Easton's Bible Dictionary

(Kiana) #1

  • SEORIM barley, the chief of the forth priestly course (1 Chronicles
    24:8).

  • SEPHAR numbering, (Genesis 10:30), supposed by some to be the
    ancient Himyaritic capital, “Shaphar,” Zaphar, on the Indian Ocean,
    between the Persian Gulf and the Red Sea.

  • SEPHARAD (Obad. 1:20), some locality unknown. The modern Jews
    think that Spain is meant, and hence they designate the Spanish Jews
    “Sephardim,” as they do the German Jews by the name “Ashkenazim,”
    because the rabbis call Germany Ashkenaz. Others identify it with Sardis,
    the capital of Lydia. The Latin father Jerome regarded it as an Assyrian
    word, meaning “boundary,” and interpreted the sentence, “which is in
    Sepharad,” by “who are scattered abroad in all the boundaries and regions
    of the earth.” Perowne says: “Whatever uncertainty attaches to the word
    Sepharad, the drift of the prophecy is clear, viz., that not only the exiles
    from Babylon, but Jewish captives from other and distant regions, shall be
    brought back to live prosperously within the enlarged borders of their own
    land.”

  • SEPHARVAIM taken by Sargon, king of Assyria (2 Kings 17:24; 18:34;
    19:13; Isaiah 37:13). It was a double city, and received the common name
    Sepharvaim, i.e., “the two Sipparas,” or “the two booktowns.” The
    Sippara on the east bank of the Euphrates is now called Abu-Habba; that
    on the other bank was Accad, the old capital of Sargon I., where he
    established a great library. (See SARGON.) The recent discovery of
    cuneiform inscriptions at Tel el-Amarna in Egypt, consisting of official
    despatches to Pharaoh Amenophis IV. and his predecessor from their
    agents in Palestine, proves that in the century before the Exodus an active
    literary intercourse was carried on between these nations, and that the
    medium of the correspondence was the Babylonian language and script.
    (See KIRJATH-SEPHER.)

  • SEPTUAGINT See VERSIONS.

  • SEPULCHRE first mentioned as purchased by Abraham for Sarah from
    Ephron the Hittite (Genesis 23:20). This was the “cave of the field of
    Machpelah,” where also Abraham and Rebekah and Jacob and Leah were
    burried (79:29-32). In Acts 7:16 it is said that Jacob was “laid in the
    sepulchre that Abraham bought for a sum of money of the sons of Emmor
    the father of Sychem.” It has been proposed, as a mode of reconciling the

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