Bible Commentary

Ezekiel 27:16

The Pulpit Commentary on Ezekiel 27:16

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

Syria; Hebrew, Aram. The LXX. which gives ἀνθρώπους, seems to have read Adam (equivalent to "man"), another instance of the fact just referred to. And this has led many commentators (Michaelis, Ewald, Hitzig, Furst) to conjecture, following the Peshito Version, that Edom must have been the true reading.

As regards the products named, we know too little of the commerce of Edom to say whether it included them in its exports, and the fact that the broidered work of Babylon had been famous from of old (), and that it was also the oldest emporium for precious stones, may be urged in favor of the present reading, and of taking Aram in its widest sense as including Mesopotamia.

On the other hand, the mention of onyx, sapphire, coral, pearls, topaz, in , the local coloring of which is essentially Idumaean, supports the conjectural emendation. Emeralds (comp. ).

Some writers identify it with the carbuncle. It meets us again in . The fine linen (butz) is different from that of (shesh) and appears only in the later books of the Old Testament (; ; , etal.

). It was probably the byssus of the Greeks, made of cotton, while the Egyptian fabric was of flax. Coral. The Hebrew (ramoth) occurs only here and in . "Coral" is the traditional Jewish interpretation, but the LXX.

transliterates, and the Vulgate gives secure. Agate is found here and in , and has been identified with the ruby or carbuncle. In and the English represents a different Hebrew word.

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