PaaraiIn
the list of (2 Samuel 23:35) "Paarai the Arbite" is one of David's men.
In (1 Chronicles 11:37) he is Naarai the son of Ezbai." (B.C. 1015.)
Padan(field).
Padan-aram. (Genesis 48:7)
PadanaramBy
this name, which signifies the table-land of Aram, i.e. Syriac, the
Hebrews designated the tract of country which they otherwise called the
Aram-naharaim, "Aram of the two of rivers," the Greek Mesopotamia,
(Genesis 24:10) and "the field (Authorized Version,'country') of
Syria." (Hosea 12:13) The term was perhaps more especially applied to
that portion which bordered on the Euphrates, to distinguish if from
the mountainous districts in the north and northeast of Mesopotamia. It
is elsewhere called [936]Padan simply. (Genesis 48:7) Abraham obtained
a wife for Isaac from Padan-aram. (Genesis 25:20) Jacob's wives were
also from Padan-aram, (Genesis 28:2,5,6,7; 31:1-8; 33:18)
Padon(deliverance)
the ancestor of a family of Nethinim who returned with Zerubbabel.
(Ezra 2:41; Nehemiah 7:47) (B.C. before 529.)
Pagiel(God
allots) the son of Ocran and chief of the tribe of Asher at the time of
the exodus. (Numbers 1:13; 2:27; 7:72,77; 10:26) (B.C. 1491.)
Pahathmoab(governor
of Moab), head of one of the chief houses of the tribe of Judah. Of the
individual or the occasion of his receiving so singular a name nothing
is known certainty but as we read in (1 Chronicles 4:22) of a family of
Shilonites, of the tribe of Judah, who in very early times "had
dominion in Moab," it may be conjectured that this was the origin of
the name.
Pai(blessing).
[[937]Pau]
Paial(judge),
the son of Uzai who assisted in restoring the walls of Jerusalem in the
time of Nehemiah, (Nehemiah 3:25) (B.C. 446.)
Paint(as
a cosmetic). The use of cosmetic dyes has prevailed in all ages in
eastern countries. We have abundant evidence of the practice of
painting the eyes both in ancient Egypt and in Assyria; and in modern
times no usage is more general. It does not appear, however, to have
been by any means universal among the Hebrews. The notices of it are
few; and in each instance it seems to have been used as a meretricious
art, unworthy of a woman of high character. The Bible gives no
indication of the substance out of which the dye was formed. The old
versions agree in pronouncing the dye to have been produced from
antimony. Antimony is still used for the purpose in Arabia and in
Persia, but in Egypt the kohl is a root produced by burning either a
kind of frankincense or the shells of almonds. The dye-stuff was
moistened with oil and kept in a small jar. Whether the custom of
staining the hands and feet, particularly the nails, now so prevalent
in the past, was known to the Hebrews is doubtful. Painting as an art
was not cultivated by the Hebrews, but they decorated their buildings
with paint.
PalacePalace
in the Bible, in the singular and plural, is the rendering of several
words of diverse meaning. (1 Chronicles 29:1; Ezra 4:14; Amos 4:3) etc.
It often designates the royal residence, and usually suggests a
fortress or battlemented house. The word occasionally included the
whole city as in (Esther 9:12) and again, as in (1 Kings 16:18) it is
restricted to a part of the royal apartments. It is applied, as in (1
Chronicles 29:1) to the temple in Jerusalem. The site of the palace of
Solomon was almost certainly in the city itself on the brow opposite to
the temple, and overlooking it and the whole city of David. It is
impossible, of course, to be at all certain what was either the form or
the exact disposition of such a palace; but, as we have the dimensions
of the three principal buildings given in the book of Kings and
confirmed by Josephus, we may, by taking these as a scale, ascertain
pretty nearly that the building covered somewhere about 150,000 or
160,000 square feet. Whether it was a square of 400 feet each way, or
an oblong of about 550 feet by 300, must always be more or less a
matter of conjecture. The principal building situated within the palace
was, as in all eastern palaces, the great hall of state and audience,
called "the house of the forest of Lebanon," apparently from the four
rows of cedar pillars by which it was supported. It was 100 cubits (175
feet) long, 50 (88 feet) wide, and 30 (52 feet) high. Next in
importance was the hall or "porch of judgment," a quadrangular building
supported by columns, as we learn front Josephus, which apparently
stood on the other side of the great court, opposite the house of the
forest of Lebanon. The third edifice is merely called a "porch of
pillars." Its dimensions were 50 by 30 cubits. Its use cannot be
considered as doubtful, as it was an indispensable adjunct to an
eastern palace. It was the ordinary place of business of the palace,
and the reception-room when the king received ordinary visitors, and
sat, except on great state occasions, to transact the business of the
kingdom. Behind this, we are told, was the inner court, adorned with
gardens and fountains, and surrounded by cloisters for shade; and there
were other courts for the residence of the attendants and guards, and
for the women of the harem. Apart from this palace, but attached, as
Josephus tells us, to the hall of judgment, was the palace of Pharaoh's
daughter-too proud and important a personage to be grouped with the
ladies of the harem, and requiring a residence of her own. The recent
discoveries at Nineveh have enabled us to understand many of the
architectural details of this palace, which before they were made were
nearly wholly inexplicable. Solomon constructed an ascent from his own
house to the temple, "the house of Jehovah," (1 Kings 10:5) which was a
subterranean passage 250 feet long by 42 feet wide, of which the
remains may still be traced.
Palestina
And Palestine(land
of strangers). These two forms occur in the Authorized Version but four
times in all, always in poetical passages; the first in (Exodus 15:14)
and Isai 14:29 The second (Joel 3:4) In each case the Hebrew is
Pelesheth, a word found, besides the above, only in (Psalms 60:8; 83:7;
87:4) and Psal 108:9 In all which our translators have rendered it by
"Philistia" or "Philistines." Palestine in the Authorized Version
really means nothing but Philistia. The original Hebrew word Pelesheth
to the Hebrews signified merely the long and broad strip of maritime
plain inhabited by their encroaching neighbors; nor does it appear that
at first it signified more to the Greeks. As lying next the sea, and as
being also the high road from Egypt to Phoenicia and the richer regions
no of it, the Philistine plain became sooner known to the western world
than the country farther inland, and was called by them Syria
Palestina-Philistine Syria. From thence it was gradually extended to
the country farther inland, till in the Roman and later Greek authors,
both heathen sad Christian, it became the usual appellation for the
whole country of the Jews, both west and east of Jordan. The word is
now so commonly employed in our more familiar language to destinate the
whole country of Israel that although biblically a misnomer, it has
been chosen here as the most convenient heading under which to give a
general description of THE HOLY LAND, embracing those points which have
not been treated under the separate headings of cities or tribes. This
description will most conveniently divide itself Into three sections:--
I. The Names applied to the country of Israel in the Bible and
elsewhere. II. The Land; its situation, aspect, climb, physical
characteristics in connection with its history, its structure, botany
and natural history. III. The History of the country is so fully given
under its various headings throughout the work that it is unnecessary
to recapitulate it here. I. [THE [938]Names].--Palestine, then, is
designated in the Bible by more than one name.
+During the patriarchal period, the conquest and the age of the Judges
and also where those early periods are referred to in the later
literature (as) (Psalms 105:11) it is spoken of as "Canaan," or more
frequently "the land of Canaan," meaning thereby the country west of
the Jordan, as opposed to "the land of Gilead." on the east.
+During the monarchy the name usually, though not frequently, employed
is "land of Israel." (1 Samuel 13:19)
+Between the captivity and the time of our Lord the name "Judea" had
extended itself from the southern portion to the whole of the country,
and even that beyond the Jordan. (Matthew 19:1; Mark 10:1)
+The Roman division of the country hardly coincided with the biblical
one, and it does not appear that the Romans had any distinct name for
that which we understand by Palestine.
+Soon after the Christian era we find the name Palestina in possession
of the country.
+The name most frequently used throughout the middle ages, and down to
our own time, is Terra Sancta--the Holy Land. II. THE LAND.-The holy
land is not in size or physical characteristics proportioned to its
moral and historical position as the theatre of the most momentous
events in the world's history. It is but a strip of country about the
size of Wales, less than 140 miles in length and barely 40 in average
breadth, on the very frontier of the East, hemmed in between the
Mediterranean Sea on the one hand and the enormous trench of the Jordan
valley on the other, by which it is effectually cut off from the
mainland of Asia behind it. On the north it is shut in by the high
ranges of Lebanon and Anti-Lebanon, and by the chasm of the Litany. On
the south it is no less enclosed by the arid and inhospitable deserts
of the upper pert of the peninsula of Sinai.
+Its position.--Its position on the map of the world--as the world was
when the holy land first made its appearance in history--is a
remarkable one. (a) It was on the very outpost-- an the extremist
western edge of the East. On the shore of the Mediterranean it stands,
as if it had advanced as far as possible toward the west, separated
therefrom by that which, when the time arrived proved to be no barrier,
but the readiest medium of communication-the wide waters of the "great
sea." Thus it was open to all the gradual influences of the rising
communities of the West, while it was saved from the retrogression and
decrepitude which have ultimately been the doom of all purely eastern
states whose connections were limited to the East only. (b) There was,
however, one channel, and but one, by which it could reach and be
reached by the great Oriental empires. The rivals road by which the two
great rivals of the ancient world could approach one another--by which
alone Egypt could get to Assyria and Assyria to lay along the broad hat
strip of coast which formed the maritime portion of the holy land, and
thence by the plain of the Lebanon to the Euphrates. (c) After this the
holy land became (like the Netherlands in Europe) the convenient arena
on which in successive ages the hostile powers who contended for the
empire of the East fought their battles.
+Physical features.--Palestine is essentially a mountainous country.
Not that if contains independent mountain chains, as in Greece for
example but that every part of the highland is in greater or less
undulation. But it is not only a mountainous country. The mass of hills
which occupies the centre of the country is bordered or framed on both
sides, east and west, by a broad belt of lowland, sunk deep below its
own level. The slopes or cliffs which form, as if it were, the
retaining walls of this depression are furrowed and cleft by the
torrent beds which discharge the waters of the hills and form the means
of communication between the upper and lower level. On the west this
lowland interposes between the mountains and the sea, and is the plain
of Philistia and of Sharon. On the east it is the broad bottom of the
Jordan valley, deep down in which rushed the one river of Palestine to
its grave in, the Dead Sea. Such is the first general impression of the
physiognomy of the land. It is a physiognomy compounded of the three
main features already named--the plains the highland hills, and the
torrent beds features which are marked in the words of its earliest
describers, (Numbers 13:29; Joshua 11:16; 12:8) and which must be
comprehended by every one who wishes to understand the country and the
intimate connection existing between its structure and its history.
About halfway up the coast the maritime plain is suddenly interrupted
by a long ridge thrown out from the central mass, rising considerably
shove the general level and terminating in a bold promontory on the
very edge of the Mediterranean. This ridge is Mount Carmel. On its
upper side the plain, as if to compensate for its temporary
displacement, invades the centre of the country, and forms an
undulating hollow right across it from the Mediterranean to the Jordan
valley. This central lowland, which divides with its broad depression
the mountains of Ephraim from the mountains of Galilee is the plain of
Esdraelon or Jezreel the great battle-field of Palestine. North of
Carmel the lowland resumes its position by the seaside till it is again
interrupted and finally put an end to by the northern mountains, which
push their way out of the sea, ending in the white promontory of the
Ras Nakhura . Above this is the ancient Phoenicia. The country thus
roughly portrayed is to all intents and purposes the whole land of
israel. The northern portion is Galilee; the centre, Samaria; the
south, Judea. This is the land of Canaan which was bestowed on
Abraham,--the covenanted home of his descendants. The highland
district, surrounded and intersected by its broad lowland plains,
preserves from north to south a remarkably even and horizontal profile.
Its average height may betaken as 1600 to 1800 feet above the
Mediterranean. It can hardly be denominated a plateau; yet so evenly is
the general level preserved and so thickly do the hills stand behind
and between one another, that, when seen from the coast or the western
part of the maritime plain, it has quite the appearance of a wall. This
general monotony of profile is however, relieved at intervals by
certain centers of elevation. Between these elevated points runs the
watershed of the country, sending off on either hand--to the Jordan
valley on the east and the Mediterranean on the west--the long,
tortuous arms of ifs many torrent beds. The valleys on the two sides of
the watershed differ considerably in character. Those on the east are
extremely steep and rugged the western valleys are more gradual in
their slope.
+Fertility .--When the highlands of the country are more closely
examined, a considerable difference will be found to exist in the
natural condition and appearance of their different portions. The
south, as being nearer the arid desert and farther removed from the
drainage of the mountains, is drier and less productive than the north.
The tract below Hebron, which forms the link between the hills of Judah
and the desert, was known to the ancient Hebrews by a term originally
derived from its dryness--Negeb . This was the south country. As the
traveller advances north of this tract there is an improvement; but
perhaps no country equally cultivated is more monotonous, bare or
uninviting in its aspect than a great part of the highlands of Judah
and Benjamin during the larger portion of the year. The spring covers
even those bald gray rocks with verdure and color, and fills the
ravines with torrents of rushing water; but in summer and autumn the
look of the country from Hebron up to Bethel is very dreary and
desolate. At Jerusalem this reaches its climax. To the west and
northwest of the highlands, where the sea-breezes are felt, there is
considerably more vegetation, Hitherto we have spoken of the central
and northern portions of Judea. Its eastern portion--a tract some nine
or ten miles in width by about thirty-five in length, which intervenes
between the centre and the abrupt descent to the Dead Sea--is far more
wild and desolate, and that not for a portion of the year only, but
throughout it. This must have been always what it is now--an
uninhabited desert, because uninhabitable. No descriptive sketch of
this part of the country can be complete which does not allude to the
caverns, characteristic of all limestone districts, but here existing
in astonishing numbers. Every hill and ravine is pierced with them,
some very large and of curious formation--perhaps partly natural,
partly artificial--others mere grottos. Many of them are connected with
most important and interesting events of the ancient history of the
country. Especially is this true of the district now under
consideration. Machpelah, Makkedah, Adullam En-gedi, names inseparably
connected with the lives, adventures and deaths of Abraham, Joshua,
David and other Old-Testament worthies, are all within the small circle
of the territory of Judea. The bareness and dryness which prevail more
or less in Judea are owing partly to the absence of wood, partly to its
proximity to the desert, sad partly to a scarcity of water arising from
its distance from the Lebanon. But to this discouraging aspect there
are some important exceptions. The valley of Urtas, south of Bethlehem
contains springs which in abundance and excellence rival even those of
Nablus the huge "Pools of Solomon" are enough to supply a district for
many miles round them; and the cultivation now going on in that
Neighborhood shows whet might be done with a soil which required only
irrigation and a moderate amount of labor to evoke a boundless produce.
It is obvious that in the ancient days of the nation, when Judah and
Benjamin possessed the teeming population indicated in the Bible, the
condition and aspect of the country must have been very different. Of
this there are not wanting sure evidences. There is no country in which
the ruined towns bear so large a proportion to those still existing.
Hardly a hill-top of the many within sight that is not covered with
vestiges of some fortress or city. But, besides this, forests appear to
have stood in many parts of Judea until the repeated invasions and
sieges caused their fall; and all this vegetation must have reacted on
the moisture of the climate, and, by preserving the water in many a
ravine and natural reservoir where now it is rapidly dried by the
fierce sun of the early summer, must have influenced materially the
look and the resources of the country. Advancing northward from Judea,
the country (Samaria) becomes gradually more open and pleasant. Plains
of good soil occur between the hills, at first small but afterward
comparatively large. The hills assume here a more varied aspect than in
the southern districts, springs are more abundant and more permanent
until at last, when the district of Jebel Nablus is reached--the
ancient Mount Ephraim-the traveller encounters an atmosphere and an
amount of vegetation and water which are greatly superior to anything
he has met with in Judea and even sufficient to recall much of the
scenery of the West. Perhaps the springs are the only objects which In
themselves, and apart from their associations, really strike an English
traveller with astonishment and admiration. Such glorious fountains as
those of Ain-jalud or the Ras el-Mukatta--where a great body of the
dearest water wells silently but swiftly out from deep blue recesses
worn in the foot of a low cliff of limestone rock and at once forms a
considerable stream--are rarely to be met with out of irregular, rocky,
mountainous countries, and being such unusual sights can hardly be
looked on by the traveler without surprise and emotion. The valleys
which lead down from the upper level in this district to the valley of
the Jordan are less precipitous than in Judea. The eastern district of
the Jebel Nablus contains some of the most fertile end valuable spots
in the holy land. Hardly less rich is the extensive region which lies
northwest of the city of Shechem (Nablus), between it and Carmel, in
which the mountains gradually break down into the plain of Sharon. Put
with all its richness and all its advance on the southern part of the
country there is a strange dearth of natural wood about this central
district. It is this which makes the wooded sides of Carmel and the
park-like scenery of the adjacent slopes and plains so remarkable. No
sooner however, is the plain of Eadraelon passed than a considerable
improvement Is perceptible. The low hills which spread down from the
mountains of Galilee, and form the barrier between the plains of Akka
and Esdraelon, are covered with timber, of moderate size it is true,
but of thick, vigorous growth, and pleasant to the eye. Eastward of
these hills rises the round mass of Tabor dark with its copses of oak,
and set on by contrast with the bare slopes of Jebel ed-Duhy (the so
called "Little Hermon") and the white hills of Nazareth. A few words
must be said in general description of the maritime lowland, which
intervenes between the sea and the highlands. This region, only
slightly elevated above the level of the Mediterranean, extends without
interruption from el-Arish, south of Gaza, to Mount Carmel. It
naturally divides itself into two portions each of about half its
length; the lower one the wider the upper one the narrower. The lower
half is the plain of the Philistines-Philistia, or, as the Hebrews
called it, the Shefelah or Lowland. The upper half is the Sharon or
Saron of the Old and New Testaments. The Philistine plain is on an
average 15 or 16 miles in width from the coast to the beginning of the
belt of hills which forms the gradual approach to the high land of the
mountains of Judah. The larger towns, as Gaza and Ashdod, which stand
near the shore, are surrounded with huge groves of olive, sycamore and,
as in the days King David. (1 Chronicles 27:28) The whole plain appears
to consist of brown loamy soil, light but rich and almost without a
stone. It is now, as it was when the Philistines possessed it, one
enormous cornfield; an ocean of wheat covers the wide expense between
the hills and the sand dunes of the seashore, without interruption of
any kind--no break or hedge, hardly even a single olive tree. Its
fertility is marvellous; for the prodigious crops which if raises are
produced, and probably have been produced almost year by year for the
last forty centuries, without any of the appliances which we find
necessary for success. The plain of Sharon is much narrower then
Philistia. It is about 10 miles wide from the sea to the foot of the
mountains, which are here of a more abrupt character than those of
Philistia, and without the intermediate hilly region there occurring.
The one ancient port of the Jews, the "beautiful", city of Joppa,
occupied a position central between the Shefelah and Sharon. Roads led
from these various cities to each other to Jerusalem, Neapolis and
Sebaste in the interior, and to Ptolemais and Gaza on the north and
south. The commerce of Damascus, and beyond Damascus, of Persia and
India, passed this way to Egypt, Rome and the infant colonies of the
West; and that traffic and the constant movement of troops backward and
forward must have made this plain, at the time of Christ, one of the
busiest and most populous regions of Syria.
+The Jordan valley .--The chacteristics already described are hardly
peculiar to Palestine, but there is one feature, as yet only alluded
to, in which she stands alone. This feature is the Jordan--the one
river of the country. The river is elsewhere described; [[939]Jordan]
but it and the valley through which it rushes down its extraordinary
descent must be here briefly characterized. This valley begins with the
river at its remotest springs of Hasbeiya, on the northwest side of
Hermon, and accompanies it to the lower end of the Dead Sea, a length
of about 1,50 miles. During the whole of this distance its course is
straight and its direction nearly due north and south. The springs of
Hasbeiya are 1700 feet above the level of the Mediterranean and the
northern end of the Dead Sea is 1317 feet below it, so that between
these two points the valley falls with more or less regularity through
a height of more than 3000 feet. But though the river disappears at
this point, the valley still continues its descent below the waters of
the Dead Sea till it reaches a further depth of 1308 feet. So that the
bottom of this extraordinary crevasse is actually more than 2600 feet
below the surface of the ocean. In width the valley varies. In its
upper and shallower portion, as between Banias and the lake of Merom
(Huleh), it is about five miles across. Between the lake of Merom and
the Sea or Galilee it contracts, and becomes more of an ordinary ravine
or glen. It is in its third and lower portion that the valley assumes
its more definite and regular character. During the greater part of
this portion it is about seven miles wide from the one wall to the
other. The eastern mountains preserve their straight line of direction,
and their massive horizontal wall-like aspect, during almost the whole
distance. The western mountains are more irregular in height, their
slopes less vertical. North of Jericho they recede in a kind of wide
amphitheatre, and the valley becomes twelve miles broad--a breadth
which it thenceforward retains to the southern extremity of the Dead
Sea. Buried as it is between such lofty ranges, and shielded from every
breeze, the climate of the Jordan valley is extremely hot and relaxing.
Its enervating influence is shown by the inhabitants of Jericho. All
the irrigation necessary for the cultivation which formerly existed is
obtained front the torrents of the western mountains. For all purposes
to which a river ordinarily applied the Jordan is useless. The Dead
Sea, which is the final receptacle of the Jordan, is described
elsewhere. [[940]Sea, The Salt, THE SALT.)
+Climate .--"Probably there is no country in the world of the same
extent which has a greater variety of climate than Palestine. On Mount
Hermon, at its northern border there is perpetual snow. From this we
descend successively by the peaks of Bashan and upper Galilee, where
the oak and pine flourish, to the hills of Judah and Samaria, where the
vine and fig tree are at home, to the plains of the seaboard where the
palm and banana produce their fruit down to the sultry shores of the
Sea, on which we find tropical heat and tropical vegetation."
McClintock and Strong . As in the time of our Saviour (Luke 12:64) the
rains come chiefly from the south or southwest. They commence at the
end of October or beginning of November and continue with greater or
less constancy till the end of February or March. It is not a heavy,
continuous rain so much as a succession of severe showers or storms,
with intervening periods of fine, bright weather. Between April and
November there is, with the rarest exceptions, an uninterrupted
succession of fine weather and skies without a cloud. Thus the year
divides itself into two and only two seasons--as indeed we see it
constantly divided in the Bible-" winter and summer" "cold and heat,"
"seed-time and harvest."
+Botany .--The botany of Syria and Palestine differs but little from
that of Asia Minor, which is one of the most rich and varied on the
globe. Among trees the oak is by far the most prevalent. The trees of
the genus Pistacia rank next to the oak in abundance, and of these
there are three species in Syria. There is also the carob or locust
tree (Ceratonia siliqua), the pine, sycamore, poplar and walnut. Of
planted trees large shrubs the first in importance is the vine, which
is most abundantly cultivated all over the country, and produces, as in
the time of the Canaanites, enormous bunches of grapes. This is
especially the case in the southern districts, those of Eshcol being
still particularly famous. Next to the vine, or even in some respects
its superior in importance, ranks the olive, which nowhere grows in
greater luxuriance and abundance than in Palestine, where the olive
orchards form a prominent feature throughout the landscape, and have
done so from time immemorial. The fig forms another most important crop
in Syria and Palestine. (Besides these are the almond, pomegranate,
orange, pear, banana, quince and mulberry among fruit trees. Of
vegetables there are many varieties, as the egg plant, pumpkin,
asparagus, lettuce, melon and cucumber. Palestine is especially
distinguished for its wild flowers, of which there are more than five
hundred varieties. The geranium, pink, poppy, narcissus, honeysuckle,
oleander, jessamine, tulip and iris are abundant. The various grains
are also very largely cultivated.--ED.)
+Zoology.--It will be sufficient in this article to give a general
survey of the fauna of Palestine, as the reader will find more
particular information in the several articles which treat of the
various animals under their respective names. Jackals and foxes are
common; the hyena and wolf are also occasionally observed; the lion is
no longer a resident in Palestine or Syria. A species of squirrel the
which the term orkidaun "the leaper," has been noticed on the lower and
middle parts of Lebanon. Two kinds of hare, rats and mice, which are
said to abound, the jerboa, the porcupine, the short-tailed
field-mouse, may be considered as the representatives of the Rodentia .
Of the Pachydermata the wild boar, which is frequently met with on
Taber and Little Hermon, appears to be the only living wild example.
There does not appear to be at present any wild ox in Palestine. Of
domestic animals we need only mention the Arabian or one-humped camel,
the ass, the mule and the horse, all of which are in general use. The
buffalo (Bubalus buffalo) is common. The ox of the country is small and
unsightly in the neighborhood of Jerusalem, but in the richer pastures
the cattle, though small, are not unsightly The common sheep of
Palestine is the broadtail, with its varieties. Goats are extremely
common everywhere. Palestine abounds in numerous kinds of birds.
Vultures, eagles, falcons, kites, owls of different kinds represent the
Raptorial order. In the south of Palestine especially, reptiles of
various kinds abound. It has been remarked that in its physical
character Palestine presents on a small scale an epitome of the natural
features of all regions, mountainous and desert, northern and tropical,
maritime and inland, pastoral, arable and volcanic.
+Antiquities .--In the preceding description allusion has been made to
many of the characteristic features of the holy land; but it is
impossible to close this account without mentioning a defect which is
even more characteristic--its luck of monuments and personal relies of
the nation which possessed it for so many centuries and gave it its
claim to our veneration and affection. When compared with other nations
of equal antiquity--Egypt, Greece Assyria--the contrast is truly
remarkable. In Egypt and Greece, and also in Assyria, as far as our
knowledge at present extends, we find a series of buildings reaching
down from the most remote and mysterious antiquity, a chain of which
hardly a link is wanting, and which records the progress of the people
in civilization art and religion as certainly as the buildings of the
medieval architects do that of the various nations of modern Europe.
But in Palestine it is not too much to say that there does not exist a
single edifice or part of an edifice of which we call be sure that it
is of a date anterior to the Christian era. And as with the buildings,
so with other memorials, With one exception, the museums of Europe do
not possess a single piece of pottery or metal work, a single weapon or
household utensil, an ornament or a piece of armor of Israelite make,
which can give us the least conception of the manners or outward
appliances of the nation before the date of the destruction of
Jerusalem by Titus. The coins form the single exception. M. Renan has
named two circumstances which must have had a great effect in
suppressing art or architecture amongst the ancient Israelites, while
their very existence proves that the people had no genius in that
direction. These are (1) the prohibition of sculptured representations
of living creatures, and (2) the command not to build a temple anywhere
but at Jerusalem.
Pallu(distinguished),
the second son of Reuben, father of Eliab, (Isaiah 6:14; Numbers
26:5,8; 1 Chronicles 5:3) and founder of the family of Palluites.
Palluites(descendants
of Pullu), The. (Numbers 26:5)
Palm
Tree(Heb.
tamar). Under this generic term many species are botanically included;
but we have here only to do with the date palm, the Phoenix dactylifera
of Linnaeus. While this tree was abundant generally in the Levant, it
was regarded by the ancients as peculiarly characteristic of Palestine
and the neighboring regions, though now it is rare. ("The palm tree
frequently attains a height of eighty feet, but more commonly forty to
fifty. It begins to bear fruit after it has been planted six or eight
years, and continues to be productive for a century. Its trunk is
straight, tall and unbroken, terminating in a crown of emerald-green
plumes, like a diadem of gigantic ostrich-feathers; these leaves are
frequently twenty feet in length, droop slightly at the ends, and
whisper musically in the breeze. The palm is, in truth, a beautiful and
most useful tree. Its fruit is the daily food of millions; its sap
furnishes an agreeable wine; the fibres of the base of its leaves are
woven into ropes and rigging; its tall stem supplies a valuable timber;
its leaves are manufactured into brushes, mats, bags, couches and
baskets. This one tree supplies almost all the wants of the Arab or
Egyptian."--Bible Plants.) Many places are mentioned in the Bible as
having connection with palm trees; Elim, where grew three score and ten
palm trees, (Exodus 15:27) and Elath. (2:8) Jericho was the city of
"palm trees." (31:3) Hazezon-tamar, "the felling of the palm tree," is
clear in its derivation. There is also Tamar, "the palm." (Ezekiel
47:19) Bethany means the "house of dates." The word Phoenicia, which
occurs twice in the New Testament-- (Acts 11:19; 15:3)--is in all
probability derived from the Greek word for a palm. The, striking
appearance of the tree, its uprightness and beauty, would naturally
suggest the giving of Its name occasionally to women. (Genesis 38:6; 2
Samuel 13:1; 14:27) There is in the Psalms, (Psalms 92:12) the familiar
comparison, "The righteous shall flourish like the palm tree." which
suggests a world of illustration whether respect be had to the orderly
and regular aspect of the tree, its fruitfulness, the perpetual
greenness of its foliage, or the height at which the foliage grows, as
far as possible from earth and as near as possible to heaven. Perhaps
no point is more worthy of mention, we wish to pursue the comparison,
than the elasticity of the fibre of the palm and its determined growth
upward even when loaded with weights. The passage in (Revelation 7:9)
where the glorified of all nations are described as "clothed with white
robes and palms in their hands," might seem to us a purely classical
image; but palm branches were used by the Jews in token of victory and
peace. (To these points of comparison may be added, its principle of
growth: it is an endogen, and grows from within; its usefulness; the
Syrians enumerating 360 different uses to which it may be put; and the
statement that it bears its best fruit in old age.--ED.) It is curious
that this tree, once so abundant in Judea, is now comparatively rare,
except in the Philistine plain and in the old Phoenicia about Beyrout .
Palmerworm(Heb.
gazam) occurs (Joel 1:4; 2:25; Amos 4:9) It is maintained by many that
gazam denotes some species of locust. but it is more probably a
caterpillar.
Palsy(contracted
from paralysis). The loss of sensation or the power of motion, or both,
in any part of the body. The infirmities included under this name in
the New Testament were various:--
+The paralytic shock affecting the whole body, or apoplexy.
+That affecting only one side.
+Affecting the whole system below the neck.
+Catalepsy, caused by the contraction of the muscles in the whole or a
part of the body. This was very dangerous and often fatal. The part
affected remains immovable and diminishes in size and dries up. A hand
thus affected was called "a withered hand." (Matthew 12:10-13)
+Cramp. This was a most dreadful disease caused by the chills of the
nights. The limbs remain immovably fixed in the same position as when
seized as it, and the person seems like one suffering torture. It is
frequently followed in a few days by death. Several paralytics were
cured by Jesus. (Matthew 4:24; 8:13) etc.
Palti(whom
Jehovah delivers), the Benjamite spy, son of Raphu. (Numbers 13:9)
(B.C.1490.)
Paltiel(whom
God delivers), the son of Azzan and prince of the tribe of Issachar.
(Numbers 34:26) He was one of the twelve appointed to divide the land
of Canaan among the tribes west of Jordan. (B.C. 1450.)
Pamphylia(of
every tribe), one of the coast-regions in the south of Asia Minor,
having Cilicia on the east and Lycia on the west. In St. Paul's time it
was not only a regular province, but the emperor Claudius had united
Lycia with it, and probably also a good part of Pisidia. It was in
Pamphylia that St. Paul first entered Asia Minor, after preaching the
gospel in Cyprus. He and Barnabas sailed up the river Cestrus to Perga.
(Acts 13:13) The two missionaries finally left Pamphylia by its chief
seaport Attalia. Many years afterward St. Paul sailed near the coast.
(Acts 27:5)
PanOf
the six words so rendered in the Authorized Version, two seem to imply
a shallow pan or plate, such as is used by the Bedouine and Syrians for
baking or dressing rapidly their cakes of meal, such as were used in
legal oblations; the others, a deeper vessel or caldron for boiling
meat, placed during the process on three stones.
Pannag(sweet),
an article of commerce exported from Palestine to Tyre, (Ezekiel 27:17)
the nature of which is a pure matter of conjecture, as the term occurs
nowhere else. A comparison of the passage in Ezekiel with (Genesis
43:11) leads to the supposition that pannag represents some of the
spices grown in Palestine.
Paper[[941]Writing]
Paphos(boiling,
or hot), a town at the west end of Cyprus, connected by a react with
Salamis at the east end. It was founded B.C. 1184 (during the period of
the judges in Israel). Paul and Barnabas travelled, on their first
missionary expedition, "through the isle" from the latter place to the
former, (Acts 13:6) The great characteristic of Paphos was the worship
of Aphrodite or Venus, who was fabled to have here risen from the sea.
Her temple, however, was at "Old Paphos" now called Kuklia . The harbor
and the chief town were at "New Paphos," ten miles to the northwest.
The place is still called Baffa .
