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Difference between revisions of "Dove"

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== Fausset's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_35093" /> ==
== Fausset's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_35093" /> ==
<p> [[Emblem]] of peace (&nbsp;Genesis 8:7-12). After God's wrath for sin had been executed upon the earth, the dove was thrice sent forth; at the first sending she found no rest for the sole of her foot until she put herself in Noah's (or "comforter") hand, and was drawn into the ark; on the second trip, she brought back the olive leaf, the earnest of the restored earth; on the third trip, she was able to roam at large, no longer needing the ark's shelter. As the raven messenger "going forth to and fro," alighting on but never entering into the ark, symbolizes the unbelieving that have "no peace," "like the troubled sea, when it cannot rest" (&nbsp;Isaiah 57:20-21): so the dove, in its threefold embassy, represents respectively the first return of the soul to its rest, the loving hand of Jesus; its subsequent reception of the dovelike spirit, the earnest of the final inheritance (&nbsp;Ephesians 1:13-14); and its actual entrance finally on the new heaven and new earth (Revelation 21), where there will be no need of the arklike church to separate between the world and God's people, between the saved and unsaved, where all shall be safe and blessed forever and the church shall be co-extensive with the world. </p> <p> As the lamb is the emblem of the Savior, so the dove of the [[Holy]] Spirit the Comforter, because of its gentleness, tenderness, innocence, and constant love (&nbsp;Matthew 3:16). He changes us into His own likeness. The liquid full soft eye is the emblem of the heavenly bride's eye, through which the soul beams out (&nbsp;Song of [[Solomon]] 1:15). Contrast the sinner's eye (&nbsp;Matthew 20:15; &nbsp;2 Peter 2:14). The church's unsheltered innocence in the world calls forth the prayer: "Deliver not the soul of [[Thy]] turtle dove unto the multitude of the wicked" (&nbsp;Psalms 74:19; &nbsp;Psalms 55:11). Their plaintive note symbolizes the mourning penitent (&nbsp;Isaiah 59:11). </p> <p> The change from the [[Egyptian]] bondage amidst the face blackening potteries to the freedom and beauty of Israel's theocratic state is expressed in &nbsp;Psalms 68:13-14, "though ye have lien (lain) among the pots yet shall ye be as the wings of a dove covered with silver, and her feathers with yellow gold," the dove's outspread wings reflecting a golden or silver splendor according to the direction in which the sunshine falls on them, typifying the dovelike spirit of joy and peace beaming forth from the believer, once darkness, but now light in the Lord. The dove's timidity answers to the believer fleeing from sin, self, and wrath, to the refuge in the cleft Rock of ages (&nbsp;Song of Solomon 2:14; &nbsp;Jeremiah 48:28; &nbsp;Isaiah 26:4, margin). Its gregariousness answers to the communion of saints, all having flocked together to Christ (&nbsp;Isaiah 60:8); the returning [[Israelites]] shall so flock to Jerusalem, as doves in a cloud to their cotes; and the converted [[Gentiles]] to Israel. </p> <p> [[Saints]] must imitate its harmless simplicity (&nbsp;Matthew 7:16), but not its silliness (&nbsp;Hosea 7:11). The Israelites under God's visitation of the enemy's invasion "shall be on the mountains like doves of the valleys" (&nbsp;Ezekiel 7:16); as doves which usually frequent valleys mount up to the mountains when fearing the birdcatcher (&nbsp;Psalms 11:1), so Israel, once dwelling in the peaceful valleys, shall flee from the foe to the mountains, once the scene of their highplace idolatries, now retributively the scene of their abject flight. In &nbsp;Jeremiah 25:38, "because of the fierceness of the oppressor" (Hebrew: the dove), the allusion is to the Chaldaean standard, the dove, the symbol of Venus. [[Semiramis]] the queen was said to have been nourished by doves when exposed at birth, and at death to have been transformed into a dove. In &nbsp;2 Kings 6:25 the "dove's dung" sold for food in the famine seems to have been a vegetable or poor grain or vetch pea, so named, that grew in the land not built upon and lying, as is common in the East, within the city. </p> <p> Linnaeus identified it with the Οrnithogalum umbellatum , with eatable bulbs, "the star of Bethlehem"; the color of the flowers, white mixed with green, originated the name "dove's dung," which is of like color. Keil thinks it to be a saltwort yielding alkali, Ηerba alkali . Josephus, however (B. J., 5:13, section 7), mentions literal dung having been eaten in terrible famine. The offering of a dove was the alternative permitted to those unable to afford a more costly one, an alternative adopted instead of the lamb by the [[Virgin]] mother at her purification, a proof of the poverty to which our Lord stooped at His incarnation. The sellers of doves profaned the temple court by selling doves to meet the wants of the poorer classes (&nbsp;John 2:13-17). </p>
