Esodo 9:31

31 Ora il lino e l’orzo erano stati percossi, perché l’orzo era in spiga e il lino in fiore;

Esodo 9:31 Meaning and Commentary

Exodus 9:31

And the flax and the barley was smitten
With the hail, thunder, and lightning, and were beat down, bruised, broken, and blasted, and destroyed; of the former there were great quantities produced in Egypt, which was famous for linen, much was made there, and there were many that wrought in fine flax, see ( Isaiah 19:9 ) and the latter were used not only to feed their cattle, but to make a drink of, as we do, ale and strong beer; and so the Egyptians use it to this day, as Dr. Shaw F16 says, both to feed their cattle, and after it is dried and parched, to make a fermented, intoxicating liquor, called "bonzah"; probably the same with the barley wine of the ancients, and a species of the "sicar", or strong drink of the Scriptures: for the barley [was] in the ear, and the flax [was] bolled;
or in the stalk, quite grown up, and so the ears of the one were beat off, and the stalks of the other battered with the hail, and broken and destroyed.


FOOTNOTES:

F16 Travels, tom. 2. c. 2. sect. 5. p. 407. Ed. 2.

Esodo 9:31 In-Context

29 E Mosè gli disse: "Come sarò uscito dalla città, protenderò le mani all’Eterno; i tuoni cesseranno e non ci sarà più grandine, affinché tu sappia che la terra è dell’Eterno.
30 Ma quanto a te e ai tuoi servitori, io so che non avrete ancora timore dell’Eterno Iddio".
31 Ora il lino e l’orzo erano stati percossi, perché l’orzo era in spiga e il lino in fiore;
32 ma il grano e la spelda non furon percossi, perché sono serotini.
33 Mosè dunque, lasciato Faraone, uscì di città, protese le mani all’Eterno, e i tuoni e la grandine cessarono, e non cadde più pioggia sulla terra.
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