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Bahasa Indonesia Sehari-hari
1 Tawarikh 21:18
Bible Study Resources
Concordances:
- Nave'sDictionaries:
- FaussetEncyclopedias:
- CondensedParallel Translations
Maka disuruh malaekat Tuhan akan Gad mengatakan kepada Daud, hendaklah Daud berjalan naik hendak mendirikan sebuah mezbah bagi Tuhan di tempat pengirik Ornan, orang Yebuzi itu.
Contextual Overview
Bible Verse Review
from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge
the angel: 1 Chronicles 21:11, Acts 8:26-40
that David: 1 Chronicles 21:15, 2 Samuel 24:18, 2 Chronicles 3:1
Reciprocal: 1 Chronicles 22:1 - This is the house Ezra 2:68 - in his place
Cross-References
And agayne the angell of the Lord sayde vnto her: I wyll multiplie thy seede in such sort, that it shal not be numbred for multitude.
And as concernyng Ismael also I haue hearde thee: for I haue blessed him, and wyll make him fruitefull, and wyl multiplie him excedingly: Twelue princes shall he beget, and I wyll make a great nation of hym.
And God sayde vnto Abraham, let it not be greeuous in thy sight, because of the lad and of thy bonde woman: In al that Sara hath said vnto thee, heare her voyce, for in Isahac shall thy seede be called.
Moreouer, of the sonne of the bonde woman wyll I make a nation, because he is thy seede.
Aryse and lyft vp the lad, and take him in thyne hande, for I wyll make of hym a great people.
And Abimelech sayd vnto Abraham: what meane these seuen ewe lambes whiche thou hast set by them selues?
Wherefore the place is called Beer seba, because that there they sware both of them.
Gill's Notes on the Bible
See Gill "1Ch 21:1".
Barnes' Notes on the Bible
It has been observed that it is only in books of a late period that Angels are brought forward as intermediaries between God and the prophets. This, no doubt, is true; and it is certainly unlikely that the records, from which the author of Chronicles drew, spoke of Gad as receiving his knowledge of God’s will from an angel. The touch may be regarded as coming from the writer of Chronicles himself, who expresses the fact related by his authorities in the language of his own day (see Zechariah 1:9, Zechariah 1:14, Zechariah 1:19; Zechariah 2:3; Zechariah 4:1; Zechariah 5:5; etc.); language, however, which we are not to regard as rhetorical, but as strictly in accordance with truth, since Angels were doubtless employed as media between God and the prophet as much in the time of David as in that of Zechariah.