2 Kings 4:38-39

Elisha.

2:1; 1Sa 7:16,17; Ac 10:38; 15:36

a dearth.

8:1; Le 26:26; De 28:22-24,38-40; 2Sa 21:1; Jer 14:1-6; Eze 14:13

Lu 4:25

the sons.

2:3; 1Sa 19:20

were sitting.

Pr 8:34; Lu 2:46; 8:35,38; 10:39; Ac 22:3

Set on the great pot.

Mr 6:37; 8:2-6; Lu 9:13; Joh 21:5,9

a wild vine.

Isa 5:4; Jer 2:21; Mt 15:13; Heb 12:15

wild gourds.The word {pakküôth,} from {peka,} in Chaldee, to burst, and in Syriac, to crack, thunder, is generally supposed to be the fruits of the coloquintida, or colocynth; whose leaves are large, placed alternately, very much like those of the vine, whence it might be called a wild vine: the flowers are white, and the fruit of the gourd kind, of the size of a large apple, and when ripe, of a yellow colour, and a pleasant and inviting appearance. It ranks among vegetable poisons, as all intense bitters do; but, judiciously employed, it is of considerable use in medicine. It is said that the fruit, when ripe, is so full of wind that it bursts, and throws its liquor and seeds to a great distance: and if touched, before it breaks of itself, it flies open with an explosion, and discharges its foetid contents in the face of him who touched it.

Amos 7:14

neither.

1Ki 20:35; 2Ki 2:3,5,7; 4:38; 6:1; 2Ch 16:7; 19:2; 20:34

an herdman.

1:1; Zec 13:5; 1Co 1:27

a gatherer.Rather, as {bolais} is rendered by the LXX. and Vulgate, [knizon,] {vellicans,} "a scraping," or a scraper of sycamores; for the fruit does not ripen till it is rubbed with iron combs.

sycamore fruit. or, wild figs.

Luke 15:16

he would.

Isa 44:20; 55:2; La 4:5; Ho 12:1; Ro 6:19-21

that.

Ps 73:22

no.

Ps 142:4; Isa 57:3; Jon 2:2-8
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