Parable(The
word parable is in Greek parable (parabole) which signifies placing
beside or together, a comparison, a parable is therefore literally a
placing beside, a comparison, a similitude, an illustration of one
subject by another.--McClintock and Strong. As used in the New
Testament it had a very wide application, being applied sometimes to
the shortest proverbs, (1 Samuel 10:12; 24:13; 2 Chronicles 7:20)
sometimes to dark prophetic utterances, (Numbers 23:7,18; 24:3; Ezekiel
20:49) sometimes to enigmatic maxims, (Psalms 78:2; Proverbs 1:6) or
metaphors expanded into a narrative. (Ezekiel 12:22) In the New
Testament itself the word is used with a like latitude in (Matthew
24:32; Luke 4:23; Hebrews 9:9) It was often used in a more restricted
sense to denote a short narrative under which some important truth is
veiled. Of this sort were the parables of Christ. The parable differs
from the fable (1) in excluding brute and inanimate creatures passing
out of the laws of their nature and speaking or acting like men; (2) in
its higher ethical significance. It differs from the allegory in that
the latter, with its direct personification of ideas or attributes, and
the names which designate them, involves really no comparison. The
virtues and vices of mankind appear as in a drama, in their own
character and costume. The allegory is self-interpreting; the parable
demands attention, insight, sometimes an actual explanation. It differs
from a proverb in that it must include a similitude of some kind, while
the proverb may assert, without a similitude, some wide generalization
of experience.--ED.) For some months Jesus taught in the synagogues and
on the seashore of Galilee as he had before taught in Jerusalem, and as
yet without a parable. But then there came a change. The direct
teaching was met with scorn unbelief hardness, and he seemed for a time
to abandon it for that which took the form of parables. The worth of
parables as instruments of teaching lies in their being at once a test
of character and in their presenting each form of character with that
which, as a penalty or blessing, is adapted to it. They withdraw the
light from those who love darkness. They protect the truth which they
enshrine from the mockery of the scoffer. They leave something even
with the careless which may be interpreted and understood afterward.
They reveal on the other hand, the seekers after truth. These ask the
meaning of the parable, and will not rest until the teacher has
explained it. In this way the parable did work, found out the fit
hearers and led them on. In most of the parables it is possible to
trace something like an order.
+There is a group which have for their subject the laws of the divine
kingdom. Under this head we have the sower, (Matthew 13:1; Mark 4:1;
Luke 8:1)... the wheat and the tares (Matthew 13:1) ... etc.
+When the next parables meet us they are of a different type and occupy
a different position. They are drawn from the life of men rather than
from the world of nature. They are such as these--the two debtors,
(Luke 7:1) ... the merciless servant, (Matthew 18:1) ... the good
Samaritan, (Luke 10:1) ... etc.
+Toward the close of our Lord's ministry the parables are again
theocratic but the phase of the divine kingdom on which they chiefly
dwell is that of its final consummation. In interpreting parables
note-- (1) The analogies must be real, not arbitrary; (2) The parables
are to be considered as parts of a whole, and the interpretation of one
is not to override or encroach upon the lessons taught by others; (3)
The direct teaching of Christ presents the standard to which all our
interpretations are to be referred, and by which they are to be
measured.
ParadiseThis
is a word of Persian origin, and is used in the Septuagint as the
translation of Eden. It means "an orchard of pleasure and fruits," a
"garden" or "pleasure ground," something like an English park. It is
applied figuratively to the celestial dwelling of the righteous, in
allusion to the garden of Eden. (2 Corinthians 12:4; Revelation 2:7) It
has thus come into familiar use to denote both that garden and the
heaven of the just.
Parah(heifer-town)
one of the cities in the territory allotted to Benjamin, named only in
the lists of the conquest. (Joshua 18:23)
Paran,
Elparan(peace
of caverns), a desert or wilderness, bounded on the north by Palestine,
on the east by the valley of Arabah, on the south by the desert of
Sinai, and on the west by the wilderness of Etham, which separated it
from the Gulf of Suez and Egypt. The first notice of Paran is in
connection with the invasion of the confederate kings. (Genesis 14:6)
The detailed itinerary of the children of Israel in (Numbers 33:1) ...
does not mention Paran because it was the name of a wide region; but
the many stations in Paran are recorded, chs. 17-36. and probably all
the eighteen stations were mentioned between Hazeroth and Kadesh were
in Paran. Through this very wide wilderness, from pasture to pasture as
do modern Arab tribes, the Israelites wandered in irregular lines of
march. This region through which the Israelites journeyed so long is
now called by the name it has borne for ages--Bedu et-Tih, "the
wilderness of wandering." ("Bible Geography," Whitney.) "Mount" Paran
occurs only in two poetic passages, (33:2); Habb 3:3 It probably
denotes the northwestern member of the Sinaitic mountain group which
lies adjacent to the Wady Teiran . (It is probably the ridge or series
of ridges lying on the northeastern part of the desert of Paran, not
far from Kadesh.--ED.)
Parbar(open
apartment), a word occurring in Hebrew and Authorized Version only in
(1 Chronicles 26:18) It would seem that Parbar was some place on the
west side of the temple enclosure, probably the suburb mentioned by
Josephus as lying in the deep valley which separated the west wall of
the temple from the city opposite it.
Parchment[[942]Writing]
Parlora
word in English usage meaning the common room of the family, and hence
probably in Authorized Version denoting the king's audience-chamber, so
used in reference to Eglon. (Judges 3:20-25)
Parmashta(superior),
one of the ten sons of Haman slain by the Jews in Shushan. (Esther 9:9)
(B.C. 473.)
Parmenas(abiding),
one of the seven deacons, "men of honest report, full of the Holy Ghost
and wisdom." (Acts 8:5) There is a tradition that he suffered martyrdom
at Philippi in the reign of Trajan.
Parnaeh(delicate),
father or ancestor of Elizaphan prince of the tribe of Zebulun.
(Numbers 34:25) (B.C. before 1452.)
Parshandatha(given
by prayer), the eldest of Haman's ten sons who were slain by the Jews
in Shushan. (Esther 9:7) (B.C. 473.)
ParthiansThis
name occurs only in (Acts 2:9) where it designates Jews settled in
Parthia. Parthia proper was the region stretching along the southern
flank of the mountains which separate the great Persian desert from the
desert of Kharesm. It lay south of Hyrcania, east of Media and north of
Sagartia. The ancient Parthians are called a "Scythic" race, and
probably belonged to the great Turanian family. After being subject in
succession to the Persians and the Seleucidae, they revolted in B.C.
256. and under Arsaces succeeded in establishing their independence.
Parthia, in the mind of the writer of the Acts, would designate this
empire, which extended from India to the Tigris and from the Chorasmian
desert to the shores of the Southern Ocean; hence the prominent
position of the name Parthians in the list of those prevent at
Pentecost. Parthia was a power almost rivalling Rome--the only existing
power which had tried its strength against Rome and not been worsted in
the encounter. The Parthian dominion lasted for nearly five centuries,
commencing in the third century before and terminating in the third
century after our era. The Parthians spoke the Persian language.
Partridge(Heb.
kore) occurs only (1 Samuel 26:20) and Jere 17:11 The "hunting this
bird upon the mountains," (1 Samuel 26:20) entirely agrees with the
habits of two well-known species of partridge, viz. Caccabis saxatilis,
the Greek partridge (which is the commonest partridge of the holy
land), and Ammoperdix heyii . Our common partridge, Perdix cinerea,
does not occur in Palestine. (The Greek partridge somewhat resembles
our red-legged partridge in plumage, but is much larger. In every part
of the hill country it abounds, and its ringing call-note in early
morning echoes from cliff to cliff alike amid the barrenness of the
hills of Judea and in the glens of the forest of Carmel. Tristram's
Nat. Hist. of Bible . The flesh of the partridge and the eggs are
highly esteemed as food, and the search for the eggs at the proper time
of the year is made a regular business.-ED.)
Paruah(flourishing),
the father of Jehoshaphat, Solomon's commissariat officer in Issachar.
(1 Kings 4:17) (B.C. about 1017.)
Parvaim(Oriental
regions), the name of an unknown place or country whence the gold was
procured for the decoration of Solomon's temple. (2 Chronicles 3:6) We
may notice the conjecture that it is derived from the Sanscrit purva,
"eastern," and is a general term for the east.
Pasach(cut
off), son of Japhlet, of the tribe of Asher. (1 Chronicles 7:33)
Pasdammim(boundary
of blood). [EPHES-DAMMIM]
Paseah(lame).
+Son of Eshton, in an obscure fragment of the genealogies of Judah. (1
Chronicles 4:12)
+The "sons of Paseah" were among the Nethinim who returned with
Zerubbabel. (Ezra 2:49)
Pashur(freedom).
+One of the families of priests of the chief house of Malchijah. (1
Chronicles 9:12; 24:9; Nehemiah 11:12; Jeremiah 21:1; 38:1) In the time
of Nehemiah this family appears to have become a chief house, and its
head the head of a course. (Ezra 2:38; Nehemiah 7:41; 10:3) The
individual from whom the family was named was probably Pushur the son
of Malchiah, who in the reign of Zedekiah was one of the chief princes
of the court. (Jeremiah 38:1) (B.C. 607.) He was sent, with others, by
Zedekiah to Jeremiah at the time when Nebuchudnezzar was preparing his
attack upon Jerusalem. (Jeremiah 21:1) ... Again somewhat later Pashur
joined with several other chief men in petitioning the king that
Jeremiah might be put to death as a traitor. (Jeremiah 38:4)
+Another person of this name, also a priest, and "chief governor of the
house of the Lord," is mentioned in (Jeremiah 20:1) He is described as
"the son of Immer." (1 Chronicles 24:14) probably the same as Amariah.
(Nehemiah 10:3; 12:2) etc. In the reign of Jehoiakim he showed himself
as hostile to Jeremiah as his namesake the son of Malchiah did
afterward, and put him in the stocks by the gate of Benjamin. For this
indignity to God's prophet Pashur was told by Jeremiah that his name
was changed to Magor-missabib (terror on every side) and that he and
all his house should be carried captives to Babylon and there die.
(Jeremiah 20:1-6) (B.C. 589.)
PassageUsed
in the plural, (Jeremiah 22:20) probably to denote the mountain region
of Abarim on the east side of Jordan. It also denotes a river ford or
mountain gorge or pass.
Passoverthe
first of the three great annual festivals of the Israelites celebrated
in the month Nisan (March-April, from the 14th to the 21st. (Strictly
speaking the Passover only applied to the paschal supper and the feast
of unleavened bread followed, which was celebrated to the 21st.) (For
the corresponding dates in our month, see Jewish calendar at the end of
this volume.) The following are the principal passages in the
Pentateuch relating to the Passover: (Exodus 12:1-51; 13:3-10;
23:14-19; 34:18-26; Leviticus 23:4-14; Numbers 9:1-14; 28:16-25;
16:1-6) Why instituted .--This feast was instituted by God to
commemorate the deliverance of the Israelites from Egyptian bondage and
the sparing of their firstborn when the destroying angel smote the
first-born of the Egyptians. The deliverance from Egypt was regarded as
the starting-point of the Hebrew nation. The Israelites were then
raised from the condition of bondmen under a foreign tyrant to that of
a free people owing allegiance to no one but Jehovah. The prophet in a
later age spoke of the event as a creation and a redemption of the
nation. God declares himself to be "the Creator of Israel." The Exodus
was thus looked upon as the birth of the nation; the Passover was its
annual birthday feast. It was the yearly memorial of the dedication of
the people to him who had saved their first-born from the destroyer, in
order that they might be made holy to himself. First celebration of the
Passover .--On the tenth day of the month, the head of each family was
to select from the flock either a lamb or a kid, a male of the first
year, without blemish. If his family was too small to eat the whole of
the lamb, he was permitted to invite his nearest neighbor to join the
party. On the fourteenth day of the month he was to kill his lamb,
while the sun was setting. He was then to take blood in a basin and
with a sprig of hyssop to sprinkle it on the two side-posts and the
lintel of the door of the house. The lamb was then thoroughly roasted,
whole. It was expressly forbidden that it should be boiled, or that a
bone of it should be broken. Unleavened bread and bitter herbs were to
be eaten with the flesh. No male who was uncircumcised was to join the
company. Each one was to have his loins girt, to hold a staff in his
hand, and to have shoes on his feet. He was to eat in haste, and it
would seem that he was to stand during the meal. The number of the
party was to be calculated as nearly as possible, so that all the flesh
of the lamb might be eaten; but if any portion of it happened to
remain, it was to be burned in the morning. No morsel of it was to be
carried out of the house. The lambs were selected, on the fourteenth
they were slain and the blood sprinkled, and in the following evening,
after the fifteenth day of the had commenced the first paschal meal was
eaten. At midnight the firstborn of the Egyptians were smitten. The
king and his people were now urgent that the Israelites should start
immediately, and readily bestowed on them supplies for the journey. In
such haste did the Israelites depart, on that very day, (Numbers 33:3)
that they packed up their kneading troughs containing the dough
prepared for the morrow's provisions, which was not yet leavened.
Observance of the Passover in later times .--As the original
institution of the Passover in Egypt preceded the establishment of the
priesthood and the regulation of the service of the tabernacle. It
necessarily fell short in several particulars of the observance of the
festival according to the fully-developed ceremonial law. The head of
the family slew the lamb in his own house, not in the holy place; the
blood was sprinkled on the doorway, not on the altar. But when the law
was perfected, certain particulars were altered in order to assimilate
the Passover to the accustomed order of religious service. In the
twelfth and thirteenth chapters of Exodus there are not only distinct
references to the observance of the festival in future ages (e.g.)
(Exodus 12:2,14,17,24-27,42; 13:2,5,8-10) but there are several
injunctions which were evidently not intended for the first Passover,
and which indeed could not possibly have been observed. Besides the
private family festival, there were public and national sacrifices
offered each of the seven days of unleavened bread. (Numbers 28:19) On
the second day also the first-fruits of the barley harvest were offered
in the temple. (Leviticus 23:10) In the latter notices of the festival
in the books of the law there are particulars added which appear as
modifications of the original institution. (Leviticus 23:10-14; Numbers
28:16-25; 16:1-6) Hence it is not without reason that the Jewish
writers have laid great stress on the distinction between "the Egyptian
Passover" and "the perpetual Passover." Mode and order of the paschal
meal .--All work except that belonging to a few trades connected with
daily life was suspended for some hours before the evening of the 14th
Nisan. It was not lawful to eat any ordinary food after midday. No male
was admitted to the table unless he was circumcised, even if he were of
the seed of Israel. (Exodus 12:48) It was customary for the number of a
party to be not less than ten. When the meal was prepared, the family
was placed round the table, the paterfamilias taking a place of honor,
probably somewhat raised above the rest. When the party was arranged
the first cup of wine was filled, and a blessing was asked by the head
of the family on the feast, as well as a special, one on the cup. The
bitter herbs were then placed on the table, and a portion of them
eaten, either with Or without the sauce. The unleavened bread was
handed round next and afterward the lamb was placed on the table in
front of the head of the family. The paschal lamb could be legally
slain and the blood and fat offered only in the national sanctuary.
(16:2) Before the lamb was eaten the second cup of wine was filled, and
the son, in accordance with (Exodus 12:26) asked his father the meaning
of the feast. In reply, an account was given of the sufferings of the
Israelites in Egypt and of their deliverance, with a particular
explanation of (26:5) and the first part of the Hallel (a contraction
from Hallelujah), Psal 113, 114, was sung. This being gone through, the
lamb was carved and eaten. The third cup of wine was poured out and
drunk, and soon afterward the fourth. The second part of the Hallel,
Psal 115 to 118 was then sung. A fifth wine-cup appears to have been
occasionally produced, But perhaps only in later times. What was termed
the greater Hallel, Psal 120 to 138 was sung on such occasions. The
Israelites who lived in the country appear to have been accommodated at
the feast by the inhabitants of Jerusalem in their houses, so far its
there was room for them. (Matthew 26:18; Luke 22:10-12) Those who could
not be received into the city encamped without the walls in tents as
the pilgrims now do at Mecca. The Passover as a type .--The Passover
was not only commemorative but also typical. "The deliverance which it
commemorated was a type of the great salvation it foretold."--No other
shadow of things to come contained in the law can vie with the festival
of the Passover in expressiveness and completeness. (1) The paschal
lamb must of course be regarded as the leading feature in the
ceremonial of the festival. The lamb slain typified Christ the "Lamb of
God." slain for the sins of the world. Christ "our Passover is
sacrificed for us." (1 Corinthians 5:7) According to the divine
purpose, the true Lamb of God was slain at nearly the same time as "the
Lord's Passover" at the same season of the year; and at the same time
of the day as the daily sacrifice at the temple, the crucifixion
beginning at the hour of the morning sacrifice and ending at the hour
of the evening sacrifice. That the lamb was to be roasted and not
boiled has been supposed to commemorate the haste of the departure of
the Israelites. It is not difficult to determine the reason of the
command "not a bone of him shall be broken." The lamb was to be a
symbol of unity--the unity of the family, the unity of the nation, the
unity of God with his people whom he had taken into covenant with
himself. (2) The unleavened bread ranks next in importance to the
paschal lamb. We are warranted in concluding that unleavened bread had
a peculiar sacrificial character, according to the law. It seems more
reasonable to accept St, Paul's reference to the subject, (1
Corinthians 5:6-8) as furnishing the true meaning of the symbol.
Fermentation is decomposition, a dissolution of unity. The pure dry
biscuit would be an apt emblem of unchanged duration, and, in its
freedom from foreign mixture, of purity also. (3) The offering of the
omer or first sheaf of the harvest, (Leviticus 23:10-14) signified
deliverance from winter the bondage of Egypt being well considered as a
winter in the history of the nation. (4) The consecration of the
first-fruits, the firstborn of the soil, is an easy type of the
consecration of the first born of the Israelites, and of our own best
selves, to God. Further than this (1) the Passover is a type of
deliverance from the slavery of sin. (2) It is the passing over of the
doom we deserve for your sins, because the blood of Christ has been
applied to us by faith. (3) The sprinkling of the blood upon the
door-posts was a symbol of open confession of our allegiance and love.
(4) The Passover was useless unless eaten; so we live upon the Lord
Jesus Christ. (5) It was eaten with bitter herbs, as we must eat our
passover with the bitter herbs of repentance and confession, which yet,
like the bitter herbs of the Passover, are a fitting and natural
accompaniment. (6) As the Israelites ate the Passover all prepared for
the journey, so do we with a readiness and desire to enter the active
service of Christ, and to go on the journey toward heaven.--ED.)
Patara(city
of Patarus), a Lycian city situated on the southwestern shore of Lycia,
not far from the left bank of the river Xanthus. The coast here is very
mountainous and bold. Immediately opposite is the island of Rhodes.
Patara was practically the seaport of the city of Xanthus, which was
ten miles distant. These notices of its position and maritime
importance introduce us to the single mention of the place in the
Bible-- (Acts 21:1,2)
Pathros(region
of the south), a part of Egypt, and a Mizraite tribe whose people were
called Pathrusim. In the list of the Mizraites the Pathrusim occur
after the Naphtuhim and before the Caluhim; the latter being followed
by the notice of the Philistines and by the Caphtorim. (Genesis
10:13,14; 1 Chronicles 1:12) Pathros is mentioned in the prophecies of
Isaiah, (Isaiah 11:11) Jeremiah (Jeremiah 44:1,15) and Ezekiel.
(Ezekiel 29:14; 30:13-18) It was probably part or all of upper Egypt,
and we may trace its name in the Pathyrite name, in which Thebes was
situated.
Pathrusimpeople
of Pathros. [[943]Pathros]
Patmos(Revelation
1:9) a rugged and bare island in the AEgean Sea, 20 miles south of
Samos and 24 west of Asia Minor. It was the scene of the banishment of
St. John in the reign of Domitian, A.D. 95. Patmos is divided into two
nearly equal parts, a northern and a southern, by a very narrow isthmus
where, on the east side are the harbor and the town. On the hill to the
south, crowning a commanding height, is the celebrated monastery which
bears the name of "John the Divine." Halfway up the descent is the cave
or grotto where tradition says that St. John received the Revelation.
Patriarch(father
of a tribe), the name given to the head of a family or tribe in Old
Testament times. In common usage the title of patriarch is assigned
especially to those whose lives are recorded in Scripture previous to
the time of Moses, as Adam, Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. ("In the early
history of the Hebrews we find the ancestor or father of a family
retaining authority over his children and his children's children so
long as he lived, whatever new connections they might form when the
father died the branch families did not break off and form new
communities, but usually united under another common head. The eldest
son was generally invested with this dignity. His authority was
paternal. He was honored as central point of connection and as the
representative of the whole kindred. Thus each great family had its
patriarch or head, and each tribe its prince, selected from the several
heads of the families which it embraced."--McClintock and Strong.)
("After the destruction of Jerusalem, patriarch was the title of the
chief religious rulers of the Jews in Asia and in early Christian times
it became the designation of the bishops of Rome, Constantinople,
Alexandria, Antioch and Jerusalem."--American Cyclopedia .)
Patrobas(paternal),a
Christian at Rome to whom St. Paul sends his salutation. (Romans 16:14)
Like many other names mentioned in Roma 16 this was borne by at least
one member of the emperor's household. Suet. Galba. 20; Martial, Ep.
ii. 32, 3. (A.D. 55.)
Pau(bleating)
(but in (1 Chronicles 1:50) [944]Pai), the capital of Hadar king of
Edom. (Genesis 36:39) Its position is unknown.
Paul(small,
little). Nearly all the original materials for the life St. Paul are
contained in the Acts of the Apostles and in the Pauline epistles. Paul
was born in Tarsus, a city of Cilicia. (It is not improbable that he
was born between A.D. and A.D. 5.) Up to the time of his going forth as
an avowed preacher of Christ to the Gentiles, the apostle was known by
the name of Saul. This was the Jewish name which he received from his
Jewish parents. But though a Hebrew of the Hebrews, he was born in a
Gentile city. Of his parents we know nothing, except that his father
was of the tribe of Benjamin, (Philemon 3:5) and a Pharisee, (Acts
23:6) that Paul had acquired by some means the Roman franchise ("I was
free born,") (Acts 22:23) and that he was settled in Tarsus. At Tarsus
he must have learned to use the Greek language with freedom and mastery
in both speaking and writing. At Tarsus also he learned that trade of
"tent-maker," (Acts 18:3) at which he afterward occasionally wrought
with his own hands. There was a goat's-hair cloth called cilicium
manufactured in Cilicia, and largely used for tents, Saul's trade was
probably that of making tents of this hair cloth. When St. Paul makes
his defence before his countrymen at Jerusalem, (Acts 22:1) ... he
tells them that, though born in Tarsus he had been "brought up" in
Jerusalem. He must therefore, have been yet a boy when was removed, in
all probability for the sake of his education, to the holy city of his
fathers. He learned, he says, at the feet of Gamaliel." He who was to
resist so stoutly the usurpations of the law had for his teacher one of
the most eminent of all the doctors of the law. Saul was yet "a young
man," (Acts 7:58) when the Church experienced that sudden expansion
which was connected with the ordaining of the seven appointed to serve
tables, and with the special power and inspiration of Stephen. Among
those who disputed with Stephen were some "of them of Cilicia." We
naturally think of Saul as having been one of these, when we find him
afterward keeping the clothes of those suborned witnesses who,
according to the law, (17:7) were the first to cast stones at Stephen.
"Saul," says the sacred writer significantly "was consenting unto his
death." Saul's conversion . A.D. 37.--The persecutor was to be
converted. Having undertaken to follow up the believers "unto strange
cities." Saul naturally turned his thoughts to Damascus. What befell
him as he journeyed thither is related in detail three times in the
Acts, first by the historian in his own person, then in the two
addresses made by St. Paul at Jerusalem and before Agrippa. St. Luke's
statement is to be read in (Acts 9:3-19) where, however, the words "it
is hard for thee to kick against the pricks," included in the English
version, ought to be omitted (as is done in the Revised Version). The
sudden light from heaven; the voice of Jesus speaking with authority to
his persecutor; Saul struck to the ground, blinded, overcome; the
three-days suspense; the coming of Ananias as a messenger of the Lord
and Saul's baptism,--these were the leading features at the great
event, and in these we must look for the chief significance of the
conversion. It was in Damascus that he was received into the church by
Ananias, and here to the astonishment of all his hearers, he proclaimed
Jesus in the synagogues, declaring him to be the Son of God. The
narrative in the Acts tells us simply that he was occupied in this
work, with increasing vigor, for "many days," up to the time when
imminent danger drove him from Damascus. From the Epistle to the
Galatians, (Galatians 1:17,18) we learn that the many days were at
least a good part of "three years," A.D. 37-40, and that Saul, not
thinking it necessary to procure authority to teach from the apostles
that were before him, went after his conversion to Arabia, and returned
from thence to us. We know nothing whatever of this visit to Arabia;
but upon his departure from Damascus we are again on a historical
ground, and have the double evidence of St. Luke in the Acts of the
apostle in his Second Epistle the Corinthians. According to the former,
the Jews lay in wait for Saul, intending to kill him, and watched the
gates of the city that he might not escape from them. Knowing this, the
disciples took him by night and let him down in a basket from the wall.
Having escaped from Damascus, Saul betook himself to Jerusalem (A.D.
40), and there "assayed to join himself to the disciples; but they were
all afraid of him, and believed not he was a disciple." Barnabas'
introduction removed the fears of the apostles, and Saul "was with them
coming in and going out at Jerusalem." But it is not strange that the
former persecutor was soon singled out from the other believers as the
object of a murderous hostility. He was,therefore, again urged to flee;
and by way of Caesarea betook himself to his native city, Tarsus.
Barnabas was sent on a special mission to Antioch. As the work grew
under his hands, he felt the need of help, went himself to Tarsus to
seek Saul, and succeeded in bringing him to Antioch. There they labored
together unremittingly for a whole year." All this time Saul was
subordinate to Barnabas. Antioch was in constant communication with
Cilicia, with Cyprus, with all the neighboring countries. The Church
was pregnant with a great movement, and time of her delivery was at
hand. Something of direct expectation seems to be implied in what is
said of the leaders of the Church at Antioch, that they were
"ministering to the Lord and fasting," when the Holy Ghost spoke to
them: "Separate me Barnabas and Saul for the work whereunto I have
called them." Everything was done with orderly gravity in the sending
forth of the two missionaries. Their brethren after fasting and prayer,
laid their hands on them, and so they departed. The first missionary
journey. A.D. 45-49.--As soon as Barnabas and Saul reached Cyprus they
began to "announce the word of God," but at first they delivered their
message in the synagogues of the Jews only. When they had gone through
the island, from Salamis to Paphos, they were called upon to explain
their doctrine to an eminent Gentile, Sergius Paulus, the proconsul,
who was converted. Saul's name was now changed to Paul, and he began to
take precedence of Barnabas. From Paphos "Paul and his company" set
sail for the mainland, and arrived at Perga in Pamphylia. Here the
heart of their companion John failed him, and he returned to Jerusalem.
From Perga they travelled on to a place obscure in secular history, but
most memorable in the history of the Kingdom of Christ--Antioch in
Pisidia. Rejected by the Jews, they became bold and outspoken, and
turned from them to the Gentiles. At Antioch now, as in every city
afterward, the unbelieving Jews used their influence with their own
adherents among the Gentiles to persuade the authorities or the
populace to persecute the apostles and to drive them from the place.
Paul and Barnabas now travelled on to Iconium where the occurrences at
Antioch were repeated, and from thence to the Lycaonian country which
contained the cities Lystra and Derbe. Here they had to deal with
uncivilized heathen. At Lystra the healing of a cripple took place.
Thereupon these pagans took the apostles for gods, calling Barnabas,
who was of the more imposing presence, Jupiter, and Paul, who was the
chief speaker, Mercurius. Although the people of Lystra had been so
ready to worship Paul and Barnabas, the repulse of their idolatrous
instincts appears to have provoked them, and they allowed themselves to
be persuaded into hostility be Jews who came from Antioch and Iconium,
so that they attacked Paul with stones, and thought they had killed
him. He recovered, however as the disciples were standing around him,
and went again into the city. The next day he left it with Barnabas,
and went to Derbe, and thence they returned once more to Lystra, and so
to Iconium and Antioch. In order to establish the churches after their
departure they solemnly appointed "elders" in every city. Then they
came down to the coast, and from Attalia, they sailed; home to Antioch
in Syria, where they related the successes which had been granted to
them, and especially the opening of the door of faith to the Gentiles."
And so the first missionary journey ended. The council at
Jerusalem.--Upon that missionary journey follows most naturally the
next important scene which the historian sets before us--the council
held at Jerusalem to determine the relations of Gentile believers to
the law of Moses. (Acts 15:1-29; Galatians 2) Second missionary journey
. A.D. 50-54.--The most resolute courage, indeed, was required for the
work to which St. Paul was now publicly pledged. He would not associate
with himself in that work one who had already shown a want of
constancy. This was the occasion of what must have been a most painful
difference between him and his comrade in the faith and in past perils,
Barnabas. (Acts 15:35-40) Silas, or Silvanus, becomes now a chief
companion of the apostle. The two went together through Syria and
Cilicia, visiting the churches, and so came to Derbe and Lystra. Here
they find Timotheus, who had become a disciple on the former visit of
the apostle. Him St. Paul took and Circumcised. St. Luke now steps
rapidly over a considerable space of the apostle's life and labors.
"They went throughout Phrygia and the region of Galatia." (Luke 16:6)
At this time St. Paul was founding "the churches of Galatia."
(Galatians 1:2) He himself gives some hints of the circumstances of his
preaching in that region, of the reception he met with, and of the
ardent though unstable character of the people. (Galatians 4:13-15)
Having gone through Phrygia and Galatia, he intended to visit, the
western coast; but "they were forbidden by the Holy Ghost to preach the
"word" there. Then, being on the borders of Mysia, they thought of
going back to the northeast into Bithynia; but again the Spirit of
Jesus "suffered them not," so they passed by Mysia and came down to
Troas. St. Paul saw in a vision a man,of Macedonia, who besought him,
saying, "Come over into Macedonia and help us." The vision was at once
accepted as a heavenly intimation; the help wanted, by the Macedonians
was believed to be the preaching of the gospel. It is at this point
that the historian, speaking of St. Paul's company, substitutes "we"
for "they." He says nothing of himself we can only infer that St. Luke,
to whatever country he belonged, became a companion of St. Paul at
Troas. The party thus reinforced, immediately set sail from Troas,
touched at Samothrace, then landed on the continent at Neapolis, and
thence journeyed to Philippi. The first convert in Macedonia was Lydia,
an Asiatic woman, at Philippi. (Acts 18:13,14) At Philippi Paul and
Silas were arrested, beaten and put in prison, having cast out the
spirit of divination from a female slave who had brought her masters
much gain by her power. This cruel wrong was to be the occasion of a
signal appearance of the God of righteousness and deliverance. The
narrative tells of the earthquake, the jailer's terror, his conversion
and baptism. (Acts 16:26-34) In the morning the magistrates sent word
to the prison that the men might be let go; but Paul denounced plainly
their unlawful acts, informing them moreover that those whom they had
beaten and imprisoned without trial; were Roman citizens. The
magistrates, in great alarm, saw the necessity of humbling themselves.
They came and begged them to leave the city. Paul and Silas consented
to do so, and, after paying a visit to "the brethren" in the house of
Lydia, they departed. Leaving St. Luke, and perhaps Timothy for a short
time at Philippi, Paul and Silas travelled through Amphipolis and
Apollonia and stopped again at Thessalonica. Here again, as in Pisidian
Antioch, the envy of the Jews was excited, and the mob assaulted the
house of Jason with whom Paul and Silas were staying as guests, and,
not finding them, dragged Jason himself and some other brethren before
the magistrates. After these signs of danger the brethren immediately
sent away Paul and Silas by night. They next came to Berea. Here they
found the Jews more noble than those at Thessalonica had been. Accordingly
they gained many converts, both Jews and Greeks; but the Jews of
Thessalonica, hearing of it, sent emissaries to stir up the people, and
it was thought best that Paul should himself leave the city whilst
Silas and Timothy remained-behind. Some of the brethren went with St.
Paul as far as Athens, where they left him carrying back a request to
Silas and Timothy that they would speedily join him. Here the apostle
delivered that wonderful discourse reported in (Acts 17:22-31) He
gained but few converts at Athens, and soon took his departure and went
to Corinth. He was testifying with unusual effort and anxiety when
Silas and Timothy came from Macedonia and joined him. Their arrival was
the occasion of the writing of the First Epistle to the Thessalonians.
The two epistles to the Thessalonians--and these alone--belong to the
present missionary journey. They were written from Corinth A.D. 52, 53.
