1 Samuel 17:7

7 El asta de su lanza era como un rodillo de telar y la punta de su lanza pesaba seiscientos siclos de hierro; y su escudero iba delante de él.

1 Samuel 17:7 Meaning and Commentary

1 Samuel 17:7

And the staff of his spear was like a weaver's beam
The wooden part of it, held in the hand; this for thickness was like the beam in the weaver's loom, about which the warp, or else the web, is rolled; and it is conjectured that, in proportion to the stature of Goliath, his spear must be twenty six feet long, since Hector's in Homer F13 was eleven cubits, or sixteen feet and a half:

and his spear's head weighed six hundred shekels of iron;
the iron part of the spear, the point of it, which has its name in Hebrew from a flame of fire, because when brandished it looks shining and flaming; and being the weight of six hundred shekels, amounted to eighteen pounds and three quarters of avoirdupois weight, and the whole spear is supposed to weigh thirty seven pounds and a half; and the whole of this man's armour is thought to weigh two hundred and seventy two pounds, thirteen ounces F14; which was a prodigious weight for a man to carry, and go into battle with; and one may well wonder how he could be able with such a weight about him to move and lay about in an engagement; though this is nothing in comparison of the weight some men have carried. Pliny F15 tells us that he saw one Athanatus come into the theatre clothed with a leaden breastplate of five hundred pounds weight, and shod with buskins of the same weight:

and one bearing a shield went before him;
which when engaged in battle he held in his own hand, and his sword in the other; the former was reckoned at thirty pounds, and the latter at four pounds, one ounce; though one would think he had no occasion for a shield, being so well covered with armour all over; so that the carrying of it before him might be only a matter of form and state. His spear is the only piece of armour that was of iron, all the rest were of brass; and Hesiod {p}, writing of the brazen age, says, their arms and their houses were all of brass, for then there was no iron; and so Lucretius F17 affirms that the use of brass was before iron; but both are mentioned together, (See Gill on Genesis 4:22), hence Mars is called (calceov arhv) {r}.


FOOTNOTES:

F13 Iliad. 18.
F14 Hostius, ut supra.
F15 Nat. Hist. l. 7. c. 20.
F16 Opera & Dies, l. 1. ver. 147, 148.
F17 "De rerum natura". l. 5. & "prior aeris erat"
F18 Homer. Iliad. 5. ver. 704, 859, 864. Pindar. Olymp. Ode 10.

1 Samuel 17:7 In-Context

5 Tenía un yelmo de bronce sobre la cabeza y llevaba una cota de malla, y el peso de la cota era de cinco mil siclos de bronce.
6 Tenía también grebas de bronce en las piernas y una jabalina de bronce colgada entre los hombros.
7 El asta de su lanza era como un rodillo de telar y la punta de su lanza pesaba seiscientos siclos de hierro; y su escudero iba delante de él.
8 Y Goliat se paró y gritó a las filas de Israel, diciéndoles: ¿Para qué habéis salido a poneros en orden de batalla? ¿Acaso no soy yo filisteo y vosotros siervos de Saúl? Escogeos un hombre y que venga contra mí.
9 Si es capaz de pelear conmigo y matarme, entonces seremos vuestros siervos; pero si yo lo venzo y lo mato, entonces seréis nuestros siervos y nos serviréis.
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