Bible Commentary

Ezekiel 27:9

The Pulpit Commentary on Ezekiel 27:9

The Pulpit Commentary · Joseph S. Exell and contributors · Public domain

The ancients of Gebal. The word is used in the sense of "elders" or "senators," the governing body. Gebal, for which the LXX. gives Biblii, is identified with the Greek Byblus. The name appears in in connection, among other nations, with Tyre and Asshur, as allied with them against Israel; in as near Lebanon and Hermon; in (margin Revised Version) as among the stonemasons who worked with Hiram's builders.

Byblus was situated on an eminence overlooking the river Adonis between Beirut and Tripoli. Its modern name, Gebail, retains the old Semitic form, and its ruins abound in marble and granite columns of Phoenician and Egyptian workmanship.

The work of the caulkers was to stop the chinks of the ship, and the men of Gebal appear to have been especially skilful in this. We note that the metaphor of the ship falls into the background in the latter clause of the verse, and does not appear again.

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