When Silas and Timotheus came to Corinth, St. Paul was testifying to
the Jews with great earnestness, but with little success. Corinth was
the chief city of the province of Achaia, and the residence of the
proconsul. During St. Paul stay the proconsular office was held by
Gallio, a brother of the philosopher Seneca. Before him the apostle was
summoned by his Jewish enemies, who hoped to bring the Roman authority
to bear upon him as an innovator in religion. But Gallio perceived at
once, before Paul could "open his mouth" to defend himself, that the
movement was due to Jewish prejudice, and refused to go into the
question. Then a singular scene occurred. The Corinthian spectators,
either favoring Paul or actuated only by anger against the Jews, seized
on the principal person of those who had brought the charge, and beat
him before the judgment-seat. Gallio left these religious quarrels to
settle themselves. The apostle therefore, was not allowed to be "hurt,"
and remained some time longer at Corinth unmolested. Having been the
instrument of accomplishing this work, Paul departed for Jerusalem,
wishing to attend a festival there. Before leaving Greece, he cut off
his hair at Cenchreae, in fulfillment of a vow. (Acts 18:18) Paul paid
a visit to the synagogue at Ephesus, but would not stay. Leaving
Ephesus, he sailed to Caesarea, and from thence went up to Jerusalem,
spring, A.D. 54, and "saluted the church." It is argued, from
considerations founded on the suspension of navigation during the
winter months, that the festival was probably the Pentecost. From
Jerusalem the apostle went almost immediately down to Antioch, thus
returning to the same place from which he had started with Silas. Third
missionary journey, including the stay at Ephesus . A.D. 54-58. (Acts
18:23; Acts 21:17)--The great epistles which belong to this period,
those to the Galatians, Corinthians and Romans, show how the
"Judaizing" question exercised at this time the apostle's mind. St.
Paul "spent some time" at Antioch, and during this stay as we are
inclined to believe, his collision with St. Peter (Galatians 2:11-14)
took place. When he left Antioch, he "went over all the country of
Galatia and Phrygia in order, strengthening all the disciples," and
giving orders concerning the collection for the saints. (1 Corinthians
18:1) It is probable that the Epistle to the Galatians was written soon
after this visit--A.D. 56-57. This letter was in all probability sent
from Ephesus. This was the goal of the apostle's journeyings through
Asia Minor. He came down to Ephesus from the upper districts of
Phrygia. Here he entered upon his usual work. He went into the
synagogue, and for three months he spoke openly, disputing and
persuading concerning "the kingdom of God." At the end of this time the
obstinacy and opposition of some of the Jews led him to give up
frequenting the synagogue, and he established the believers as a
separate society meeting "in the school of Tyrannus." This continued
for two years. During this time many things occurred of which the
historian of the Acts chooses two examples, the triumph over magical
arts and the great disturbance raised by the silversmiths who made
shrines Diana--among which we are to note further the writing of the
First Epistle to the Corinth A.D. 57. Before leaving Ephesus Paul went
into Macedonia, where he met Titus, who brought him news of the state
of the Corinthian church. Thereupon he wrote the Second Epistle to the
Corinthians, A.D. 57, and sent it by the hands of Titus and two other
brethren to Corinth. After writing this epistle, St. Paul travelled
throughout Macedonia, perhaps to the borders of Illyricum, (Romans
15:19) and then went to Corinth. The narrative in the Acts tells us
that "when he had gone over those parts (Macedonia), and had given them
much exhortation he came into Greece, and there abode three months."
(Acts 20:2,3) There is only one incident which we can connect with this
visit to Greece, but that is a very important one--the writing of his
Epistle to the Romans, A.D. 58. That this was written at this time from
Corinth appears from passages in the epistle itself and has never been
doubted. The letter is a substitute for the personal visit which he had
longed "for many years" to pay. Before his departure from Corinth, St.
Paul was joined again by St. Luke, as we infer from the change in the
narrative from the third to the first person. He was bent on making a
journey to Jerusalem, for a special purpose and within a limited time.
With this view he was intending to go by sea to Syria. But he was made
aware of some plot of the Jews for his destruction, to be carried out
through this voyage; and he determined to evade their malice by
changing his route. Several brethren were associated with him in this
expedition, the bearers no doubt, of the collections made in all the
churches for the poor at Jerusalem. These were sent on by sea, and
probably the money with them, to Troas, where they were to await Paul.
He, accompanied by Luke, went northward through Macedonia. Whilst the
vessel which conveyed the rest of the party sailed from Troas to Assos,
Paul gained some time by making the journey by land. At Assos he went
on board again. Coasting along by Mitylene, Chios, Samos and
Trogyllium, they arrived at Miletus. At Miletus, however there was time
to send to Ephesus, and the elders of the church were invited to come
down to him there. This meeting is made the occasion for recording
another characteristic and representative address of St. Paul. (Acts
20:18-35) The course of the voyage from Miletas was by Coos and Rhodes
to Patara, and from Patara in another vessel past Cyprus to Tyre. Here
Paul and his company spent seven days. From Tyre they sailed to
Ptolemais, where they spent one day, and from Ptolemais proceeded,
apparently by land, to Caesarea. They now "tarried many days" at
Caesarea. During this interval the prophet Agabus, (Acts 11:28) came
down from Jerusalem, and crowned the previous intimations of danger
with a prediction expressively delivered. At this stage a final effort
was made to dissuade Paul from going up to Jerusalem, by the Christians
of Caesarea and by his travelling companions. After a while they went
up to Jerusalem and were gladly received by the brethren. This is St.
Paul's fifth an last visit to Jerusalem. St. Paul's imprisonment:
Jerusalem . Spring, A.D. 58.--He who was thus conducted into Jerusalem
by a company of anxious friends had become by this time a man of
considerable fame among his countrymen. He was widely known as one who
had taught with pre-eminent boldness that a way into God's favor was
opened to the Gentiles, and that this way did not lie through the door
of the Jewish law. He had thus roused against himself the bitter enmity
of that unfathomable Jewish pride which was almost us strong in some of
those who had professed the faith of Jesus as in their unconverted
brethren. He was now approaching a crisis in the long struggle, and the
shadow of it has been made to rest upon his mind throughout his journey
to Jerusalem. He came "ready to die for the name of the Lord Jesus,"
but he came expressly to prove himself a faithful Jew and this purpose
is shown at every point of the history. Certain Jews from "Asia," who
had come up for the pentecostal feast, and who had a personal knowledge
of Paul, saw him in the temple. They set upon him at once, and stirred
up the people against him. There was instantly a great commotion; Paul
was dragged out of the temple, the doors of which were immediately
shut, and the people having him in their hands, were going to kill him.
Paul was rescued from the violence of the multitude by the Roman
officer, who made him his own prisoner, causing him to be chained to
two soldiers, and then proceeded to inquire who he was and what he had
done. The inquiry only elicited confused outcries, and the "chief
captain" seems to have imagined that the apostle might perhaps be a
certain Egyptian pretender who recently stirred up a considerable
rising of the people. The account In the (Acts 21:34-40) tells us with
graphic touches how St. Paul obtained leave and opportunity to address
the people in a discourse which is related at length. Until the hated
word of a mission to the Gentiles had been spoken, the Jews had
listened to the speaker. "Away with such a fellow from the earth," the
multitude now shouted; "it is not fit that he should live." The Roman
commander seeing the tumult that arose might well conclude that St.
Paul had committed some heinous offence; and carrying him off, he gave
orders that he should be forced by scourging to confess his crime.
Again the apostle took advantage of his Roman citizenship to protect
himself from such an outrage. The chief captain set him free from
bonds, but on the next day called together the chief priests and the
Sanhedrin, and brought Paul as a prisoner before them. On the next day
a conspiracy was formed which the historian relates with a singular
fullness of detail. More than forty of the Jews bound themselves under
a curse neither to eat nor drink until they had killed Paul. The plot
was discovered, and St. Paul was hurried away from Jerusalem. The chief
captain, Claudius Lysias determined to send him to Caesarea to Felix,
the governor or procurator of Judea. He therefor put him in charge of a
strong guard of soldiers, who took him by night as far as Antipatris.
From thence a smaller detachment conveyed him to Caesarea, where they
delivered up their prisoner into the hands of the governor.
Imprisonment at Caesarea. A.D. 58-60.--St. Paul was henceforth to the
end of the period embraced in the Acts, if not to the end of his life,
in Roman custody. This custody was in fact a protection to him, without
which he would have fallen a victim to the animosity of the Jews. He
seems to have been treated throughout with humanity and consideration.
The governor before whom he was now to be tried, according to Tacitus
and Josephus, was a mean and dissolute tyrant. After hearing St, Paul's
accusers and the apostle's defence, Felix made an excuse for putting
off the matter, and gave orders that the prisoner should be treated
with indulgence and that his friends should be allowed free access to
him. After a while he heard him again. St. Paul remained in custody
until Felix left the province. The unprincipled governor had good
reason to seek to ingratiate himself with the Jews; and to please them,
be handed over Paul, as an untried prisoner, to his successor, Festus.
Upon his arrival in the province, Festus went up without delay from
Caesarea to Jerusalem, and the leading Jews seized the opportunity of
asking that Paul might be brought up there for trial intending to
assassinate him by the way. But Festus would not comply with their
request, He invited them to follow him on his speedy return to
Caesarea, and a trial took place there, closely resembling that before
Felix. "They had certain questions against him," Festus says to
Agrippa, "of their own superstition (or religion), and of one Jesus,
who was dead, whom Paul affirmed to be alive. And being puzzled for my
part as to such inquiries, I asked him whether he would go to Jerusalem
to be tried there." This proposal, not a very likely one to be
accepted, was the occasion of St. Paul's appeal to Caesar. The appeal
having been allowed, Festus reflected that he must send with the
prisoner a report of "the crimes laid against him." He therefore took
advantage of an opportunity which offered itself in a few days to seek
some help in the matter. The Jewish prince Agrippa arrived with his
sister Bernice on a visit to the new governor. To him Festus
communicated his perplexity. Agrippa expressed a desire to hear Paul
himself. Accordingly Paul conducted his defence before the king; and
when it was concluded Festus and Agrippa, and their companions,
consulted together, and came to the conclusion that the accused was
guilty of nothing that deserved death or imprisonment. "Agrippa"s final
answer to the inquiry of Festus was, "This man might have been set at
liberty, if he had not appealed unto Caesar." The voyage to Rome and
shipwreck. Autumn, A.D. 60.--No formal trial of St. Paul had yet taken
place. After a while arrangements were made to carry "Paul and certain
other prisoners," in the custody of a centurion named Julius, into
Italy; and amongst the company, whether by favor or from any other
reason, we find the historian of the Acts, who in chapters 27 and 28
gives a graphic description of the voyage to Rome and the shipwreck on
the Island of Melita or Malta. After a three-months stay in Malta the
soldiers and their prisoners left in an Alexandria ship for Italy. They
touched at Syracuse, where they stayed three days, and at Rhegium, from
which place they were carried with a fair wind to Puteoli, where they
left their ship and the sea. At Puteoli they found "brethren," for it
was an important place and especially a chief port for the traffic
between Alexandria and Rome; and by these brethren they were exhorted
to stay a while with them. Permission seems to have been granted by the
centurion; and whilst they were spending seven days at Puteoli news of
the apostle's arrival was sent to Rome. (Spring, A.D. 61.) First
imprisonment of St. Paul at Rome . A.D. 61-63.--On their arrival at
Rome the centurion delivered up his prisoners into the proper custody
that of the praetorian prefect. Paul was at once treated with special
consideration and was allowed to dwell by himself with the soldier who
guarded him. He was now therefore free "to preach the gospel to them
that were at Rome also;" and proceeded without delay to act upon his
rule--"to the Jews first," But as of old, the reception of his message
by the Jews was not favorable. He turned, therefore, again to the
Gentiles, and for two years he dwelt in his own hired house. These are
the last words of the Acts. But St. Paul's career is not abruptly
closed. Before he himself fades out of our sight in the twilight of
ecclesiastical tradition, we have letters written by himself which
contribute some particulars to his biography. Period of the later
epistles.--To that imprisonment to which St. Luke has introduced
us--the imprisonment which lasted for such a tedious time, though
tempered by much indulgence--belongs the noble group of letters to
Philemon, to the Colossians, to the Ephesians and to the Philippians.
The three former of these were written at one time, and sent by the
same messengers. Whether that to the Philippians was written before or
after these we cannot determine; but the tone of it seems to imply that
a crisis was approaching, and therefore it is commonly regarded us the
latest of the four. In this epistle St. Paul twice expresses a
confident hope that before long he may be able to visit the Philippians
in person. (Philemon 1:25; 2:24) Whether this hope was fulfilled or not
has been the occasion of much controversy. According to the general
opinion the apostle was liberated from imprisonment at the end of two
years, having been acquitted by Nero A.D. 63, and left Rome soon after
writing the letter to the Philippians. He spent some time in visits to
Greece, Asia Minor and Spain, and during the latter part of this time
wrote the letters (first epistles) to Timothy and Titus from Macedonia,
A.D. 65. After these were written he was apprehended again and sent to
Rome. Second imprisonment at Rome . A.D. 65-67.--The apostle appears
now to have been treated not as an honorable state prisoner but as a
felon, (2 Timothy 2:9) but he was allowed to write the second letter to
Timothy, A.D. 67. For what remains we have the concurrent testimony of
ecclesiastical antiquity that he was beheaded at Rome, by Nero in the
great persecutions of the Christians by that emperor, A.D. 67 or 68.
Pavement[[945]Gabbatha]
Paviliona
temporary movable tent or habitation.
+Soc, properly an enclosed place, also rendered "tabernacle," "covert"
and "den;" once only "pavilion." (Psalms 27:5) (Among the Egyptians
pavilions were built in a similar style to houses, though on a smaller
scale in various parts of the country, and in the foreign districts
through which the Egyptian armies passed, for the use of the
king--Wilkinson .)
+Succah, Usually "tabernacle" and "booth."
+Shaphrur and shaphrir, a word used once only, in (Jeremiah 49:10) to
signify glory or splendor, and hence probably to be understood of the
splendid covering of the royal throne.
Peacocks(Heb.
tuccyyim). Among the natural products which Solomon's fleet brought
home to Jerusalem, mention is made of "peacocks," (1 Kings 10:22; 2
Chronicles 9:21) which is probably the correct translation. The Hebrew
word may be traced to the Talmud or Malabaric togei, "peacock."
Pearl(Heb.
gabish). The Hebrew word in (Job 28:18) probably means "crystal."
Pearls, however are frequently mentioned in the New Testament, (Matthew
13:45; 1 Timothy 2:9; Revelation 17:4; 21:21) and were considered by
the ancients among the most precious of gems, and were highly esteemed
as ornaments. The kingdom of heaven is compared to a "pearl of great
price." In (Matthew 7:6) pearls are used metaphorically for anything of
value, or perhaps more especially for "wise sayings." (The finest
specimens of the pearl are yielded by the pearl oyster (Avicula
margaritifera), still found in abundance in the Persian Gulf and near
the coasts of Ceylon, Java and Sumatra. The oysters grow in clusters on
rocks in deep water, and the pearl is found inside the shell, and is
the result of a diseased secretion caused by the introduction of
foreign bodies, as sand, etc., between the mantle and the shell. They
are obtained by divers trained to the business. March or April is the
time for pearl fishing. A single shell sometimes yields eight to twelve
pearls. The size of a good Oriental pearl varies from that of a pea to
about three times that size. A handsome necklace of pearls the size of
peas is worth,000. Pearls have been valued as high as,000 or,000
apiece.--ED.)
Pedahel(whom
God redeems), the son of Ammihud, and prince of the tribe of Naphtali.
(Numbers 34:28)
Pedaiah(whom
Jehovah redeems).
+The father of Zebudah, mother of King Jehoiakim. (2 Kings 23:38) (B.C.
before 648.)
+The brother of Salathiel or Shealtiel and father of Zerubbabel who is
usually called the "son of Shealtiel," being, as Lord A. Hervey
conjectures, in reality his uncle's successor and heir, in consequence
Of the failure of issue in the direct line. (1 Chronicles 3:17-19)
(B.C. before 536.)
+Son of Parosh, that is, one of the family or that name, who assisted
Nehemiah in repairing the walls of Jerusalem. (Nehemiah 3:25) (B.C.
about 446.)
+Apparently a priest; one of those who stood on the left hand of Ezra
when he read the law to the people. (Nehemiah 8:4) (B.C. 445.)
+A Benjamite, ancestor of Sallu. (Nehemiah 11:7)
+A Levite in the time of Nehemiah, (Nehemiah 13:13) apparently the same
as 4.
+The father of Joel, prince of the half tribe of Manasseh in the reign
of David. (1 Chronicles 27:20) (B.C. before 1013.)
Pedarhzur(whom
the rock (i.e. God) redeems), father of Gamaliel, the chief of the
tribe of Manasseh at the time of the exodus. (Numbers 1:10; 2:20;
7:54,59; 10:23) (B.C. 1491.)
Pekah(open-eyed),
son of Remaliah, originally a captain of Pekaiah king of Israel,
murdered his master seized the throne, and became the 18th sovereign of
the northern kingdom, B.C. 757-740. Under his predecessors Israel had
been much weakened through the payment of enormous tribute to the
Assyrians (see especially) (2 Kings 15:20) and by internal wars and
conspiracies. Pekah seems to have steadily applied himself to the
restoration of power. For this purpose he contracted a foreign
alliance, and fixed his mind on the plunder of the sister kingdom of
Judah. He must have made the treaty by which he proposed to share its
spoil with Rezin king of Damascus, when Jotham was still on the throne
of Jerusalem (2 Kings 10:37) but its execution was long delayed,
probably in consequence of that prince's righteous and vigorous
administration. (2 Chronicles 27:1) ... When however his weak son Ahaz
succeeded to the crown of David, the allies no longer hesitated, but
entered upon the siege of Jerusalem, B.C. 742. The history of the war
is found in 2Kin 13 and 2Chr 28. It is famous as the occasion of the
great prophecies in Isai 7-9. Its chief result was the Jewish port of
Elath on the Red Sea; but the unnatural alliance of Damascus and
Samaria was punished through the complete overthrow of the ferocious
confederates by Tiglath-pileser. The kingdom of Damascus. was finally
suppressed and Rezin put to death while Pekah was deprived of at least
half his kingdom, including all the northern portion and the whole
district to the east of Jordan. Pekah himself, now fallen into the
position of an Assyrian vassal was of course compelled to abstain from
further attacks on Judah. Whether his continued tyranny exhausted the
patience of his subjects, or whether his weakness emboldened them to
attack him, is not known; but, from one or the other cause, Hoshea the
son of Elah conspired against him and put him to death.
Pekahiah(whose
eyes Jehovah opened), son and successor of Menahem was the 17th king of
the separate kingdom of Israel, B.C. 759-757. After a brief reign of
scarcely two years a conspiracy was organized against him by Pekah, who
murdered him and seized the throne.
Pekod(visitation),
an appellative applied to the Chaldeans. (Jeremiah 50:21; Ezekiel
23:23) Authorities are undecided as to the meaning of the term.
Pelaiah(distinguished
by Jehovah).
+A son of Elioenai, of the royal line of Judah. (1 Chronicles 3:24)
(B.C. after 400.)
+One of the Levites who assisted Ezra in expounding the law, (Nehemiah
8:7) He afterward sealed the covenant with Nehemiah. (Nehemiah 10:10)
(B.C.445.)
Pelaliah(judged
by Jehovah), the son of Amzi and ancestor of Adaiah. (Nehemiah 11:12)
Pelatiah(delivered
by Jehovah).
+Son of Hananiah the son of Zerubbabel. (1 Chronicles 3:21) (B.C. after
536.)
+One of the captains of the marauding band of Simeonites who in the
reign of Hezekiah made an expedition to Mount Seir and smote the
Amalekites. (1 Chronicles 4:42) (B.C. about 700.)
+One of the heads of the people, and probably the name of a family who
sealed the covenant with Nehemiah. (Nehemiah 10:22) (B.C. about 440.)
+The son of Benaiah. and one of the princes of the people against whom
Ezekiel was directed to utter the words of doom recorded in (Ezekiel
11:5-12) (B.C. about 592.)
Peleg(division,
part), son of Eber and brother of Joktan. (Genesis 10:25; 11:16) The
only incident connected with his history is the statement that "in his
days was the earth divided." an event embodied in the meaning of his
name--"division." The reference is to a division of the family of Eber
himself, the younger branch of which (the Joktanids) migrated into
southern Arabia, while the elder remained in Mesopotamia.
Pelet(liberation),
+A son of Jahdai in an obscure genealogy. (1 Chronicles 2:47)
+The son of Azmaveth, that is, either a native of the place of that
name or the son of one of David's heroes. (1 Chronicles 12:3) (B.C.
about 1015.)
Peleth(swiftness).
+The father of On the Reubenite who joined Dathan and Abiram in their
rebellion. (Numbers 16:1) (B.C. 1490.)
+Son of Jonathan and a descendant of Jerahmeel. (1 Chronicles 2:33)
Pelethites(couriers).
[[946]Cherethites]
Pelican(Heb.
kaath, sometimes translated "cormorant," as (Isaiah 34:11; Zephaniah
2:14) though in the margin correctly rendered "pelican"), a voracious
waterbird, found most abundantly in tropical regions. It is equal to
the swan in size. (It has a flat bill fifteen inches long, and the
female has under the bill a pouch capable of great distension. It is
capacious enough to hold fish sufficient for the dinner of half a dozen
men. The young are fed from this pouch, which is emptied of the food by
pressing the pouch against the breast. The pelican's bill has a crimson
tip, and the contrast of this red tip against the white breast probably
gave rise to the tradition that the bird tore her own breast to feed
her young with her blood. The flesh of the pelican was forbidden to the
Jews. (Leviticus 11:18)--ED.) The psalmist in comparing his pitiable
condition to the pelican, (Psalms 102:6) probably has reference to its
general aspect as it sits in apparent melancholy mood, with its bill
resting on its breast.
Pelonite,
TheTwo
of David's men, Helez and Ahijah, are called Pelonites. (1 Chronicles
11:27,36) (B.C. about 1015.) From (1 Chronicles 27:10) it appears that
the former was of the tribe of Ephraim, and "Pelonite" would therefore
be an appellation derived from his place of birth or residence. "Ahijah
the Pelonite" appears in (2 Samuel 23:34) as "Eliam the son of
Ahithophel the Gilonite," of which the former is a corruption.
Pen[[947]Writing]
Peniel(face
of God) the name which Jacob gave to the place in which he had wrestled
with God: "He called the name of the place 'face of El,' for I have
seen Elohim face to face." (Genesis 32:30) In (Genesis 32:31) and the
other passages in which the name occurs, its form is changed to
[948]Penuel. From the narrative it is evident that Peniel lay somewhere
on the north bank of the Jabbok, and between that torrent and the fords
of the Jordan at Succoth, a few miles north of the glen where the
Jabbok falls into the Jordan.
Peninnah(coral
or pearl), one of the two wives of Elkanah. (1 Samuel 1:2) (B.C. 1125.)
Penny,
PennyworthIn
the New Testament "penny," either alone or in the compound
"pennyworth," occurs as the rendering of the Roman denarius . (Matthew
20:2; 22:10; Mark 6:37; 12:15; Luke 20:24; John 6:7; Revelation 6:6)
The denarius was the chief Roman silver coin, and was worth about 15 to
17 cents.
Pentateuch,
Theis
the Greek name given to the five books commonly called the "five books
of Moses." This title is derived from "pente",five, and "teucos")
which, meaning originally "vessel" "instrument," etc., came In
Alexandrine Greek to mean "book" hence the fivefold book. In the time
of Ezra and Nehemiah it was called "the law of Moses," (Ezra 7:6) or
"the book of the law of Moses," (Nehemiah 8:1) or simply "the book of
Moses." (2 Chronicles 25:4; 35:12; Ezra 6:13; Nehemiah 13:1) This was
beyond all reasonable doubt our existing Pentateuch. The book which was
discovered the temple in the reign of Josiah, and which is entitled, (2
Chronicles 34:14) "a book of the law of Jehovah by the hand of Moses,"
was substantially, it would seem the same volume, though it may
afterward have undergone some revision by Ezra. The present Jews
usually called the whole by the name of Torah, i.e. "the Law," or
Torath Mosheh "the Law of Moses." The division of the whole work into
five parts was probably made by the Greek translators; for the titles
of the several books are not of Hebrew but of Greek origin. The Hebrew
names are merely taken from the first words of each book, and in the
first instance only designated particular sections and not whole books.
The MSS. of the Pentateuch form a single roll or volume, and are
divided not into books but into the larger and smaller sections called
Parshiyoth and Sedarim . The five books of the Pentateuch form a
consecutive whole. The work, beginning with the record of creation end
the history of the primitive world, passes on to deal more especially
with the early history of the Jewish family, and finally concludes with
Moses' last discourses and his death. Till the middle of the last
century it was the general opinion of both Jews and Christians that the
whole of the Pentateuch was written by Moses, with the exception of a
few manifestly later additions,--such as the, 34th chapter of
Deuteronomy, which gives the account of Moses death. The attempt to
call in question the popular belief was made by Astruc, doctor and
professor of medicine in the Royal College at Paris, and court
physician to Louis XIV. He had observed that throughout the book of
Genesis, and as far as the 6th chapter of Exodus, traces were to be
found of two original documents, each characterized by a distinct use
of the names of God; the one by the name Elohim, and the other by the
name Jehovah. [[949]God] Besides these two principal documents, he
supposed Moses to have made use of ten others in the composition of the
earlier part of his work. The path traced by Astruc has been followed
by numerous German writers; but the various hypotheses which have been
formed upon the subject cannot be presented in this work. It is
sufficient here to state that there is evidence satisfactory that the
main bulk of the Pentateuch, at any rate, was written by Moses, though
the probably availed himself of existing documents in the composition
of the earlier part of the work. Some detached portions would appear to
be of later origin; and when we remember how entirely, during some
periods of Jewish history, the law seems to have been forgotten, and
again how necessary it would be after the seventy years of exile to
explain some of its archaisms, and to add here and there short notes to
make it more intelligible to the people, nothing can be more natural
than to suppose that such later additions were made by Ezra and
Nehemiah. To briefly sum up the results of our inquiry--
+The book of Genesis rests chiefly on documents much earlier than the
time of Moses though it was probably brought to very nearly its,
present shape either by Moses himself or by one of the elders who acted
under him.
+The books of Exodus, Leviticus and Numbers are to a great extent
Mosaic. Besides those portions which are expressly declared to have
been written by him other portions, and especially the legal sections,
were, if not actually written, in all probability dictated by him.
+Deuteronomy, excepting the concluding part, is entirely the work of
Moses as it professes to be.
+It is not probable that this was written before the three preceding
books, because the legislation in Exodus and Leviticus, as being the
more formal, is manifestly the earlier whilst Deuteronomy is the
spiritual interpretation and application of the law. But the letter is
always before the spirit; the thing before its interpretation.
+The first composition of the Pentateuch as a whole could not have
taken place till after the Israelites entered Cannan. It is probable
that Joshua and the elders who were associated with him would provide
for its formal arrangement, custody and transmission.
+The whole work did not finally assume its present shape till its
revision was undertaken by Ezra after the return from the Babylonish
captivity. For an account of the separate books see [950]Genesis,
[951]Exodus, [952]Leviticus, [953]Numbers, [954]Deuteronomy.
Pentecostthat
is, the fiftieth day (from a Greek word meaning fiftieth), or Harvest
Feast, or Feast of Weeks, may be regarded as a supplement to the
Passover. It lasted for but one day. From the sixteenth of Nisan seven
weeks were reckoned inclusively, and the next or fiftieth day was the
day of Pentecost, which fell on the sixth of Sivan (about the end of
May). (Exodus 23:16; 34:22; Leviticus 23:15,22; Numbers 28) See Jewish
calendar at the end of this volume. The Pentecost was the Jewish
harvest-home, and the people were especially exhorted to rejoice before
Jehovah with their families their servants, the Levite within their
gates, the stranger, the fatherless and the widow in the place chosen
by God for his name, as they brought a free-will offering of their hand
to Jehovah their God. (16:10,11) The great feature of the celebration
was the presentation of the two loaves made from the first-fruits of
the wheat harvest. With the loaves two lambs were offered as a peace
offering and all were waved before Jehovah and given to the priests;
the leaves being leavened, could not be offered on the altar. The other
sacrifices were, a burnt offering of a young bullock, two, rams and
seven lambs with a meat and drink offering, and a kid for a sin
offering. (Leviticus 23:18,19) Till the pentecostal leaves were
offered, the produce of the harvest might not be eaten, nor could any
other firstfruits be offered. The whole ceremony was the completion of
that dedication of the harvest to God as its giver, and to whom both
the land and the people were holy, which was begun by the offering of
the wave-sheaf at the Passover. The interval is still regarded as a
religious season. The Pentecost is the only one of the three great
feasts which is not mentioned as the memorial of events in the history
of the Jews; but such a significance has been found in the fact that
the law was given from Sinai on the fiftieth day after the deliverance
from Egypt. Comp. Exod 12 and 19. In the exodus the people were offered
to God as living first fruits; at Sinai their consecration to him as a
nation was completed. The typical significance of the Pentecost is made
clear from the events of the day recorded in the Acts of the Apostles.
Acts 2. Just as the appearance of God on Sinai was the birthday of the
Jewish nation, so was the Pentecost the birthday of the Christian
Church.
Penuel[[955]Peniel]
Peor(cleft),
a mountain peak in Moab belonging to the Abarim range, and near Pisgah,
to which, after having ascended Pisgah, the prophet Balaam was
conducted by Balak that he might look upon the whole host of Israel and
curse them. (Numbers 23:14,28) In four passages-- (Numbers 25:18)
twice; Numb 31:16; Josh 22:17--Peor occurs as a contraction for
Baal-peor. [[956]Baal.)
Perazim(a
breach), Mount, a name which occurs in (Isaiah 28:21) only--unless the
place which it designates is identical with the Baal-perazim mentioned
as the scene of one of David's victories over the Philistines, which
was in the valley of Rephaim, south of Jerusalem, on the road to
Bethlehem.
Peresh(dung),
the son of Machir by his wife Maachah. (1 Chronicles 7:16)
Perez(breach).
The "children of Perez," or Pharez, the son of Judah, appear to have
been a family of importance for many centuries. (1 Chronicles 27:3;
Nehemiah 11:4,6)
Perezuzza(breaking
of Uzzah), (1 Chronicles 13:11) and PEREZ-UZZAH (2 Samuel 6:8) the
title which David conferred on the threshing-floor of Nachon or Cidon,
in commemoration of the sudden death of Uzzah. (B.C. 1042.)
PerfumesThe
free use of perfumes was peculiarly grateful to the Orientals,
(Proverbs 27:9) whose olfactory nerves are more than usually sensitive
to the offensive smells engendered by the heat of their climate. The
Hebrews manufactured their perfumes chiefly from spices imported from
Arabia though to a certain extent also from aromatic plants growing in
their own country. Perfumes entered largely into the temple service, in
the two forms of incense and ointment. (Exodus 30:22-38) Nor were they
less used in private life; not only were they applied to the person,
but to garment, (Psalms 45:8; Song of Solomon 4:11) and to articles of
furniture, such as beds. (Proverbs 7:17)
Perga(earthy),
a city of Pamphylia, (Acts 13:13) situated on the river Cestius, at a
distance of 60 stadia (7 1/2 miles) from its mouth, and celebrated in
antiquity for the worship of Artemis (Diana).
Pergamos(in
Revised Version Pergamum) (height, elevation), a city of Mysia, about 3
miles to the north of the river Caicus, and 20 miles from its present
mouth. It was the residence of a dynasty of Greek princes founded after
the time of Alexander the Great, and usually called the Attalic
dynasty, from its founder, Attalus. The sumptuousness of the Attalic
princes hall raised Pergamos to the rank of the first city in Asia as
regards splendor. The city was noted for its vast, library, containing
200,000 volumes. Here were splendid temples of Zeus or Jupiter, Athene,
Apollo and AEsculapius. One of "the seven churches of Asia" was in
Pergamos. (Revelation 1:11; 2:12-17) It is called "Satan's seat" by
John, which some suppose to refer to the worship of AEsculapius, from
the serpent being his characteristic emblem. Others refer it to the
persecutions of Christians, which was work of Satan. The modern name of
the city is Bergama .
PergamumIn
the Revised Version for Pergamos. (Revelation 1:11) Pergamum is the
form usual in the classic writers.
Perida(grain,
kernel), The children of Perida returned from Babylon with Zerubbabel.
(Nehemiah 7:57) (B.C. before 536.)
Perizzite,
Theand
Per'izzites (belonging to a village), one of the nations inhabiting the
land of promise before and at the time of its conquest by Israel. (B.C.
1450.) They are continually mentioned in the formula so frequently
occurring to express the promised land. (Genesis 15:20; Exodus 3:8,17;
23:23; 33:2; 34:11) The notice in the book of Judges locates them in
the southern part of the holy land. The signification of the name is
not by any means clear. It possibly meant rustics, dwellers in open,
unwalled villages, which are denoted by a similar word.
Persepolismentioned
only in 2 Macc. 9:2, was the capital of Persia proper, and the
occasional residence of the Persian court from the time of Darius
Hystaspes, who seems to have been its founder, to the invasion of
Alexander. Its wanton destruction by that conqueror is well known. Its
site is now called the Chehl-Minar, or Forty Pillars. Here, on a
platform hewn out of the solid rock the sides of which face the four
cardinal points, are the remains of two great palaces, built
respectively by Darius Hytaspes and his son Xerxes, besides a number of
other edifices, chiefly temples. They are of great extent and
magnificence, covering an area of many acres.
