Judges 13:6
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Overview - Judges 13 | |
1 | Israel is delivered into the hands of Philistines. |
2 | An angel appears to Manoah's wife. |
8 | The angel appears to Manoah. |
15 | Manoah's sacrifices, whereby the angel is discovered. |
24 | Samson is born. |
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Judges 13:6 (King James Version)
Then the woman came and told her husband, saying, A man of God came unto me, and his countenance was like the countenance of an angel of God, very terrible: but I asked him not whence he was, neither told he me his name:
- A man
- Deuteronomy 33:1 ; Joshua 14:6 ; 1 Samuel 2:27 ; 9:6 1 Kings 17:18 1 Kings 17:24 ; 2 Kings 4:9 2 Kings 4:16
- 1 Timothy 6:11
- countenance was
- Matthew 28:3 ; Luke 9:29 ; Acts 6:15
- terrible
- 22 ; Genesis 28:16 Genesis 28:17 ; Exodus 3:2 Exodus 3:6 ; Daniel 8:17 ; Daniel 10:5 Daniel 10:11 Matthew 28:4 ; Revelation 1:17
- but I asked, etc
- The Vulgate renders this cause very differently, the negative Not being omitted: {Quem cm interrogssim quis esset, et unde venisset, et quo nomine vocaretur, noluit mihi dicere; sed hoc respondit, etc; "Whom when I asked who he was, and whence he came, and by what name he was called, would not tell me: but this he said," etc. The negative is also wanting in the Septuagint, as it is in the Complutensian Polyglott; [kai erouton auton pothen estin, kai to onoma auton, ouk apengeilen moi.] "And I asked him whence he was, and his name, but he did not tell me." This is also the reading of the Codex Alexandrinus; but the Septuagint in the London Polyglott, the Chaldee, Syriac, and Arabic, read the negative particle with the Hebrew text: I asked Not his name, etc.
- his name
- Judges 13:17 Judges 13:18 ; Genesis 32:29 ; Luke 1:19