1 Kings 5:6

cedar trees.

6:9,10,16,20; 2Ch 2:8,10; Ps 29:5

will I give hire.

Ro 12:17; Php 4:8

appoint. Heb. say. that there is not.

1Co 12:14-21; Eph 4:7

Sidonians.

Ge 10:15; Ezr 3:7

1 Kings 5:9-10

Lebanon.

De 3:25

and I will.

2Ch 2:16

appoint. Heb. send. in giving food.

2Ch 1:15; Ezr 3:7; Eze 27:17; Ac 12:20

10

1 Kings 5:18

the stone-squarers. or, Giblites.

Jos 13:5; Ps 83:7; Eze 27:9

1 Chronicles 22:2

the strangers.

1Ki 9:20,21; 2Ch 2:17; 8:7,8; Isa 61:5,6; Eph 2:12,19-22

masons.

14:1; 2Sa 5:11; 1Ki 5:17,18; 6:7; 7:9-12; 2Ki 12:12; 22:6

Ezr 3:7

2 Chronicles 2:3

Huram.

1Ki 5:1

Hiram.As thou didst.

2Sa 5:11; 1Ch 14:1

2 Chronicles 2:8-10

Send me also.

1Ki 5:6

algum trees. or, algummim.Called in the parallel passage, by a transposition of letters, {almuggim,} or "almug-trees;" which is rendered by the Vulgate, {ligna thyina,} the thya or lignum vitæ wood. Theophrastus say that "the thyon of thya tree grows near the temple of Jupiter Ammon (in Africa), and in the Cyrenaica; that it resembles the cypress in its boughs, leaves, stalk, and fruit; and that its wood (from its close texture) never rots." The LXX. render here [peukina;] and Josephus calls it [xyla peukina,] torch or pine-trees; but cautions us against supposing that the wood was like what was known in his time by that name; for these "were to the sight like the wood of the fig-tree, but more white and shining." The Syriac version has {kaiso dekee-sotho,} probably cypress wood; and Dr. Shaw supposes it denotes the cypress. Several critics understand it to mean gummy wood; and Celsius queries whether it may not be the sandal-tree, as the Rabbins and Dr. Geddes suppose.

1Ki 10:11

almug-trees.

wonderful great. Heb. great and wonderful.

5; 7:21; 1Ki 9:8

I will give.

1Ki 5:11; Lu 10:7; Ro 13:7,8

baths of wine.

1Ki 7:26,38; Ezr 7:22

Ezra 3:7

gave money.

2Ki 12:11,12; 22:5,6; 2Ch 24:12,13

carpenters. or, workmen. meat.

1Ki 5:6,9-11; 2Ch 2:10-15; Eze 27:17; Ac 12:20

JoppaJoppa, now Jaffa or Yaffa, one of the most ancient sea-ports in the world, is situated in a fine plain on the shore of the Mediterranean, between Jamnia south and Caesarea of Palestine north, 150 stadia from Antipatris, according to Josephus, 30 miles south of Caesarea, 12 miles north of Ashdod, 9 miles west of Ramla, and 40 miles west of Jerusalem, according to modern authorities; and in lat. 32 degrees 50' long. 65 degrees 40' according to Ptolemy. It is still a considerable town, containing about 4,000 or 5,000 souls, and occupying a circular eminence close to the seaside, with a citadel on the summit; the bottom of the hill being surrounded by a wall 12 or 14 feet high, and two or three feet thick. The environs are occupied by extensive gardens.

2Ch 2:16; Jon 1:3; Ac 9:36; 10:5,6

according.

6:3-5
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