Persia(pure,
splended), Per'sians. Persia proper was a tract of no very large
dimensions on the Persian Gulf, which is still known as Fars or
Farsistan, a corruption of the ancient appellation. This tract was
bounded on the west by Susiana or Elam, on the north by Media on the
south by the Persian Gulf and on the east by Carmania. But the name is
more commonly applied, both in Scripture and by profane authors to the
entire tract which came by degrees to be included within the limits of
the Persian empire. This empire extended at one time from India on the
east to Egypt and Thrace on the west, and included. besides portions of
Europe and Africa, the whole of western Asia between the Black Sea, the
Caucasus, the Caspian and the Jaxartes on the north, the Arabian desert
the Persian Gulf and the Indian Ocean on the south. The only passage in
Scripture where Persia designates the tract which has been called above
"Persia proper" is (Ezekiel 38:5) Elsewhere the empire is intended. The
Persians were of the same race as the Medes, both being branches of the
great Aryan stock.
+Character of the nation .--The Persians were a people of lively and
impressible minds, brave and impetuous in war, witty, passionate, for
Orientals truthful, not without some spirit of generosity: and of more
intellectual capacity than the generality of Asiatics. In the times
anterior to Cyrus they were noted for the simplicity of their habits,
which offered a strong contrast to the luxuriousness of the Medes; but
from the late of the Median overthrow this simplicity began to decline.
Polygamy was commonly practiced among them. They were fond of the
pleasures of the table. In war they fought bravely, but without
discipline.
+Religion .--The religion which the Persians brought with there into
Persia proper seems to have been of a very simple character, differing
from natural religion in little except that it was deeply tainted with
Dualism. Like the other Aryans, the Persians worshipped one supreme
God. They had few temples, and no altars or images.
+Language .--The Persian language was closely akin to the Sanskrit, or
ancient language of India. Modern Persian is its degenerate
representative, being largely impregnated with Arabic.
+History .--The history of Persia begins with the revolt from the Medes
and the accession of Cyrus the Great, B.C. 558. Cyrus defeated Croesus,
and added the Lydian empire to his dominions. This conquest was
followed closely by the submission of the Greek settlements on the
Asiatic coast, and by the reduction of Caria and Lycia The empire was
soon afterward extended greatly toward the northeast and east. In B.C.
539 or 538, Babylon was attacked, and after a stout defence fell into
the hands of Cyrus. This victory first brought the Persians into
contact with the Jews. The conquerors found in Babylon an oppressed
race--like themselves, abhorrers of idols, and professors of a religion
in which to a great extent they could sympathize. This race Cyrus
determined to restore to their own country: which he did by the
remarkable edict recorded in the first chapter of Ezra. (Ezra 1:2-4) He
was slain in an expedition against the Massagetae or the Derbices,
after a reign of twenty-nine years. Under his son and successor,
Cambyses, the conquest of Egypt took place, B.C. 525. This prince
appears to be the Ahasuerus of (Ezra 4:6) Gomates, Cambyses' successor,
reversed the policy of Cyrus with respect to the Jews, and forbade by
an edict the further building of the temple. (Ezra 4:17-22) He reigned
but seven months, and was succeeded by Darius. Appealed to, in his
second year, by the Jews, who wished to resume the construction of
their temple, Darius not only granted them this privilege, but assisted
the work by grants from his own revenues, whereby the Jews were able to
complete the temple as early as his sixth year. (Ezra 6:1-15) Darius
was succeeded by Xerxes, probably the Ahasuerus of Esther. Artaxerxes,
the son of Xerxes, reigned for forty years after his death and is
beyond doubt the king of that name who stood in such a friendly
relation toward Ezra, (Ezra 7:11-28) and Nehemiah. (Nehemiah 2:1-9)
etc. He is the last of the Persian kings who had any special connection
with the Jews, and the last but one mentioned in Scripture. His
successors were Xerxes II., Sogdianus Darius Nothus, Artaxerxes Mnemon,
Artaxerxes Ochus, and Darius Codomannus, who is probably the "Darius
the Persian" of Nehemiah (Nehemiah 12:22) These monarchs reigned from
B.C. 424 to B.C. 330. The collapse of the empire under the attack of
Alexander the Great took place B.C. 330.
Persis(a
Persian woman), a Christian woman at Rome, (Romans 16:12) whom St. Paul
salutes. (A.D. 55.)
PerudaThe
same as [957]Perida. (Ezra 2:55)
Pestilence[[958]Plague,
The, THE]
Peter(a
rock or stone). The original name of this disciple was Simon, i.e.
"hearer." He was the son of a man named Jonas, (Matthew 16:17; John
1:42; 21:16) and was brought up in his father's occupation, that of a
fisherman. He and his brother Andrew were partners of John end James,
the sons of Zebedee, who had hired servants. Peter did not live, as a
mere laboring man, in a hut by the seaside, but first at Bethsaida, and
afterward in a house at Capernaum belonging to himself or his
mother-in-law, which must have been rather a large one, since he
received in it not only our Lord and his fellow disciples, but
multitudes who were attracted by the miracles and preaching of Jesus.
Peter was probably between thirty and forty pears of age at the date of
his call. That call was preceded by a special preparation. Peter and
his brother Andrew, together with their partners James and John, the
sons,of Zebedee, were disciples of John the Baptist when he was first
called by our Lord. The particulars of this are related with graphic
minuteness by St. John. It was upon this occasion that Jesus gave Peter
the name Cephas, a Syriac word answering to the Greek Peter, and
signifying a stone or rock. (John 1:35-42) This first call led to no
immediate change in Peter's external position. He and his fellow
disciples looked henceforth upon our Lord as their teacher, but were
not commanded to follow him as regular disciples. They returned to
Capernaum, where they pursued their usual business, waiting for a
further intimation of his will. The second call is recorded by the
other three evangelists; the narrative of Luke being apparently
supplementary to the brief and, so to speak official accounts given by
Matthew and Mark. It took place on the Sea of Galilee near Capernaum,
where the four disciples Peter and Andrew, James and John were fishing.
Some time was passed afterward in attendance upon our Lord's public
ministrations in Galilee, Decapolis, Peraea and Judea. The special
designation of Peter and his eleven fellow disciples took place some
time afterward, when they were set apart as our Lord's immediate
attendants. See (Matthew 10:2-4; Mark 3:13-19) (the most detailed
account); Luke 6:13 They appear to have then first received formally
the name of apostles, and from that time Simon bore publicly, and as it
would seem all but exclusively, the name Peter, which had hitherto been
used rather as a characteristic appellation than as a proper name. From
this time there can be no doubt that Peter held the first place among
the apostles, to whatever cause his precedence is to be attributed. He
is named first in every list of the apostles; he is generally addressed
by our Lord as their representative; and on the most solemn occasions
he speaks in their name. The distinction which he received, and it may
be his consciousness of ability, energy, zeal and absolute devotion to
Christ's person, seem to have developed a natural tendency to rashness
and forwardness bordering upon resumption. In his affection and
self-confidence Peter ventured to reject as impossible the announcement
of the sufferings and humiliation which Jesus predicted, and heard the
sharp words, "Get thee behind me, Satan; thou art an offence unto me,
for thou savorest not the things that be of God but those that be of
men." It is remarkable that on other occasions when St. Peter
signalized his faith and devotion, he displayed at the time, or
immediately afterward, a more than usual deficiency in spiritual
discernment and consistency. Toward the close of our Lord's ministry
Peter's characteristics become especially prominent. At the last supper
Peter seems to have been particularly earnest in the request that the
traitor might be pointed out. After the supper his words drew out the
meaning of the significant act of our Lord in washing his disciples'
feet. Then too it was that he made those repeated protestations of
unalterable fidelity, so soon to be falsified by his miserable fall. On
the morning of the resurrection we have proof that Peter, though
humbled, was not crushed by his fall. He and John were the first to
visit the sepulchre; he was the first who entered it. We are told by
Luke and by Paul that Christ appeared to him first among the apostles.
It is observable; however, that on that occasion he is called by his
original name, Simon not Peter; the higher designation was not restored
until he had been publicly reinstituted, so to speak, by his Master.
That reinstitution--an event of the very highest import-took place at
the Sea of Galilee. John 21. The first part of the Acts of the Apostles
is occupied by the record of transactions in nearly all forth as the
recognized leader of the apostles. He is the most prominent person in
the greatest event after the resurrection, when on the day of Pentecost
the Church was first invested with the plenitude of gifts and power.
When the gospel was first preached beyond the precincts of Judea, he
and John were at once sent by the apostles to confirm the converts at
Samaria. Henceforth he remains prominent, but not exclusively
prominent, among the propagators of the gospel. We have two accounts of
the first meeting of Peter and Paul-- (Acts 9:26; Galatians 1:17,18)
This interview was followed by another event marking Peter's
position--a general apostolical tour of visitation to the churches
hitherto established. (Acts 9:32) The most signal transaction after the
day of Pentecost was the baptism of Cornelius. That was the crown and
consummation of Peter's ministry. The establishment of a church in
great part of Gentile origin at Antioch and the mission of Barnabas
between whose family and Peter there were the bonds of near intimacy,
set the seal upon the work thus inaugurated by Peter. This transaction
was soon followed by the imprisonment of our apostle. His miraculous
deliverance marks the close of this second great period of his
ministry. The special work assigned to him was completed. From that
time we have no continuous history of him. Peter was probably employed
for the most part in building up and completing the organization of
Christian communities in Palestine and the adjoining districts. There
is, however strong reason to believe that he visited Corinth at an
early period. The name of Peter as founder or joint founder is not
associated with any local church save the churches of Corinth, Antioch
or Rome, by early ecclesiastical tradition. It may be considered as a
settled point that he did not visit Rome before the last year of his
life; but there is satisfactory evidence that he and Paul were the
founders of the church at Rome, and suffered death in that city. The
time and manner of the apostle's martyrdom are less certain. According
to the early writers, he suffered at or about the same time with Paul,
and in the Neronian persecution, A.D. 67,68. All agree that he was
crucified. Origen says that Peter felt himself to be unworthy to be put
to death in the same manner as his Master, and was therefore, at his
own request, crucified with his head downward. The apostle is said to
have employed interpreters. Of far more importance is the statement
that Mark wrote his Gospel under the teaching of Peter, or that he
embodied in that Gospel the substance of our apostle's oral
instructions. [[959]Mark, Gospel Of] The only written documents which
Peter has left are the First Epistle-- about which no doubt has ever
been entertained in the Church-- and the Second, which has been a
subject of earnest controversy.
Peter,
First Epistle OfThe
external evidence of authenticity of this epistle is of the strongest
kind and the internal is equally strong. It was addressed to the
churches of Asia Minor which had for the most part been founded by Paul
and his companions, Supposing it to have been written at Babylon, (1
Peter 5:13) it ia a probable conjecture that Silvanus, By whom it was
transmitted to those churches, had joined Peter after a tour of
visitation, and that his account of the condition of the Christians in
those districts determined the apostle to write the epistle. (On the
question of this epistle having been written at Babylon commentators
differ. "Some refer it to the famous Babylon in Asia, which after its
destruction was still inhabited by a Jewish colony; others refer it to
Babylon in Egypt, now called Old Cairo; still others understand it
mystically of heathen Rome, in which sense 'Babylon' is certainly used
in the Apocalypse of John."--Schaff.) The objects of the epistle were--
+To comfort and strengthen the Christians in a season of severe trial.
+To enforce the practical and spiritual duties involved in their calling
+To warn them against special temptations attached to their position.
+To remove all doubt as to the soundness and completeness of the
religious system which they had already received. Such an attestation
was especially needed by the Hebrew Christians, who were to appeal from
Paul's authority to that of the elder apostles, and above all to that
of Peter. The last, which is perhaps the very principal object, is kept
in view throughout the epistle, and is distinctly stated (1 Peter 5:12)
The harmony of such teaching with that of Paul is sufficiently obvious.
Peter belongs to the school, or to speak more correctly, is the leader
of the school, which at once vindicates the unity of the law and the
gospel, and puts the superiority of the latter on its true basis-that
of spiritual development. The date of this epistle is uncertain, but
Alford believes it to have been written between A.D. 63 and 67.
Peter,
Second Epistle OfThe
following is a brief outline of the contents of this epistle: The
customary opening salutation is followed by an enumeration of Christian
blessings and exhortation to Christian duties. (2 Peter 1:1-13)
Referring then to his approaching death, the apostle assigns as grounds
of assurance for believers his own personal testimony as eye-witness of
the transfiguration and the sure word of prophecy--that is the
testimony of the Holy Ghost. vs. (2 Peter 1:14-21) The danger of being
misled by false prophets is dwelt upon with great earnestness
throughout the second chapter, which is almost identical in language
and subject with the Epistle of Jude. The overthrow of all opponents of
Christian truth is predicted in connection with prophecies touching the
second advent of Christ, the destruction of the world by fire, and the
promise of new heavens and a new earth wherein dwelleth righteousness.
ch. 3. This epistle of Peter presents questions of difficulty. Doubts
as to its genuineness were entertained by the early Church; in the time
of Eusebius it was reckoned among the disputed books, and was not
formally admitted into the canon until the year 393, at the Council of
Hippo. These difficulties, however, are insufficient to justify more
than hesitation in admitting its,genuineness. A majority of names may
be quoted in support of the genuineness and authenticity of this
epistle. (It is very uncertain as to the time when it was written. It
was written near the close of Peter's life--perhaps about A.D. 68--from
Rome or somewhere on the journey thither from the East--Alford .)
Pethahiah(freed
by Jehovah).
+A priest, over the nineteenth course in the reign of David. (1
Chronicles 24:16) (B.C. 1020.)
+A Levite in the time of Ezra, who had married a foreign wife. (Ezra
10:23) He is probably the same who is mentioned in (Nehemiah 9:5) (B.C.
458.)
+The son of Meshezabeel, and descendant of Zerah. (Nehemiah 11:24)
(B.C. 446.)
Pethor(soothsayer),
a town of Mesopotamia, where Balaam resided, and situated "upon the
river," possibly the Euphrates. (Numbers 22:5; 23:4) Its position is
wholly unknown.
Pethuel(vision
of God), the father of the prophet Joel. (Joel 1:1) (B.C. before 800.)
Peulthai(my
wages) properly Peullethai, the eighth son of Obed-edom. (1 Chronicles
26:5) (B.C. 1020.)
Phalec(division).
Peleg the son of Eber. (Luke 3:35)
Phallu(distinguished),
Pallu the son of Reuben is so called in the Authorized Version of
(Genesis 46:9) (B.C. about 1706.)
Phalti(my
deliverance), the son of Laish of Gallim, to whom Saul gave Michal in
marriage after his mad jealousy had driven David forth as an outlaw. (1
Samuel 25:4-1) In (2 Samuel 3:15) he is called [960]Phaltiel. With the
exception of this brief mention of his name, and the touching little
episode in (2 Samuel 3:16) nothing more is heard of Phalti. (B.C. 1061.)
PhaltielThe
same as Phalti. (2 Samuel 5:15)
Phanuel(face
of God), the father of Anna, the prophetess of the tribe of Aser. (Luke
2:36) (B.C. about 80.)
Pharaohthe
common title of the native kings of Egypt in the Bible, corresponding
to P-ra or Ph-ra "the sun," of the hieroglyphics. Brugsch, Ebers and
other modern Egyptologists define it to mean 'the great house," which
would correspond to our "the Sublime Porte." As several kings are
mentioned only by the title "Pharaoh" in the Bible, it is important to
endeavor to discriminate them:
+The Pharaoh of Abraham . (Genesis 12:15)--At the time at which the
patriarch went into Egypt, it is generally held that the country, or at
least lower Egypt, was ruled by the Shepherd kings, of whom the first
and moat powerful line was the fifteenth dynasty, the undoubted
territories of which would be first entered by one coming from the
east. The date at which Abraham visited Egypt was about B.C. 2081,
which would accord with the time of Salatis the head of the fifteenth
dynasty, according to our reckoning.
+The Pharoah of Joseph . (Genesis 41:1) ...--One of the Shepherd kings
perhaps Apophis, who belonged to the fifteenth dynasty. He appears to
have reigned from Joseph's appointment (or perhaps somewhat earlier)
until Jacob's death, a period of at least twenty-six years, from about
B.C. 1876 to 1850 and to have been the fifth or sixth king of the
fifteenth dynasty.
+The Pharoah of the oppression . (Exodus 1:8)--The first Persecutor of
the Israelites may be distinguished as the Pharaoh of the oppression,
from the second, the Pharoah of the exodus especially as he commenced
and probably long carried on the persecution. The general view is that
he was an Egyptian. One class of Egyptologists think that Amosis
(Ahmes), the first sovereign of the eighteenth dynasty, is the Pharaoh
of the oppression; but Brugsch and others identify him with Rameses II.
(the Sesostris of the Greeks), of the nineteenth dynasty. (B.C. 1340.)
+The Pharoah of the exodus . (Exodus 5:1)--Either Thothmes III., as
Wilkinson, or Menephthah son of Rameses II., whom Brugsch thinks was
probably the Pharaoh of the exodus, who with his army pursued the
Israelites and were overwhelmed in the Red Sea. "The events which form
the lamentable close of his rule over Egypt are Passed over by the
monuments (very naturally) with perfect silence. The dumb tumults
covers the misfortune: which was suffered, for the record of these
events was inseparably connected with the humiliating confession of a
divine visitation, to which a patriotic writer at the court of Pharaoh
would hardly have brought his mind." The table on page 186 gives some
of the latest opinions.
+Pharaoh, father-in-law of Mered .--In the genealogies of the tribe of
Judah, mention is made of the daughter of a Pharaoh married to an
Israelite--" Bithiah the daughter of Pharaoh. which Mered took." (1
Chronicles 4:18)
+Pharaoh, brother-in-law of Hadad the Edomite .--This king gave Haadad.
as his wife, the sister of his own wife, Tahpenes. (1 Kings 11:18-20)
+Pharaoh, father-in-law of Solomon .--The mention that the queen was
brought into the city of David while Solomon's house and the temple and
the city wall were building shows that the marriage took place not
later than the eleventh year of the king, when the temple was finished,
having been commenced in the Pharaoh led an expedition into Palestine.
(1 Kings 9:16)
+Pharaoh, the opponent of Sennacherib .--This Pharaoh, (Isaiah 36:6)
can only be the Sethos whom Herodotus mentions as the opponent of
Sennacherib and who may reasonably be supposed to be the Zet of Manetho.
+Pharoah-necho .--The first mention in the Bible of a proper name with
the title Pharaoh is the case of Pharaoh-necho, who is also called
Necho simply. This king was of the Saite twenty-sixth dynasty, of which
Manetho makes him either the fifth or the sixth ruler. Herodotus calls
him Nekos, and assigns to him a reign of sixteen years, which is
confirmed by the monuments. He seems to have been an enterprising king,
as he is related to have attempted to complete the canal connecting the
Red Sea with the Nile, and to have sent an expedition of Phoenicians to
circumnavigate Africa, which was successfully accomplished. At the
commencement of his reign B.C. 610, he made war against the king of
Assyria, and, being encountered on his way by Josiah, defeated and slew
the king of Judah at Megiddo. (2 Kings 23:29,30; 2 Chronicles 35:20-24)
Necho seems to have soon returned to Egypt. Perhaps he was on his way
thither when he deposed Jehoahaz. The army was probably posted at
Carchemish, and was there defeated by Nebuchadnezzar in the fourth year
of Necho, B.C. 607, that king not being, as it seems, then at its head.
(Jeremiah 46:1,2,6,10) This battle led to the loss of all the Asiatic
dominions of Egypt. (2 Kings 24:7)
+Pharaoh-hophra .--The next king of Egypt mentioned in the Bible is
Pharaoh-hophra, the second successor of Necho, from whom he was
separated by the six-years reign of Psammetichus II. He came to the
throne about B.C. 589, and ruled nineteen years. Herodotus who calls
him Apries, makes him son of Psammetichus II., whom he calls Psammis,
and great-grandson of Psammetichus I. In the Bible it is related that
Zedekiah, the last king of Judah was aided by a Pharaoh against
Nebuchadnezzar, in fulfillment of it treaty, and that an army came out
of Egypt, so that the Chaldeans were obliged to raise the siege of
Jerusalem. The city was first besieged in the ninth year of Zedekiah
B.C. 590, and was captured in his eleventh year, B.C. 588. It was
evidently continuously invested for a length of time before was taken,
so that it is most probable that Pharaoh's expedition took place during
590 or 589. The Egyptian army returned without effecting its purpose.
(Jeremiah 27:5-8; Ezekiel 17:11-18) comp. 2Kin 25:1-4 No subsequent
Pharaoh is mentioned in Scripture, but there are predictions doubtless
referring to the misfortunes of later princes until the second Persian
conquest, when the prophecy, "There shall be no more a prince of the
land of Egypt," (Ezekiel 30:13) was fulfilled. (In the summer of 1881 a
large number of the mummies of the Pharaohs were found in a tomb near
Thebes--among them Raskenen, of the seventeenth dynasty, Ahmes I.,
founder of the eighteenth dynasty, Thothmes I,II, and III., and Rameses
I. It was first thought that Rameses II, of the nineteenth dynasty, was
there, But this was found to be a mistake. A group of coffins belonging
to the twenty-first dynasty has been found, and it is probable that we
will learn not a little about the early Pharaohs, especially from the
inscriptions on their shrouds.--ED.)
Pharaoh,
The Wife OfThe
wife of one Pharaoh, the king who received Hadad the Edomite, is
mentioned in Scripture. She is called "queen," and her name, Tahpenes,
is given. [[961]Tahpenes; [962]Pharaoh, 6]
Pharaohs
DaughterThree
Egyptian princesses, daughters of Pharaohs, are mentioned in the
Bible:--
+The preserver of Moses, daughter of the Pharaoh who first oppressed
the Israelites. (Exodus 2:6-10) Osborn thinks her name was Thouoris,
daughter of Rameses II, others that her name was Merrhis. (B.C. 1531.)
+Bithiah wife of Mered, an Israelite. daughter of a Pharaoh of an
uncertain age, probably of about the time of the exodus. (1 Chronicles
4:18) [[963]Pharaoh, No. 5]
+A wife of Solomon. (1 Kings 3:1; 7:8; 8:24) [[964]Pharaoh, 7]
(B.C.1000.)
Phares,
Pharez Or PerezThe
son of Judah. (Matthew 1:3; Luke 3:33)
Pharez(Perez,
(1 Chronicles 27:3) Phares, (Matthew 1:3; Luke 3:33) 1 Esd. 5:6), twin
son, with Zarah or Zerah, of Judah and Tamer his daughter-in-law. (B.C.
1730.) The circumstances of his birth are detailed in Gen. 38. Pharez
occupied the rank of Judah's second son, and from two of his sons
sprang two new chief houses, those of the Hezronites and Hamulites.
From Hezron's second son Ram, or Aram, sprang David and the kings of
Judah, and eventually Jesus Christ. In the reign of David the house of
Pharez seems to have been eminently distinguished.
Phariseesa
religious party or school among the Jews at the time of Christ, so
called from perishin, the Aramaic form of the Hebrew word perushim,
"separated." The chief sects among the Jews were the Pharisees, the
Sadducees and the Essenes, who may be described respectively as the
Formalists, the Freethinkers and the Puritans. A knowledge of the
opinions and practices of the Pharisees at the time of Christ is of
great importance for entering deeply into the genius of the Christian
religion. A cursory perusal of the Gospels is sufficient to show that
Christ's teaching was in some respects thoroughly antagonistic to
theirs. He denounced them in the bitterest language; see (Matthew
15:7,8; 23:5,13,14,15,23; Mark 7:6; Luke 11:42-44) and compare (Mark
7:1-5; 11:29; 12:19,20; Luke 6:28,37-42) To understand the Pharisees is
by contrast an aid toward understanding the spirit of uncorrupted
Christianity.
+The fundamental principle all of the of the Pharisees, common to them
with all orthodox modern Jews, is that by the side of the written law
regarded as a summary of the principles and general laws of the Hebrew
people there was on oral law to complete and to explain the written
law, given to Moses on Mount Sinai and transmitted by him by word of
mouth. The first portion of the Talmud, called the Mishna or "second
law," contains this oral law. It is a digest of the Jewish traditions
and a compendium of the whole ritual law, and it came at length to be
esteemed far above the sacred text.
+While it was the aim of Jesus to call men to the law of God itself as
the supreme guide of life, the Pharisees, upon the Pretence of
maintaining it intact, multiplied minute precepts and distinctions to
such an extent that the whole life of the Israelite was hemmed in and
burdened on every side by instructions so numerous and trifling that
the law was almost if not wholly lost sight of. These "traditions" as
they were called, had long been gradually accumulating. Of the trifling
character of these regulations innumerable instances are to be found in
the Mishna. Such were their washings before they could eat bread, and
the special minuteness with which the forms of this washing were
prescribed; their bathing when they returned from the market; their
washing of cups, pots, brazen vessels, etc.; their fastings twice in
the week, (Luke 18:12) were their tithing; (Matthew 23:23) and such,
finally, were those minute and vexatious extensions of the law of the
Sabbath, which must have converted God's gracious ordinance of the
Sabbath's rest into a burden and a pain. (Matthew 12:1-13; Mark 3:1-6;
Luke 18:10-17)
+It was a leading aim of the Redeemer to teach men that true piety
consisted not in forms, but in substance, not in outward observances,
but in an inward spirit. The whole system of Pharisaic piety led to
exactly opposite conclusions. The lowliness of piety was, according to
the teaching of Jesus, an inseparable concomitant of its reality; but
the Pharisees sought mainly to attract the attention and to excite the
admiration of men. (Matthew 6:2,6,16; 23:5,6; Luke 14:7) Indeed the
whole spirit of their religion was summed up not in confession of sin
and in humility, but in a proud self righteousness at variance with any
true conception of man's relation to either God or his fellow creatures.
+With all their pretences to piety they were in reality avaricious,
sensual and dissolute. (Matthew 23:25; John 13:7) They looked with
contempt upon every nation but their own. (Luke 10:29) Finally, instead
of endeavoring to fulfill the great end of the dispensation whose
truths they professed to teach, and thus bringing men to the Hope of
Israel, they devoted their energies to making converts to their own
narrow views, who with all the zeal of proselytes were more exclusive
and more bitterly opposed to the truth than they were themselves.
(Matthew 22:15)
+The Pharisees at an early day secured the popular favor and thereby
acquired considerable political influence. This influence was greatly
increased by the extension of the Pharisees over the whole land and the
majority which they obtained in the Sanhedrin. Their number reached
more than six thousand under the Herods. Many of them must have
suffered death for political agitation. In the time of Christ they were
divided doctrinally into several schools, among which those of Hillel
and Shammai were most noted.--McClintock and Strong .
+One of the fundamental doctrines of the Pharisees was a belief in a
future state . They appear to have believed in a resurrection of the
dead, very much in the same sense: as the early Christians. They also
believed in "a divine Providence acting side by side with the free will
of man."--Schaff.
+It is proper to add that it would be a great mistake to suppose that
the Pharisees were wealthy and luxurious much more that they had
degenerated into the vices which were imputed to some of the Roman
popes and cardinals during the two hundred years preceding the
Reformation. Josephus compared the Pharisees to the sect of the Stoics.
He says that they lived frugally, in no respect giving in to luxury. We
are not to suppose that there were not many individuals among them who
were upright and pure, for there were such men as Nicodemus, Gamaliel,
Joseph of Arimathea and Paul.
Pharosh(Ezra
8:3) [See PAROSH]
Pharpar(swift),
the second of the "two rivers of Damascus"--Abana and Pharpar--alluded
to by Naaman. (2 Kings 5:18) The two principal streams in the district
of Damascus are the Barada and the Awaj, the former being the Abana and
the latter the Pharpur. The Awaj rises on the southeast slopes of
Hermon, and flows into the most southerly of the three lakes or swamps
of Damascus.
Pharzites.
Thethe
descendants of Parez the son of Judah. (Numbers 26:20)
Phaseah(Nehemiah
7:51) [[965]Paseah, 2]
Phaselisa
town on the coast of Asia Minor, on the confines of Lycia and
Pamphylia, and consequently ascribed by the ancient writers sometimes
to one and sometimes to the other. 1 Macc. 15:23.
Phebe[[966]Phoebe]
Phenice(Acts
27:12) (more properly Phoenix, as it is translated in the Revised
Version), the name of a haven in Crete on the south coast. The name was
no doubt derived from the Greek word for the palm tree, which
Theophrastus says was indigenous in the island. It is the modern Lutro
. [See [967]Phoenice, Phoenicia; PHOENICIA]
Phichol(strong),
chief captain of the army of Abimelech, king of the Philistines of
Gerar in the days of both Abraham, (Genesis 21:22,32) and Isaac.
(Genesis 28:26) (B.C. 1900.)
Philadelphiastrictly
Philadelphi'a (brotherly love), a town on the confines of Lydia and
Phrygia Catacecaumene, 25 southeast of Sardis, and built by Attalus
II., king of Pergamos, who died B.C. 138. It was situated on the lower
slopes of Tmolus, and is still represented by a town called Allah-shehr
(city of God). Its elevation is 952 feet above the sea. The original
population of Philadelphia. Seems to have been Macedonian; but there
was, as appears from (Leviticus 3:9) a synagogue of Hellenizing Jews
there, as well as a Christian church. (It was the seat of one of "the
seven churches of Asia.") The locality was subject to constant
earthquakes, which in the time of Strabo rendered even the town walls
of Philadelphia unsafe. The expense of reparation was constant, and
hence perhaps the poverty of the members of the church. (Revelation
3:8) (The church was highly commended.) (Revelation 3:7-13) Even Gibbon
bears the following well-known testimony to the truth of the prophecy,
"Because thou hast kept the word of my patience, I also will keep thee
in the hour of temptation": "At a distance from the sea, forgotten by
the (Greek) emperor encompassed, all sides by the Turks, her valiant
citizens defended their religion and freedom above fourscore years.
Among the Greek colonies and churches of Asia, Philadelphia is still
erect, a column in a scene of ruins." "The modern town (Allah-shehr,
city of God), although spacious, containing 3000 houses and 10,000
inhabitants, is badly built; the dwellings are mean and the streets
filthy. The inhabitants are mostly Turks. A few ruins are found,
including remains of a wall and about twenty-five churches. In one
place are four strong marble pillars, which once supported the dome of
a church. One of the old mosques is believed by the native Christians
to have been the church in which assembled the primitive Christians
addressed in the Apocalypse." Whitney's Bible Geography.)
Philemonthe
name of the Christian to whom Paul addressed his epistle in behalf of
Onesimus. He was a native probably of Colosse, or at all events lived
in that city when the apostle wrote to him: first, because Onesimus was
a Colossian, (Colossians 4:9) and secondly because Archippus was a
Colossian, (Colossians 4:17) whom Paul associates with Philemon at the
beginning of his letter. (Philemon 1:1,2) It is related that Philemon
became bishop of Colosse, and died as a martyr under Nero. It is
evident from the letter to him that Philemon was a man of property and
influence, since he is represented as the head of a numerous household,
and as exercising an expensive liberality toward his friends and the
poor in general. He was indebted to the apostle Paul as the medium of
his personal participation in the gospel. It is not certain under what
circumstances they became known to each other. It is evident that on
becoming a disciple he gave no common proof of the sincerity and power
of his faith. His character as shadowed forth in the epistle to him, is
one of the noblest which the sacred record makes known to us.
Philemon,
The Epistle Of Paul Tois
one of the letters which the apostle wrote during his first captivity
at Rome A.D. 63 or early in A.D. 64. Nothing is wanted to confirm the
genuineness of the epistle: the external testimony is unimpeachable;
nor does the epistle itself offer anything to conflict with this
decision. The occasion of the letter was that Onesimus, a slave of
Philemon, had run away from him to Rome, either desiring liberty or, as
some suppose, having committed theft. (Philemon 1:18) Here he was
converted under the instrumentality of Paul. The latter; intimately
connected with the master and the servant, was naturally anxious to
effect a reconciliation between them. He used his influence with
Onesimus, ver. 12, to induce him to return to Colosse and place himself
again at the disposal of his master. On his departure, Paul put into
his hand this letter as evidence that Onesirnus was a true and approved
disciple of Christ, and entitled as such to received, not as a servant
but above a servant, as a brother in the faith. The Epistle to Philemon
has one peculiar feature--its aesthetical character it may be
termed--which distinguishes it from all the other epistles. The writer
had peculiar difticulties to overcame; but Paul, it is confessed, has
shown a degree of self-denial and a fact in dealing with them which in
being equal to the occasion could hardly be greater.
Philetus(beloved)
was possibly a disciple of Hymenaeus, with whom he is associated in (2
Timothy 2:17) and who is named without him in an earlier epistle. (1
Timothy 1:20) (A.D. 68-64) Thep appear to have been persons who
believed the Scripture of the Old Testament, but misinterpreted them,
allegorizing away the doctrine of the resurrection and resolving it all
into figure and metaphor. The delivering over unto Satan. seems to have
been a form of excommunication declaring the person reduced to the
state of a heathen; and in the apostolic age it was accompanied with
supernatural or miraculous effects upon the bodies of the persons so
delivered.
