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Bible Encyclopedias
Aloes; Lignaloes
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
"How goodly are thy tents,
Thy tabernacles,
As valleys are they spread forth,
As gardens by the river-side,
As lign-aloes which Yahweh hath planted,
As cedar-trees beside the waters."
As the aloes in question grow in East Asia it is difficult to see how Balaam could have come to speak of them as living trees. Post (HDB , I, 69) suggests that they may possibly have been growing at that time in the Jordan valley; this is both improbable and unnecessary. Balaam need have had no actual tree in his mind's eye but may have mentioned the aloe as a tree famous over the Orient for its preciousness. That the reference is poetical rather than literal may be supposed by the expression in the next verse "cedar-trees beside the waters" - a situation very unnatural for the high-mountain-loving cedar. Yet another explanation is that the Hebrew has been altered and that אילים ,
The aloe wood of the Bible is eaglewood - so misnamed by the Portuguese who confused the Malay name for it (
These aloes must be clearly distinguished from the well-known medicinal aloes, of ancient fame. This is a resin from Aloes socatrina , and allied species, of the Natural Order Liliaceae , originally from the island of Socotra, but now from Barbados, the Cape of Good Hope and other places. The "American aloe" (Agave americana ) which today is cultivated in many parts of Palestine, is also quite distinct from the Biblical plant.
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Orr, James, M.A., D.D. General Editor. Entry for 'Aloes; Lignaloes'. International Standard Bible Encyclopedia. https://www.studylight.org/​encyclopedias/​eng/​isb/​a/aloes-lignaloes.html. 1915.