Leviticus 26:26

Ps 105:16; Isa 3:1; 9:20; Jer 14:12; La 4:3-9; Eze 4:10,16; 5:16

Eze 14:13; Ho 4:10; Mic 6:14; Hag 1:6

2 Kings 6:25

a great famine.

28,29; 7:4; 25:3; 1Ki 18:2; Jer 14:13-15,18; 32:24; 52:6

an ass's head.If the pieces of silver were {drachms,} the whole would amount to about 2£. 9s.; which was a great price for so mean a part of this unclean animal.

Eze 4:13-16

dove's dung.This probably denotes, as Bochart, Scheuchzer, and others suppose, a kind of {pulse,} or {vetches,} which the Arabs still call pigeon's dung. "They never," says Dr. Shaw, (Travels, p. 140), "constitute a dish by themselves, but are strewed singly as a garnish over {cuscasowe, pillowe,} and other dishes. They are besides in the greatest repute after they are parched in pans and ovens; then assuming the name {leblebby;}" and he thinks they were so called from being pointed at one end, and acquiring an ash colour in parching.

Isaiah 3:1

1 The great calamities which come by sin.

10 The different reward of the righteous and wicked.

12 The oppression and covetousness of the rulers.

16 The judgments which shall be for the pride of the women.

25 The general desolation.

behold.

2:22

the Lord.

1:24; 36:12; 51:22

the stay.

Le 26:26; Ps 105:16; Jer 37:21; 38:9; Eze 4:16,17; 14:13

Ezekiel 4:16

I will.

5:16; 14:13; Le 26:26; Ps 105:16; Isa 3:1

eat.The prophet was allowed each day only twenty shekels weight, or about ten ounces, of the coarse food he had prepared, and the sixth part of a hin, scarcely a pint and a half, of water; all of which was intended to shew that they should be obliged to eat the meanest and coarsest food, and that by weight, and their water by measure.

10,11; 12:18,19; Ps 60:3; La 1:11; 4:9,10; 5:9

Ezekiel 14:13

when.

9:9; Ezr 9:6; Isa 24:20; La 1:8,20; Da 9:5,10-12

break.

4:16; 5:16; Le 26:26; Isa 3:1; Jer 15:2,3; La 4:9,10

and will cut.

17,19,21; 25:13; Ge 6:7; Jer 7:20; 32:43; 36:29
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