Philip(lover
of horses) the apostle was of Bethsaida, the city of Andrew and Peter,
(John 1:44) and apparently was among the Galilean peasants of that
district who flocked to hear the preaching of the Baptist. The manner
in which St. John speaks of him indicates a previous friendship with
the sons of Jona and Zebedee, and a consequent participation in their
messianic hopes. The close union of the two in John 6 and 12 suggests
that he may have owed to Andrew the first tidings that the hope had
been fulfilled. The statement that Jesus found him (John 1:43) implies
a previous seeking. In the lists of the twelve apostles, in the
Synoptic Gospel, his name is as uniformly at the head of the second
group of four as the name of Peter is at that of the first, (Matthew
10:3; Mark 5:18; Luke 6:14) and the facts recorded by St. John give the
reason of this priority. Philip apparently was among the first company
of disciples who were with the Lord at the commencement of his ministry
at the marriage at Cana, on his first appearance as a prophet in
Jerusalem, John 2. The first three Gospels tell us nothing more of him
individually. St.John with his characteristic fullness of personal
reminiscences, records a few significant utterances. (John 6:5-9;
12:20-22; 14:8) No other fact connected with the name of Philip is
recorded in the Gospels. He is among the company of disciples at
Jerusalem after the ascension (Acts 1:13) and on the day of Pentecost.
After this all is uncertain and apocryphal, According tradition he
preached in Phrygia, and died at Hierapolis.
Philip
The Evangelistis
first mentioned in the account of the dispute between the Hebrew and
Hellenistic disciples in Acts 6. He is one of the deacons appointed to
superintend the daily distribution of food and alms, and so to remove
all suspicion of partiality. The persecution of which Saul was the
leader must have stopped the "daily ministrations" of the Church. The
teachers who had been most prominent were compelled to take flight, and
Philip was among them. It is noticeable that the city of Samaria, is
the first scene of his activity. Acts 8. He is the precursor of St.
Paul in his work, as Stephen had been in his teaching. The scene which
brings Philip and Simon the sorcerer into contact with each other,
(Acts 8:9-13) which the magician has to acknowledge a power over nature
greater than his own, is interesting. This step is followed by another.
On the road from Jerusalem to Gaza he meets the Ethiopian eunuch. (Acts
8:26) ff. The History that follows is interesting as one of the few
records in the New Testament of the process of individual conversion. A
brief sentence tells us that Philip continued his work as a preacher at
Azotus (Ashdod) and among the other cities that had formerly belonged
to the Philistines, and, following the coast-line, came to Caesarea.
Then for a long period--not less than eighteen or nineteen years--we
lose sight of him. The last glimpse of him in the New Testament is in
the account of St. Paul's journey to Jerusalem. It is to his house as
to one well known to them, that St. Paul and his companions turn for
shelter. He has four daughters, who possess the gift of prophetic
utterance and who apparently give themselves to the work of teaching
instead of entering on the life of home. (Acts 21:8,9) He is visited by
the prophets and elders of Jerusalem. One tradition places the scene of
his death at Hierapolis in Phrygia. According to another, he died
bishop of Tralles. The house in which he and-his daughters had lived
was pointed out to travellers in the time of Jerome.
Philippi(named
from Philip of Macedonia), a city of Macedonia about nine miles from
the sea, to the northwest of the island of Thasos which is twelve miles
distant from its port Neapolis, the modern Kavalla . It is situated in
a plain between the ranges of Pangaeus and Haemus. The Philippi which
St. Paul visited was a Roman colony founded by Augustus after the
famous battle of Philippi, fought here between Antony and Octavius and
Brutus and Cassius, B.C. 42. The remains which strew the ground near
the modern Turkish village Bereketli are no doubt derived from that
city. The original town, built by Philip of Macedonia, was probably not
exactly on the same site. Philip, when he acquired possession of the
site, found there a town named Datus or Datum, which was probably in
its origin a factory of the Phoenicians, who were the first that worked
the gold-mines in the mountains here, as in the neighboring Thasos. The
proximity of the goldmines was of course the origin of so large a city
as Philippi, but the plain in which it lies is of extraordinary
fertility. The position, too, was on the main road from Rome to Asia,
the Via Egnatia, which from Thessalonica to Constantinople followed the
same course as the existing post-road. On St. Paul's visits to
Philippi, see the following article. At Philippi the gospel was first
preached in Europe. Lydia was the first convert. Here too Paul and
Silas were imprisoned. (Acts 16:23) The Philippians sent contributions
to Paul to relieve his temporal wants.
Philippians,
Epistle To Thewas
St. Paul from Rome in A.D. 62 or 63. St. Paul's connection with
Philippi was of a peculiar character, which gave rise to the writing of
this epistle. St. Paul entered its walls A.D. 52. (Acts 16:18) There,
at a greater distance from Jerusalem than any apostle had yet
penetrated, the long-restrained energy of St, Paul was again employed
in laying the foundation of a Christian church, Philippi was endeared
to St. Paul not only by the hospitality of Lydia, the deep sympathy of
the converts, and the remarkable miracle which set a seal on his
preaching, but, also by the successful exercise of his missionary
activity after a long suspense, and by the happy consequences of his
undaunted endurance of ignominies which remained in his memory,
(Philemon 1:30) after the long interval of eleven years. Leaving
Timothy and Luke to watch over the infant church, Paul and Silas went
to Thessalonica, (1 Thessalonians 2:2) whither they were followed by
the alms of the Philippians, (Philemon 4:16) and thence southward.
After the lapse of five years, spent chiefly at Corinth and Ephesus,
St. Paul passed through Macedonia, A.D. 57, on his way to Greece, and
probably visited Philippi for the second time, and was there joined by
Timothy. He wrote at Philippi his second Epistle to the Corinthians. On
returning from Greece, (Acts 20:4) he again found a refuge among his
faithful Philippians, where he spent some days at Easter, A.D. 58, with
St. Luke, who accompanied him when he sailed from Neapolis. Once more,
in his Roman captivity, A.D. 62, their care of him revived-again. They
sent Epaphroditus bearing their alms for the apostle's support, and
ready also to tender his personal service. (Philemon 2:25) St. Paul's
aim in writing is plainly this: while acknowledging the alms of the
Philippians and the personal services of their messenger, to give them
some information respecting his own condition, and some advice
respecting theirs. Strangely full of joy and thanksgiving amidst
adversity, like the apostle's midnight hymn from the depth of his
Philippian dungeon, this epistle went forth from his prison at Rome. In
most other epistles he writes with a sustained effort to instruct, or
with sorrow, or with indignation; he is striving to supply imperfect or
to correct erroneous teaching, to put down scandalous impurity or to
schism in the church which he addresses. But in this epistle, though he
knew the Philippians intimately and was not blind to the faults and
tendencies to fault of some of them, yet he mentions no evil so
characteristic of the whole Church as to call for general censure on
his part or amendment on theirs. Of all his epistles to churches, none
has so little of an official character as this.
Philistia(Heb.
Pelesheth) (land of sojourners). The word thus translated (in) (Psalms
60:8; 87:4; 108:9) is in the original identical with that elsewhere
rendered Palestine, which always means land of the Philistines.
(Philistia was the plain on the southwest coast of Palestine. It was 40
miles long on the coast of the Mediterranean between Gerar and Joppa,
and 10 miles wide at the northern end and 20 at the southern.--ED.)
This plain has been in all ages remarkable for the extreme richness of
its soil. It was also adapted to the growth of military power; for
while the itself permitted. the use of war-chariots, which were the
chief arm of offence, the occasional elevations which rise out of it
offered secure sites for towns and strongholds. It was, moreover, a
commercial country: from its position it must have been at all times
the great thoroughfare between Phoenicia and Syria in the north and
Egypt and Arabia in the south.
Philistines(immigrants),
The origin of the Philistines is nowhere expressly stated in the Bible;
but as the prophets describe them as "the Philistines-from Caphtor,"
(Amos 9:7) and "the remnant of the maritime district of Caphtor"
(Jeremiah 47:4) it is prima facie probable that they were the Caphtorim
which came out of Caphtor" who expelled the Avim from their territory
and occupied it; in their place, (2:23) and that these again were the
Caphtorim mentioned in the Mosaic genealogical table among the
descendants of Mizraim. (Genesis 10:14) It has been generally assumed
that Caphtor represents Crete, and that the Philistines migrated from
that island, either directly or through Egypt, into Palestine. But the
name Caphtor is more probably identified with the Egyptian Coptos.
[[968]Caphtor, Caphtorim] History.--The Philistines must have settled
in the land of Canaan before the time of Abraham; for they are noticed
in his day as a pastoral tribe in the neighborhood of Gerur. (Genesis
21:32,34; 26:1,8) Between the times of Abraham and Joshua the
Philistines had changed their quarters, and had advanced northward into
the plain of Philistia. The Philistines had at an early period attained
proficiency in the arts of peace. Their wealth was abundant, (Judges
16:5,19) and they appear in all respects to have been a prosperous
people. Possessed of such elements of power, they had attained in the
time of the judges an important position among eastern nations. About
B.C. 1200 we find them engaged in successful war with the Sidonians.
Justin xviii. 3. The territory of the Philistines having been once
occupied by the Canaanites, formed a portion of the promised land, and
was assigned the tribe of Judah. (Joshua 15:2,12,45-47) No portion of
it, however, was conquered in the lifetime of Joshua, (Joshua 13:2) and
even after his death no permanent conquest was effected, (Judges 3:3)
though we are informed that the three cities of Gaza, Ashkelon and
Ekron were taken. (Judges 1:18) The Philistines soon recovered these,
and commenced an aggressive policy against the Israelites, by which
they gained a complete ascendancy over them. Individual heroes were
raised up from time to time, such as Shamgar the son of Anath, (Judges
3:31) and still more Samson, Judg 13-16, but neither of these men
succeeded in permanently throwing off the yoke. The Israelites
attributed their past weakness to their want, of unity, and they
desired a king, with the special object of leading them against the
foe. (1 Samuel 8:20) Saul threw off the yoke; and the Philistines were
defeated with great slaughter at Geba. (1 Samuel 13:3) They made no
attempt to regain their supremacy for about twenty-five years, and the
scene of the next contest shows the altered strength of the two
parties. It was no longer in the central country, but in a ravine
leading down to the Philistine plain, the valley of Elah, the position
of which is about 14 miles southwest of Jerusalem. On this occasion the
prowess of young David secured success to Israel, and the foe was
pursued to the gates of Gath and Ekron. (1 Samuel 17:1) ... The power
of the Philistines was, however, still intact on their own territory.
The border warfare was continued. The scene of the next conflict was
far to the north, in the valley of Esdraelon. The battle on this
occasion proved disastrous to the Israelites; Saul himself perished,
and the Philistines penetrated across the Jordan and occupied the,
forsaken cities. (1 Samuel 31:1-7) On the appointment of David to be
king, he twice attacked them, and on each occasion with signal success,
in the first case capturing their images, in the second pursuing them
"from Geba until thou come to Gazer." (2 Samuel 5:17-25; 1 Chronicles
14:8-16) Henceforth the Israelites appear as the aggressors. About
seven years after the defeat at Rephaim, David, who had now
consolidated his power, attacked them on their own soil end took Gath
with its dependencies. The whole of Philistine was included in
Solomon's empire. Later when the Philistines, joined by the Syrians and
Assyrians, made war on the kingdom of Israel, Hezekiah formed an
alliance with the Egyptians, as a counterpoise to the Assyrians, and
the possession of Philistia became henceforth the turning-point of the
struggle between the two great empires of the East. The Assyrians under
Tartan, the general of Sargon, made an expedition against Egypt, and
took Ashdod, as the key of that country. (Isaiah 20:1,4,5) Under
Senacherib, Philistia was again the scene of important operations. The
Assyrian supremacy was restored by Esarhaddon, and it seems probable
that the Assyrians retained their hold on Ashdod until its capture,
after a long siege, by Psammetichus. It was about this time that
Philistia was traversed by vast Scythian horde on their way to Egypt.
The Egyptian ascendancy was not as yet re-established, for we find the
next king, Necho, compelled to besiege Gaza on his return from the
battle of Megiddo. After the death of Necho the contest was renewed
between the Egyptians and the Chaldeans under Nebuchadnezzar, and the
result was specially disastrous to the Philistines. The "old hatred"
that the Philistines bore to the Jews was exhibited in acts of
hostility at the time of the Babylonish captivity, (Ezekiel 25:15-17)
but on the return this was somewhat abated, for some of the Jews
married Philistine women, to the great scandal of their rulers.
(Nehemiah 13:23,24) From this time the history of Philistia is absorbed
in the struggles of the neighboring kingdoms. The latest notices of the
Philistines as a nation occur in 1 Macc. 3-5. Institutions, religion,
etc .--With regard to the institutions of the Philistines our
information is very scanty, The five chief cities had, as early as the
days of Joshua, constituted themselves into a confederacy, restricted
however, in all probability, to matters of offence and defence. Each
was under the government of a prince, (Joshua 13:3; Judges 3:3) etc.;
(1 Samuel 18:30; 29:6) and each possessed its own territory. The
Philistines appear to have been deeply imbued with superstition: they
carried their idols with them on their campaigns, (2 Samuel 5:21) and
proclaimed their victories in their presence. (1 Samuel 31:9) The gods
whom they chiefly worshipped were Dagon, (Judges 16:23; 1 Samuel 5:3-5;
1 Chronicles 10:10) 1Macc. 10:83, Ashtaroth, (1 Samuel 31:10) Herod. I.
105, and Baalzebub. (2 Kings 1:2-6)
Philologusa
Christian at Rome to whom St. Paul sends his salutation. (Romans 18:15)
PhilosophyIt
is the object of the following article to give some account (I.) of
that development of thought among the Jews which answered to the
philosophy of the West; (II.) of the systematic progress of Greek
philosophy as forming a complete whole; and (III.) of the contact of
Christianity with philosophy. I. THE PHILOSOPHIC DISCIPLINE OF THE
JEWS.--Philosophy, if we limit the word strictly to describe the free
pursuit of knowledge of which truth is the one complete end is
essentially of western growth. In the East the search after wisdom has
always been connected with practice. The history of the Jews offers no
exception to this remark: there is no Jewish philosophy, properly so
called. The method of Greece was to proceed from life to God; the
method of Israel (so to speak) was to proceed from God to life. The
axioms of one system are the conclusions of the other. The one led to
the successive abandonment of the noblest domains of science which man
had claimed originally as his own, till it left bare systems of
morality; the other, in the fullness of time, prepared many to welcome
the Christ--the Truth. The philosophy of the Jews, using the word in a
large sense, is to be sought for rather in the progress of the national
life than in special books. Step by step the idea of the family was
raised into that of the people; and the kingdom furnished the basis of
those wider promises which included all nations in one kingdom of
heaven. The social, the political, the cosmical relations of man were
traced out gradually in relation to God. The philosophy of the Jews is
thus essentially a moral philosophy, resting on a definite connection
with God. The doctrines of Creation and Providence, of an infinite
divine person and of a responsible human will, which elsewhere form the
ultimate limits of speculation, are here assumed at the outset. The
Psalms, which, among the other infinite lessons which they convey, give
a deep insight into the need of a personal apprehension of truth,
everywhere declare the absolute sovereignty of God over the material
and the moral world. One man among all is distinguished among the Jews
as "the wise man". The description which is given of his writings
serves as a commentary on the national view of philosophy (1 Kings
4:30-33) The lesson of practical duty, the full utterance of "a large
heart," ibid. 29, the careful study of God's creatures,--this is the
sum of wisdom. Yet in fact the very practical aim of this philosophy
leads to the revelation of the most sublime truth. Wisdom was gradually
felt to be a person, throned by God and holding converse with men.
(Proverbs 8:1) ... She was seen to stand in open enmity with "the
strange woman"), who sought to draw them aside by sensuous attractions;
and thus a new step was made toward the central doctrine of
Christianity:--the incarnation of the Word. Two books of the Bible, Job
and Ecclesiastes, of which the latter at any rate belongs to the period
of the close of the kingdom, approach more nearly than any others to
the type of philosophical discussions. But in both the problem is moral
and not metaphysical. The one deals with the evils which afflict "the
perfect and upright;" the other with the vanity of all the pursuits and
pleasures of earth. The captivity necessarily exercised a profound
influence. The teaching of Persia Jewish thought. The teaching of
Persia seems to have been designed to supply important elements in the
education of the chosen people. But it did yet more than this. The
contact of the Jews with Persia thus gave rise to a traditional
mysticism. Their contact with Greece was marked by the rise of distinct
sects. In the third century B.C. the great Doctor Antigonus of Socho
bears a Greek name, and popular belief pointed to him as the teacher of
Sadoc and Boethus the supposed founders of Jewish rationalism. At any
rate we may date from this time the twofold division of Jewish
speculation, The Sadducees appear as the supporters of human freedom in
its widest scope; the Pharisees of a religious Stoicism. At a later
time the cycle of doctrine was completed, when by a natural reaction
the Essenes established as mystic Asceticism. II. THE DEVELOPMENT OF
GREEK PHILOSOPHY.--The various attempts which have been made to derive
western philosophy from eastern sources have signally failed. It is
true that in some degree the character of Greek speculation may have
been influenced, at least in its earliest-stages, by religious ideas
which were originally introduced from the East; but this indirect
influence does hot affect the real originality of the Greek teachers.
The very value of Greek teaching lies in the fact that it was, as far
as is possible, a result of simple reason, or, if faith asserts ifs
prerogative, the distinction is sharply marked. Of the various
classifications of the Greek schools which have been proposed, the
simplest and truest seems to be that which divides the history of
philosophy into three great periods, the first reaching to the era of
the Sophists, the next to the death of Aristotle, the third to the
Christian era. In the first period the world objectively is the great
centre of inquiry; in the second, the "ideas" of things, truth, and
being; in the third, the chief interest of philosophy falls back upon
the practical conduct of life. After the Christian era philosophy
ceased to have any true vitality in Greece, but it made fresh efforts
to meet the conditions of life at Alexandria and Rome.
+The pre-Socratic schools .--The first Greek philosophy was little more
than an attempt to follow out in thought the mythic cosmogonies of
earlier poets. What is the one permanent element which underlies the
changing forms of things?--this was the primary inquiry, to which the
Ionic school endeavored to find an answer. Thales (cir. B.C. 639-543)
pointed to moisture (water) as the one source and supporter of life.
Anaximenes (cir. B.C. 520-480) substituted air for wafer. At a much
later date (cir. B.C. 460) Diogenes of Apollonia represented this
elementary "air" as endowed with intelligence.
+The Socratic schools .--In the second period of Greek philosophy the
scene and subject were both changed. A philosophy of ideas, using the
term in its widest sense, succeeded a philosophy of nature, in three
generations Greek speculation reached its greatest glory in the
teaching of Socrates, Plato and Aristotle. The famous sentence in which
Aristotle characterizes the teachings of Socrates (B.C.465-399) places
his scientific position in the clearest light. There are two things, he
says, which we may rightly attribute to Socrates--inductive reasoning
and general definition. By the first he endeavored to discover the
permanent element which underlies the changing forms of appearances and
the varieties of opinion; by the second he fixed the truth which he had
thus gained. But, besides this, Socrates rendered another service to
truth. Ethics occupied in his investigations the primary place which
had hitherto been held by Physics. The great aim of his induction was
to establish the sovereignty of Virtue. He affirmed the existence of a
universal law of right and wrong. He connected philosophy with action,
both in detail and in general. On the one side he upheld the supremacy
of Conscience, on the other the working of Providence.
+The post-Socratic schools .--after Aristotle, philosophy took a new
direction. Speculation became mainly personal. Epicurus (B.C. 352-270)
defined the object of philosophy to be the attainment of a happy life.
The pursuit of truth for its own sake he recognized as superfluous. He
rejected dialectics as a useless study, and accepted the senses, in the
widest acceptation of the term, as the criterion of truth. But he
differed widely from the Cyrenaics in his view of happiness. The
happiness at which the wise man aims is to be found, he said, not in
momentary gratification, but in life-long pleasure. All things were
supposed to come into being by chance, and so pass away. The individual
was left master of own life. While Epicurus asserted in this manner the
claims of one part of man's nature in the conduct of life, Zeno of
Citium (cir. B.C. 280), with equal partiality advocated a purely
spiritual (intellectual) morality. Opposition between the two was
complete. The infinite, chance-formed worlds of the one stand over
against the one harmonious world of the other. On the one aide are gods
regardless of material things, on the other a Being permeating and
vivifying all creation. This difference necessarily found its chief
expression in Ethics. III. CHRISTIANITY IN CONTACT WITH ANCIENT
PHILOSOPHY.--The only direct trace of the contact of Christianity with
western philosophy in the New Testament is in the account of St. Paul's
visit to Athens, (Acts 17:18) and there is nothing in the apostolic
writings to show that it exercised any important influence upon the
early Church. Comp. (1 Corinthians 1:22-24) But it was otherwise with
eastern speculation, which penetrated more deeply through the mass of
the people. The "philosophy" against which the Colossians were warned,
(Colossians 2:8) seems undoubtedly to have been of eastern origin,
containing elements similar to those which were afterward embodied in
various shapes of Gnosticism, as a selfish asceticism, and a
superstitions reverence for angels, (Colossians 2:16-23) and in the
Epistles to Timothy, addressed to Ephesians, in which city St. Paul
anticipated the rise of false teaching, (Acts 20:30) two distinct forms
of error may be traced in addition to Judaism, due more or less to the
same influence. The writings of the sub-apostolic age, with the
exception of the famous anecdote of Justin Martyr (Dial. 2--1), throw
little light upon the relations of Christianity and philosophy.
Christian philosophy may be in one sense a contradiction in terms, for
Christianity confessedly derives its first principles from revelation,
and not from simple reason; but there is no less a true philosophy of
Christianity, which aims to show how completely these meet the
instincts and aspirations of all ages. The exposition of such a
philosophy would be the work of a modern Origen.
Phinehas(mouth
of brass).
+Son of Eleazar and grandson of Aaron. (Exodus 6:25) He is memorable
for having while quite a youth, by his zeal and energy at the critical
moment of the licentious idolatry of Shittim, appeased the divine
wrath, and put a stop to the plague which was destroying the nation.
(Numbers 25:7) (B.C. 1452.) For this he was rewarded by the special
approbation of Jehovah and by a promise that the priesthood should
remain in his family forever. (Numbers 25:10-13) He was appointed to
accompany as priest the expedition by which the Midianites were
destroyed. ch. (Numbers 31:6) Many years later he also headed the party
which was despatched from Shiloh to remonstrate against the altar which
the transjordanic tribes were reported to have built near Jordan.
(Joshua 22:13-32) In the partition of the country he received an
allotment of his own--a hill on Mount Ephraim which bore his name.
After Eleazar's death he became high priest--the third of the series.
In this capacity he is introduced as giving the oracle to the nation
during the whole struggle with the Benjamites on the matter of Gibeah.
(Judges 20:28) The verse which closes the book of Joshua is ascribed to
Phinehas, as the description of the death of Moses at the end of
Deuteronomy is to Joshua. The tomb of Phinehas, a place of great resort
to both Jews and Samaritans, is shown at Awertah, four miles southeast
of Nablus .
+Second son of Eli. (1 Samuel 1:3; 2:34; 4:4,11,17,19; 14:3) Phinehas
was killed with his brother by the Philistines when the ark was
captured. (B.C. 1125.) [[969]Eli]
+A Levite of Ezra's time, (Ezra 8:33) unless the meaning be that
Eleazar was of the family of the great Phinehas.
Phlegon(burning),
a Christian at Rome whom St. Paul salutes. (Romans 16:14) (A.D.55.)
Pseudo-Hippolytus makes him one of the seventy disciples and bishop of
Marathon.
Phoebe(radiant)
the first and one of the most important of the Christian persons the
detailed mention of whom nearly all the last chapter of the Epistle to
the Romans. (A.D.55.) What is said of her, (Romans 16:1,2) is worthy of
special notice because of its bearing on the question of the
deaconesses of the apostolic Church.
Phoenice,
Phoenicia(land
of palm trees) a tract of country, of which Tyre and Sidon were the
principal cities, to the north of Palestine, along the coast of the
Mediterranean Sea bounded by that sea on the west, and by the mountain
range of Lebanon on the east. The name was not the one by which its
native inhabitants called it, but was given to it by the Greeks, from
the Greek word for the palm tree. The native name of Phoenicia was
Kenaan (Canaan) or Kna, signifying lowland, so named in contrast to the
ad joining Aram, i.e. highland, the Hebrew name of Syria. The length of
coast to which the name of Phoenicia was applied varied at different
times.
+What may be termed Phoenicia proper was a narrow undulating plain,
extending from the pass of Ras el-Beyad or Abyad, the Promontorium
Album of the ancients, about six miles south of Tyre, to the Nahr
el-Auly, the ancient Bostrenus, two miles north of Sidon. The plain is
only 28 miles in length. Its average breadth is about a mile; but near
Sidon the mountains retreat to a distance of two miles, and near Tyre
to a distance of five miles.
+A longer district, which afterward became entitled to the name of
Phoenicia, extended up the coast to a point marked by the island of
Aradus, and by Antaradus toward the north; the southern boundary
remaining the same as in Phoenicia proper. Phoenicia, thus defined is
estimated to have been about 120 miles in length; while its breadth,
between Lebanon and the sea, never exceeded 20 miles, and was generally
much less. The whole of Phoenicia proper is well watered by various
streams from the adjoining hills. The havens of Tyre and Sidon afforded
water of sufficient depth for all the requirements of ancient
navigation, and the neighboring range of the Lebanon, in its extensive
forests, furnished what then seemed a nearly inexhaustible supply of
timber for ship-building. Language and race .--The Phoenicians spoke a
branch of the Semitic language so closely allied to Hebrew that
Phoenician and Hebrew, though different dialects, may practically be
regarded as the same language. Concerning the original race to which
the Phoenicians belonged, nothing can be known with certainty, because
they are found already established along the Mediterranean Sea at the
earliest dawn of authentic history, and for centuries afterward there
is no record of their origin. According to Herodotus, vii. 89, they
said of themselves in his time that they came in days of old from the
shores of the Red Sea and in this there would be nothing in the
slightest degree improbable as they spoke a language cognate to that of
the Arabians, who inhabited the east coast of that sea. Still neither
the truth nor the falsehood of the tradition can now be proved. But
there is one point respecting their race which can be proved to be in
the highest degree probable, and which has peculiar interest as bearing
on the Jews, viz., that the Phoenicians were of the same race as the
Canaanites. Commerce, etc .--In regard to Phoenician trade, connected
with the Israelites, it must be recollected that up to the time of
David not one of the twelve tribes seems to have possessed a single
harbor on the seacoast; it was impossible there fore that they could
become a commercial people. But from the time that David had conquered
Edom, an opening for trade was afforded to the Israelites. Solomon
continued this trade with its king, obtained timber from its territory
and employed its sailors and workmen. (2 Samuel 5:11; 1 Kings
5:9,17,18) The religion of the Phoenicians, opposed to Monotheism, was
a pantheistical personification of the forces of nature and in its most
philosophical shadowing forth of the supreme powers it may be said to
have represented the male and female principles of production. In its
popular form it was especially a worship of the sun, moon and five
planets, or, as it might have been expressed according to ancient
notions, of the seven planets--the most beautiful and perhaps the most
natural form of idolatry ever presented to the human imagination. Their
worship was a constant temptation for the Hebrews to Polytheism and
idolatry--
+Because undoubtedly the Phoenicians, as a great commercial people,
were more generally intelligent, and as we should now say civilized,
than the inland agricultural population of Palestine. When the
simple-minded Jews, therefore, came in contact with a people more
versatile and apparently more enlightened than themselves, but who
nevertheless, either in a philosophical or in a popular form admitted a
system of Polytheism an influence would be exerted on Jewish minds
tending to make them regard their exclusive devotion to their own one
God Jehovah, however transcendent his attributes, as unsocial and
morose.
+The Phoenician religion had in other respects an injurious effect on
the people of Palestine, being in some points essentially demoralizing,
For example, it mentioned the dreadful superstition of burning children
as sacrifices to a Phoenician god. Again, parts of the Phoenician
religion, especially the worship of Astarte, fended to encourage
dissoluteness in the relations of the sexes, and even to sanctify
impurities of the most abominable description. The only other fact
respecting the Phoenicians that need be mentioned here is that the
invention of letters was universally asserted by the Greeks and Romans
to have been communicated by the Phoenicians to the Greeks. For further
details respecting the Phoenicians see [970]Tyre and [971]Zidon, Or
Sidon. Phoenicia is now a land of ruins.
Phrygia(dry,
barren). Perhaps there is no geographical term in the New Testament
which is less capable of an exact definition. In fact there was no
Roman province of Phrygia till considerably after the first
establishment of Christianity in the peninsula of Asia Minor. The word
was rather ethnological than political, and denoted in a vague manner
the western part of the central region of that peninsula. Accordingly,
in two of the three places where it is used it is mentioned in a manner
not intended to he precise. (Acts 16:6; 18:23) By Phrygia we must
understand an extensive district in Asia Minor which contributed
portions to several Roman provinces, and varying portions at different
times. (All over this district the Jews were probably numerous. The
Phrygians were a very ancient people, and were supposed to be among the
aborigines of Asia Minor. Several bishops from Phrygia were present at
the Councils of Nice, A.D. 325, and of Constantinople, A.D. 381,
showing the prevalence of Christianity at that time--ED.)
Phurah(bough),
Gideon's servant, probably his armor-bearer, comp. (1 Samuel 14:1) who
accompanied him in his midnight visit to the camp of the Midianites.
(Judges 7:10,11)
Phurim(Esther
11:1) [[972]Purim]
Phut,
Put(a
bow) the third name in the list of the sons of Ham (Genesis 10:6; 1
Chronicles 1:8) elsewhere applied to an African country or people. The
few mentions of Phut in the Bible clearly indicate a country or people
of Africa, and, it must be added, probably not far from Egypt. (Isaiah
66:19; Jeremiah 46:9; Ezekiel 27:10; 30:5; 38:5; Nahum 3:9) Some
identify it with Libya, in the northern part Africa near the
Mediterranean Sea; others, as Mr. Poole, with Nubia, south of Egypt.
Phuvah(mouth),
one of the sons of Issachar, (Genesis 46:13) and founder of the family
of the Punites.
Phygellus(fugitive).
[[973]Hermogenes]
PhygelusUsed
in the Revised Version in (2 Timothy 1:15) for [974]Phygellus.
Phylactery[[975]Frontlets,
Or Phylacteries]
Pibesetha
town of lower Egypt, mentioned in (Ezekiel 30:17) the same as Bubastis,
so named from the goddess Bubastis. It was situated on the west bank of
the Pelusiac branch of the Nile, about 40 miles front Memphis. It was
probably a city of great importance when Ezekiel foretold its doom.
PictureIn
two of the three passages in which "picture" is used in the Authorized
Version it denotes idolatrous representations, either independent
images or more usually stones "portrayed," i.e. sculptured in low
relief, or engraved and colored. (Ezekiel 23:14) Layard, Nin. and Rob.
ii. 306, 308. Moveable pictures, in the modern sense, were doubtless
unknown to the Jews. The "pictures of silver" of (Proverbs 25:11) were
probably well surfaces or cornices with carvings.
Piece
Of GoldThe
rendering "pieces of gold," as in (2 Kings 5:5) is very doubtful; and
"shekels of gold") as designating the value of the whole quantity, not
individual pieces is preferable. Coined money was unknown in Palestine
till the Persian period.
Piece
Of SilverI.
In the Old Testament the word "pieces" is used in the Authorized
Version for a word understood in the Hebrew (if we except) (Psalms
68:30) The phrase is always "a thousand," or the like, "of silver."
(Genesis 20:16; 37:28; 45:28; Judges 9:4; 16:5; 2 Kings 6:25; Hosea
3:2; Zechariah 11:12,13) In similar passages the word "shekels" occurs
in the Hebrew. There are other passages in which the Authorized Version
supplies the word "shekels" instead of "pieces," (22:19,29; Judges
17:2,3,4,10; 2 Samuel 18:11,12) and of these the first two require this
to be done. The shekel, be it remembered, was the common weight for
money, and therefore most likely to be understood in an elliptical
phrase. The "piece" or shekel of silver weighed 220 grains, or about
half an ounce, and was worth a little more than half a dollar (55
cents). II. In the New Testament two words are rendered by the phrase
"piece of silver:"
+Drachma, (Luke 15:8,9) which was a Greek silver coin, equivalent, at
the time of St. Luke, to the Roman denarias (15 or 16 cents).
+Silver occurs only in the account of the betrayal of our Lord for
"thirty pieces of silver." (Matthew 26:15; 17:3,5,6,9) It is difficult
to ascertain what coins are here intended. If the most common silver
pieces be meant, they would be denarii. The parallel passage in
Zachariah, (Zechariah 11:12,13) must, however, be taken into
consideration where shekels (worth about 55 cents) must be understood.
It is more probable that the thirty pieces of silver were tetradrachms
than that they were denarii (80 cents).