<p> [[Emblem]] of peace (&nbsp;Genesis 8:7-12). After God's wrath for sin had been executed upon the earth, the dove was thrice sent forth; at the first sending she found no rest for the sole of her foot until she put herself in Noah's (or "comforter") hand, and was drawn into the ark; on the second trip, she brought back the olive leaf, the earnest of the restored earth; on the third trip, she was able to roam at large, no longer needing the ark's shelter. As the raven messenger "going forth to and fro," alighting on but never entering into the ark, symbolizes the unbelieving that have "no peace," "like the troubled sea, when it cannot rest" (&nbsp;Isaiah 57:20-21): so the dove, in its threefold embassy, represents respectively the first return of the soul to its rest, the loving hand of Jesus; its subsequent reception of the dovelike spirit, the earnest of the final inheritance (&nbsp;Ephesians 1:13-14); and its actual entrance finally on the new heaven and new earth (Revelation 21), where there will be no need of the arklike church to separate between the world and God's people, between the saved and unsaved, where all shall be safe and blessed forever and the church shall be co-extensive with the world. </p> <p> As the lamb is the emblem of the Savior, so the dove of the [[Holy]] Spirit the Comforter, because of its gentleness, tenderness, innocence, and constant love (&nbsp;Matthew 3:16). He changes us into His own likeness. The liquid full soft eye is the emblem of the heavenly bride's eye, through which the soul beams out (&nbsp;Song of [[Solomon]] 1:15). Contrast the sinner's eye (&nbsp;Matthew 20:15; &nbsp;2 Peter 2:14). The church's unsheltered innocence in the world calls forth the prayer: "Deliver not the soul of [[Thy]] turtle dove unto the multitude of the wicked" (&nbsp;Psalms 74:19; &nbsp;Psalms 55:11). Their plaintive note symbolizes the mourning penitent (&nbsp;Isaiah 59:11). </p> <p> The change from the [[Egyptian]] bondage amidst the face blackening potteries to the freedom and beauty of Israel's theocratic state is expressed in &nbsp;Psalms 68:13-14, "though ye have lien (lain) among the pots yet shall ye be as the wings of a dove covered with silver, and her feathers with yellow gold," the dove's outspread wings reflecting a golden or silver splendor according to the direction in which the sunshine falls on them, typifying the dovelike spirit of joy and peace beaming forth from the believer, once darkness, but now light in the Lord. The dove's timidity answers to the believer fleeing from sin, self, and wrath, to the refuge in the cleft Rock of ages (&nbsp;Song of Solomon 2:14; &nbsp;Jeremiah 48:28; &nbsp;Isaiah 26:4, margin). Its gregariousness answers to the communion of saints, all having flocked together to Christ (&nbsp;Isaiah 60:8); the returning [[Israelites]] shall so flock to Jerusalem, as doves in a cloud to their cotes; and the converted [[Gentiles]] to Israel. </p> <p> [[Saints]] must imitate its harmless simplicity (&nbsp;Matthew 7:16), but not its silliness (&nbsp;Hosea 7:11). The Israelites under God's visitation of the enemy's invasion "shall be on the mountains like doves of the valleys" (&nbsp;Ezekiel 7:16); as doves which usually frequent valleys mount up to the mountains when fearing the birdcatcher (&nbsp;Psalms 11:1), so Israel, once dwelling in the peaceful valleys, shall flee from the foe to the mountains, once the scene of their highplace idolatries, now retributively the scene of their abject flight. In &nbsp;Jeremiah 25:38, "because of the fierceness of the oppressor" (Hebrew: the dove), the allusion is to the Chaldaean standard, the dove, the symbol of Venus. [[Semiramis]] the queen was said to have been nourished by doves when exposed at birth, and at death to have been transformed into a dove. In &nbsp;2 Kings 6:25 the "dove's dung" sold for food in the famine seems to have been a vegetable or poor grain or vetch pea, so named, that grew in the land not built upon and lying, as is common in the East, within the city. </p> <p> Linnaeus identified it with the '''''Οrnithogalum Umbellatum''''' , with eatable bulbs, "the