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Filipino Cebuano Bible

Exodo 34:21

21 Unom ka adlaw magabuhat ka, apan sa ikapito ka adlaw mopahulay ka: sa panahon sa pagdaro ug sa pag-ani mopahulay ka.

Bible Study Resources

Concordances:

- Nave's Topical Bible - Agriculture;   Harvest;   Labor;   Rest;   Sabbath;   Sanitation;   Thompson Chain Reference - Rest, Enjoined (Physical);   Rest-Unrest;   Sabbath;   Torrey's Topical Textbook - Harvest, the;  

Dictionaries:

- American Tract Society Bible Dictionary - Earing;   Bridgeway Bible Dictionary - Farming;   Baker Evangelical Dictionary of Biblical Theology - Harvest;   Sabbath;   Easton Bible Dictionary - Earing;   Plough;   Fausset Bible Dictionary - Earing;   Jehoiakim;   Sabbath;   Holman Bible Dictionary - Crimes and Punishments;   Exodus, Book of;   Pilgrimage;   Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible - Covenant;   Hexateuch;   Idolatry;   Law;   Moses;   Sabbath;   Ten Commandments;   Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament - Israel, Israelite;   Numbers (2);   Sabbath;   Morrish Bible Dictionary - Eared, Earing;   People's Dictionary of the Bible - Earing;   Sinai;   Smith Bible Dictionary - Earing;   Pass'over,;   Wilson's Dictionary of Bible Types - Rest (and forms);   Watson's Biblical & Theological Dictionary - Moses;  

Encyclopedias:

- Condensed Biblical Cyclopedia - Events of the Encampment;   Other Laws;   Moses, the Man of God;   International Standard Bible Encyclopedia - Ark of the Covenant;   Criticism (the Graf-Wellhausen Hypothesis);   Earing;   Harvest;   Law in the Old Testament;   Passover;   Plow;   Sabbath;   Ten Commandments, the;   The Jewish Encyclopedia - Agriculture;   Anan ben David;   Commandments, the 613;   Decalogue;   Deuteronomy;   Law, Reading from the;   Pentecost;   Sabbath;   Sidra;  

Bible Verse Review
  from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge

Six: Exodus 20:9-11, Exodus 23:12, Exodus 35:2, Deuteronomy 5:12-15, Luke 13:14, Luke 23:56

earing: Genesis 45:6, Deuteronomy 21:4, 1 Samuel 8:12, Isaiah 30:24

Reciprocal: Genesis 2:3 - blessed Genesis 8:22 - seedtime Exodus 20:10 - the seventh Exodus 31:15 - Six days Leviticus 23:3 - General Nehemiah 13:15 - treading wine

Gill's Notes on the Bible

Six days shalt thou work, but on the seventh day thou shalt rest,.... This is the law of the seventh day sabbath, which is after repeated, to fix it in the minds and memories of the people, see Exodus 20:10 and here it is added, which has not been mentioned before:

in earing and in harvest thou shall rest; that is, in the time of ploughing, and in the time of reaping and gathering in the harvest, which are both very busy seasons; the rest of the sabbath was not to be violated; such sort of works, though they might require haste and expedition, yet the sabbath was not to be broken on account of them: this is the common sense of the law, as it is understood; but Maimonides o gives another sense from their doctors, who say, it is forbidden to plough in the sixth year what cannot be reaped but in the seventh; and so likewise that it is forbidden to reap on the seventh year, that of which profit may be had on the eighth year, and this is founded on what the Scripture says, Exodus 34:21 "in earing", c. and they say, that here ploughing and harvest are not to be understood of the seventh day, because this is included in the general rule, "thou shalt not do any work"--they say, of that which is ploughed, whose reaping or harvest is forbidden, is the ploughing at the evening of the seventh year, and at the going out of the seventh and know this, that the evening of the seventh is the sixth year, and the going out of the seventh is the eighth year, and so Jarchi on the text observes, that some of their Rabbins say, this is to be understood of the ploughing of the seventh year, the seventh year entering, and the harvest of the seventh year, at the going out of it; so that as there is a seventh day of rest, there is a year in which ploughing and harvest are forbidden; but there are others, he says, who say the text speaks only of the sabbath.

o In Misn. Sheviith, c. 14. sect. 1.

Barnes' Notes on the Bible

The precepts contained in these verses are, for the most part, identical in substance with some of those which follow the Ten Commandments and are recorded in “the Book of the covenant” (Exo. 20–23; see Exodus 24:7).

Exodus 34:13

Cut down their groves - This is the first reference to what is commonly known as grove-worship. The original word for “grove” in this connection אשׁרה 'ăshêrāh is different from that so rendered in Genesis 21:33. Our translators supposed that what the law commands is the destruction of groves dedicated to the worship of false deities Judges 6:25; 2 Kings 18:4; but inasmuch as the worship of asherah is found associated with that of Astarte, or Ashtoreth Judges 2:13; Jdg 10:6; 1 Samuel 7:4, it seems probable that while Astarte was the personal name of the goddess, the asherah was a symbol of her, probably in some one of her characters, made in wood in some conventional form.

Exodus 34:15-16

An expansion of Exodus 34:12. The unfaithfulness of the nation to its covenant with Yahweh is here for the first time spoken of as a breach of the marriage bond. The metaphor is, in any case, a natural one, but it seems to gain point, if we suppose it to convey an allusion to the abominations connected with pagan worship, such as are spoken of in Numbers 25:1-3.

Exodus 34:21

See Exodus 20:9; Exodus 23:12. There is here added to the commandment a particular caution respecting those times of year when the land calls for most labor. The old verb “to ear” (i. e. to plow) is genuine English.

Exodus 34:24

Neither shall any man desire etc. - Intended to encourage such as might fear the consequences of obeying the divine law in attending to their religious duties. Compare Proverbs 16:7.

Clarke's Notes on the Bible

Verse Exodus 34:21. In earing time and in harvest thou shalt rest. — This commandment is worthy of especial note; many break the Sabbath on the pretense of absolute necessity, because, if in harvest time the weather happens to be what is called bad, and the Sabbath day be fair and fine, they judge it perfectly lawful to employ that day in endeavouring to save the fruits of the field, and think that the goodness of the day beyond the preceding, is an indication from Providence that it should be thus employed. But is not the above command pointed directly against this? I have known this law often broken on this pretence, and have never been able to discover a single instance where the persons who acted thus succeeded one whit better than their more conscientious neighbors, who availed themselves of no such favourable circumstances, being determined to keep God's law, even to the prejudice of their secular interests; but no man ever yet ultimately suffered loss by a conscientious attachment to his duty to God. He who is willing and obedient, shall eat the good of the land; but God will ever distinguish those in his providence who respect his commandments.


 
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