Numbers 5:18-24

the priest.

Heb 13:4; Re 2:19-23

uncover.

Le 13:45; 1Co 11:15; Heb 4:12,13

and put.

15,25,26

the bitter water.So called from the bitter effects which it had upon the guilty.

17,22,24; De 29:18; 1Sa 15:32; Pr 5:4; Ec 7:26; Isa 38:17; Jer 2:19

Re 10:9,10

charge her.

Mt 26:63

with another. or, being in the power of they husband. Heb.under thy husband.

Ro 7:2; *Gr:

20

an oath.

Jos 6:26; 1Sa 14:24; Ne 10:29; Mt 26:74

The Lord make.

Isa 65:15; Jer 29:22

rot. Heb. fall.

2Ch 21:15; Pr 10:7

go into.

27; Ps 109:18; Pr 1:31; Eze 3:3

the woman.

De 27:15-26; Job 31:21,22,39,40; Ps 7:4,5

Amen.

Ps 41:13; 72:19; 89:52; Joh 3:3,11; 5:24,25; 6:53; *Gr:

write these.

Ex 17:14; De 31:19; 2Ch 34:24; Job 31:35; Jer 51:60-64

1Co 16:21,22; Re 20:12

blot.

Ps 51:1,9; Isa 43:25; 44:22; Ac 3:19

Zec 5:3,4; Mal 3:5

Deuteronomy 32:32

of the vine of Sodom. or, worse than the vine of Sodom, etc.

Isa 1:10; Jer 2:21; La 4:6; Eze 16:45-51; Mt 11:24

their grapes.

29:18; Isa 5:4; Heb 12:15

Psalms 69:21

gall for my meat.Bochart, from a comparison of this passage with Joh 19:29, thinks that {rosh} is the same herb as the evangelist calls [ ,] hyssop; a species of which, growing in Judea, he proves from Isaac ben Orman, an Arabian writer, to be so bitter as not to be eatable. Theophylact expressly tells us, that the hyssop was added [ ,] as being deleterious, or poisonous: and Nonnus, in his paraphrase, says, [ ] "One gave the deadly acid mixed with hyssop."

Jer 8:14; 9:15; 23:15; Mt 27:34,48

vinegar.

Mr 15:23,36; Lu 23:36; Joh 19:29,30

Jeremiah 9:15

I will.

8:14; 23:15; 25:15; Ps 60:3; 69:21; 75:8; 80:5; Isa 2:17,22

La 3:15,19; Re 8:11

Jeremiah 23:15

will.

8:14; 9:15; Ps 69:21; La 3:5,15,19; Mt 27:34; Re 8:11

profaneness. or, hypocrisy.

Lamentations 3:19

Remembering. or, Remember.

Ne 9:32; Job 7:7; Ps 89:47,50; 132:1

the.

5,15; Jer 9:15

Matthew 27:34

gave.

48; Ps 69:21; Mr 15:23; Joh 19:28-30

vinegar.Mark says wine mingled with myrrh; but as the sour wine used by the Roman soldiers and common people was termed [oinos ] wine, and [oxos ] vinegar, [vin aigre, French,] is sour wine; and as [chole ] gall, is applied to bitters of any kind, it is not difficult to reconcile the two accounts.
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