star of Bethlehem"; the color of the flowers, white mixed with green, originated the name "dove's dung," which is of like color. Keil thinks it to be a saltwort yielding alkali, '''''Ηerba Alkali''''' . Josephus, however (B. J., 5:13, section 7), mentions literal dung having been eaten in terrible famine. The offering of a dove was the alternative permitted to those unable to afford a more costly one, an alternative adopted instead of the lamb by the [[Virgin]] mother at her purification, a proof of the poverty to which our Lord stooped at His incarnation. The sellers of doves profaned the temple court by selling doves to meet the wants of the poorer classes (&nbsp;John 2:13-17). </p>
          
          
== Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament <ref name="term_55605" /> ==
== Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament <ref name="term_55605" /> ==
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== International Standard Bible Encyclopedia <ref name="term_2862" /> ==
== International Standard Bible Encyclopedia <ref name="term_2862" /> ==
<p> '''''duv''''' ( תּור , <i> '''''tōr''''' </i> , יונה , <i> '''''yōnāh''''' </i> ; περιστερά , <i> '''''peristerá''''' </i> ; Latin <i> Zenaedura carolinensis </i> ): A bird of the family <i> Columbidae </i> . Doves and pigeons are so closely related as to be spoken and written of as synonymous, yet there is a distinction recognized from the beginning of time. It was especially marked in Palestine, because doves migrated, but pigeons remained in their chosen haunts all the year. Yet doves were the wild birds and were only confined singly or in pairs as caged pets, or in order to be available for sacrifice. Pigeons, without question, were the first domesticated birds, the record of their conquest by man extending if anything further back than ducks, geese and swans. These two were the best known and the most loved of all the myriads of birds of Palestine. Doves were given preference because they remained wild and were more elusive. The thing that escapes us is usually a little more attractive than the thing we have. Their loving natures had been noted, their sleek beautiful plumage, their plump bodies. They were the most precious of anything offered for sacrifice. Their use is always specified in preference to pigeons if only one bird was used; if both, the dove is frequently mentioned first. Because of their docility when caged, their use in sacrifice, and the religious superstition concerning them, they were allowed to nest unmolested and, according to species, flocked all over Palestine. The turtle-dove nested in gardens and vineyards, and was almost as tame as the pigeons. The palm turtle-dove took its name from its love of homing in palm trees, and sought these afield, and in cities, even building near the temple in Jerusalem. It also selected thorn and other trees. It has a small body, about ten inches in length, covered with bright chestnut-colored feathers, the neck dappled with dark, lustrous feathers. The rock dove swarmed over, through, and among the cliffs of mountains and the fissures of caves and ravines. The collared turtle-dove was the largest of the species. It remained permanently and homed in the forests of [[Tabor]] and Gilead, around the [[Dead]] Sea, and along the Jordan valley. This bird was darker than the others and took its name from a clearly outlined collar of dark feathers encircling the neck, and was especially sought for caged pets on account of its size and beauty. </p> <p> In all, the dove is mentioned about fifty times in the Bible. Many of these references are concerning its use in sacrifice and need not all be mentioned. The others are quoted and explained from a scientific standpoint and in accordance with the characteristics and habits of the birds. The first reference to the dove occurs in &nbsp;Genesis 8:8-12 , in the history of the flood; then follows its specified use in sacrifice; note of its migratory habits is made, and then in poetry, prophecy, comparison, simile and song, it appears over and over throughout the Bible. </p> <p> In &nbsp;Genesis 8:8-12 , we read, "And he sent forth a dove from him, to see if the waters were abated." Noah first sent out a raven, because it was a strong, aggressive bird and would return to its mate. But the raven only flew over the water and returned to perch on the ark. This was not satisfactory, so Noah in looking for a bird better suited to his purpose, bethought him of the most loving and tender bird he knew - the dove. It not only would return to the ark, but would enter and go to the cage