12; Prov.
17:23; 21:14).
Female dress. The "coat" was common to both
sexes (Cant. 5:3). But peculiar to females were (1) the "veil" or
"wimple," a kind of shawl (Ruth 3:15; rendered "mantle," R.V., Isa.
3:22); (2) the "mantle," also a species of shawl (Isa. 3:22); (3) a
"veil," probably a light summer dress (Gen. 24:65); (4) a
"stomacher," a holiday dress (Isa. 3:24). The outer garment
terminated in an ample fringe or border, which concealed the feet (Isa.
47:2; Jer. 13:22).
The dress of the Persians is described in
Dan. 3:21.
The reference to the art of sewing are few,
inasmuch as the garments generally came forth from the loom ready
for being worn, and all that was required in the making of clothes
devolved on the women of a family (Prov. 31:22; Acts 9:39).
Extravagance in dress is referred to in Jer.
4:30; Ezek. 16:10; Zeph. 1:8 (R.V., "foreign apparel"); 1 Tim. 2:9;
1 Pet. 3:3. Rending the robes was expressive of grief (Gen. 37:29,
34), fear (1 Kings 21:27), indignation (2 Kings 5:7), or despair (Judg.
11:35; Esther 4:1).
Shaking the garments, or shaking the dust
from off them, was a sign of renunciation (Acts 18:6); wrapping them
round the head, of awe (1 Kings 19:13) or grief (2 Sam. 15:30;
casting them off, of excitement (Acts 22:23); laying hold of them,
of supplication (1 Sam. 15:27). In the case of travelling, the outer
garments were girded up (1 Kings 18:46). They were thrown aside also
when they would impede action (Mark 10:50; John 13:4; Acts 7:58).
Drink - The
drinks of the Hebrews were water, wine, "strong drink," and vinegar.
Their drinking vessels were the cup, goblet or "basin," the "cruse"
or pitcher, and the saucer.
To drink water by measure (Ezek. 4:11), and
to buy water to drink (Lam. 5:4), denote great scarcity. To drink
blood means to be satiated with slaughter.
The Jews carefully strained their drinks
through a sieve, through fear of violating the law of Lev. 11:20,
23, 41, 42. (See Matt. 23:24. "Strain at" should be "strain out.")
Drink-offering -
consisted of wine (Num. 15:5; Hos. 9:4) poured around the altar
(Ex. 30:9). Joined with meat-offerings (Num. 6:15, 17; 2 Kings
16:13; Joel 1:9, 13; 2:14), presented daily (Ex. 29:40), on the
Sabbath (Num. 28:9), and on feast-days (28:14). One-fourth of an hin
of wine was required for one lamb, one-third for a ram, and one-half
for a bullock (Num. 15:5; 28:7, 14). "Drink offerings of blood" (Ps.
16:4) is used in allusion to the heathen practice of mingling the
blood of animals sacrificed with wine or water, and pouring out the
mixture in the worship of the gods, and the idea conveyed is that
the psalmist would not partake of the abominations of the heathen.
Drink, strong -
(Heb. shekar'), an intoxicating liquor (Judg. 13:4; Luke 1:15; Isa.
5:11; Micah 2:11) distilled from corn, honey, or dates. The effects
of the use of strong drink are referred to in Ps. 107:27; Isa.
24:20; 49:26; 51:17-22. Its use prohibited, Prov. 20:1. (See
WINE.)
Dromedary - (Isa.
60:6), an African or Arabian species of camel having only one hump,
while the Bactrian camel has two. It is distinguished from the camel
only as a trained saddle-horse is distinguished from a cart-horse.
It is remarkable for its speed (Jer. 2:23). Camels are frequently
spoken of in partriarchal times (Gen. 12:16; 24:10; 30:43; 31:17,
etc.). They were used for carrying burdens (Gen. 37:25; Judg. 6:5),
and for riding (Gen. 24:64). The hair of the camel falls off of
itself in spring, and is woven into coarse cloths and garments
(Matt. 3:4). (See
CAMEL.)
Dropsy - mentioned
only in Luke 14:2. The man afflicted with it was cured by Christ on
the Sabbath.
Dross - the
impurities of silver separated from the one in the process of
melting (Prov. 25:4; 26:23; Ps. 119:119). It is also used to denote
the base metal itself, probably before it is smelted, in Isa. 1:22,
25.
