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Sagradas Escrituras
Jueces 6:18
Bible Study Resources
Concordances:
- Nave'sDictionaries:
- AmericanEncyclopedias:
- CondensedParallel Translations
Te ruego que no te vayas de aquí hasta que yo vuelva a ti, y traiga mi ofrenda y la ponga delante de ti. Y él respondió: Me quedaré hasta que vuelvas.
Ru�gote que no te vayas de aqu�, hasta que � ti vuelva, y saque mi presente, y lo ponga delante de ti. Y �l respondi�: Yo esperar� hasta que vuelvas.
Te ruego que no te vayas de aqu�, hasta que a ti vuelva, y saque mi presente, y lo ponga delante de ti. Y �l respondi�: Yo esperar� hasta que vuelvas.
Bible Verse Review
from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge
bring: Judges 13:15, Genesis 18:3, Genesis 18:5, Genesis 19:3
present: or, meat offering
Reciprocal: 1 Samuel 9:7 - what shall
Gill's Notes on the Bible
Ver. 18 Depart not hence, I pray thee, until I come unto thee,.... Intending to go to his own, or his father's house, to fetch some food to entertain him with, and therefore entreats he would not quit the place where he was until he returned:
and bring forth my present, and set it before thee; to treat him with, as a stranger and a messenger of God; and perhaps he thought, by this means, the better to discover who he was, whether an angel or a man: the word for the "present" is "minchah", often used for a meat offering, therefore some have thought of a sacrifice; but it appears by what follows that it was not of the nature of a sacrifice; and, besides, Gideon was no priest, nor was this a place for sacrifice, nor was there here any altar; and, besides, as Gideon did not yet know that it was the Lord himself, he could never think of offering a sacrifice to him:
and he said, I will tarry until thou come again; which was a wonderful instance of divine condescension, it being some time he waited ere Gideon could prepare what he brought, as follows.
Barnes' Notes on the Bible
My present - My Minchah: the word used regularly, though not exclusively, for the meat and drink offering (Leviticus 2:1 note). Its double sense of an offering to God, and of a gift to man, suits the doubt in Gideon’s mind as to who his visitor might be.
Clarke's Notes on the Bible
Verse Judges 6:18. And bring forth my present — My minchah; generally an offering of bread, wine, oil, flour, and such like. It seems from this that Gideon supposed the person to whom he spoke to be a Divine person. Nevertheless, what he prepared and brought out appears to be intended simply as an entertainment to refresh a respectable stranger.