of its mate, and if it found green food it would regurgitate a portion for her or its young, or if not nesting he could tell by its droppings if greenery had been eaten and so decide if the waters were going down. And this is precisely what happened. The dove came back, and the watching Noah saw it feed its mate little green olive leaves, for the dove never carries food in the beak, but swallows and then regurgitates it to mate and young. This first reference to birds was made on account of the loving, tender characteristics of the species; the next, because they were the most loved by the people, and therefore chosen as most suitable to offer as sacrifice (&nbsp;Genesis 15:9 ). In &nbsp;Leviticus 1:14 f, doves are mentioned as sacrifice: "And the priest shall bring it unto the altar, and wring off its head, and burn it on the altar; and the blood thereof shall be drained out on the side of the altar." In &nbsp; Leviticus 5:7 the proper preparation of the sacrifice is prescribed. For method of handling sacrifice see &nbsp; Leviticus 5:8 , &nbsp;Leviticus 5:9 , &nbsp;Leviticus 5:10 . In &nbsp;Leviticus 12:6 the law for a sacrifice for a mother is given, and &nbsp; Leviticus 12:8 of same chapter provides that if she be too poor to offer a lamb, doves or pigeons will suffice. In &nbsp; Leviticus 14:4-8 the reference for the sacrifice of a leper is merely to "birds," because it is understood that they are pigeons and doves, and it contains the specification that if the victim is too poor to afford so elaborate a sacrifice, a smaller one will suffice. The birds are named in &nbsp; Leviticus 14:22 : "Two turtle-doves, or two young pigeons, such as he is able to get; and the one shall be a sin-offering, and the other a burnt-offering" (compare &nbsp; Leviticus 15:14 , &nbsp;Leviticus 15:29; &nbsp;Numbers 6:10 ). When David prayed for the destruction of the treacherous, he used the dove in comparison, and because he says he would "lodge in the wilderness" he indicates that he was thinking of the palm turtle. </p> <p> "And I said, [[Oh]] that I had wings like a dove! </p> <p> Then would I fly away, and be at rest" (&nbsp;Psalm 55:6 ). </p> <p> In chanting a song of triumph, David used an exquisite thought. </p> <p> "When ye lie among the sheepfolds, </p> <p> It is as the wings of a dove covered with silver, </p> <p> And her pinions with yellow gold" (&nbsp;Psalm 68:13 ). </p> <p> He referred to the rock dove because the metallic luster on its neck would gleam like gold in sunshine, and the soft grayish-white feathers beneath the wings as he would see the bird above him in flight would appear silver-like. By this quotation David meant that in times of peace, when men slept contentedly at home among their folds, their life was as rich with love and as free in peace as the silver wing of the dove that had the gold feathers and was unmolested among the inaccessible caves and cliffs. In &nbsp;Psalm 74:19 the term "turtle-dove" is used to indicate people whom the [[Almighty]] is implored to protect: "Oh deliver not the soul of thy turtle-dove unto the wild beast: forget not the life of thy poor for ever." </p> <p> Solomon uses the dove repeatedly in comparison or as a term of endearment. In &nbsp;Song of Solomon 1:15; &nbsp;Song of Solomon 4:1; &nbsp;Song of Solomon 5:12 , he compares the eyes of his bride full, tender, beautiful, with those of a dove. In &nbsp;Song of Solomon 2:12 he uses the voice of the dove as an indication of spring. In &nbsp; Song of Solomon 2:14 he addresses the bride as a rock dove, In &nbsp; Song of Solomon 5:2 is another term of endearment, this time used in the dream of the bride (compare &nbsp; Song of Solomon 6:9 ). &nbsp;Isaiah 38:14 has reference to the wailing, mournful dove note from which the commonest species take the name "mourning dove." The reference in &nbsp; Isaiah 60:8 proves that the prophet was not so good an observer, or so correct in his natural history as David, who may have learned from the open. As a boy, David guarded the flocks of his father and watched the creatures around him. When exulting over the glory of the church in the numerous accessions of Gentiles, Isaiah cried, "Who are these that fly as a cloud, and as the doves to their windows?" This proves that he confounded pigeons and doves. Doves were wild, mostly migratory, and had no "windows." But the clay cotes of pigeons molded in squares so that one large cote sheltered many pairs in separate homes had the appearance of latticed windows and were used as a basis in estimating a man's wealth. This reference should be changed to read, "and as pigeons to