Drought - From
the middle of May to about the middle of August the land of
Palestine is dry. It is then the "drought of summer" (Gen. 31:40;
Ps. 32:4), and the land suffers (Deut. 28:23: Ps. 102:4), vegetation
being preserved only by the dews (Hag. 1:11). (See
DEW.)
Drown - (Ex. 15:4;
Amos 8:8; Heb. 11:29). Drowning was a mode of capital punishment in
use among the Syrians, and was known to the Jews in the time of our
Lord. To this he alludes in Matt. 18:6.
Drunk - The
first case of intoxication on record is that of Noah (Gen. 9:21).
The sin of drunkenness is frequently and strongly condemned (Rom.
13:13; 1 Cor. 6:9, 10; Eph. 5:18; 1 Thess. 5:7, 8). The sin of
drinking to excess seems to have been not uncommon among the
Israelites.
The word is used figuratively, when men are
spoken of as being drunk with sorrow, and with the wine of God's
wrath (Isa. 63:6; Jer. 51:57; Ezek. 23:33). To "add drunkenness to
thirst" (Deut. 29:19, A.V.) is a proverbial expression, rendered in
the Revised Version "to destroy the moist with the dry", i.e., the
well-watered equally with the dry land, meaning that the effect of
such walking in the imagination of their own hearts would be to
destroy one and all.
Drusilla -
third and youngest daughter of Herod Agrippa I. (Acts 12:1-4,
20-23). Felix, the Roman procurator of Judea, induced her to leave
her husband, Azizus, the king of Emesa, and become his wife. She was
present with Felix when Paul reasoned of "righteousness, temperance,
and judgment to come" (Acts 24:24). She and her son perished in the
eruption of Mount Vesuvius, A.D. 79.
Duke - derived
from the Latin dux, meaning "a leader;" Arabic, "a sheik." This word
is used to denote the phylarch or chief of a tribe (Gen. 36:15-43;
Ex. 15:15; 1 Chr. 1:51-54).
Dulcimer -
(Heb. sumphoniah), a musical instrument mentioned in Dan. 3:5, 15,
along with other instruments there named, as sounded before the
golden image. It was not a Jewish instrument. In the margin of the
Revised Version it is styled the "bag-pipe." Luther translated it
"lute," and Grotius the "crooked trumpet." It is probable that it
was introduced into Babylon by some Greek or Western-Asiatic
musician. Some Rabbinical commentators render it by "organ," the
well-known instrument composed of a series of pipes, others by
"lyre." The most probable interpretation is that it was a bag-pipe
similar to the zampagna of Southern Europe.
Dumah -
silence, (comp. Ps. 94:17), the fourth son of Ishmael; also the
tribe descended from him; and hence also the region in Arabia which
they inhabited (Gen. 25:14; 1 Chr. 1:30).
There was also a town of this name in Judah
(Josh. 15:52), which has been identified with ed-Domeh, about 10
miles southwest of Hebron. The place mentioned in the "burden" of
the prophet Isaiah (21:11) is Edom or Idumea.
Dumb - from
natural infirmity (Ex. 4:11); not knowing what to say (Prov. 31:8);
unwillingness to speak (Ps. 39:9; Lev. 10:3). Christ repeatedly
restored the dumb (Matt. 9:32, 33; Luke 11:14; Matt. 12:22) to the
use of speech.
Dung - (1.)
Used as manure (Luke 13:8); collected outside the city walls (Neh.
2:13). Of sacrifices, burned outside the camp (Ex. 29:14; Lev. 4:11;
8:17; Num. 19:5). To be "cast out as dung," a figurative expression
(1 Kings 14:10; 2 Kings 9:37; Jer. 8:2; Ps. 18:42), meaning to be
rejected as unprofitable.
(2.) Used as fuel, a substitute for firewood,
which was with difficulty procured in Syria, Arabia, and Egypt
(Ezek. 4:12-15), where cows' and camels' dung is used to the present
day for this purpose.
Dungeon -
different from the ordinary prison in being more severe as a place
of punishment. Like the Roman inner prison (Acts 16:24), it
consisted of a deep cell or cistern (Jer. 38:6). To be shut up in, a
punishment common in Egypt (Gen. 39:20; 40:3; 41:10; 42:19). It is
not mentioned, however, in the law of Moses as a mode of punishment.
