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Difference between revisions of "Sackcloth"

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== Vine's Expository Dictionary of NT Words <ref name="term_79068" /> ==
== Vine's Expository Dictionary of NT Words <ref name="term_79068" /> ==
<div> '''1: σάκκος ''' (Strong'S #4526 — Noun Masculine — sakkos — sak'-kos ) </div> <p> "a warm material woven from goat's or camel's hair," and hence of a dark color, &nbsp;Revelation 6:12; [[Jerome]] renders it saccus cilicinus (being made from the hair of the black goat of Cilicia; the Romans called it cilicium); cp. &nbsp;Isaiah 50:3; it was also used for saddle-cloths, &nbsp;Joshua 9:4; also for making sacks, e.g., &nbsp;Genesis 42:25 , and for garments worn as expressing mourning or penitence, &nbsp;Matthew 11:21; &nbsp;Luke 10:13 , or for purposes of prophetic testimony, &nbsp;Revelation 11:3 . </p>
<div> '''1: '''''Σάκκος''''' ''' (Strong'S #4526 Noun Masculine sakkos sak'-kos ) </div> <p> "a warm material woven from goat's or camel's hair," and hence of a dark color, &nbsp;Revelation 6:12; [[Jerome]] renders it saccus cilicinus (being made from the hair of the black goat of Cilicia; the Romans called it cilicium); cp. &nbsp;Isaiah 50:3; it was also used for saddle-cloths, &nbsp;Joshua 9:4; also for making sacks, e.g., &nbsp;Genesis 42:25 , and for garments worn as expressing mourning or penitence, &nbsp;Matthew 11:21; &nbsp;Luke 10:13 , or for purposes of prophetic testimony, &nbsp;Revelation 11:3 . </p>
          