their windows." In &nbsp; Jeremiah 8:7 the fact is pointed out that doves were migratory; and in &nbsp; Jeremiah 48:28 people are advised to go live in solitary places and be peaceable, loving and faithful, like the rock doves. See also &nbsp; Ezekiel 7:16 : "But those of them that escape shall escape, and shall be on the mountains like doves of the valleys, all of them moaning, every one in his iniquity." This merely means that people should be driven to hide among the caves and valleys where the rock doves lived, and that the sound of their mourning would resemble the cry of the birds. It does not mean, however, that the doves were mourning, for when doves coo and moan and to our ears grow most pitiful in their cries, they are the happiest in the mating season. The veneration cherished for doves in these days is inborn, and no bird is so loved and protected as the dove - hence, it is unusually secure and happy and its mournful cry is the product of our imagination only. The dove is the happiest of birds. &nbsp; Hosea 7:11 and &nbsp; Hosea 11:11 each compares people with doves; the first, because the birds at times appear foolishly trusting; the second, because, while no bird is more confiding, none is more easily frightened. "And [[Ephraim]] is like a silly dove, without understanding: they call unto Egypt, they go to Assyria" (&nbsp; Hosea 7:11 ). "They shall come trembling as a bird out of Egypt, and as a dove out of the land of Assyria; and I will make them to dwell in their houses, saith Yahweh" (&nbsp;Hosea 11:11 ). The reference in &nbsp;Nahum 2:7 is to the voice of the birds. </p> <p> New [[Testament]] references will be found in a description of the baptism of Jesus (&nbsp;Matthew 3:16 ). People are admonished to be "harmless as doves" (&nbsp;Matthew 10:16 ). "And Jesus entered into the temple of God, and cast out all them that sold and bought in the temple, and overthrew the tables of the money-changers, and the seats of them that sold the doves" (&nbsp;Matthew 21:12 ). This proves that these birds were a common article of commerce, probably the most used for caged pets, and those customarily employed for sacrifice. </p> <p> Dove's [[Dung]] ( חרי יונים , <i> '''''ḥărı̄ yōnı̄m''''' </i> , [[Kethibh]] for דּביונים , <i> '''''dibhyōnı̄m''''' </i> ): &nbsp;2 Kings 6:25 : "And there was a great famine in Samaria: and, behold, they besieged it, until an ass's head was sold for fourscore pieces of silver, and the fourth part of a kab of dove's dung for five pieces of silver." This seems so repulsive that some commentators have tried to prove the name applied to the edible root of a plant, but the history of sieges records other cases where matter quite as offensive was used to sustain life. The text is probably correct as it stands. </p>
<p> ''''' duv ''''' ( תּור , <i> ''''' tōr ''''' </i> , יונה , <i> ''''' yōnāh ''''' </i> ; περιστερά , <i> ''''' peristerá ''''' </i> ; Latin <i> Zenaedura carolinensis </i> ): A bird of the family <i> Columbidae </i> . Doves and pigeons are so closely related as to be spoken and written of as synonymous, yet there is a distinction recognized from the beginning of time. It was especially marked in Palestine, because doves migrated, but pigeons remained in their chosen haunts all the year. Yet doves were the wild birds and were only confined singly or in pairs as caged pets, or in order to be available for sacrifice. Pigeons, without question, were the first domesticated birds, the record of their conquest by man extending if anything further back than ducks, geese and swans. These two were the best known and the most loved of all the myriads of birds of Palestine. Doves were given preference because they remained wild and were more elusive. The thing that escapes us is usually a little more attractive than the thing we have. Their loving natures had been noted, their sleek beautiful plumage, their plump bodies. They were the most precious of anything offered for sacrifice. Their use is always specified in preference to pigeons if only one bird was used; if both, the dove is frequently mentioned first. Because of their docility when caged, their use in sacrifice, and the religious superstition concerning them, they were allowed to nest unmolested and, according to species, flocked all over Palestine. The turtle-dove nested in gardens and vineyards, and was almost as tame as the pigeons. The palm turtle-dove took its name from its love of homing in palm trees, and sought these afield, and in cities, even building near the temple in Jerusalem. It also selected thorn and other trees. It has a small body, about ten