the Fifth Week after Easter
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Bahasa Indonesia Sehari-hari
Ulangan 24:21
Bible Study Resources
Concordances:
- Nave'sDictionaries:
- AmericanEncyclopedias:
- InternationalParallel Translations
Apabila engkau mengumpulkan hasil kebun anggurmu, janganlah engkau mengadakan pemetikan sekali lagi; itulah bagian orang asing, anak yatim dan janda.
Maka apabila kamu sudah memungut buah pokok anggurmu, janganlah berulang kamu memungut buahnya karena ia itulah bahagian orang dagang dan anak piatu dan perempuan janda.
Contextual Overview
Bible Verse Review
from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge
gatherest: Deuteronomy 24:19, Leviticus 19:9, Leviticus 19:10
afterward: Heb. after thee
Reciprocal: Obadiah 1:5 - if the
Cross-References
And Abraham was old & stricken in dayes, and the Lorde had blessed Abraham in all thinges.
To whom Abraham aunswered: beware that thou bring not my sonne thyther agayne.
The Lorde God of heauen whiche toke me from my fathers house, & from the land of my kinred, and which spake vnto me, and that sware vnto me, saying, vnto thy seede wyll I geue this lande: he shall sende his angell before thee, and thou shalt take a wyfe vnto my sonne from thence.
And he saide: Lord God of my maister Abraham, I pray thee sende me good speede this day, and shewe mercy vnto my maister Abraham.
And she sayd: drinke my Lorde. And she hasted, and let downe her pytcher vpon her arme, and gaue him drinke.
And she poured out her pytcher into the trough hastyly, and ranne agayne vnto the well to draw [water] and drew for all his Camelles.
He sayde vnto them: hynder me not, beholde, the Lorde hath prospered my iourney, sende me away therefore, that I may go to my maister.
Confesse you [it] vnto God: for he is gratious, and his mercy endureth for euer.
O that men would confesse vnto God his louyng kindnesse: and his marueylous actes [done] to the chyldren of men.
O that men would confesse vnto God: his louing kindnes and his marueylous actes [done] to the chyldren of men.
Gill's Notes on the Bible
When thou gatherest the grapes of thy vineyard,.... Which was done much about the same time that the olives were gathered, and both after wheat harvest, about the latter end of June, or beginning of July; for they were more forward in those hot countries:
thou shall not glean [it] afterwards; go over the vines a second time, to pick off every berry or bunch that escaped them at first gathering:
it shall be for the stranger, for the fatherless, and for the widow; as the forgotten sheaf, and the olive berries left; these are all supposed to be poor persons, otherwise no doubt there were strangers, and fatherless persons, and widows, in good circumstances; who, as they needed not, so neither would give themselves the trouble, but think it beneath them to go into fields, oliveyards, and vineyards, to gather what was left by the owners. These laws were made in favour of the poor, that mercy and kindness might be showed to them, and that they might have a taste of all the fruits of the earth.
Barnes' Notes on the Bible
Compare the marginal references. The motive assigned for these various acts of consideration is one and the same Deuteronomy 24:18, Deuteronomy 24:22.