Under the later kings imprisonment was frequently used as a
punishment (2 Chron. 16:10; Jer. 20:2; 32:2; 33:1; 37:15), and it
was customary after the Exile (Matt. 11:2; Luke 3:20; Acts 5:18, 21;
Matt. 18:30).
Dung-gate - (Neh.
2:13), a gate of ancient Jerusalem, on the south-west quarter. "The
gate outside of which lay the piles of sweepings and offscourings of
the streets," in the valley of Tophet.
Dung-hill - to
sit on a, was a sign of the deepest dejection (1 Sam. 2:8; Ps.
113:7; Lam. 4:5).
Dura - the
circle, the plain near Babylon in which Nebuchadnezzar set up a
golden image, mentioned in Dan. 3:1. The place still retains its
ancient name. On one of its many mounds the pedestal of what must
have been a colossal statue has been found. It has been supposed to
be that of the golden image.
Dust - Storms
of sand and dust sometimes overtake Eastern travellers. They are
very dreadful, many perishing under them. Jehovah threatens to bring
on the land of Israel, as a punishment for forsaking him, a rain of
"powder and dust" (Deut. 28:24).
To cast dust on the head was a sign of
mourning (Josh. 7:6); and to sit in dust, of extreme affliction (Isa.
47:1). "Dust" is used to denote the grave (Job 7:21). "To shake off
the dust from one's feet" against another is to renounce all future
intercourse with him (Matt. 10:14; Acts 13:51). To "lick the dust"
is a sign of abject submission (Ps. 72:9); and to throw dust at one
is a sign of abhorrence (2 Sam. 16:13; comp. Acts 22:23).
Dwarf - a lean
or emaciated person (Lev. 21:20).
Dwell - Tents
were in primitive times the common dwellings of men. Houses were
afterwards built, the walls of which were frequently of mud (Job
24:16; Matt. 6:19, 20) or of sun-dried bricks.
God "dwells in light" (1 Tim. 6:16; 1 John
1:7), in heaven (Ps. 123:1), in his church (Ps. 9:11; 1 John 4:12).
Christ dwelt on earth in the days of his humiliation (John 1:14). He
now dwells in the hearts of his people (Eph. 3:17-19). The Holy
Spirit dwells in believers (1 Cor. 3:16; 2 Tim. 1:14). We are
exhorted to "let the word of God dwell in us richly" (Col. 3:16; Ps.
119:11).
Dwell deep occurs only in Jer. 49:8, and
refers to the custom of seeking refuge from impending danger, in
retiring to the recesses of rocks and caverns, or to remote places
in the desert.
Dwellings - The
materials used in buildings were commonly bricks, sometimes also
stones (Lev. 14:40, 42), which were held together by cement (Jer.
43:9) or bitumen (Gen. 11:3). The exterior was usually whitewashed
(Lev. 14:41; Ezek. 13:10; Matt. 23:27). The beams were of sycamore (Isa.
9:10), or olive-wood, or cedar (1 Kings 7:2; Isa. 9:10).
The form of Eastern dwellings differed in
many respects from that of dwellings in Western lands. The larger
houses were built in a quadrangle enclosing a court-yard (Luke 5:19;
2 Sam. 17:18; Neh. 8:16) surrounded by galleries, which formed the
guest-chamber or reception-room for visitors. The flat roof,
surrounded by a low parapet, was used for many domestic and social
purposes. It was reached by steps from the court. In connection with
it (2 Kings 23:12) was an upper room, used as a private chamber (2
Sam 18:33; Dan. 6:11), also as a bedroom (2 Kings 23:12), a sleeping
apartment for guests (2 Kings 4:10), and as a sick-chamber (1 Kings
17:19). The doors, sometimes of stone, swung on morticed pivots, and
were generally fastened by wooden bolts. The houses of the more
wealthy had a doorkeeper or a female porter (John 18:16; Acts
12:13). The windows generally opened into the courtyard, and were
closed by a lattice (Judg. 5:28). The interior rooms were set apart
for the female portion of the household.
The furniture of the room (2 Kings 4:10)
consisted of a couch furnished with pillows (Amos 6:4; Ezek. 13:20);
and besides this, chairs, a table and lanterns or lamp-stands (2
Kings 4:10).
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