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Nova Vulgata

Leviticus 13:30

Et, siquidem humilior fuerit locus carne reliqua, et capillus flavus solitoque subtilior, contaminabit eos, quia scabies est, lepra capitis vel barbae.

Bible Study Resources

Concordances:

- Nave's Topical Bible - Beard;   Sanitation;   Scall;   Torrey's Topical Textbook - Beard, the;   Leprosy;   Priests;  

Dictionaries:

- American Tract Society Bible Dictionary - Hair;   Bridgeway Bible Dictionary - Leprosy;   Priest;   Baker Evangelical Dictionary of Biblical Theology - Heal, Health;   Easton Bible Dictionary - Plague;   Fausset Bible Dictionary - Leper;   Holman Bible Dictionary - Itch;   Leviticus;   Scall;   Yellow;   Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible - Clean and Unclean;   Hair;   Medicine;   Numbers, Book of;   Priests and Levites;   Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament - Leprosy ;   The Hawker's Poor Man's Concordance And Dictionary - Leper;   Smith Bible Dictionary - Leper, Leprosy;  

Encyclopedias:

- The Jewish Encyclopedia - Color;   Leprosy;   Sidra;  

Parallel Translations

Clementine Latin Vulgate (1592)
Et si quidem humilior fuerit locus carne reliqua, et capillus flavus, solitoque subtilior, contaminabit eos, quia lepra capitis ac barb� est.
Jerome's Latin Vulgate (405)
Et si quidem humilior fuerit locus carne reliqua, et capillus flavus, solitoque subtilior, contaminabit eos, quia lepra capitis ac barb� est.

Bible Verse Review
  from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge

scall: Leviticus 13:34-37, Leviticus 14:54

Reciprocal: Leviticus 13:32 - yellow hair Isaiah 3:17 - smite John 20:4 - outrun

Gill's Notes on the Bible

Then the priest shall see the plague,.... The person on whom it is shall come or be brought unto him; and he shall look upon it and examine it:

and, behold, if it [be] in sight deeper than the skin; which is always one sign of leprosy;

[and there be] in it a yellow thin hair; like the appearance of thin gold, as the Targum of Jonathan; for, as Ben Gersom says, its colour is the colour of gold; and it is called thin in this place, because short and soft, and not when it is long and small; and so it is said, scabs make unclean in two weeks, and by two signs, by thin yellow hair, and by spreading, by yellow hair, small, soft, and short t: now this is to be understood, not of hair that is naturally of a yellow or gold colour, as is the hair of the head and beard of some persons, but of hair changed into this colour through the force of the disease; and so Jarchi interprets it, black hair turned yellow; in other parts of the body, hair turned white was a sign of leprosy, but here that which was turned yellow or golden coloured: Aben Ezra observes, that the colour expressed by this word is, in the Ishmaelitish or Arabic language, the next to the white colour:

then the priest shall pronounce him unclean; declare him a leper, and unfit for company, and order him to do and have done for him the things after expressed, as required in such a case:

it [is] a dry scall; or "wound", as the Septuagint version; "nethek", which is the word here used, Jarchi says, is the name of a plague that is in the place of hair, or where that grows; it has its name from plucking up; for there the hair is plucked away, as Aben Ezra and Ben Gersom note:

[even] a leprosy upon the head or beard; as the head is the seat of knowledge, and the beard a sign of manhood, and of a man's being arrived to years of discretion; when wisdom and prudence are expected in him; this sort of leprosy may be an emblem of errors in judgment, of false doctrines and heresies imbibed by persons, which eat as doth a canker, and are in themselves damnable, and bring ruin and destruction on teachers and hearers, unless recovered from them by the grace of God.

t Negaim, c. 10. sect. 1.

Barnes' Notes on the Bible

Scall - As this is the name for another disease not allied to the leprosy, it would have been better to retain the original word נתק netheq. It is a true elephantiasis, and is recognized by modern writers under the name of the Fox mange.


 
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