PietyThis
word occurs but once in the Authorized Version: "Let them learn first
to show piety at home," better "toward their own household" or family.
(1 Timothy 5:4) The choice of this word here instead of the more usual
equivalents -of "godliness," "reverence," and the like, was probably
determined by the special sense of pietas, as "erga parentes," i.e.
toward parents.
Pigeon[TURTLE-DOVE]
Pihahirotha
place before or at which the Israelites encamped, at the close of the
third march from Rameses (the last place before they crossed the Red
Sea), when they went out of Egypt. (Exodus 14:2,9; Numbers 35:7,8) It
is an Egyptian word, signifying "the place where sedge grows."
Pilate(armed
with a spear), Pontius. Pontius Pilate was the sixth Roman procurator
of Judea, and under him our Lord worked, suffered and died, as we learn
not only from Scripture, but from Tacitus (Ann. xv. 44). was appointed
A.D. 25-6, in the twelfth year of Tiberius. His arbitrary
administration nearly drove the Jews to insurrection on two or three
occasions. One of his first acts was to remove the headquarters of the
army from Caesarea to Jerusalem. The soldiers of course took with them
their standards, bearing the image of the emperor, into the holy city.
No previous governor had ventured on such an outrage. The people poured
down in crowds to Caesarea, where the procurator was then residing, and
besought him to remove the images. After five days of discussion he
gave the signal to some concealed soldiers to surround the petitioners
and put them to death unless they ceased to trouble him; but this only
strengthened their determination, and they declared themselves ready
rather to submit to death than forego their resistance to aa idolatrous
innovation. Pilate then yielded, and the standards were by his orders
brought down to Caesarea. His slaughter of certain Galileans, (Luke
13:1) led to some remarks from our Lord on the connection between sin
and calamity. It must have occurred at some feast at Jerusalem, in the
outer court of the temple. It was the custom for the procurators to
reside at Jerusalem during the great feasts, to preserve order, and
accordingly, at the time of our Lord's last Passover, Pilate was
occupying his official residence in Herod's palace. The history of his
condemnation of our Lord is familiar to all. We learn from Josephus
that Pilate's anxiety to avoid giving offence to Caesar did not save
him from political disaster. The Samaritans were unquiet and rebellious
Pilate led his troops against them, and defeated them enough. The
Samaritans complained to Vitellius, then president of Syria, and he
sent Pilate to Rome to answer their accusations before the emperor.
When he reached it he found Tiberius dead and Caius (Caligula) on the
throne A,D, 36. Eusebius adds that soon afterward "wearied with
misfortunes," he killed himself. As to the scene of his death there are
various traditions. One is that he was banished to Vienna Allobrogum
(Vienne on the Rhone), where a singular monument--a pyramid on a
quadrangular base, 52 feet high--is called Pontius Pilate"s tomb, An
other is that he sought to hide his sorrows on the mountain by the lake
of Lucerne, now called Mount Pilatus; and there) after spending years
in its recesses, in remorse and despair rather than penitence, plunged
into the dismal lake which occupies its summit.
Pildash(flame
of fire), one of the eight sons of Nahor, Abraham's brother by Iris
wife and niece, Milcah. (Genesis 22:22) (B.C. 1900.)
Pileha(worship),
the name of one of the chief of the people, probably a family, who
signed the covenant with Nehemiah. (Nehemiah 10:24) (B.C. 410.)
PillarThe
notion of a pillar is of a shaft or isolated pile either supporting or
not supporting a roof. But perhaps the earliest application of the
pillar was the votive or monumental, This in early times consisted of
nothing but a single stone or pile of stones. (Genesis 28:18; 31:40)
etc. The stone Ezel, (1 Samuel 20:19) was probably a terminal stone or
a way-mark. The "place" set up by Saul (1 Samuel 15:12) is explained by
St, Jerome to be a trophy. So also Jacob set up a pillar over Rachel's
grave. (Genesis 36:20) The monolithic tombs and obelisks of Petra are
instances of similar usage. Lastly, the figurative use of the term
"pillar," in reference to the cloud and fire accompanying the
Israelites on their march or as in (Song of Solomon 3:6) and Reve 10:1
Is plainly derived from the notion of an isolated column not supporting
a roof.
Pillar,
Plain Of Theor
rather "oak of the pillar" (that being the real signification of the
Hebrew word elon), a tree which stood near Shechem and at which the men
of Shechem and the house of Millo assembled to crown Abimelech the son
of Gideon. (Judges 9:6)
Pilled(Genesis
30:37,38) "peeled," Isai 18:2; Ezek 29:28 The verb "to pill" appears in
old English as identical in meaning with "to peel, to strip."
Piltai,
Or Piltai(my
deliverances), the representative of the priestly house of Moadiah or
Maadiah, in the time of Joiakim the son of Jeshua. (Nehemiah 12:17)
(B.C. 445.)
Pine
Tree
+Heb. tidhar . (Isaiah 41:19; 60:13) What tree is intended is not
certain: but the rendering "pine," seems least probable of any.
+Shemen, (Nehemiah 8:16) is probably the wild olive.
Pinnacle(of
the temple), (Matthew 4:5; Luke 4:9) The Greek word ought to be
rendered not a pinnacle, but the pinnacle. The only part of the temple
which answered to the modern sense of pinnacle was the golden spikes
erected on the roof to prevent birds from settling there. Perhaps the
word means the battlement ordered by law to be added to every roof.
(According to Alford it was the roof of Herod's royal portico of the
temple,"which overhung the ravine of Kedron from a dizzy height"--600
or 700 feet.-ED.)
Pinon(darkness),
one of the "dukes" of Edom,--that is, head or founder of a tribe of
that nation. (Genesis 38:41; 1 Chronicles 1:52)
Pipe(Heb.
chalil). The Hebrew word so rendered is derived from a root signifying
"to bore, perforate" and is represented with sufficient correctness by
the English "pipe" or "flute," as in the margin of (1 Kings 1:40) The
pipe was the type of perforated wind instruments, as the harp was of
stringed instruments. It was made of reed, bronze or copper. It is one
of the simplest, and therefore probably one of the oldest, of musical
Instruments. It is associated with the tabret as an instrument of a
peaceful and social character. The pipe and tabret were used at the
banquets of the Hebrews, (Isaiah 5:12) and accompanied the simpler
religious services when the young prophets, returning from the high
place, caught their inspiration from the harmony, (1 Samuel 10:5) or
the pilgrims, on their way to the great festivals of their ritual,
beguiled the weariness of the march with psalms sung to the simple
music of the pipe. (Isaiah 30:29) The sound of the pipe was apparently
a soft wailing note, which made it appropriate to be used in mourning
and at funerals (Matthew 9:23) and in the lament of the prophet over
the destruction of Moab. (Jeremiah 48:36) It was even used in the
temple choir, as appears from (Psalms 87:7) In later times the funeral
and death-bed were never without the professional pipers or
flute-players, (Matthew 9:23) a custom which still exists. In the
social and festive life of the Egyptians the pipe played as prominent a
part as among the Hebrews.
Piram(like
a wild ass; fleet) the Amorite king of Jarmuth at the time of Joshua's
conquest of Canaan. (Joshua 10:3) (B.C. 1450.)
Pirathon(princely),
"in the land of Ephraim in the mount of the Amalekite," a place in
(Judges 12:15) Its site, now called Fer'ata, is about one mile and a
half south of the road from Jaffa, by Hableh, to Nablus . Pirathonites
are mentioned in (Judges 12:13,15) and 1Chr 27:14
Pirathonitea
native of or dweller in Pirathon. Two such are named in the Bible:--
+Abdon ben-Hillel. (Judges 12:13,15)
+"Benaiah the Pirathonite of the children of Ephraim," (1 Chronicles
27:14)
Pisgah(section,
i.e. peak), (Numbers 21:20; 23:14; 3:27; 34:1) a mountain range or
district, the same as or a part of, that called the mountains of
Abarim. Comp. (32:49) with Deuteronomy 34:1 It lay on the east of
Jordan contiguous to the field of Moab, and immediately opposite
Jericho. Its highest point or summit--its "head"--was Mount Nebo. [See
[976]Nebo]
Pisidia(pitchy)
was a district in Asia Minor north of Pamphylia, and reached to and was
partly included in Phrygia. Thus Antioch in Pisidia was sometimes
called a Phrygian town. St. Paul passed through Pisidia twice, with
Barnabas, on the first missionary journey, i.e., both in going from
Perga to Iconium, (Acts 13:13,14,51) and in returning. (Acts
14:21,24,25) comp. 2Tim 3:11 It is probable also that he traversed the
northern part of the district, with Silas and Timotheus, on the second
missionary journey, (Acts 18:8) but the word Pisidia does not occur
except in reference to the former journey.
Pison[[977]Eden]
Pit[[978]Hell]
PitchThe
three Hebrew words so translated all represent the same object, viz.,
mineral pitch or asphalt in its different aspects. Asphalt is an
opaque, inflammable substance which bubbles up from subterranean
fountains in a liquid state, and hardens by exposure to the air, but
readily melts under the influence of heat. In the latter state it is
very tenacious, and was used as a cement in lieu of mortar in Babylonia
((Genesis 11:3) as well as for coating the outside of vessels, (Genesis
6:14) and particularly for making the papyrus boats of the Egyptians
water-tight. (Exodus 2:3) The jews and Arabians got their supply in
large quantities from the Dead Sea, which hence received its classical
name of Lacus Asphaltites .
PitcherThis
word is used in the Authorized Version to denote the earthen water-jars
or pitchers with one or two handles, used chiefly by women for carrying
water, as in the story of Rebekah. (Genesis 24:15-20) but see Mark
14:13; Luke 22:10 This mode of carrying has been and still is customary
the East and elsewhere. The vessels used for the purpose are generally
borne on the head or the shoulder. The Bedouin women commonly use skin
bottles. Such was the "bottle" carried by Hagar (Genesis 21:14) The
same word is used of the pitchers employed by Gideon's three hundred
men. (Judges 7:16)
Pithom(the
city of justice), one of the store-cites Israelites for the first
oppressor, the Pharaoh "which knew not Joseph." (Exodus 1:11) It is
probably the Patumus of Herodotus (ii. 1 159), a town on the borders of
Egypt, nest which Necho constructed a canal from the Nile to the
Arabian Gulf.
Pithon(harmless),
one of the four sons of Micah, the son of Mephibosheth. (1 Chronicles
8:36; 9:41) (B.C. 1050.)
Plague,
TheThe
plague is considered to be a severe kind of typhus, accompanied by
buboes (tumors).--Like the cholera, it is most violent at the first
outbreak, causing almost instant death. Great difference of opinion has
obtained as to whether it is contagious or not. It was very prevalent
in the East, and still prevails in Egypt. Several Hebrew words are
translated "pestilence" or "plague" but not one of these words call be
considered as designating by its signification the disease now called
the plague. Whether the disease be mentioned must be judged from the
sense of passages, not from the sense of words. Those pestilences which
were sent as special judgments, and were either supernaturally rapid in
their effects or were in addition directed against particular culprits
are beyond the reach of human inquiry. But we also read of pestilences
which, although sent as judgments, have the characteristics of modern
epidemics, not being rapid beyond nature nor directed against
individuals. (Leviticus 26:25; 28:21) In neither of these passages
does,it seem certain that the plague is specified. The notices in the
prophets present the same difficulty. Hezekiah's disease has been
thought to have been the plague, and its fatal nature, as well as the
mention of a boil, makes this not improbable. On the other hand, there
Is no mention of a pestilence among his people at the time.
Plagues,
The TenThe
occasion on which the plagues were sent is described in Exod 3-12.
+The plague of blood.When Moses and Aaron came before Pharaoh, a
miracle was required of them. Then Aaron's rod became "a serpent
(Authorized Version), or rather "a crocodile." Its being changed into
an animal reverenced by all the Egyptians, or by some of them, would
have been an especial warning to Pharaoh, The Egyptian magicians called
by the king produced what seemed to be the same wonder, yet Aaron's rod
swallowed up the others. (Exodus 7:3-12) This passage, taken alone
would appear to indicate that the magicians succeeded in working
wonders, but, if it is compared with the others which relate their
opposition on the occasions of the first three plagues, a contrary
inference seems more reasonable for the very first time that Moses
wrought his miracle without giving previous notice, the magicians "did
so with their enchantments," but failed. A comparison with other
passages strengthens us in the inference that the magicians succeeded
merely by juggling. After this warning to Pharaoh, Aaron, at the word
of Moses, waved his rod over the Nile, and the river was turned into
blood, with all its canals and reservoirs, and every vessel of water
drawn from them; the fish died, and the river stank. The Egyptians
could not drink of it, and digged around it for water. This plague was
doubly humiliating to the religion of the country, as the Nile was held
sacred, as well as some kinds of its fish, not to speak of the
crocodiles, which probably were destroyed. (Exodus 7:16-25) Those who
have endeavored to explain this plague by natural causes have referred
to the changes of color to which the Nile is subject, the appearance of
the Red Sea, and the so called rain and dew of blood of the middle
ages; the last two occasioned by small fungi of very rapid growth. But
such theories do not explain why the wonder happened at a time of year
when the Nile is most clear nor why it killed the fish and made the
water unfit to he drunk.
+The plague of frogs .--When seven days had passed after the first
plague, the river and all the open waters of Egypt brought forth
countless frogs, which not only covered the land but filled the houses,
even in their driest parts and vessels, for the ovens and
kneading-troughs are specified. This must have been an especially
trying judgment to the Egyptians, as frogs were included among the
sacred animals. (Exodus 8:1-15)
+The plague of lice .--The dry land was now smitten by the rod, and
very dust seemed turned into minute noxious insects, so thickly did
they swarm on man and beast, or rather "in" them. The scrupulous
cleanliness of the Egyptians would add intolerably to the bodily
distress of this plague, by which also they again incurred religious
defilement. As to the species of the vermin, there seems no reason to
disturb the authorized translation of the word. The magicians, who had
imitated by their enchantments the two previous miracles, were now
foiled. They struck the ground, as Aaron did, and repeated their own
incantations. but it was without effect. (Exodus 8:16-19)
+The plague of flies .--After the river and the land, the air was
smitten, being filled with winged insects, which swarmed in the houses
and devoured the land, but Goshen was exempted from the plague. The
word translated "swarms of flies" most probably denotes the great
Egyptian beetle, Scarabaeus sacer, which is constantly represented in
their sculptures. Besides the annoying and destructive habits of its
tribe, it was an object of worship, and thus the Egyptians were again
scourged by their own superstitions. (Exodus 8:20-32)
+The plague of the murrain of beasts .--Still coming closer and closer
to the Egyptians, God sent a disease upon the cattle, which were not
only their property but their deities. At the precise time of which
Moses forewarned Pharaoh, all the cattle of the Egyptians were smitten
with a murrain and died, but not one of the cattle of the Israelites
suffered. (Exodus 9:1-7)
+The plague of boils--From the cattle the hand of God was extended to
the persons of the Egyptians. Moses and Aaron were commanded to take
ashes of the furnace, and to "sprinkle it toward the heaven in the
sight of Pharaoh." It was to become "small dust" throughout Egypt, and
"be a boil breaking forth [with] blains upon man and upon beast."
(Exodus 9:8-12) This accordingly came to pass. The plague seems to have
been the leprosy, a fearful kind of elephantiasis which was long
remembered as "the botch of Egypt." (28:27,35)
+The plague of hail .--The account of the seventh plague is preceded by
a warning which Moses was commanded to deliver to Pharaoh, respecting
the terrible nature of the plagues that were to ensue if he remained
obstinate. Man and beast were smitten, and the herbs and every tree
broken, save in the land of Goshen. The ruin caused by the hail was
evidently far greater than that effected by any of the earlier plagues.
Hail is now extremely rare, but not unknown, in Egypt, and it is
interesting that the narrative seems to imply that if sometimes falls
there. (Exodus 9:13-34)
+The plague of locusts .--The severity of this plague can be well
understood by those who have been in Egypt in a part of the country
where a flight of locusts has alighted. In this case the plague was
greater than an ordinary visitation, since it extended over a far wider
space, rather than because it was more intense; for it is impossible to
imagine any more complete destruction than that always caused by a
swarm of locusts. (Exodus 10:1-20)
+The plague of darkness .--"There was a darkness in all the land of
Egypt three days;" while "all the children of Israel had light in their
dwellings." It has been illustrated by reference to the samoom and the
hot wind of the Khamaseen. The former is a sand-storm which occurs in
the desert, seldom lasting more than a quarter of an hour or twenty
minutes, but for the time often causing the darkness of twilight, and
affecting man and beast. The hot wind of the Khamaseen usually blows
for three days and nights, and carries so much sand with it that it
produces the appearance of a yellow fog. It thus resembles the samoom,
though far less powerful and less distressing in its effects. It is not
known to cause actual darkness. The plague may have been an extremely
severe sandstorm, miraculous in its violence and duration, for the
length of three days does not make it natural since the severe storms
are always very brief. (Exodus 10:21-29)
+The death of the first-born .--Before the tenth plague Moses went to
warn Pharaoh: "Thus saith the Lord, about midnight will I go out into
the midst of Egypt; and all the first-born in the land of Egypt shall
die, from the first-born of Pharaoh that sitteth upon his throne even
to the first-born of the maidservant that is behind the mill; and all
the first-born of beasts." (Exodus 11:4,5) The clearly miraculous
nature of this plague, its falling upon man and in its beast; and the
singling out of the firstborn, puts it wholly beyond comparison with
any natural pestilence, even the severest recorded in history, whether
of the peculiar Egyptian plague or of other like epidemics. The history
of the ten plagues strictly ends with the death of the first-born. The
gradual increase in severity of the plagues is perhaps the best key to
their meaning. They seem to have been sent as warnings to the
oppressor, to afford him a means of seeing God's will and an
opportunity of repenting before Egypt was ruined. The lesson that
Pharaoh's career teaches us seems to be that there are men whom the
meet signal judgments do not affect so as to cause any lasting
repentance. The following characteristics of the plagues may be
specially noticed: (1) Their relation to natural phenomena. Each of the
inflictions has a demonstrable connection with Egyptian customs and
phenomena; each is directly aimed at some Egyptian superstition all are
marvellous, not for the most part as reversing, but as developing,
forces inherent in nature, and directing them to a special end.--Canon
Cook . (2) Their order. They are divided first into nine and one the
last one standing clearly apart from all the others. The nine are
arranged in threes. In the first of each three the warning is given to
Pharaoh in the morning. In the first and second of each three the
plague is announced beforehand in the third, not. At the third the
magicians acknowledge the finger of God; at the sixth they cannot stand
before Moses; and at the ninth Pharaoh refuses to see the face of Moses
any more. The gradation of the severity of these strokes is no less
obvious. In the first three no distinction is made among the
inhabitants of the land; in the remaining seven a distinction is made
between the Israelites, who are shielded from, and the Egyptians who
are exposed to, the stroke. -Kurlz, (3) Their duration. It is probable
that the plagues extended through a period of several months. The first
plague occurred probably during the annual inundation of the Nile,
hence about the middle of June (Edersheim). The second, that of the
frogs, in September, the time when Egypt often suffers in this way. The
seventh (hail) came when the barley was in ear, and before the wheat
was grown, and hence in February; and the tenth came in the following
March or April. (4) Their significance. The first plague was directed
against the Nile one of the Egyptian deities, adored as a source of
life, not only to the produce of the land, but to its inhabitants. The
second plague, that of the frogs, struck also at the idolatry of Egypt;
for the frog was an object of worship. The third plague turned the
land, which was worshipped, into a source of torment the dust produced
a curse. The fourth plague consisted in the torment of either flies of
a ravenous disposition, or beetles. If the former, then the air, which
was worshipped, was turned into a source of exquisite annoyance; if the
latter then the beetle, one of the most common of the Egyptian idols,
swarmed with voracious appetite, attacking even man, as the Egyptian
beetle still does and inflicting painful wounds. The fifth plague, that
of murrain, struck at the cattle-worship for which Egypt was
celebrated. The sixth plague, produced by the ashes scattered toward
heaven in conformity with an ancient Egyptian rite, as if an invocation
of the sun-god, continued the warfare of Jehovah upon Egyptian
idolatry; the religious ceremony which was employed to invoke blessing
brought disease. The seventh plague, beginning a new series, seems to
have been aimed like those which followed, to demonstrate the power of
Jehovah over all the elements, and even life itself, in contrast with
the impotence of the idols. The storm and the hail came at his bidding.
The locusts appeared and departed at his word. The sun itself was
veiled at his command. Nay, the angel of death was held and loosed by
his hand alone. The tenth plague had an immediate relation to idolatry,
since it destroyed not only the first-born of man, but the first-born
of beast; so that the sacred animals in the temples were touched by a
power higher than those they were supposed to represent. The victory
was complete; upon all the gods of Egypt, Jehovah had executed
judgment.--Rev. Franklin Johnson .
PlainsThis
one term does duty in the Authorized Version for no less than seven
distinct Hebrew words.
+Abel . This word perhaps answers more nearly to our word "meadow" than
any other. It occurs in the names of Abel-maim Abel-meholah,
Abel-shittim and is rendered "plain" in (Judges 11:33)--"plain of
vineyards."
+Bik'ah . Fortunately we are able to identify the most remarkable of
the bik'ahs of the Bible, and thus to ascertain the force of the term.
The great plain or valley of Coele-Syria, the "hollow land" of the
Greeks, which separates the two ranges of Lebanon and Anti-Lebanon is
the most remarkable of them all. Out of Palestine we find denoted by
the word bik'ah the "plain of the land of Shiner," (Genesis 11:2) the
"plain of Mesopotamia," (Ezekiel 3:22,23; 8:4; 37:1,2) and the "plain
in the province of Dura." (Daniel 3:1)
+Ha shefelah the invariable designation of the depressed, flat or
gently-undulating region which intervened between the highlands of
Judah and the Mediterranean, and was commonly in possession of the
Philistines.
+Elon . Our translators have uniformly rendered this word "plain;" but
this is not the verdict of the majority or the most trustworthy of the
ancient versions. They regard the word as meaning an "oak" or "grove of
oaks," a rendering supported by nearly all the commentators and
lexicographers of the present day, The passages in which the word
occurs erroneously translated "plain" are as-follows: Plain of Moreh,
(Genesis 12:6; 11:30) plain of Mamre, (Genesis 13:18; 14:13; 18:1)
plain of Zaanaim, (Judges 4:11) plain of the pillar, (Judges 9:6) plain
of Meonenim, (Judges 9:37) plain of Tabor, (1 Samuel 10:5)
Pledge[[979]Loan]
PleiadesThe
Hebrew word (cimah) so rendered occurs in (Job 9:9; 38:31; Amos 6:8) In
the last passage our Authorized Version has "the seven stars," although
the Geneva version translates the word "Pleiades" as in the other
cases. The Pleiades are a group of stars situated on the shoulder of
the constellation Taurus. The rendering "sweet influences" of the
Authorized Version, (Job 38:31) is a relic of the lingering belief in
the power which the stars exerted over human destiny. But Schaff thinks
the phrase arose from the fact that the Pleiades appear about the
middle of April, and hence are associated with the return of spring,
the season of sweet influences .
PloughThe
ploughs of ancient Egypt consisted of a share-often pointed with iron
or bronze--two handles and a pole which was inserted into the base of
the two handles. Ploughs in Palestine have usually but one handle with
a pole joined to it near the ground and drawn by oxen, cows or camels.
PocherethThe
children of Pochereth of Zebaim were among the children of Solomon's
servants who returned with Zerubbabel. (Ezra 2:57; Nehemiah 7:59)
Poetry,
Hebrew
+Lyrical poetry .--Of the three kinds of poetry which are illustrated
by the Hebrew literature, the lyric occupies the foremost place. That
literature abounds with illustrations of all forms of Lyrical poetry,
in its most manifold and wide-embracing compass, from such short
ejaculations as the songs of the two Lamechs and Psal 15, 117 and
others, to the longer chants of victors and thanksgiving, like the
songs of Deborah and David. Judg 5; Psal 18. The Shemitic nations have
nothing approaching to an epic poem, and in proportion to this defect
the lyric element prevailed more greatly, commencing in the pre-Mosaic
times, flourishing in rude vigor during the earlier periods of the
judges, the heroic age of the Hebrews, growing with the nation's growth
and strengthening with its strength, till it reached its highest
excellence in David, the warrior poet, and from thenceforth began
slowly to decline.
+Gnomic poetry .--The second grand division of Hebrew poetry is
occupied by a class of poems which are peculiarly Shemitic, and which
represent the nearest approaches made by the people of that race to
anything like philosophic thought. Reasoning there is none: we have
only results, and those rather the product of observation and
reflection than of induction or argumentation. As lyric poetry is the
expression of the poet's own feelings and impulses, so gnomic poetry is
the form in which the desire of communicating knowledge to others finds
vent. Its germs are the floating proverbs which pass current in the
mouths of the people, and embody the experiences of many with the wit
of one. The utterer of sententious sayings was to the Hebrews the wise
man, the philosopher. Of the earlier isolated proverbs but few examples
remain.
+Dramatic poetry .--It is impossible to assert that no form of the
drama existed among the Hebrew people. It is unquestionably true, as
Ewald observes, that the Arab reciters of romances will many times in
their own persons act out a complete drama in recitation, changing
their voice and gestures with the change of person and subject.
Something of this kind may possibly have existed among the Hebrews;
still there is no evidence that it did exist, nor any grounds for
making even a probable conjecture with regard to it. But the mere fact
of the existence of these rude exhibitions' among the Arabs and
Egyptians of the present day is of no weight when the question to be
decided is whether the Song of Songs was designed to be so represented,
as a simple pastoral drama, or whether the book of Job is a dramatic
poem or not. Inasmuch as it represents an action and a progress, it is
a drama as truly and really as any poem can be which develops the
working of passion and the alter-nations of faith, hope, distrust,
triumph and confidence and black despair, in the struggle which it
depicts the human mind as engaged in while attempting to solve one of
the most intricate problems it can be called upon to regard. It is a
drama as life is a drama, the most powerful of all tragedies but that
it is a dramatic poem, intended to be represented upon a stage, or
capable of being so represented, may be confidently denied. One
characteristic of Hebrew poetry, not indeed peculiar to it, but shared
by it in common with the literature of other nations, is its intensely
national and local coloring. The writers were Hebrews of the Hebrews,
drawing their inspiration from the mountains and rivers of Palestine,
which they have immortalized in their poetic figures, and even while
uttering the sublimest and most universal truths never forgetting their
own nationality in its narrowest and intensest form. Examples of this
remarkable characteristic the Hebrew poets stand thick upon every page
of these writings, and in striking contrast with the vague
generalizations of the indian philosophic poetry. About one third of
the Old Testament is poetry in the Hebrew--a large part of Job, Psalms,
Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, the Song of Solomon, besides a great part of
the prophets. Fragments of poetry are also found in the historical
books. (The form which biblical poetry takes is not of rhyme and
metre--the rhythm of quantity in the syllables--as with us, but the
rhythm of the thought--there usually being two corresponding members to
each distich or verse, which is called a parallelism. To some extent
there is verbal rhythm. Sometimes there were alliterations, as in the
119th Psalm, which is divided up into sections, one for each letter of
their alphabet, and each of the eight verses in a section begins with
the same letter in the Hebrew; and chap. 31, vs. 10-31, of the book of
Proverbs is an alphabetical acrostic in praise of "the virtuous woman."
The poetry of the Hebrews, in its essential poetic nature, stands in
the front rank. It abounds in metaphors and images and in high poetic
feeling and fervor.--ED.)
Pollux[[980]Castor
And Pollux AND POLLUX]
Polygamy[[981]Marriage]
PomegranateThe
pomegranate tree, Punicu granatum, derives its name from the Latin
pomum granatum, "grained apple." The Romans gave it the name of Punica,
as the tree was introduced from Carthage. It belongs to the natural
order Myrtaceae (Myrtle), being, however, rather a tall bush than a
tree, The foliage is dark green, the flowers are crimson, the fruit,
which is about the size of art orange, is red when which in Palestine
is about the middle of October. It contains a quantity of juice.
Mention is made in (Song of Solomon 8:2) of spiced wine of the juice of
the pomegranate. The rind is used in the manufacture of morocco
leather, and together with the bark is sometimes used medicinally. Mr.
Royle (Kitto's Cyc., art "Rimmon") states that this tree is a native of
Asia and is to be traced from Syria through Persia, even to the
mountains of northern India. The pomegranate was early cultivated in
Egypt; hence the complaint of the Israelites in the wilderness of Zin,
(Numbers 20:5) this "is no place of figs, or of vines, or of
pomegranates." Carved figures of the pomegranate adorned the tops of
the pillars in Solomon's temple, (1 Kings 7:18,20) etc.; and worked
representations of this fruit, in blue, purple and scarlet, ornamented
the hem of the robe of the ephod. (Exodus 28:33,34)
Pommelsonly
in (2 Chronicles 4:12,13) In (1 Kings 7:41) "bowls." The word signifies
convex projections belonging to the capitals of pillars.
PondThe
ponds of Egypt, (Exodus 7:19; 13:5) were doubtless water left by the
inundation of the Nile. Ponds for fish mentioned in (Isaiah 19:10)
Pontius
Pilate[[982]Pilate]
Pontusa
large district in the north of Asia Minor, extending along the coast of
the Pontus Euxinus Sea (Pontus), from which circumstance the name was
derived. It corresponds nearly to the modern Trebizond. It is three
times mentioned in the New Testament-- (Acts 2:9; 18:2; 1 Peter 1:1)
All these passages agree in showing that there were many Jewish
residents in the district. As to the annals of Pontus, the one
brilliant passage of its history is the life of the great Mithridates.
Under Nero the whole region was made of Roman province, bearing the
name of Pontus. It was conquered by the Turks in A.D. 1461, and is
still under their dominion.
PoolPools,
like the tanks of India, are in many parts of Palestine and Syria the
only resource for water during the dry season, and the failure of them
involves drought and calamity. (Isaiah 42:15) Of the various pools
mentioned in Scripture, perhaps the most celebrated are the pools of
Solomon near Bethlehem called by the Arabs el-Burak, from which an
aqueduct was carried which still supplies Jerusalem with wafer.
(Ecclesiastes 2:6) Ecclus. 24:30, 31.
PoorThe
general kindly spirit of the law toward the poor is sufficiently shown
by such passages as (15:7) for the reason that (ver. 11) "the poor
shall never cease out of the land." Among the special enactments in
their favor the following must be mentioned:
+The right of gleaning. (Leviticus 19:9,10; 24:19,21)
+From the produce of the land in sabbatical years the poor and the
stranger were to have their portion. (Exodus 23:11; Leviticus 25:6)
+Re-entry upon land in the jubilee year, with the limitation as to town
homes. (Leviticus 25:25-30)
+Prohibition of usury and of retention of pledges. (Exodus 22:25-27;
Leviticus 25:3,5,37) etc.
+Permanent bondage forbidden, and manumission of Hebrew bondmen or
bondwomen enjoined in the sabbatical and jubilee years. (Leviticus
25:39-42,47-54; 15:12-15)
+Portions from the tithes to be shared by the poor after the Levites.
(14:28; 26:12,13)
+The poor to partake in entertainments at the feasts of Weeks and
Tabernacles. (16:11,14) see Nehe 8:10
+Daily payment of wages. (Leviticus 19:13) Principles similar to those
laid down by Moses are inculcated in the New Testament, as (Luke 3:11;
14:13; Acts 6:1; Galatians 2:10; James 2:15)
PoplarThis
is the rendering of the Hebrew word libneh, which occurs in (Genesis
30:37) and Hose 4:13 Several authorities are in favor of the rendering
of the Authorized Version and think that "white poplar" (Populus alba)
is the tree denoted: others understand the "storax tree" (Styrax
officinale, Linn.). Both poplars and storax or styrax trees are common
in Palestine, and either would suit the passages where the Hebrew term
occurs. Storax is mentioned in Ecclus. 24:15, together with other
aromatic substances. The Styrax officinale is a shrub from nine to
twelve feet high, with ovate leaves, which are white underneath; the
flowers are in racemes, and are white or cream-colored.
Porathaone
of the ten sons of Haman slain by the Jews in Shushan the palace.
(Esther 9:8)
Porch
+Ulam, or ulam . (1 Chronicles 28:11)
+Misderon ulam, (Judges 3:23) strictly a vestibule, was probably a sort
of veranda chamber in the works of Solomon, open in front and at the
sides, but capable of being enclosed with awnings or curtains. The
porch, (Matthew 26:71) may have been the passage from the street into
the first court of the house, in which, in eastern houses, is the
mastabah or stone bench, for the porter or persons waiting, and where
also the master of the house often receives visitors and transacts
business.
Porcius
Festus[[983]Festus,
Porcius]
PorterThis
word when used in the Authorized Version does not bear its modern
signification of a carrier of burdens, but denotes in every case a
gate-keeper, from the Latin portarius, the man who attended to the
porta or gate.
