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Bahasa Indonesia Sehari-hari

Keluaran 3:5

Lalu Ia berfirman: "Janganlah datang dekat-dekat: tanggalkanlah kasutmu dari kakimu, sebab tempat, di mana engkau berdiri itu, adalah tanah yang kudus."

Bible Study Resources

Concordances:

- Nave's Topical Bible - Burning Bush;   Fear of God;   God Continued...;   Israel;   Moses;   Quotations and Allusions;   Religion;   Revelation;   Reverence;   Shoe;   Worship;   Scofield Reference Index - Israel;   Kingdom;   Thompson Chain Reference - Awe;   Godly Reverence;   Reverence;   Reverence-Irreverence;   Shoes Removed;   Torrey's Topical Textbook - Egypt;   Feet, the;   Garments;   Shoes;  

Dictionaries:

- American Tract Society Bible Dictionary - Angel of the Lord;   Sandals;   Sinai;   Bridgeway Bible Dictionary - Angels;   Moses;   Revelation;   Baker Evangelical Dictionary of Biblical Theology - Aaron;   Angel of the Lord;   Building;   Fire;   Holy, Holiness;   Jeremiah, Theology of;   Sanctification;   Charles Buck Theological Dictionary - Frugality;   Easton Bible Dictionary - Adore;   Fausset Bible Dictionary - Foot;   Joshua;   Judges, the Book of;   Priest;   Sandal;   Holman Bible Dictionary - Angel;   Bible, Hermeneutics;   Call, Calling;   Foot;   Horeb;   Land, Ground;   Mountain;   Theophany;   Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible - Dress;   Foot;   Greek Versions of Ot;   Prayer;   Sinai;   Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament - Foot;   Shoe Sandal;   Morrish Bible Dictionary - Fire;   Shoes;   The Hawker's Poor Man's Concordance And Dictionary - Feet;   Naked;   Rod;   Sandals;   Smith Bible Dictionary - Mo'ses;   Sandal;   Watson's Biblical & Theological Dictionary - Foot;   Moses;   Priest;   Shoes;  

Encyclopedias:

- Condensed Biblical Cyclopedia - Exodus, the;   Tabernacle, the;   Priesthood, the;   Moses, the Man of God;   International Standard Bible Encyclopedia - Adoration;   Barefoot;   Dress;   Foot;   Ground;   Holiness;   Moses;   Shoe;   Trinity;   The Jewish Encyclopedia - Adoration, Forms of;   Ancestor Worship;   Angelology;   Barefoot;   Costume;   Groves and Sacred Trees;   Holiness;   Moses;   Sandals;   Shoe;   Sinai, Mount;  

Devotionals:

- Daily Light on the Daily Path - Devotion for March 23;   Every Day Light - Devotion for February 28;  

Parallel Translations

Alkitab Terjemahan Baru
Lalu Ia berfirman: "Janganlah datang dekat-dekat: tanggalkanlah kasutmu dari kakimu, sebab tempat, di mana engkau berdiri itu, adalah tanah yang kudus."
Alkitab Terjemahan Lama
Maka firman-Nya: Janganlah engkau hampir ke mari; tanggalkanlah kasut pada kakimu, karena tempat engkau berdiri itu tanah yang suci adanya.

Contextual Overview

1 Moyses kept the sheepe of Iethro his father in lawe, priest of Madian: and he droue the flocke to the backesyde of the desert, aud came to the mountayne of God Horeb. 2 And the angell of the Lorde appeared vnto hym in a flambe of fire out of the middes of a busshe: And he loked, and beholde the busshe burned with fire, and the busshe was not consumed. 3 Therfore Moyses sayde: I wyll go nowe and see this great syght, howe it commeth that the busshe burneth not. 4 And when ye Lorde sawe that he came for to see, God called vnto him out of the middes of the busshe, & sayde: Moyses, Moyses? And he answered, here am I. 5 And he said: Draw not nigh hither, put thy shoes of thy feete, for the place whereon thou standest, is holy ground. 6 And he sayde: I am the God of thy father, the God of Abraham, the God of Isahac, and the God of Iacob. And Moyses hid his face, for he was afrayde to loke vpon God.

Bible Verse Review
  from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge

Draw not: Exodus 19:12, Exodus 19:21, Leviticus 10:3, Hebrews 12:20

put off: Genesis 28:16, Genesis 28:17, Joshua 5:15, Ecclesiastes 5:1, Acts 7:33

Reciprocal: Exodus 3:1 - the mountain Exodus 24:1 - Come up Joshua 3:4 - a space 1 Kings 19:13 - he wrapped his face 2 Chronicles 8:11 - holy Psalms 68:17 - as in Sinai Isaiah 20:2 - put 1 Corinthians 3:17 - destroy 2 Peter 1:18 - the holy

Cross-References

Genesis 2:17
But as touching the tree of knowlege of good and euyll thou shalt not eate of it: For in what daye so euer thou eatest therof, thou shalt dye the death.
Genesis 3:2
And the woman sayde vnto the serpent: We eate of ye fruite of the trees of the garden.
Genesis 3:3
But as for the fruite of the tree which is in the myddes of the garden, God hath sayde, ye shall not eate of it, neither shal ye touche of it, lest peraduenture ye dye.
Genesis 3:6
And so the woman, seing that the same tree was good to eate of, and pleasaunt to the eyes, and a tree to be desired to make one wise, toke of the fruite therof, and dyd eate, and gaue also vnto her husbande beyng with her, and he dyd eate.
Genesis 3:7
Then the eyes of them both were opened, and they knewe that they were naked, and they sowed fygge leaues together, & made them selues apernes.
Genesis 3:10
Which sayde: I hearde thy voyce in the garden, and was afrayde because I was naked, and hyd my selfe.
Genesis 3:13
And the Lord God sayd vnto the woman: Why hast thou done this? And the woman sayde: the serpent begyled me, and I dyd eate.
Genesis 3:14
And the lord god said vnto ye serpent: Because thou hast done this, thou art cursed aboue all cattel, and aboue euery beast of the fielde: vpon thy belly shalt thou go, and dust shalt thou eate all the dayes of thy lyfe.
Genesis 3:15
I wyll also put enmitie betweene thee & the woman, betweene thy seede and her seede: and it shall treade downe thy head, and thou shalt treade vpon his heele.
Genesis 3:22
And the Lorde God sayde: Beholde, the man is become as one of vs, in knowing good and euyll: And now lest peraduenture he put foorth his hande, and take also of the tree of lyfe and eate, and lyue for euer.

