Genesis 49:17

shall be.

Jud 14:1-15:20; 16:22-30; 18:22-31; 1Ch 12:35

an adder. Heb. an arrow-snake.

1 Samuel 26:20

let not my.

2:9; 25:29

the king.

24:14; Mt 26:47,55

a flea.{Parosh,} (in Arabic {borghooth,} Syriac, {poorthano,}) the well known little contemptible and troublesome insect, the flea, seems to be so called from its agility in leaping and skipping, from {para,} "free," and {raash,} "to leap, bound." David, by comparing himself to this insect, seems to import, that while it would cost Saul much pains to catch him, he would obtain but very little advantage from it.

a partridge.{Korai} certainly denotes the partridge, which is called in Arabic, {kiräa.} It seems to be so called from the cry or {cur} which it utters when calling its young.

Psalms 22:16

dogs.

22:1; *title

20; 59:6,14; Mt 7:6; Php 3:2; Re 22:15

compassed.

Lu 11:53,54

assembly.

86:14; Jer 12:6; Mt 26:57; Mr 15:16-20; Lu 22:63-71; 23:4,5,10,11

Lu 23:23

they pierced.The textual reading is {kaäri,} "as a lion my hands and feet;" but several MSS., read {kâroo,} and others {karoo} in the margin, which affords the reading adopted by our translators. So the LXX. [oryxan cheiras mou kai podas,] so also the Vulgate, Syriac, Arabic, and Ethiopic; and as all the Evangelists so quote the passage, and apply it to the crucifixion of Christ, there seems scarcely the shadow of a doubt that this is the genuine reading; especially when it is considered, that the other contains no sense at all. The whole difference lies between [vâv] {wav} and [yôwd,] {yood,} which might easily be mistaken for each other.

Zec 12:10; Mt 27:35; Mr 15:24; Lu 23:33; Joh 19:23,37; 20:25,27

Psalms 56:6-7

gather.

2:1-3; 59:3; 71:10; 140:2; Mt 26:3,4,57; 27:1; Ac 4:5,6; 23:12-14

hide.

10:8-10; 64:2-6; Da 6:4

mark.

37:32; 57:6; 89:51; Job 14:16; 31:4; Jer 20:10; Lu 20:20

escape.

94:20,21; Ec 8:8; Isa 28:15; Jer 7:10; Hab 1:13

in thine.

55:9,15,23; Jer 10:25; 18:19-23
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