inches in length, covered with bright chestnut-colored feathers, the neck dappled with dark, lustrous feathers. The rock dove swarmed over, through, and among the cliffs of mountains and the fissures of caves and ravines. The collared turtle-dove was the largest of the species. It remained permanently and homed in the forests of [[Tabor]] and Gilead, around the [[Dead]] Sea, and along the Jordan valley. This bird was darker than the others and took its name from a clearly outlined collar of dark feathers encircling the neck, and was especially sought for caged pets on account of its size and beauty. </p> <p> In all, the dove is mentioned about fifty times in the Bible. Many of these references are concerning its use in sacrifice and need not all be mentioned. The others are quoted and explained from a scientific standpoint and in accordance with the characteristics and habits of the birds. The first reference to the dove occurs in &nbsp;Genesis 8:8-12 , in the history of the flood; then follows its specified use in sacrifice; note of its migratory habits is made, and then in poetry, prophecy, comparison, simile and song, it appears over and over throughout the Bible. </p> <p> In &nbsp;Genesis 8:8-12 , we read, "And he sent forth a dove from him, to see if the waters were abated." Noah first sent out a raven, because it was a strong, aggressive bird and would return to its mate. But the raven only flew over the water and returned to perch on the ark. This was not satisfactory, so Noah in looking for a bird better suited to his purpose, bethought him of the most loving and tender bird he knew - the dove. It not only would return to the ark, but would enter and go to the cage of its mate, and if it found green food it would regurgitate a portion for her or its young, or if not nesting he could tell by its droppings if greenery had been eaten and so decide if the waters were going down. And this is precisely what happened. The dove came back, and the watching Noah saw it feed its mate little green olive leaves, for the dove never carries food in the beak, but swallows and then regurgitates it to mate and young. This first reference to birds was made on account of the loving, tender characteristics of the species; the next, because they were the most loved by the people, and therefore chosen as most suitable to offer as sacrifice (&nbsp;Genesis 15:9 ). In &nbsp;Leviticus 1:14 f, doves are mentioned as sacrifice: "And the priest shall bring it unto the altar, and wring off its head, and burn it on the altar; and the blood thereof shall be drained out on the side of the altar." In &nbsp; Leviticus 5:7 the proper preparation of the sacrifice is prescribed. For method of handling sacrifice see &nbsp; Leviticus 5:8 , &nbsp;Leviticus 5:9 , &nbsp;Leviticus 5:10 . In &nbsp;Leviticus 12:6 the law for a sacrifice for a mother is given, and &nbsp; Leviticus 12:8 of same chapter provides that if she be too poor to offer a lamb, doves or pigeons will suffice. In &nbsp; Leviticus 14:4-8 the reference for the sacrifice of a leper is merely to "birds," because it is understood that they are pigeons and doves, and it contains the specification that if the victim is too poor to afford so elaborate a sacrifice, a smaller one will suffice. The birds are named in &nbsp; Leviticus 14:22 : "Two turtle-doves, or two young pigeons, such as he is able to get; and the one shall be a sin-offering, and the other a burnt-offering" (compare &nbsp; Leviticus 15:14 , &nbsp;Leviticus 15:29; &nbsp;Numbers 6:10 ). When David prayed for the destruction of the treacherous, he used the dove in comparison, and because he says he would "lodge in the wilderness" he indicates that he was thinking of the palm turtle. </p> <p> "And I said, [[Oh]] that I had wings like a dove! </p> <p> Then would I fly away, and be at rest" (&nbsp;Psalm 55:6 ). </p> <p> In chanting a song of triumph, David used an exquisite thought. </p> <p> "When ye lie among the sheepfolds, </p> <p> It is as the wings of a dove covered with silver, </p> <p> And her pinions with yellow gold" (&nbsp;Psalm 68:13 ). </p> <p> He referred to the rock dove because the metallic luster on its neck would gleam like gold in sunshine, and the soft grayish-white feathers beneath the wings as he would see the bird above him in flight would appear silver-like. By this quotation David meant that in times of peace, when men slept contentedly at home among their folds, their life was as rich with love and as free in peace as the silver wing of the dove that had the gold feathers and was unmolested among the inaccessible caves and cliffs. In &nbsp;Psalm 74:19 the term "turtle-dove" is used to indicate people whom the [[Almighty]] is implored to protect: "Oh deliver not the soul of thy turtle-dove unto the wild beast: forget not the life of thy poor for ever." </p> <p> Solomon uses the dove repeatedly in comparison or as a term of endearment. In &nbsp;Song of Solomon 1:15; &nbsp;Song of Solomon 4:1; &nbsp;Song of Solomon 5:12 , he compares the eyes of his bride full, tender, beautiful, with those of a dove. In &nbsp;Song of Solomon 2:12 he uses the voice of the dove as an indication of spring. In &nbsp; Song of Solomon 2:14 he addresses the bride as a rock dove, In &nbsp; Song of Solomon 5:2 is another term of endearment, this time used in the dream of the bride (compare &nbsp; Song of Solomon 6:9 ). &nbsp;Isaiah 38:14 has reference to the wailing, mournful dove note from which the commonest species take the name "mourning dove." The reference in &nbsp; Isaiah 60:8 proves that the prophet was not so good an observer, or so correct in his natural history as David, who may have learned from the open. As a boy, David guarded the flocks of his father and watched the creatures around him. When exulting over the glory of the church in the numerous accessions of Gentiles, Isaiah cried, "Who are these that fly as a cloud, and as the doves to their windows?" This proves that he confounded pigeons and doves. Doves were wild, mostly migratory, and had no "windows." But the clay cotes of pigeons molded in squares so that one large cote sheltered many pairs in separate homes had the appearance of latticed windows and were used as a basis in estimating a man's wealth. This reference should be changed to read, "and as pigeons to their windows." In &nbsp; Jeremiah 8:7 the fact is pointed out that doves were migratory; and in &nbsp; Jeremiah 48:28 people are advised to go live in solitary places and be peaceable, loving and faithful, like the rock doves. See also &nbsp; Ezekiel 7:16 : "But those of them that escape shall escape, and shall be on the mountains like doves of the valleys, all of them moaning, every one in his iniquity." This merely means that people should be driven to hide among the caves and valleys where the rock doves lived, and that the sound of their mourning would resemble the cry of the birds. It does not mean, however, that the doves were mourning, for when doves coo and moan and to our ears grow most pitiful in their cries, they are the happiest in the mating season. The veneration cherished for doves in these days is inborn, and no bird is so loved and protected as the dove - hence, it is unusually secure and happy and its mournful cry is the product of our imagination only. The dove is the happiest of birds. &nbsp; Hosea 7:11 and &nbsp; Hosea 11:11 each compares people with doves; the first, because the birds at times appear foolishly trusting; the second, because, while no bird is more confiding, none is more easily frightened. "And [[Ephraim]] is like a silly dove, without understanding: they call unto Egypt, they go to Assyria" (&nbsp; Hosea 7:11 ). "They shall come trembling as a bird out of Egypt, and as a dove out of the land of Assyria; and I will make them to dwell in their houses, saith Yahweh" (&nbsp;Hosea 11:11 ). The reference in &nbsp;Nahum 2:7 is to the voice of the birds. </p> <p> New [[Testament]] references will be found in a description of the baptism of Jesus (&nbsp;Matthew 3:16 ). People are admonished to be "harmless as doves" (&nbsp;Matthew 10:16 ). "And Jesus entered into the temple of God, and cast out all them that sold and bought in the temple, and overthrew the tables of the money-changers, and the seats of them that sold the doves" (&nbsp;Matthew 21:12 ). This proves that these birds were a common article of commerce, probably the most used for caged pets, and those customarily employed for sacrifice. </p> <p> Dove's [[Dung]] ( חרי יונים , <i> ''''' ḥărı̄ yōnı̄m ''''' </i> , [[Kethibh]] for דּביונים , <i> ''''' dibhyōnı̄m ''''' </i> ): &nbsp;2 Kings 6:25 : "And there was a great famine in Samaria: and, behold, they besieged it, until an ass's head was sold for fourscore pieces of silver, and the fourth part of a kab of dove's dung for five pieces of silver." This seems so repulsive that some commentators have tried to prove the name applied to the edible root of a plant, but the history of sieges records other cases where matter quite as offensive was used to sustain life. The text is probably correct as it stands. </p>
          
          
== The Nuttall Encyclopedia <ref name="term_72123" /> ==
== The Nuttall Encyclopedia <ref name="term_72123" /> ==