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Read the Bible
Delitzsche Hebrew New Testament
מרקוםי 7:26
Bible Study Resources
Concordances:
- Nave'sDictionaries:
- AmericanEncyclopedias:
- InternationalParallel Translations
והאשה יונית וארץ מולדתה כנען אשר לסוריא ותבקש ממנו לגרש אר השד מבתה׃
Bible Verse Review
from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge
Greek: or, Gentile, Isaiah 49:12, Galatians 3:28, Colossians 3:11
a Syrophenician: Matthew 15:22
Reciprocal: Mark 9:17 - I Mark 10:48 - but Luke 4:25 - many John 12:20 - Greeks Acts 14:1 - Greeks Galatians 2:15 - sinners
Gill's Notes on the Bible
The woman was a Greek,.... Or Gentile, an Heathen woman, which made her faith the more remarkable. So the Syriac, Persic, and Ethiopic versions call her; which she might be, and was, though she was a woman of Canaan, as she is said to be in Matthew 15:22, for though the land of Israel in general, was called the land of Canaan, yet there was a particular part, which was at first inhabited by Canaan himself, which bore this name; and is the same with Phoenicia, of which this woman was an inhabitant, and therefore she is afterwards called a Syrophoenician; Matthew 15:22- :. And this place was now inhabited by Gentiles; hence the Jews often distinguish between an Hebrew and a Canaanitish servant; of which take an z instance or two;
"an Hebrew servant is obtained by money, and by writing, a Canaanitish servant is obtained by money, and by writing, and by possession.''
Again a,
"he that does injury to an Hebrew servant, is bound to all these (i.e. to make compensation for loss, pain, healing, cessation from business, and reproach), excepting cessation from business--but he that hurts a Canaanitish servant, that belongs to others, is bound to them all.''
And by a Canaanitish servant, they understand any one that is not an Israelite; for an Hebrew and a Canaanite, are manifestly opposed to one another. This woman being of Phoenicia, as appears by what follows, which was sometimes called Canaan, might be said to be a woman of Canaan, and also a Gentile.
A Syrophoenician by nation; or extract. The Syriac and Persic versions say she was "of Phoenicia of Syria"; and the latter, by way of explanation, "of Emisa". The Arabic version adds, "her extraction was of Ghaur"; and the Ethiopic version says, she was "the wife of a Syrophoenician man"; Matthew 15:22- :.
And she besought him, that he would cast forth the devil out of her daughter; which she was persuaded, by what she had heard of him, he was able to do, by a word speaking, though her daughter was not present.
z Misn. Kiddushin, c. 1. scct. 2, 3. a Misn. Bava Kama, c. 8. sect. 3.
Barnes' Notes on the Bible
See this miracle explained in the notes at Matthew 15:21-28.
Mark 7:24
Would have no man know it - To avoid the designs of the Pharisees he wished to be retired.
Mark 7:26
A Greek - The Jews called all persons âGreeksâ who were not of their nation. Compare Romans 1:14. The whole world was considered as divided into Jews and Greeks. Though she might not have been strictly a âGreek,â yet she came under this general appellation as a foreigner.
Clarke's Notes on the Bible
Verse 26. The woman was a Greek — Rosenmuller has well observed, that all heathens or idolaters were called ÎÌλληνεÏ, Greeks, by the Jews; whether they were Parthians, Medes, Arabs, Indians, or AEthiopians. Jews and Greeks divided the whole world at this period.