Possession[[984]Demoniacs]
Post
+Probably, as Gesenius argues, the door-case of a door, including the
lintel and side posts. The posts of the doors of the temple were of
olive wood. (1 Kings 6:33)
+A courier or carrier of messages, used among other places in (Job 9:25)
PotThe
term "pot" is applicable to so many sorts of vessels that it can
scarcely be restricted to any one in particular.
+Asuc (2 Kings 4:2) the earthen jar, deep and narrow, without handles,
probably like the Roman and Egyptian amphora, inserted in a stand of
wood or stone.
+Cheres, an earthen vessel for stewing or seething. (Leviticus 6:28;
Ezekiel 4:9)
+Dud, a vessel for culinary purposes, perhaps of smaller size. (1
Samuel 2:14) The "pots" set before the Rachabites, (Jeremiah 35:5) were
probably bulging jars or bowls. The water-pots of Cana appear to have
been large amphorae, such as are in use at the present day in Syria.
These were of stone or hard earthenware. The water-pot of the Samaritan
woman may have been a leathern bucket, such as Bedouin women use.
Potipharan
Egyptian name, also written Potipherah, signifies belonging to the sun
. Potiphar. with whom the history of Joseph is connected is described
as an officer of Pharaoh chief of the executioners, an Egyptian."
(Genesis 39:1) comp. Genesis37:36 (B.C. 1728.) He appears to have been
a wealthy man. (Genesis 39:4-6) The view we have of Potiphar's
household is exactly in accordance with the representations on the
monuments. When Joseph was accused, his master contented himself with
casting him into prison. (Genesis 39:19,20) After this we hear no more
of Potiphar. [[985]Joseph]
Potipherah,
Or Potipherahwas
priest or prince of On, and his daughter Asenath was given Joseph to
wife by Pharaoh. (Genesis 41:45,50; 46:20) (B.C. 1715.)
Potsherdalso
in Authorized Version "sherd," a broken piece of earthenware. (Proverbs
26:23)
Pottage[[986]Lentils]
Potters
Field, Thea
piece of ground which, according to the statement of St. Matthew,
(Matthew 27:7) was purchased by the Priests with the thirty pieces of
silver rejected by Judas, and converted into a burial-place for Jews
not belonging to the city. [[987]Aceldama]
PotteryThe
art of pottery is one of the most common and most ancient of all
manufactures. It is abundantly evident, both that the Hebrews used
earthenware vessels in the wilderness and that the potter's trade was
afterward carried on in Palestine. They had themselves been concerned
in the potter's trade in Egypt, (Psalms 81:6) and the wall-paintings
minutely illustrate the Egyptian process. The clay, when dug, was
trodden by men's feet so as to form a paste, (Isaiah 41:25) Wisd. 15:7;
then placed by the potter on the wheel beside which he sat, and shaped
by him with his hands. How early the wheel came into use in Palestine
is not known, but it seems likely that it was adopted from Egypt.
(Isaiah 45:9; Jeremiah 15:3) The vessel was then smoothed and coated
with a glaze, and finally burnt in a furnace. There was at Jerusalem a
royal establishment of potters, (1 Chronicles 4:23) from whose
employment, and from the fragments cast away in the process, the
Potter's Field perhaps received its name. (Isaiah 30:11)
Pound
+A weight. [See [988]Weights And Measures AND [989]Measures]
+A sum of money put in the Old Testament, (1 Kings 10:17; Ezra 2:69;
Nehemiah 7:71) for the Hebrew maneh, worth in silver about . In the
parable of the ten pounds, (Luke 19:12-27) the reference appears to be
to a Greek pound, a weight used as a money of account, of which sixty
went to the talent. It was worth to .
Praetorium(in
the Revised Version translated palace,) (Matthew 27:27; John 18:28,33;
19:3) the headquarters of the Roman military governor, wherever he
happened to be. In time of peace some one of the best buildings of the
city which, was the residence of the proconsul or praetor, was selected
for this purpose. Thus at Caesarea that of Herod the Great was occupied
by Felix, (Acts 23:35) and at Jerusalem the new palace erected by the
same prince was the residence of Pilate. After the Roman power was
established in Judea, a Roman guard was always maintained in the
Antonia. The praetorian camp at Rome, to which St. Paul refers,
(Philemon 1:13) was erected by the emperor Tiberius, acting under the
advice of Sejanus. It stood outside the walls, at some distance short
of the fourth milestone. St. Paul appears to have been permitted, for
the space of two years, to lodge, so to speak, "within the rules" of
the praetorium, (Acts 28:30) Although still under the custody of a
soldier.
Praltite,
TheHelez
"the Paltite" is named in (2 Samuel 23:26) among David's mighty men.
(B.C. 1015.)
PrayerThe
object of this article will be to touch briefly on--
+The doctrine of Scripture as to the nature and efficacy of prayer;
+Its directions as to time, place and manner of prayer;
+Its types and examples of prayer.
+Scripture does not give any theoretical explanation of the mystery
which attaches to prayer. The difficulty of understanding real efficacy
arises chiefly from two sources: from the belief that man lives under
general laws, which in all cases must be fulfilled unalterably; and the
opposing belief that he is master of his own destiny, and need pray for
no external blessing. Now, Scripture, while, by the doctrine of
spiritual influence it entirely disposes of the latter difficulty, does
not so entirely solve that part of the mystery which depends on the
nature of God. It places it clearly before us, and emphasizes most
strongly those doctrines on which the difficulty turns. Yet while this
is so, on the other hand the instinct of prayer is solemnly sanctioned
and enforced on every page. Not only is its subjective effect asserted,
but its real objective efficacy, as a means appointed by God for
obtaining blessing, is both implied and expressed in the plainest
terms. Thus, as usual in the case of such mysteries, the two apparently
opposite truths are emphasized, because they are needful: to man's
conception of his relation to God; their reconcilement is not, perhaps
cannot be, fully revealed. For, in fact, it is involved in that
inscrutable mystery which attends on the conception of any free action
of man as necessary for the working out of the general laws of God's
unchangeable will. At the same time it is clearly implied that such a
reconcilement exists, and that all the apparently isolated and
independent exertions of man's spirit in prayer are in some way
perfectly subordinated to the one supreme will of God, so as to form a
part of his scheme of providence. It is also implied that the key to
the mystery lies in the fact of man's spiritual unity with God in
Christ, and of the consequent gift of the Holy Spirit. So also is it
said of the spiritual influence of the Holy Ghost on each individual
mind that while "we know not what to pray for, "the indwelling" Spirit
makes intercession for the saints, according to the will of God."
(Romans 8:26,27) Here, as probably in still other cases, the action of
the Holy Spirit on the soul is to free agents what the laws of nature
are to things inanimate, and is the power which harmonizes free
individual action with the universal will of God.
+There are no directions as to prayer given in the Mosaic law: the duty
is rather taken for granted, as an adjunct to sacrifice, than enforced
or elaborated. It is hardly conceivable that, even from the beginning
public prayer did not follow every public sacrifice. Such a practice is
alluded to in (Luke 1:10) as common; and in one instance, at the
offering of the first-fruits, it was ordained in a striking form.
(26:12-15) In later times it certainly grew into a regular service both
in the temple and in the synagogue. But, besides this public prayer, it
was the custom of all at Jerusalem to go up to the temple, at regular
hours if possible, for private prayer, see (Luke 18:10; Acts 3:1) and
those who were absent were wont to "open their windows toward
Jerusalem," and pray "toward" the place of God's presence. (1 Kings
8:46-49; Psalms 5:7; 28:2; 138:2; Daniel 6:10) The regular hours of
prayer seem to have been three (see) (Psalms 55:17; Daniel 6:10) "the
evening," that is the ninth hour (Acts 3:1; 10:3) the hour of the
evening sacrifice, (Daniel 9:21) the "morning," that is, the third hour
(Acts 2:15) that of the morning sacrifice; and the sixth hour, or
"noonday." Grace before meat would seem to have been a common practice.
See (Matthew 15:36; Acts 27:35) The posture of prayer among the Jews
seems to have been most often standing, (1 Samuel 1:26; Matthew 6:5;
Mark 11:25; Luke 18:11) unless the prayer were offered with especial
solemnity and humiliation, which was naturally expressed by kneeling,
(1 Kings 8:54) comp. 2Chr 6:13; Ezra 9:5; Psal 95:8; Dani 6:10 Or
prostration. (Joshua 7:6; 1 Kings 18:42; Nehemiah 8:6)
+The only form of prayer given for perpetual use in the Old Testament
is the one in (26:5-15) connected with the offering of tithes and
first-fruits, and containing in simple form the important elements of
prayer, acknowledgment of God's mercy, self-dedication and prayer for
future blessing. To this may perhaps be added the threefold blessing of
(Numbers 6:24-26) couched as it is in a precatory form, and the short
prayer of Moses, (Numbers 10:35,36) at the moving and resting of the
cloud the former of which was the germ of the 68th Psalm. But of the
prayers recorded in the Old Testament the two most remarkable are those
of Solomon at the dedication of the temple, (1 Kings 8:23-58) and of
Joshua the high priest, and his colleagues, after the captivity.
(Nehemiah 9:5-38) It appears from the question of the disciples in
(Luke 11:1) and from Jewish tradition, that the chief teachers of the
day gave special forms of prayer to their disciples as the badge of
their discipleship and the best fruits of their learning. All Christian
prayer is, of course, based on the Lord's Prayer; but its spirit is
also guided by that of his prayer in Gethsemane and of the prayer
recorded by St. John, (John 17:1) ... the beginning of Christ's great
work of intercession. The influence of these prayers is more distinctly
traced in the prayers contained in the epistles, see (Romans 16:25-27;
Ephesians 3:14-21; Philemon 1:3-11; Colossians 1:9-15; Hebrews
13:20,21; 1 Peter 5:10,11) etc., than in those recorded in the Acts.
The public prayer probably in the first instance took much of its form
and style from the prayers of the synagogues. In the record on prayer
accepted and granted by God, we observe, as always, a special
adaptation to the period of his dispensation to which they belong. In
the patriarchal period, they have the simple and childlike tone of
domestic application for the ordinary and apparently trivial incidents
of domestic life. In the Mosaic period they assume a more solemn tone
and a national bearing, chiefly that of direct intercession for the
chosen people. More rarely are they for individuals. A special class
are those which precede and refer to the exercise of miraculous power.
In the New Testament they have a more directly spiritual hearing. It
would seem the intention of Holy Scripture to encourage all prayer more
especially intercession, in all relations and for all righteous objects.
Presents[[990]Gift]
President(sarac
or sareca, only used (Daniel 6:1) ... the Chaldee equivalent for Hebrew
shter, probably from sara, Zend. a "head"), a high officer in the
Persian court, a chief, a president, used of the three highest
ministers.
PriestThe
English word is derived from the Greek presbyter, signifying an "elder"
(Heb. cohen). Origin.--The idea of a priesthood connects itself in all
its forms, pure or corrupted, with the consciousness, more or less
distinct of sin. Men feel that they have broken a law. The power above
them is holier than they are, and they dare not approach it. They crave
for the intervention of some one of whom they can think as likely to be
more acceptable than themselves. He must offer up their prayers,
thanksgivings, sacrifices. He becomes their representative in "things
pertaining unto God." He may become also (though this does not always
follow) the representative of God to man. The functions of the priest
and prophet may exist in the same person. No trace of a hereditary or
caste priesthood meets us in the worship of the patriarchal age. Once
and once only does the word cohen meet us as belonging to a ritual
earlier than the time of Abraham. Melchizedek is "the priest of the
most high God." (Genesis 14:18) In the worship of the patriarchs
themselves, the chief of the family, as such, acted as the priest. The
office descended with the birthright, and might apparently he
transferred with it. When established.--The priesthood was first
established in the family of Aaron, and all the sons of Aaron were
priests. They stood between the high priest on the one hand and the
Levites on the other. [HIGH PRIEST; LEVITES] The ceremony of their
consecration is described in HIGH PRIEST - 1986 (Exodus 29:1; Leviticus
8:1) ... Dress.--The dress which the priests wore during their
ministrations consisted of linen drawers, with a close-fitting cassock,
also of linen, white, but with a diamond or chess-board pattern on it.
This came nearly to the feet, and was to be worn in its garment shape.
Comp. (John 19:23) The white cassock was gathered round the body with a
girdle of needle work, in which, as in the more gorgeous belt of the
high priest, blue, purple and scarlet were intermingled with white, and
worked in the form of flowers. (Exodus 28:39,40; 39:2; Ezekiel
44:17-19) Upon their heads the were to wear caps or bonnets in the form
of a cup-shaped flower, also of fine linen. In all their acts of
ministration they were to be bare footed. Duties .--The chief duties of
the priests were to watch over the fire on the altar of burnt offering,
and to keep it burning evermore both by day and night, (Leviticus 6:12;
2 Chronicles 13:11) to feed the golden lamp outside the vail with oil
(Exodus 27:20,21; Leviticus 24:2) to offer the morning and evening
sacrifices, each accompanied with a meet offering and a drink offering,
at the door of the tabernacle. (Exodus 29:38-44) They were also to
teach the children of Israel the statutes of the Lord. (Leviticus
10:11; 33:10; 2 Chronicles 15:3; Ezekiel 44:23,24) During the journeys
in the wilderness it belonged to them to cover the ark and all the
vessels of the sanctuary with a purple or scarlet cloth before the
Levites might approach them. (Numbers 4:5-15) As the people started on
each days march they were to blow "an alarm" with long silver trumpets.
(Numbers 10:1-8) Other instruments of music might be used by the more
highly-trained Levites and the schools of the prophets, but the
trumpets belonged only to the priests, The presence of the priests on
the held of battle, (1 Chronicles 12:23,27; 2 Chronicles 20:21,22) led,
in the later periods of Jewish history, to the special appointment at
such times of a war priest. Other functions were hinted at in
Deuteronomy which might have given them greater influence as the
educators and civilizers of the people. They were to act (whether
individually or collectively does not distinctly appear) as a court of
appeal in the more difficult controversies in criminal or civil cases.
(17:8-13) It must remain doubtful however how far this order kept its
ground during the storms and changes that followed, Functions such as
these were clearly incompatible with the common activities of men.
Provision for support .--This consisted--
+Of one tenth of the tithes which the people paid to the Levites, i.e.
one per cent on the whole produce of the country. (Numbers 18:26-28)
+Of a special tithe every third year. (14:28; 26:12)
+Of the redemption money, paid at the fixed rate of five shekels a
head, for the first-born of man or beast. (Numbers 18:14-19)
+Of the redemption money paid in like manner for men or things
specially dedicated to the Lord. (Leviticus 27:5)
+Of spoil, captives, cattle and the like, taken in war. (Numbers
31:25-47)
+Of the shew-bread, the flesh of the burnt offerings, peace offerings,
trespass offerings, (Leviticus 6:26,29; 7:6-10; Numbers 18:8-14) and in
particular the heave-shoulder and the wave-breast. (Leviticus 10:12-15)
+Of an undefined amount of the firstfruits of corn, wine and oil.
(Exodus 23:19; Leviticus 2:14; 26:1-10)
+On their settlement in Canaan the priestly families had thirteen
cities assigned them, with "suburbs" or pasture-grounds for their
flocks. (Joshua 21:13-19) These provisions were obviously intended to
secure the religion of Israel against the dangers of a caste of pauper
priests, needy and dependent, and unable to bear their witness to the
true faith. They were, on the other hand as far as possible removed
from the condition of a wealthy order. Coarses .--The priesthood was
divided into four and twenty "courses" or orders, (1 Chronicles
24:1-19; 2 Chronicles 23:8; Luke 1:5) each of which was to serve in
rotation for one week, while the further assignment of special services
during the week was determined by lot. (Luke 1:9) Each course appears
to have commenced its work on the Sabbath, the outgoing priests taking
the morning sacrifice, and leaving that of the evening to their
successors. (2 Chronicles 23:8) Numbers--If we may accept the numbers
given by Jewish writers as at all trustworthy, the proportion of the
priesthood population of Palestine during the last century of their
existence as an order, must have been far greater than that of the
clergy has ever been in any Christian nation. Over and above those that
were scattered in the country and took their turn there were not fewer
than 24,000 stationed permanently at Jerusalem,and 12,000 at Jericho.
It was almost inevitable that the great mass of the order, under such
circumstances, should sink in character and reputation. The reigns of
the two kings David and Solomon were the culminating period of the
glory of the Jewish priesthood. It will be interesting to bring
together the few facts that indicate the position of the priests in the
New Testament period of their history. The number scattered throughout
Palestine was, as has been stated, very large. Of these the greater
number were poor and ignorant. The priestly order, like the nation, was
divided between contending sects. In the scenes of the last tragedy of
Jewish history the order passes away without honor, "dying as a fool
dieth." The high priesthood is given to the lowest and vilest of the
adherents of the frenzied Zealots. Other priests appear as deserting to
the enemy. The destruction of Jerusalem deprived the order at one blow
of all but an honorary distinction.
Prince,
PrincessThe
only special uses of the word "prince" are--
+"Princes of provinces" (1 Kings 20:14) who were probably local
governors or magistrates.
+The "princes" mentioned in (Daniel 6:1) (see Esth 1:1) wore the
predecessors of the satraps of Darius Hystaspes. The word princess is
seldom used in the Bible, but the persons to which it alludes--
"daughters of kings" are frequently mentioned.
PrincipalityIn
several passages of the New Testament the term "principalities and
powers" appears to denote different orders of angels,good or bad. See
(Ephesians 6:12)
Prisca(ancient),
(2 Timothy 4:19) or Priscil'la (a diminutive from Prisca), the wife of
Aquila. [[991]Aquila] To what has been said elsewhere under the head of
[992]Aquila the following may be added: We find that the name of the
wife is placed before that of the husband in (Romans 16:3; 2 Timothy
4:19) and (according to some of the best MSS.) in (Acts 18:26) Hence we
should be disposed to conclude that Priscilla was the more energetic
character of the two. In fact we may say that Priscilla is the example
of what the married woman may do for the general service of the Church,
in conJunction with home duties, as Phoebe is the type of the unmarried
servant of the Church, or deaconess.
Prison[For
imprisonment as a punishment, see [993]Punishments] It is plain that in
Egypt special places were used as prisons, and that they were under the
custody of a military officer. (Genesis 40:3; 42:17) During the
wandering in the desert we read on two occasions of confinement "in
ward"-- (Leviticus 24:12; Numbers 15:34) but as imprisonment was not
directed by the law, so we hear of none till the time of the kings,
when the prison appears as an appendage to the palace, or a special
part of it. (1 Kings 22:27) Private houses were sometimes used as
places of confinement. By the Romans the tower of Antoni, was used as a
prison at Jerusalem, (Acts 23:10) and at Caesarea the praetorium of
Herod. The royal prisons In those days were doubtless managed after the
Roman fashion, and chains, fetters and stocks were used as means of
confinement. See (Acts 16:24) One of the readiest places for
confinement was a dry or partially-dry wall or pit. (Jeremiah 35:6-11)
Prochorus(leader
of the chorus), one of the seven deacons, being the third of the list,
and named next after Stephen and Philip. (Acts 6:5)
Proconsul(for,
or in place of, the consul). At the division of the provinces by
Augustus, in the year B.C. 27, into senatorial and imperial, the
emperor assigned to the senate such portions of territory as were
peaceable and could be held without force of arms. Those which he
retained were called imperial, and were governed by legates and
procurators . [[994]Procurator] Over the senatorial provinces the
senate appointed by lot yearly an officer, who was called "proconsul"
and who exercised purely proconsul, civil functions. The provinces were
in consequence called "proconsular."
ProcuratorThe
Greek agemon, rendered "governor" in the Authorized Version, is applied
in the New Testament to the officer who presided over the imperial
province of Judea. It is used of Pontius Pilate, (Matthew 27:1) ... of
Felix, Acts 23, 24, and of Festus. (Acts 26:30) It is explained under
[995]Proconsul that after the battle of Actium, B.C. 27, the provinces
of the Roman empire were divided by Augustus into two portions, giving
some to the senate and reserving to himself the rest. The imperial
provinces were administered by legali . No quaestor came into the
emperor's provinces, but the property and revenues of the imperial
treasury were administered by procuratores. Sometimes a province was
governed by a procurator with the functions of a legatus. This was
especially the case with the smaller provinces an the outlying
districts of a larger province; and such is the relation in which Judea
stood to Syria. The headquarters of the procurator were at Caesarea,
(Acts 23:23) where he had a judgment seat, (Acts 25:6) in the audience
chamber, (Acts 25:23) and was assisted by a council (Acts 25:12) whom
he consulted in cases of difficulty. He was attended by a cohort as
body-guard, (Matthew 27:27) and apparently went up to Jerusalem at the
time of the high festivals, and there resided at the palace of Herod,
in which was the praetorium or "judgment hall." (Matthew 27:27; Mark
15:16) comp. Acts 23:35
ProphetThe
ordinary Hebrew word for prophet is nabi, derived from a verb
signifying "to bubble forth" like a fountain; hence the word means one
who announces or pours forth the declarations of God. The English word
comes from the Greek prophetes (profetes), which signifies in classical
Greek one who speaks for another, especially one who speaks for a god,
and so interprets his will to man; hence its essential meaning is "an
interpreter." The use of the word in its modern sense as "one who
predicts" is post-classical. The larger sense of interpretation has
not, however, been lost. In fact the English word ways been used in a
closer sense. The different meanings or shades of meanings in which the
abstract noun is employed in Scripture have been drawn out by Locke as
follows: "Prophecy comprehends three things: prediction; singing by the
dictate of the Spirit; and understanding and explaining the mysterious,
hidden sense of Scripture by an immediate illumination and motion of
the Spirit." Order and office .--The sacerdotal order was originally
the instrument by which the members of the Jewish theocracy were taught
and governed in things spiritual. Teaching by act and teaching by word
were alike their task. But during the time of the judges, the
priesthood sank into a state of degeneracy, and the people were no
longer affected by the acted lessons of the ceremonial service. They
required less enigmatic warnings and exhortations, under these
circumstances a new moral power was evoked the Prophetic Order. Samuel
himself Levite of the family of Kohath, (1 Chronicles 6:28) and almost
certainly a priest, was the instrument used at once for effecting a
reform in the sacerdotal order (1 Chronicles 9:22) and for giving to
the prophets a position of importance which they had never before held.
Nevertheless it is not to be supposed that Samuel created the prophetic
order as a new thing before unknown. The germs both of the prophetic
and of the regal order are found in the law as given to the Israelites
by Moses, (13:1; 18:20; 17:18) but they were not yet developed, because
there was not yet the demand for them. Samuel took measures to make his
work of restoration permanent as well as effective for the moment. For
this purpose he instituted companies or colleges of prophets. One we
find in his lifetime at Ramah, (1 Samuel 19:19,20) others afterward at
Bethel, (2 Kings 2:3) Jericho, (2 Kings 2:2,5) Gilgal; (2 Kings 4:38)
and elsewhere. (2 Kings 6:1) Their constitution and object similar to
those of theological colleges. Into them were gathered promising
students, and here they were trained for the office which they were
afterward destined to fulfill. So successful were these institutions
that from the time of Samuel to the closing of the canon of the Old
Testament there seems never to have been wanting due supply of men to
keep up the line of official prophets. Their chief subject of study
was, no doubt, the law and its interpretation; oral, as distinct from
symbolical, teaching being thenceforward tacitly transferred from the
priestly to the prophetic order. Subsidiary subjects of instruction
were music and sacred poetry, both of which had been connected with
prophecy from the time of Moses (Exodus 15:20) and the judges. (Judges
4:4; 5:1) But to belong to the prophetic order and to possess the
prophetic gift are not convertible terms. Generally, the inspired
prophet came from the college of prophets, and belonged to prophetic
order; but this was not always the case. Thus Amos though called to the
prophetic office did not belong to the prophetic order. (Amos 7:14) The
sixteen prophets whose books are in the canon have that place of honor
because they were endowed with the prophetic gift us well as ordinarily
(so far as we know) belonging to the prophetic order. Characteristics
.--What then are the characteristics of the sixteen prophets thus
called and commissioned and intrusted with the messages of God to his
people?
+They were the national poets of Judea.
+They were annalists and historians. A great portion of Isaiah, of
Jeremiah, of Daniel of Jonah, of Haggai, is direct or in direct history.
+They were preachers of patriotism,--their patriotism being founded on
the religious motive.
+They were preachers of morals and of spiritual religion. The system of
morals put forward by the prophets, if not higher or sterner or purer
than that of the law, is more plainly declared, and with greater,
because now more needed, vehemence of diction.
+They were extraordinary but yet authorized exponents of the law.
+They held a pastoral or quasi-pastoral office.
+They were a political power in the state.
+But the prophets were something more than national poets and
annalists, preachers of patriotism moral teachers, exponents of the
law, pastors and politicians. Their most essential characteristic is
that they were instruments of revealing God's will to man, as in other
ways, so specially by predicting future events, and in particular
foretelling the incarnation of the Lord Jesus Christ and the redemption
effected by him. We have a series of prophecies which are so applicable
to the person and earthly life of Jesus Christ as to be thereby shown
to have been designed to apply to him. And if they were designed to
apply to him, prophetical prediction is proved. Objections have, been
urged. We notice only one, vis., vagueness. It has been said that the
prophecies are too darkly and vaguely worded to be proved predictive by
the events which they are alleged to foretell. But to this might be
answered,
+That God never forces men to believe, but that there is such a union
of definiteness and vagueness in the prophecies as to enable those who
are willing to discover the truth, while the willfully blind are not
forcibly constrained to see it.
+That, had the prophecies been couched in the form of direct
declarations, their fulfillment would have thereby been rendered
impossible or at least capable of frustration.
+That the effect of prophecy would have been far less beneficial to
believers, as being less adapted to keep them in a state of constant
expectation.
+That the Messiah of revelation could not be so clearly portrayed in
his varied character as God and man, as prophet, priest and king, if he
had been the mere teacher."
+That the state of the prophets, at the time of receiving the divine
revelation, was such as necessarily to make their predictions
fragmentary figurative, and abstracted from the relations of time.
+That some portions of the prophecies were intended to be of double
application, and some portions to be understood only on their
fulfillment, Comp. (John 14:29; Ezekiel 36:33)
Proselyte(a
stranger, a new comer), the name given by the Jews to foreigners who
adopted the Jewish religion. The dispersion of the Jews in foreign
countries, which has been spoken of elsewhere [[996]Dispersion, The
Jews Of The, THE], enabled them to make many converts to their faith.
The converts who were thus attracted joined, with varying strictness,
in the worship of the Jews. In Palestine itself, even Roman centurions
learned to love the conquered nation built synagogues for them, (Luke
7:5) fasted and prayed, and gave alms after the pattern of the
strictest Jews, (Acts 10:2,30) and became preachers of the new faith to
the soldiers under them. (Acts 10:7) Such men, drawn by what was best
in Judaism were naturally among the readiest receivers of the new truth
which rose out of it, and became, in many cases, the nucleus of a
Gentile Church. Proselytism had, however, its darker side. The Jews of
Palestine were eager to spread their faith by the same weapons as those
with which they had defended it. The Idumaeans had the alternative
offered them by John Hyrcanus of death, exile or circumcision. The
Idumeans were converted in the same way by Aristobulus. Where force was
not in their power, they obtained their ends by the most unscrupulous
fraud. Those who were most active in proselytizing were precisely those
from whose teaching all that was most true and living had departed. The
vices of the Jew were engrafted on the vices of the heathen. A
repulsive casuistry released the convert from obligations which he had
before recognized, while in other things he was bound hand and fool to
an unhealthy superstition. It was no wonder that he became "twofold
more the child of hell," (Matthew 23:15) than the Pharisees themselves.
We find in the Talmud a distinction between proselytes of the gate and
proselytes of righteousness,
+The term proselytes of the gate was derived from the frequently
occurring description in the law the stranger that is within (Exodus
20:10) etc. Converts of thy gates this class were not bound by
circumcision and the other special laws of the Mosaic code. It is
doubtful however whether the distinction made in the Talmud ever really
existed.
+The proselytes of righteousness, known also as proselytes of the
covenant, were perfect Israelites. We learn from the Talmud that, in
addition to circumcision, baptism was also required to complete their
admission to the faith. The proselyte was placed in a tank or pool up
to his neck in water. His teachers, who now acted as his sponsors,
repeated the great commandments of the law. The baptism was followed as
long as the temple stood, by the offering or corban.
Proverbs,
Book OfThe
title of this book in Hebrew is taken from its first word, mashal,
which originally meant "a comparison." It is sometimes translated
parable, sometimes proverb as here. The superscriptions which are
affixed to several portions of the book, in chs. (Proverbs 1:1; 10:1;
25:1) attribute the authorship of those portions to Solomon the son of
David, king of Israel. With the exception of the last two chapters,
which are distinctly assigned to other author it is probable that the
statement of the superscriptions is in the main correct, and that the
majority of the proverbs contained in the book were uttered or
collected by Solomon. Speaking roughly, the book consists of three main
divisions, with two appendices:--
+Chs. 1-9 form a connected didactic Wisdom is praised and the youth
exhorted to devote himself to her. This portion is preceded by an
introduction and title describing the character and general aim of the
book.
+Chs. 10-24 with the title "The Proverbs of Solomon," consist of three
parts: (Proverbs 10:1-22; Proverbs 10:16) a collection of single
proverbs and detached sentences out of the region of moral teaching and
worldly prudence; (Proverbs 22:17-24; Proverbs 22:21) a more connected
didactic poem, with an introduction, (Proverbs 22:17-22) which contains
precepts of righteousness and prudence; (Proverbs 24:23-34) with the
inscription "These also belong to the wise," a collection of
unconnected maxims, which serve as an appendix to the preceding. Then
follows the third division chs. 25-29, which, according to the
superscription, professes to be collection of Solomon's proverbs,
consisting of single sentences, which the men of the court of Hezekiah
copied out. The first appendix, ch. 30, "The words of Agur the son of
Jakeh," is a collection of partly proverbial and partly enigmatical
sayings; the second, ch. 31, is divided into two parts, "The words of
King Lemuel," vs. 1-6, and an alphabetical acrostic in praise of a
virtuous woman, which occupies the rest of the chapter. Who was Agur
and who was Jakeh, are questions which have been often asked and never
satisfactorily answered. All that can be said of the first is that he
was an unknown Hebrew sage, the son of an equally unknown Jakeh, and
that he lived after the time of Hezekiah. Lemuel, like Agur, is
unknown. It is even uncertain whether he is to be regarded as a real
personage, or whether the name is merely symbolical. The Proverbs are
frequently quoted or alluded to in the New Testament and the canonicity
of the book thereby confirmed. The following is a list of the principal
passages:-- (Proverbs 1:16) compare Roma 3:10,15 (Proverbs 3:7) compare
Roma 12:16 (Proverbs 3:11,12) compare Hebr 12:5,6, see also Reve 3:19
(Proverbs 3:34) compare Jame 4:6 (Proverbs 10:12) compare 1Pet 4:8
(Proverbs 11:31) compare 1Pet 4:18 (Proverbs 17:13) compare Roma 12:17;
1The 5:15; 1Pet 3:9 (Proverbs 17:27) compare Jame 1:19 (Proverbs 20:9)
compare 1Joh 1:8 (Proverbs 20:20) compare Matt 15:4; Mark 7:10
(Proverbs 22:8) (LXX.), compare 2Cor 9:7 (Proverbs 25:21,22) compare,
Roma 12:20 (Proverbs 26:11) compare, 2Pet 2:22 (Proverbs 27:1) compare,
Jame 4:13,14
Province
+In the Old Testament this word appears in connection with the wars
between Ahab and Ben-hadad. (1 Kings 20:14,15,19) The victory of the
former is gained chiefly "by the young" probably men of the princes of
the provinces the chiefs: of tribes in the Gilead country.
+More commonly the word is used of the divisions of the Chaldean
kingdom. (Daniel 2:49; 3:1,30) and the Persian kingdom. (Ezra 2:1;
Nehemiah 7:6; Esther 1:1,22; 2:3) etc. In the New Testament we are
brought into contact with the administration of the provinces of the
Roman empire. The classification of provinces supposed to need military
control and therefore placed under the immediate government of the
Caesar, and those still belonging theoretically to the republic and
administered by the senate, and of the latter again into proconsular
and praetorian, is recognized, more or less distinctly, in the Gospels
and the Acts. [[997]Proconsul; [998]Procurator] The strategoi of (Acts
16:22) ("magistrates," Authorized Version), on the other hand were the
duumviri or praetors of a Roman colony. The right of any Roman citizen
to appeal from a provincial governor to the emperor meets us as
asserted by St. Paul. (Acts 25:11) In the council of (Acts 25:12) we
recognize the assessors who were appointed to take part in the judicial
functions of the governor.
Psalms,
Book OfThe
present Hebrew name of the book is Tehill'im, "Praises;" but in the
actual superscriptions of the psalms the word Tehillah is applied only
to one, (Psalms 145:1) ... which is indeed emphatically a praise-hymn.