          
== Hawker's Poor Man's Concordance And Dictionary <ref name="term_48690" /> ==
== Hawker's Poor Man's Concordance And Dictionary <ref name="term_48690" /> ==
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== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_58863" /> ==
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_58863" /> ==
<p> (שִׂק, ''Sak'' , from its [[Net]] -like or ''Sieve-'' like structure; a word which has descended pure in the Greek σάκκος and modern languages) is the name of a coarse material, apparently made of goat's or camel's hair (&nbsp;Revelation 6:12), and resembling the ''Cilicium'' of the Romans (&nbsp;Genesis 37:34; &nbsp;1 Kings 20:31; &nbsp;2 Kings 19:1 sq.; &nbsp;Matthew 11:21; &nbsp;Luke 10:13; comp. Josephus, ''Ant.'' 7, 1, 6; Porphyr. ''Abstin.'' 4, 15; Plutarch, Superst. c. 7). It was probably dark brown or black in color (&nbsp;Isaiah 1:3; &nbsp;Revelation 6:12; comp. ''The Black Dresses'' of the Greeks: Eurip. ''Alc.'' 440; ''Orest.'' 458; [[Helen]] , 1088; and Romans, Ovid, ''Metam.'' 6, 568; Tacit. Annal. 3, 2; Becker, Gallus, 2, 289; see Josephus, Life, 28). It was used for the following purposes: </p> <p> '''(1.)''' For making sacks for grain, the same word describing both the material and the article (&nbsp;Genesis 42:25; &nbsp;Leviticus 11:32; &nbsp;Joshua 9:4). Sacks are usually made of hair in the East; whence we may understand that where sackcloth is mentioned haircloth is intended. </p> <p> '''(2.)''' This material was certainly employed for making the rough garments used by mourners (Esther 4:21), which were in extreme cases worn next the skin (&nbsp;1 Kings 21:27; &nbsp;2 Kings 6:30; &nbsp;Job 16:15; &nbsp;Isaiah 32:11), and this even by females (&nbsp;Joel 1:8; &nbsp;2 [[Maccabees]] 3:19), but at other times were worn over the coat or ''Kethoneth'' (Ton. 3, 6) in lieu of the outer garment. The robe probably resembled a sack in shape, thus fitting closer to the person than the usual flowing garments of the Orientals (Niebuhr, Beschreib. p. 340), as we may infer from the application of the term חָגִר, ''To Bind'' , to the process of putting it on (&nbsp;2 Samuel 3:31; &nbsp;Ezra 7:18, etc.). It was confined by a girdle of similar material (&nbsp;Isaiah 3:24). Sometimes it was not laid aside even at night (&nbsp;1 Kings 21:27). [[Prophets]] and ascetics wore it over the underclothing, to signify the sincerity of their calling (&nbsp;Isaiah 20:2; &nbsp;Matthew 3:4; see Wetstein, N.T. 1, 384 sq.). The [[Apocrypha]] intimates that this habit of sackcloth was that in which good people clothed themselves when they went to prayers (&nbsp;Baruch 4:20). The use of haircloth as a penitential dress was retained by the early Oriental monks, hermits, and pilgrims, and was adopted by the Roman Church, which still retains it for the same purposes. Haircloth was, indeed, called "sackcloth" by the early Greek and Latin fathers. It does not appear that sackcloth is now much used in token of grief in the East; but ornaments are relinquished, the usual dress is neglected, or it is laid aside, and one coarse or old assumed in its place (comp. Liske, De Sacco et Cinere [Vitemb. 1693]). (See Mourning). </p>
<p> ( '''''שִׂק''''' , ''Sak'' , from its [[Net]] -like or ''Sieve-'' like structure; a word which has descended pure in the Greek '''''Σάκκος''''' and modern languages) is the name of a coarse material, apparently made of goat's or camel's hair (&nbsp;Revelation 6:12), and resembling the ''Cilicium'' of the Romans (&nbsp;Genesis 37:34; &nbsp;1 Kings 20:31; &nbsp;2 Kings 19:1 sq.; &nbsp;Matthew 11:21; &nbsp;Luke 10:13; comp. Josephus, ''Ant.'' 7, 1, 6; Porphyr. ''Abstin.'' 4, 15; Plutarch, Superst. c. 7). It was probably dark brown or black in color (&nbsp;Isaiah 1:3; &nbsp;Revelation 6:12; comp. ''The Black Dresses'' of the Greeks: Eurip. ''Alc.'' 440; ''Orest.'' 458; [[Helen]] , 1088; and Romans, Ovid, ''Metam.'' 6, 568; Tacit. Annal. 3, 2; Becker, Gallus, 2, 289; see Josephus, Life, 28). It was used for the following purposes: </p> <p> '''(1.)''' For making sacks for grain, the same word describing both the material and the article (&nbsp;Genesis 42:25; &nbsp;Leviticus 11:32; &nbsp;Joshua 9:4). Sacks are usually made of hair in the East; whence we may understand that where sackcloth is mentioned haircloth is intended. </p> <p> '''(2.)''' This material was certainly employed for making the rough garments used by mourners (Esther 4:21), which were in extreme cases worn next the skin (&nbsp;1 Kings 21:27; &nbsp;2 Kings 6:30; &nbsp;Job 16:15; &nbsp;Isaiah 32:11), and this even by females (&nbsp;Joel 1:8; &nbsp;2 [[Maccabees]] 3:19), but at other times were worn over the coat or ''Kethoneth'' (Ton. 3, 6) in lieu of the outer garment. The robe probably resembled a sack in shape, thus fitting closer to the person than the usual flowing garments of the Orientals (Niebuhr, Beschreib. p. 340), as we may infer from the application of the term '''''חָגִר''''' , ''To Bind'' , to the process of putting it on (&nbsp;2 Samuel 3:31; &nbsp;Ezra 7:18, etc.). It was confined by a girdle of similar material (&nbsp;Isaiah 3:24). Sometimes it was not laid aside even at night (&nbsp;1 Kings 21:27). [[Prophets]] and ascetics wore it over the underclothing, to signify the sincerity of their calling (&nbsp;Isaiah 20:2; &nbsp;Matthew 3:4; see Wetstein, N.T. 1, 384 sq.). The [[Apocrypha]] intimates that this habit of sackcloth was that in which good people clothed themselves when they went to prayers (&nbsp;Baruch 4:20). The use of haircloth as a penitential dress was retained by the early Oriental monks, hermits, and pilgrims, and was adopted by the Roman Church, which still retains it for the same purposes. Haircloth was, indeed, called "sackcloth" by the early Greek and Latin fathers. It does not appear that sackcloth is now much used in token of grief in the East; but ornaments are relinquished, the usual dress is neglected, or it is laid aside, and one coarse or old assumed in its place (comp. Liske, De Sacco et Cinere [Vitemb. 1693]). (See Mourning). </p>
          
          
== Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature <ref name="term_16593" /> ==
== Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature <ref name="term_16593" /> ==