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Nowe Przymierze Zaremba
Księga Wyjścia 4:17
Bible Study Resources
Concordances:
- Nave'sDictionaries:
- AmericanEncyclopedias:
- CondensedParallel Translations
Laskę też tę weźmij w rękę twoję, którą będziesz czynił znaki.
Weźmiesz też tę laskę w rękę swą, którą cuda czynić będziesz.
Weźmiesz też w twoją rękę tą laskę i wykonasz nią owe znaki.
Laskę też tę weźmij w rękę twoję, którą będziesz czynił znaki.
I weź w rękę tę laskę, którą będziesz czynił znaki.
A laskę tę weź do ręki swojej, bo nią będziesz dokonywał znaków.
Bible Verse Review
from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge
Exodus 4:2, Exodus 7:9, Exodus 7:19, 1 Corinthians 1:27
Reciprocal: Exodus 4:3 - it became Exodus 4:14 - cometh Exodus 4:20 - the rod of God Exodus 14:16 - lift Leviticus 8:11 - General Numbers 17:2 - twelve rods Numbers 20:8 - the rod 2 Kings 4:29 - take my 2 Kings 13:17 - The arrow
Gill's Notes on the Bible
And thou shall take this rod in thine hand,.... Which he then had in his hand, and was no other than his shepherd's staff:
wherewith thou shall do signs: wondrous things, meaning the ten plagues inflicted on Egypt.
Clarke's Notes on the Bible
Verse Exodus 4:17. Thou shalt take this rod — From the story of Moses's rod the heathens have invented the fables of the thyrsus of Bacchus, and the caduceus of Mercury. Cicero reckons five Bacchuses, one of which, according to Orpheus, was born of the river Nile; but, according to the common opinion, he was born on the banks of that river. Bacchus is expressly said to have been exposed on the river Nile, hence he is called Nilus, both by Diodorus and Macrobius; and in the hymns of Orpheus he is named Myses, because he was drawn out of the water. He is represented by the poets as being very beautiful, and an illustrious warrior; they report him to have overrun all Arabia with a numerous army both of men and women. He is said also to have been an eminent law-giver, and to have written his laws on two tables. He always carried in his hand the thyrsus, a rod wreathed with serpents, and by which he is reported to have wrought many miracles. Any person acquainted with the birth and exploits of the poetic Bacchus will at once perceive them to be all borrowed from the life and acts of Moses, as recorded in the Pentateuch; and it would be losing time to show the parallel, by quoting passages from the book of Exodus.
The caduceus or rod of Mercury is well known in poetic fables. It is another copy Of the rod of Moses. He also is reported to have wrought a multitude of miracles by this rod; and particularly he is said to kill and make alive, to send souls to the invisible world and bring them back from thence. Homer represents Mercury taking his rod to work miracles precisely in the same way as God commands Moses to take his.
ÎÌÏÎ¼Î·Ï Î´Îµ ÏÏ ÏÎ±Ï ÎÏ Î»Î»Î·Î½Î¹Î¿Ï ÎµÎ¾ÎµÎºÎ±Î»ÎµÎ¹Ïο
ÎνδÏÏν μνηÏÏηÏÏνΠεÏε δε ΡÌÎÎÎÎΠμεÏα ÏεÏÏιν
Îαλην, ÏÏÏ Ïειην, ÏÎ·Í Ï' ανδÏÏν ομμαÏα θελγει,
ΩÌν εθελει, ÏÎ¿Ï Ï Î´' Î±Ï Ïε και Ï ÌÏνÏονÏÎ±Ï ÎµÎ³ÎµÎ¹Ïει.
Odyss., lib. xxiv., ver. 1.
Cyllenian Hermes now call'd forth the souls
Of all the suitors; with his golden WAND
Of power, to seal in balmy sleep whose eyes
Soe'er he will, and open them again. COWPER.
Virgil copies Homer, but carries the parallel farther, tradition having probably furnished him with more particulars; but in both we may see a disguised copy of the sacred history, from which indeed the Greek and Roman poets borrowed most of their beauties.
TUM VIRGAM CAPIT: hac animas ille evocat Orco
Pallentes, alias sub tristia Tartara mittit;
Dat somnos, adimitque, et lumina morte resignat
ILLA fretus agit, ventos, et turbida tranat.
AEneid, lib. iv., ver. 242.
But first he grasps within his awful hand
The mark of sovereign power, the magic wand;
With this he draws the ghosts from hollow graves,
With this he drives them down the Stygian waves;
With this he seals in sleep the wakeful sight,
And eyes, though closed in death, restores to light.
Thus arm'd, the god begins his airy race,
And drives the racking clouds along the liquid space.
DRYDEN.
Many other resemblances between the rod of the poets and that of Moses, the learned reader will readily recollect. These specimens may be deemed sufficient.