The LXX. entitled them psalmoi or "psalms," i.e., lyrical pieces to be
sung to a musical instrument. The Christian Church obviously received
the Psalter from the Jews not only as a constituent portion of the
sacred volume of Holy Scripture, but also as the liturgical hymn-book
which the Jewish Church had regularly used in the temple. Division of
the Psalms .--The book contains 150 psalms, and may be divided into
five great divisions or books, which must have been originally formed
at different periods. Book I. is, by the superscriptions, entirely
Davidic nor do we find in it a trace of any but David's authorship. We
may well believe that the compilation of the book was also David's
work. Book II. appears by the date of its latest psalm, (Psalms 46:1)
... to have been compiled in the reign of King Hezekiah. It would
naturally comprise, 1st, several or most of the Levitical psalms
anterior to that date; and 2d, the remainder of the psalms of David
previously uncompiled. To these latter the collector after properly
appending the single psalm of Solomon has affixed the notice that "the
prayers of David the son of Jesse are ended." (Psalms 72:20) Book III.,
the interest of which centers in the times of Hezekiah stretches out,
by its last two psalms, to the reign of Manasseh: it was probably
compiled in the reign of Josiah. It contains seventeen psalms, from
Psal 73-89 eleven by Asaph, four by the sons of Horah, one (86) by
David, and one by Ethan. Book IV. contains the remainder of the psalms
up to the date of the captivity, There are seventeen, from Psal
90-106--one by Moses, two by David, and the rest anonymous. Book V.,
the psalms of the return, contains forty-four, from Psal
107-180--fifteen by David, one by Solomon and the rest anonymous. There
is nothing to distinguish these two books from each other in respect of
outward decoration or arrangement and they may have been compiled
together in the days of Nehemiah. Connection of the Psalms with
Israelitish history .--The psalm of Moses Psal 90, which is in point of
actual date the earliest, faithfully reflects the long, weary
wanderings, the multiplied provocations and the consequent punishments
of the wilderness. It is, however, with David that Israelitish psalmody
may be said virtually to commence. Previous mastery over his harp had
probably already prepared the way for his future strains, when the
anointing oil of Samuel descended upon him, and he began to drink in
special measure, from that day forward, of the Spirit of the Lord. It
was then that, victorious at home over the mysterious melancholy of
Saul and in the held over the vaunting champion of the Philistine
hosts, he sang how from even babes and sucklings God had ordained
strength because of his enemies. Psal 8. His next psalms are of a
different character; his persecutions at the hands of Saul had
commenced. When David's reign has begun, it is still with the most
exciting incidents of his history, private or public, that his psalms
are mainly associated. There are none to which the period of his reign
at Hebron can lay exclusive claim. But after the conquest of Jerusalem
his psalmody opened afresh with the solemn removal of the ark to Mount
Zion; and in Psal 24-29 which belong together, we have the earliest
definite instance of David's systematic composition or arrangement of
psalms for public use. Even of those psalms which cannot be referred to
any definite occasion, several reflect the general historical
circumstances of the times. Thus Psal 9 is a thanksgiving for the
deliverance of the land of Israel from its former heathen oppressors.
Psal 10 is a prayer for the deliverance of the Church from the
highhanded oppression exercised from within. The succeeding psalms
dwell on the same theme, the virtual internal heathenism by which the
Church of God was weighed clown. So that there remain very few e.g.
Psal 15-17,19,32 (with its choral appendage, 23), 37 of which some
historical account may not be given. A season of repose near the close
of his reign induced David to compose his grand personal thanksgiving
for the deliverances of his whole life, Psal 18 the date of which is
approximately determined by the place at which it ia inserted in the
history. (2 Samuel 22:1) ... It was probably at this period that he
finally arranged for the sanctuary service that collection of his
psalms which now constitutes the first book of the Psalter. The course
of David's reign was not, however, as yet complete. The solemn assembly
convened by him for the dedication of the materials of the future
temple, 1Chr 28, 29, would naturally call forth a renewal of his best
efforts to glorify the God of Israel in psalms; and to this occasion we
doubtless owe the great festal hymns, Psal 65-68, containing a large
review of the past history, present position and prospective glories of
God's chosen people. The supplications of Psal 69, suit best with the
renewed distress occasioned by the sedition of Adonijah. Psal 71 to
which Psal 70 a fragment of a former psalm, is introductory, forms
David's parting strain. Yet that the psalmody of Israel may not seem
finally to terminate with hint, the glories of the future are forthwith
anticipated by his son in Psal 72. The great prophetical ode, Psal 45,
connects itself most readily with the splendors of Jehoshaphat's reign.
Psal 42-44, 74 are best assigned to the reign of Ahaz. The reign of
Hezekiah is naturally rich in psalmody, Psal 46,73,75,76 connect
themselves with the resistance to the supremacy of the Assyrians and
the divine destruction of their host. We are now brought to a series of
psalms of peculiar interest, springing out of the political and
religious history of the,separated ten tribes. In date of actual
composition they commence before the times of Hezekiah. The earliest is
probably Psal 80 A supplication for the Israelitish people at the time
of the Syrian oppression. All these psalms--80-83-- are referred by
their superscriptions to the Levite singers, and thus beer witness to
the efforts of the Levites to reconcile the two branches of the chosen
nation. The captivity of Manasseh himself proved to be but temporary;
but the sentence which his sins had provoked upon Judah and Jerusalem
still remained to be executed, and precluded the hope that God's
salvation could be revealed till after such an outpouring of his
judgments as the nation had never yet known. Labor and sorrow must be
the lot of the present generation; through these mercy might
occasionally gleam, but the glory which was eventually to be manifested
must be for posterity alone. The psalms of Book IV.--bear generally the
impress of this feeling. We pass to Book V. Psal 107 is the opening
psalm of the return, sung probably at the first feast of tabernacles.
Ezra 3 A directly historical character belongs to Psal 120-134, styled
in our Authorized Version "Songs of Degrees." Internal evidence refers
these to the period when the Jews under Nehemiah were, in the very face
of the enemy, repairing the walls of Jerusalem and the title may well
signify "songs of goings up upon the walls," the psalms being from
their brevity, well adapted to be sung by the workmen and guards while
engaged in their respective duties. Psal 139 is a psalm of the new
birth of Israel from the womb of the Babylonish captivity, to a life of
righteousness; Psal 140-143 may be a picture of the trials to which the
unrestored exiles were still exposed in the realms of the Gentiles.
Henceforward, as we approach the close of the Psalter, its strains rise
in cheerfulness; and it fittingly terminates with Psal 147-150 which
were probably sung on the occasion of the thanksgiving procession of
Nehe 12, after the rebuilding of the walls of Jerusalem had been
completed. Moral characteristics of the Psalms .--Foremost among these
meets us, undoubtedly, the universal recourse to communion with God.
Connected with this is the faith by which the psalmist everywhere lives
in God rather than in himself. It is of the essence of such faith that
his view of the perfections of God should be true and vivid. The
Psalter describes God as he is: it glows with testimonies to his power
and providence, his love and faithfulness, his holiness and
righteousness. The Psalms not only set forth the perfections of God;
they proclaim also the duty of worshipping him by the acknowledgment
and adoration of his perfections. They encourage all outward rites and
means of worship. Among these they recognize the ordinance of sacrifice
as in expression of the worshipper's consecration of himself to God's
service. But not the less do they repudiate the outward rite when
separated from that which it was designed to express. Similar depth is
observable in the view taken by the psalmists of human sin. In regard
to the law, the psalmist, while warmly acknowledging its excellence,
feels yet that it cannot so effectually guide his own unassisted
exertions as to preserve him from error Psal 19. The Psalms bear
repeated testimony to the duty of instructing other in the ways of
holiness. Psal 32,34, 51 This brings us to notice, lastly, the faith of
the psalmists in righteous recompense to all men according to their
deeds. Psal 37, etc. Prophetical character of the Psalms .--The moral
struggle between godliness and ungodliness, so vividly depicted in the
Psalms, culminates in Holy Scripture, in the life of the Incarnate Son
of God upon earth. It only remains to show that the Psalms themselves
definitely anticipated this culmination. Now there are in the Psalter
at least three psalms of which the interest evidently centers in a
person distinct from the speaker, and which, since they cannot without
violence to the language be interpreted of any but the Messiah, may be
termed directly and exclusively Messianic. We refer to Psal 2,45,110,
to which may perhaps be added, Psal 72. It would be strange if these
few psalms stood, in their prophetical significance absolutely alone
among the rest. And hence the impossibility of viewing the psalms
generally, notwithstanding the drapery in which they are outwardly
clothed, as simply the past devotions of the historical David or the
historical Israel. The national hymns of Israel are indeed also
prospective; but in general they anticipate rather the struggles and
the triumphs of the Christian Church than those of Christ himself.
PsalteryThis
was a stringed instrument of music to accompany the voice. The Hebrew
nabel or nebel is so rendered in the Authorized Version in all passages
where if occurs, except in (Isaiah 5:12; 14:11; 22:24), marg.; (Amos
5:23; 6:6) where it is translated viol . The ancient viol was a
six-stringed guitar. In the Prayer Book version of the Psalms the
Hebrew word is rendered "lute." This instrument resembled the guitar,
but was superior in tone, being larger, and having a convex back,
somewhat like the vertical section of a gourd, or more nearly
resembling that of a pear. These three instruments, the psaltery or
sautry, the viol and lute, are frequently associated in the old English
poets and were clearly instruments resembling each other though still
different. The Greek psalterium (psalterion), from which our word is
derived, denotes an instrument played with the fingers instead of a
plectrum or quill, the verb being used of twanging the bow-string. It
is impossible to say positively with what instrument the nebel of the
Hebrew exactly corresponded, From the fact that nebel in Hebrew also
signifies a wine-bottle or skin it has been conjectured that the term
when applied to a musical instrument denotes a kind of bagpipe. The
psalteries of David were made of cypress, (2 Samuel 6:5) those of
Solomon of algum Or almug trees. (2 Chronicles 9:11) Among the
instruments of the band which played before Nebuchadnezzar's golden
image on the plains of Dura, we again meet with the psaltery. (Daniel
3:6,10,15) pesanterin .
Ptolemaeus,
Or Ptolemywas
the common name of the Greek dynasty of Egyptian kings. PTOLEMAEUS I.
SOTER, the son of Lagus, a Macedonian of low rank, distinguished
himself greatly during the campaigns of Alexander; at whose death he
secured for himself the government of Egypt, where he proceeded at once
to lay the foundations of a kingdom, B.C. 323. He abdicated in favor of
his youngest son, Ptolemy II. Philadelphus, two years before his death
which took place in B.C. 283. Ptolemy Soter is described very briefly
in Daniel, (Daniel 11:6) as one of those who should receive part of the
empire of Alexander when it was "divided toward the four winds of
heaven." PTOLEMAEUS II. PHILADELPHUS, B.C. 285-247, the youngest son of
Ptolemy I., was made king two years before his father's death, to
confirm the irregular succession. The conflict between Egypt and Syria
was renewed during his reign in consequence of the intrigue of his half
brother Magas. Ptolemy bestowed liberal encouragement on literature and
science, founding the great library and museum at Alexandria, and
gathered about him many men of learning, as the poet Theocritus, the
geometer Euclid and the astronomer Aratua. This reign was a critical
epoch for the development of Judaism, as it was for the intellectual
history of the ancient world. The critical faculty was called forth in
place of the creative, and learning in some sense supplied the place of
original speculation. It was impossible on the Jew who was now become
us true a citizen of the world as the Greek, should remain passive in
the conflict of opinions. It is enough now to observe the greatness of
the consequences involved in the union of Greek language with Jewish
thought. From this time the Jew was familiarized with the great types
of western literature, and in some degree aimed at imitating them. A
second time and in new fashion Egypt disciplined a people of God. It
first impressed upon a nation the firm unity of a family and then in
due time reconnected a matured people with the world from which it had
been called out. PTOLEMAEUS III. EUERGETES, B.C. 247-222, was the
eldest son of Ptolemy Philadelphus and brother of Berenice the wife of
Antiochus II. The repudiation and murder of his sister furnished him
with an occasion for invading Syria, cir. B.C. 246. (Daniel 11:7) He
extended his conquests as far as Antioch, and then eastward to Babylon,
but was recalled to Egypt by tidings of seditions which had broken out
there. His success was brilliant and complete. He carried "captives
into Egypt their gods of the conquered nations, with their princes and
with their precious vessels of silver and of gold." (Daniel 11:8) This
capture of sacred trophies earned for the king the name Euergetes--
"Benefactor." After his return to Egypt, cir. B.C. 243 he suffered a
great part of the conquered provinces to fall again under the power of
Seleucus. PTOLEMAEUS IV. PHILOPATOR, B.C. 222-205. After the death of
Ptolemy Euergetes the line of the Ptolemies rapidly degenerated.
Ptolemy Philopator, his eldest son, who succeeded him, was to the last
degree sensual, effeminate and debased. But externally his kingdom
retained its power and splendor and when circumstances forced him to
action. Ptolemy himself showed ability not unworthy of his race. The
description of the campaign of Raphia (B.C. 217) in the book of Daniel
gives a vivid description of his character. (Daniel 11:10-12) cf. Macc.
1:1-3. After offering in the temple at Jerusalem sacrifices for the
success they achieved, he attempted to enter the sanctuary. A sudden
paralysis hindered his design; but when he returned to Alexandria he
determined to inflict on the Alexandrine Jews the vengeance for his
disappointment. He was succeeded by his only child, Ptolemy V.
Epiphanes who was at the time only four or five years old. PTOLEMAEUS
V. EPIPHANES, B.C. 205-181. The reign of Ptolemy Epiphanes was a
critical epoch in the history of the Jews. The rivalry between the
Syrian and Egyptian parties, some time divided the people, came to an
open rupture in the struggles which marked his minority. In the strong
language of Daniel "The robbers of the people exalted themselves to
establish the vision." (Daniel 11:14) The accession of Ptolemy and the
confusion of a disputed regency furnished a favorable opportunity for
foreign invasion. "Many stood up against the king of the south" under
Antiochus the Great and Philip III of Macedonia, who formed a league
for the dismemberment of his kingdom. "So the king of the north
[Antiochus] came, and cast up a mount, and took the most fenced city
[Sidon], and the arms of the south did not withstand" [at Paneas B.C.
198]. (Daniel 11:14,15) The Romans interfered, and in order to retain
the provinces of Coele-Syria, Phoenicia and Judea, Antiochus "gave him
[Ptolemy] a young maiden" [his daughter Cleopatra as his betrothed
wife]. (Daniel 11:27) But in the end his policy only partially
succeeded. After the marriage of Ptolemy and Cleopatra was consummated
B.C. 193, (Cleopatra, did "not stand on his side," but supported her
husband in maintaining the alliance with Rome. The disputed provinces,
however remained in the possession of Antiochus and Ptolemy was
poisoned at the time when he was preparing an expedition to recover
them from Seleucus, the unworthy successor of Antiochus. PTOLEMAEUS VI.
PHILOMETOR, B.C. 181-145. On the death of Ptolemy Epiphanes, his wife
Cleopatra held the regency for her young son, Ptolemy Philometor, and
preserved peace with Syria till she died, B.C. 173. The government then
fell into unworthy hands, and an attempt was made to recover Syria.
Comp. 2 Macc. 4:21. Antiochus Epiphanes seems to have made the claim a
pretext for invading Egypt. The generals of Ptolemy were defeated near
Pelusium, probably at the close of B.C. 171, 1 Macc. 1:16 ff; and in
the next year Antiochus, having secured the person of the young king,
reduced almost the whole of Egypt. Comp. 2 Macc. 5:1. Meanwhile Ptolemy
Euergetes II., the younger brother of Ptolemy Philometor, assumed the
supreme power at Alexandris; and Antiochus, under the pretext of
recovering the crown for Philometor, besieged Alexandria in B.C. 169.
By this time, however, his selfish designs were apparent: the brothers
were reconciled, and Antiochus was obliged to acquiesce for the time in
the arrangement which they made. But while doing so he prepared for
another invasion of Egypt, and was already approaching Alexandria when
he was met by the Roman embassy led by C. Popillius Laenas, who, in the
name of the Roman senate insisted on his immediate retreat (B.C.168), a
command which the late victory at Pydna made it impossible to disobey.
These campaigns, which are intimately connected with the visits of
Antiochus to Jerusalem in B.C. 170, 168, are briefly described in
(Daniel 11:25,30) The whole of Syria was afterward subdued by Ptolemy,
and he was crowned at Antioch king of Egypt and Asia. 1 Macc. 11:13.
Alexander, a rival claimant, attempted to secure the crown, but was
defeated and afterward put to death by Ptolemy. But the latter did not
long enjoy his success. He fell from his horse in the battle and died
within a few days. 1 Macc. 11:18. Ptolemy Philometor is the last king
of Egypt who is noticed in sacred history, and his reign was marked
also by the erection of the temple at Leontopolis.
Ptolemais[[999]Accho]
Ptolemee,
Or Ptolemeus
+"The son of Dorymenes," 1 Macc. 3:38; 2 Macc. 4:45; comp. Polyb. v,
61, a courtier who possessed great influence with Antiochus Epiphanes.
+The son of Agesarchus, a Megalopolitan, surnamed Macron, 2 Macc.
10:12, who was governor of Cyprus during the minority of Ptolemy
Philometor. He afterward deserted the Egyptian service to join
Antiochus Epiphanes. He stood in the favor of Antiochus, and received
from him the government of Phoenicia and Coele-Syria. 2 Macc 8:8;
10:11,12. On the accession of Antiochus Eupator his conciliatory policy
toward the Jews brought him into suspicion at court. He was deprived of
his government, and in consequence of this disgrace he poisoned
himself, cir. B.C. 164. 2 Macc. 10:13.
+The son of Abuhus, who married the daughter of Simon the Maccabee. He
was a man of great wealth, and being invested with the government of
the district of Jericho, formed the design of usurping the sovereignty
of Judea.
Puaproperly
Puvvah. Phuvah the son of Issachar. (Numbers 26:23) (B.C. 1452.)
Puah(splendid).
+The father of Tola, a man of the tribe of Issachar and judge of Israel
after Abimelech. (Judges 10:1) (B.C. 1211.)
+The son of Issachar, (1 Chronicles 7:1) elsewhere called Phuvah and
Pua.
+One of the two midwives to whom Pharaoh gave instructions to kill the
Hebrew male children at their birth. (Exodus 1:15) (B.C. 1571.)
PublicanThe
class designated by this word in the New Testament were employed as
collectors of the Roman revenue. The Roman senate farmed the vectigalia
(direct taxes) and the portorin (customs) to capitalists who undertook
to pay a given sum into the treasury (in publicum), and so received the
name of publicani . Contracts of this kind fell naturally into the
hands of the equites, as the richest class of Romans. They appointed
managers, under whom were the portitores, the actual custom-house
officers, who examined each bale of goods, exported or imported,
assessed its value more or less arbitrarily, wrote out the ticket, and
enforced payment. The latter were commonly natives of the province in
which they were stationed as being brought daily into contact with all
classes of the population. The name pubicani was used popularly, and in
the New Testament exclusively, of the portitores . The system was
essentially a vicious one. The portitores were encouraged in the most
vexatious or fraudulent exactions and a remedy was all but impossible.
They overcharged whenever they had an opportunity, (Luke 3:13) they
brought false charges of smuggling in the hope of extorting hush-money
(Luke 19:8) they detained and opened letters on mere suspicion. It was
the basest of all livelihoods. All this was enough to bring the class
into ill favor everywhere. In Judea and Galilee there were special
circumstances of aggravation. The employment brought out all the
besetting vices of the Jewish character. The strong feeling of many
Jews as to the absolute unlawfulness of paying tribute at all made
matters worse. The scribes who discussed the question, (Matthew 22:15)
for the most part answered it in the negative. In addition to their
other faults, accordingly, the publicans of the New Testament were
regarded as traitors and apostates, defiled by their frequent
intercourse with the heathen, willing tools of the oppressor. The class
thus practically excommunicated furnished some of the earliest
disciples both of the Baptist and of our Lord. The position of
Zacchaeus as a "chief among the publicans," (Luke 19:2) implies a
gradation of some kind among the persons thus employed.
Publiusthe
chief man--probably the governor-of Melita, who received and lodged St.
Paul and his companions on the occasion of their being shipwrecked off
that island. (Acts 28:7) (A.D.55.)
Pudens(modest),
a Christian friend of Timothy at Rome. (2 Timothy 4:21) (A.D. 84.)
According to legend he was the host of St. Peter and friend of St.
Paul. and was martyred under Nero.
Puhites,
TheAccording
to (1 Chronicles 2:53) the "Puhites" or "Puthites" belonged to the
families of Kirjath-jearim.
Pulan
Assyrian king, and the first Assyrian monarch mentioned in Scripture.
He made an expedition against Menahem, king of Israel, about B.C. 770.
(2 Kings 15:19) (lord), a country or nation mentioned in (Isaiah 66:19)
It is spoken of with distant nations, and is supposed by some to
represent the island Philae in Egypt, and by others Libya.
Pulse(seeds)
usually means peas, beans and the seeds that grow in pods. In the
Authorized Version it occurs only in (Lamentations 1:12,16) as the
translation of words the literal meaning of which is "seeds" of any
kind. Probably the term denotes uncooked grain of any kind, as barley
wheat, millet, vetches, etc.
PunishmentsThe
earliest theory of punishment current among mankind is doubtless the
one of simple retaliation, "blood for blood." Viewed historically, the
first case of punishment for crime mentioned in Scripture, next to the
Fall itself, is that of Cain, the first murderer. That death was
regarded as the fitting punishment for murder appears plain from the
remark of Lamech. (Genesis 4:24) In the post-diluvian code, if we may
so call it, retribution by the hand of man, even in the case of an
offending animal, for blood shed, is clearly laid dawn. (Genesis 9:5,6)
Passing onward to Mosaic times, we find the sentence of capital
punishment, in the case of murder, plainly laid down in the law. The
murderer was to be put to death, even if he should have taken refuge at
God's altar or in a refuge city, and the same principle was to be
carried out even in the case of an animal. Offences punished with
death.-- I. The following offences also are mentioned in the law as
liable to the punishment of death:
+Striking, or even reviling, a parent. (Exodus 21:15,17)
+Blasphemy. (Leviticus 24:14,16,23)
+Sabbath-breaking. (Exodus 31:14; 35:2; Numbers 15:32-36)
+Witchcraft, and false pretension to prophecy. (Exodus 22:18; Leviticus
20:27; 13:5; 18:20)
+Adultery. (Leviticus 20:10; 22:22)
+Unchastity. (Leviticus 21:9; 22:21,23)
+Rape. (22:25)
+Incestuous and unnatural connections. (Exodus 22:19; Leviticus
20:11,14,16)
+Manstealing. (Exodus 21:16; 24:7)
+Idolatry, actual or virtual, in any shape. (Leviticus 20:2;
13:8,10,15; 17:2-7) see Josh 7:1 ... and Josh 22:20 and Numb 25:8
+False witness in certain cases. (19:16,19) II. But there is a large
number of offences, some of them included in this list, which are named
in the law as involving the,penalty of "cutting off from the people. On
the meaning of this expression some controversy has arisen. There are
altogether thirty six or thirty seven cases in the Pentateuch in which
this formula is used. We may perhaps conclude that the primary meaning
of "cutting off" is a sentence of death to be executed in some cases
without remission, but in others voidable-- (1) by immediate atonement
on the offender's part; (2) by direct interposition of the Almighty
i.e., a sentence of death always "regarded," but not always executed.
Kinds of punishments .--Punishments are twofold, Capital and Secondary.
I. Capital. (A) The following only are prescribed by the law:
+Stoning, which was the ordinary mode of execution. (Exodus 17:4; Luke
20:6; John 10:31; Acts 14:5) In the case of idolatry, and it may be
presumed in other cases also, the witnesses, of whom there were to be
at least two, were required to cast the first stone. (13:9; Acts 7:58)
+Hanging is mentioned as a distinct punishment. (Numbers 25:4; 2 Samuel
21:6,9)
+Burning, in pre-Mosaic times, was the punishment for unchastity.
(Genesis 38:24) Under the law it was ordered in the case of a priest's
daughter (Leviticus 21:9)
+Death by the sword or spear is named in the law, (Exodus 19:13; 32:27;
Numbers 25:7) and it occurs frequently in regal and post-Babylonian
times. (1 Kings 2:25,34; 19:1; 2 Chronicles 21:4) etc.
+Strangling is said by the rabbis to have been regarded as the most
common but least severe of the capital punishments, and to have been
performed by immersing the convict in clay or mud, and then strangling
him by a cloth twisted round the neck. (B) Besides these ordinary
capital punishments, we read of others, either of foreign introduction
or of an irregular kind. Among the former
+[1000]Crucifixion is treated elsewhere.
+Drowning, though not ordered under the law, was practiced at Rome, and
is said by St. Jerome to have been in use among the Jews.
+Sawing asunder or crushing beneath iron instruments. (2 Samuel 12:31)
and perhaps (Proverbs 20:26; Hebrews 11:37)
+Pounding in a mortar, or beating to death, is alluded to in (Proverbs
27:22) but not as a legal punishment, and cases are described. 2 Macc.
6:28,30.
+Precipitation, attempted in the case of our Lord at Nazareth, and
carried out in that of captives from the Edomites, and of St. James,
who is said to have been cast from "the pinnacle" of the temple.
Criminals executed by law were burned outside the city gates, and heaps
of stones were flung upon their graves. (Joshua 7:25,26; 2 Samuel
18:17; Jeremiah 22:19) II. Of secondary punishments among the Jews, the
original Principles were,
+Retaliation, "eye for eye," etc. (Exodus 21:24,25)
+Compensation, Identical (restitution)or analogous payment for loss of
time or of power. (Exodus 21:18-36; Leviticus 24:18-21; 19:21) Slander
against a wife's honor was to be compensated to her parents by a fine
of one hundred shekels, and the traducer himself to be punished with
stripes (22:18,19)
+Stripes, whose number was not to exceed forty, (25:3) whence the Jews
took care not to exceed thirty-nine. (2 Corinthians 11:24)
+Scourging with thorns is mentioned (Judges 8:16) The stocks are
mentioned (Jeremiah 20:2) passing through fire, (2 Samuel 12:31)
mutilation, (Judges 1:6) 2 Macc. 7:4, and see (2 Samuel 4:12) plucking
out hair, (Isaiah 50:6) in later times, imprisonment and confiscation
or exile. (Ezra 7:26; Jeremiah 37:15; 38:6; Acts 4:3; 5:18; 12:4)
Punites,
Thethe
descendants of Pua, or Puvah, the son of Issachar. (Numbers 26:23)
Punon(darkness)
one of the halting-places of the Israelite host during the last portion
of the wandering. (Numbers 33:42,43) By Eusebius and Jerome, it is
identified with Phaeno, which contained the copper-mines so well known
at that period, and was situated between Petra and Zoar.
Purificationin
its legal and technical sense, is applied to the ritual observances
whereby an Israelite was formally absolved from the taint of
uncleanness. The essence of purification, in all eases, consisted in
the use of water, whether by way of ablution or aspersion; but in the
majora delicta of legal uncleanness, sacrifices of various kinds were
added and the ceremonies throughout bore an expiatory character.
Ablution of the person and of the clothes was required in the cases
mentioned in (Leviticus 15:18; 11:25,40; 15:18,17) In cases of
childbirth the sacrifice was increased to a lamb of the first year,
with a pigeon or turtle-dove. (Leviticus 12:8) The ceremonies of
purification required in cases of contact with a corpse or a grave are
detailed in (Numbers 19:1) ... The purification of the leper was a yet
more formal proceeding, and indicated the highest pitch of uncleanness.
The rites are described in (Leviticus 14:4-32) The necessity of
purification was extended in the post-Babylonian Period to a variety of
unauthorized cases. Cups and pots and brazen vessels were washed as a
matter of ritual observance. (Mark 7:4) The washing of the hands before
meals was conducted in a formal manner. (Mark 7:3) What play have been
the specific causes of uncleanness in those who came up to purify
themselves before the Passover, (John 11:55) or in those who had taken
upon themselves the Nazarites' vow, (Acts 21:24,26) we are not
informed. In conclusion it may he observed that the distinctive
feature. In the Mosaic rites of purification is their expiatory
character. The idea of uncleanness was not peculiar to the Jew; but
with all other nations simple ablution sufficed: no sacrifices were
demanded. The Jew alone was taught by the use of expiatory offerings to
discern to its fullest extent the connection between the outward sign
and the inward fount of impurity.
Purim(lots),
the annual festival instituted to commemorate the preservation of the
Jews in Persia from the massacre with which they were threatened
through the machinations of Haman. (Esther 9:1) ... It was probably
called Purim by the Jews in irony. Their great enemy Haman appears to
have been very superstitious, and much given to casting lots. (Esther
3:7) They gave the name. Purim, or "Lots," to the commemorative
festival because he had thrown lots to ascertain what day would be
suspicious for him to carry into effect the bloody decree which the
king had issued at his instance. (Esther 9:24) The festival lasted two
days, and was regularly observed on the 14th and 15th of Adar.
According to modern custom, as soon as the stars begin to appear, when
the 14th of the month has commenced, candles are lighted up in token of
rejoicing, and the people assemble in the synagogue. After a short
prayer and thanksgiving, the reading of the book of Esther commences.
The book is written in a peculiar manner, on a roll called "the Roll"
(Megillah). When the reader comes to the name of Haman, the
congregation cry out, "May his name be blotted out," or, "Let the name
of the ungodly perish." When the Megillah is read through, the whole
congregation exclaim, "Cursed be Haman; blessed be Mordecai; cursed be
Zoresh (the wife of Haman); blessed be Esther; cursed be all idolaters;
blessed be all Israelites, and blessed be Harbonah who hanged Haman."
In the morning service in the synagogue, on the 14th, after the
prayers, the passage is read from the law, (Exodus 17:8-16) which
relates the destruction of the Amalekites, the people of Agag, (1
Samuel 15:8) the supposed ancestor of Haman. (Esther 3:1) The Megillah
is then read again in the same manner. The 14th of Adar, as the very
day of the deliverance of the Jews, is more solemnly kept than the
13th; but when the service in the synagogue is over, all give
themselves up to merry making.
Purosh(flea).
The descendants of Parosh, in number 2172, returned front Babylon with
Zerubbabel. (Ezra 2:3; Nehemiah 7:8) Another detachment of 150 males,
with Zechariah at their head, accompanied Ezra. (Ezra 8:3) They
assisted in the building of the well of Jerusalem, (Nehemiah 3:26) and
signed the covenant with Nehemiah. (Nehemiah 10:14) (B.C. before
535-445.)
Pursea
bag for money. The Hebrews, when on a journey, were provided with a
bag, in which they carried their money, (Genesis 42:35; Proverbs 1:14;
7:20; Isaiah 46:6) and, if they were merchants, also their weights.
(25:13; Micah 6:11) This bag is described in the New Testament by the
terms balantion (bag) (Luke 10:4; 12:33; 22:35,38) and glossokomon
(originally the bag in which musicians carried the mouth-pieces of
their Instruments). (John 12:6; 13:29) The girdle also served as a
purse. (Matthew 10:9; Mark 6:8) Ladies wore ornamental purses. (Isaiah
3:24)
Put(1
Chronicles 1:8; Nahum 3:9) [[1001]Phut, Put]
Puteoli(sulphurous
springs), the great landing-place of travelers to Italy from the
Levant, and the harbor to which the Alexandrian corn-ships brought
their cargoes. (Acts 27:13) The celebrated bay which is now the Bay of
Naples was then called "Sinus Puteolanus." The city was at the
northeastern angle of the bay. The name Puteoli arose from the strong
mineral springs which are characteristic of the place. It was a
favorite watering-place of the Romans its hot springs being considered
efficacious for cure of various diseases. Here also ships usually
discharged their passengers and cargoes, partly to avoid doubling the
promontory of Circeium and partly because there was no commodious
harbor nearer to Rome. Hence the ship in which Paul was conveyed from
Melita landed the prisoners at this place, where the apostle stayed a
week. (Acts 28:13,14)--Whitney . The associations of Puteoli with
historical personages are very numerous. Scipio sailed from this place
to Spain; Cicero had a villa in the neighborhood; here Nero planned the
murder of his mother; Vespasian gave to this city peculiar privileges;
and here Adrian was buried. In the fifth century it was ravaged by both
Alaric and Genseric, and it never afterward recovered its former
eminence. It is now a fourth-rate Italian town, still retaining the
name of Pozzuoli . The remains of Puteoli are worthy of mention. Among
them are the aqueduct the reservoirs, portions (probably) of the baths
the great amphitheatre and the building called the temple of Serapis.
No Roman harbor has left as solid a memorial of itself as this one, at
which St. Paul landed in Italy.
PutielOne
of the daughters of Putiel was wife of Eleazar the son of Aaron, and
mother of Phinehas. (Exodus 6:25) (B.C. before 1481.)
Pygargoccurs,
(14:5) in the list of clean animals as the rendering of the Heb.
dishon, the name apparently of one species of antelope, though it is by
no means easy to identify it.
Pyrrhusthe
father of Sopater of Berea. (Acts 20:4) in Revised Version. (A.D. 55.)