Gill's Notes on the Bible

And he said, draw not nigh hither,.... Keep a proper distance:

put off thy shoes from off thy feet; dust and dirt cleaving to shoes, and these being ordered to be put off from the feet, the instrument of walking, show that those that draw nigh to God, and are worshippers of him, ought to be of pure and holy lives and conversations:

for the place whereon thou standest is holy ground; not that there was any inherent holiness in this spot of ground more than in any other, which ground is not capable of; but a relative holiness on account of the presence of God here at this time, and was not permanent, only while a pure and holy God was there: hence, in after times, the temple being the place of the divine residence, the priests there performed their services barefooted, nor might a common person enter into the temple with his shoes on k; and to this day the Jews go to their synagogues barefooted on the day of atonement l, to which Juvenal m seems to have respect; and from hence came the Nudipedalia among the Heathens, and that known symbol of Pythagoras n, "sacrifice and worship with naked feet": in this manner the priests of Diana sacrificed to her among the Cretians and other people o; and so the priests of Hercules did the same p; the Brahmans among the Indians never go into their temples without plucking off their shoes q; so the Ethiopian Christians, imitating Jews and Gentiles, never go into their places of public worship but with naked feet r, and the same superstition the Turks and Mahometans observe s.

k Misn. Beracot, c. 9. sect. 5. l Buxtorf. Jud Synagog. c. 30. p. 571. m "Observant ub. festa mero pede Sabbata reges." Satyr. 6. n Jamblichus de Vita Pythagor. Symbol. 3. o Solin. Polyhistor. c. 16. Strabo, l. 12. p. 370. p Silius de Bello Punic, l. 3. q Rogerius de Relig. Brachman. l. 2. c. 10. apud Braunium de vest. sacerdot. l. 1. c. 3. p. 66. r Damianus a Goes apud Rivet. in loc. s Pitts's Account of the Relig. and Manners of the Mahometans, c. 6. p. 38. 81. Georgieviz. de Turc. Moribus, c. 1. p. 11. Sionita de Urb. Oriental. & Relig. c. 7. p. 18. c. 10. p. 34.

Barnes' Notes on the Bible

Put off thy shoes - The reverence due to holy places thus rests upon God’s own command. The custom itself is well known from the observances of the temple, it was almost universally adopted by the ancients, and is retained in the East.

Holy ground - This passage is almost conclusive against the assumption that the place was previously a sanctuary. Moses knew nothing of its holiness after some 40 years spent on the Peninsula. It became holy by the presence of God.

Clarke's Notes on the Bible

Verse Exodus 3:5. Put off thy shoes — It is likely that from this circumstance all the eastern nations have agreed to perform all the acts of their religious worship barefooted. All the Mohammedans, Brahmins, and Parsees do so still. The Jews were remarked for this in the time of Juvenal; hence he speaks of their performing their sacred rites barefooted; Sat. vi., ver. 158:

Observant ubi festa mero pede sabbata reges.

The ancient Greeks did the same. Jamblichus, in the life of Pythagoras, tells us that this was one of his maxims, Ανυποδητος θυε και προσκυνει, Offer sacrifice and worship with your shoes off. And Solinus asserts that no person was permitted to enter into the temple of Diana, in Crete, till he had taken off his shoes. "AEdem Numinis (Dianae) praeterquam nudus vestigio nulles licito ingreditur." Tertullian observes, de jejunio, that in a time of drought the worshippers of Jupiter deprecated his wrath, and prayed for rain, walking barefooted. "Cum stupet caelum, et aret annus, nudipedalia, denunciantur." It is probable that נעלים nealim, in the text, signifies sandals, translated by the Chaldee סנדל sandal, and סנדלא sandala, (see Genesis 14:23), which was the same as the Roman solea, a sole alone, strapped about the foot As this sole must let in dust, gravel, and sand about the foot in travelling, and render it very uneasy, hence the custom of frequently washing the feet in those countries where these sandals were worn. Pulling off the shoes was, therefore, an emblem of laying aside the pollutions contracted by walking in the way of sin. Let those who name the Lord Jesus Christ depart from iniquity. In our western countries reverence is expressed by pulling off the hat; but how much more significant is the eastern custom! "The natives of Bengal never go into their own houses with their shoes on, nor into the houses of others, but always leave their shoes at the door. It would be a great affront not to attend to this mark of respect when visiting; and to enter a temple without pulling off the shoes would be an unpardonable offence."-Ward.

The place whereon thou standest is holy ground. — It was not particularly sanctified by the Divine presence; but if we may credit Josephus, a general opinion had prevailed that God dwelt on that mountain; and hence the shepherds, considering it as sacred ground, did not dare to feed their flocks there. Moses, however, finding the soil to be rich and the pasturage good, boldly drove his flock thither to feed on it. - Antiq., b. ii., c. xii., s. 1.


 
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