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Difference between revisions of "Scrip"

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== Fausset's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_37592" /> ==
== Fausset's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_37592" /> ==
<p> ("Shepherd's bag".) (yalquwt ), &nbsp;1 Samuel 17:40; &nbsp;2 Kings 4:42 (tsiqlon ) margin. In New Testament, the leather "wallet" (fra ) slung on the shoulder for carrying food for a journey; distinct from the "purse" (zone , literally, "girdle"; balantion , "small bag for money"): &nbsp;Matthew 10:9-10; &nbsp;Luke 10:4; &nbsp;Luke 12:33. Unlike other travelers, the twelve and the seventy, when sent forth, were wholly dependent on God, having no provision for their journey; at other times they carried provisions in a bag and purse (&nbsp;Luke 22:35-36; &nbsp;John 12:6; &nbsp;Mark 8:14-16). The English "scrip," originally "script," related to "scrap," was used for food. </p>
<p> ("Shepherd's bag".) ( '''''Yalquwt''''' ), &nbsp;1 Samuel 17:40; &nbsp;2 Kings 4:42 ( '''''Tsiqlon''''' ) margin. In New Testament, the leather "wallet" ( '''''Fra''''' ) slung on the shoulder for carrying food for a journey; distinct from the "purse" ( '''''Zone''''' , literally, "girdle"; '''''Balantion''''' , "small bag for money"): &nbsp;Matthew 10:9-10; &nbsp;Luke 10:4; &nbsp;Luke 12:33. Unlike other travelers, the twelve and the seventy, when sent forth, were wholly dependent on God, having no provision for their journey; at other times they carried provisions in a bag and purse (&nbsp;Luke 22:35-36; &nbsp;John 12:6; &nbsp;Mark 8:14-16). The English "scrip," originally "script," related to "scrap," was used for food. </p>
          
          
== Webster's Dictionary <ref name="term_171878" /> ==
== Webster's Dictionary <ref name="term_171878" /> ==
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== King James Dictionary <ref name="term_62903" /> ==
== King James Dictionary <ref name="term_62903" /> ==
<p> SCRIP, n. This belongs to the root of gripe, our vulgar grab, that is, to seize or press. </p> <p> A small bag a wallet a satchel. David put five smooth stones in a scrip. &nbsp;1 Samuel 17 . &nbsp;Matthew 10 . </p> <p> SCRIP, n. L. scriptum, scriptio, from scribo, to write. </p> <p> A small writing, certificate or schedule a piece of paper containing a writing. </p> <p> Bills of exchange cannot pay our debts abroad, till scrips of paper can be made current coin. </p> <p> A certificate of stock subscribed to a bank or other company, or of a share of other joint property, is called in [[America]] a scrip. </p>
<p> [[Scrip]] n. This belongs to the root of gripe, our vulgar grab, that is, to seize or press. </p> <p> A small bag a wallet a satchel. David put five smooth stones in a scrip. &nbsp;1 Samuel 17 . &nbsp;Matthew 10 . </p> <p> SCRIP, n. L. scriptum, scriptio, from scribo, to write. </p> <p> A small writing, certificate or schedule a piece of paper containing a writing. </p> <p> Bills of exchange cannot pay our debts abroad, till scrips of paper can be made current coin. </p> <p> A certificate of stock subscribed to a bank or other company, or of a share of other joint property, is called in [[America]] a scrip. </p>
          
          
== Easton's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_33678" /> ==
== Easton's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_33678" /> ==
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== Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_54026" /> ==
== Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_54026" /> ==
<p> <strong> [[Scrip]] </strong> . See Bag. </p>
<p> <strong> SCRIP </strong> . See Bag. </p>
          
          
== Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament <ref name="term_57514" /> ==
== Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament <ref name="term_57514" /> ==
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== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_59728" /> ==
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_59728" /> ==
<p> an old Saxon name for satchel (Bible Educator, 4:209). is used in the A.V. as a rendering of the Heb. יַלְקוּט '', Yalkut'' (from לָקַט, to collect; Sept. συλλογή ), in &nbsp;1 Samuel 17:40, where it appears as a synonym for כְּלִי חָרֹעִים (τὸ κάδιον τὸ ποιμενικόν )'','' the bag in which the shepherds of Palestine carried their food or other necessaries. In [[Symmachus]] and the Vulg. pera, and in the marginal reading of A.V. "scrip," appear in &nbsp;2 Kings 4:42 for the צִקְלוֹן, ''Tsiklon,'' which in the text of the A. 57. is translated [[Husk]] (comp. Gesen. s.v.). The ππήρα of the New Test. appears in our Lord's command to his disciples as distinguished from the ζώνη (&nbsp;Matthew 10:10; &nbsp;Mark 6:8) and the βαλλάντιον (&nbsp;Luke 10:4; &nbsp;Luke 22:35-36), and its nature and use are sufficiently defined by the lexicographers. The English word has a meaning precisely equivalent to that of the Greek. Connected, as it probably is, with ''Scrape, Scrap,'' the scrip was used for articles of food. It belonged especially to shepherds (''A S You Like It,'' act iii, sc. 2). It was made of leather (Milton, ''Comus,'' 626). The later sense of [[Scrip]] as a written certificate is, it need hardly be said, of different origin or meaning; the word, on its first use in English, was written ''Script'' (Chaucer). The scrip of the ancient peasants was of leather, used especially to carry their food on a journey (ἡ θηκὴ τῶν ἄρτων, Suid.; δέρμα τι ἀρτόφορον '','' Ammon.), and slung over their shoulders. In the Talmudic writers the word תרמיל is used as denoting the same thing, and is named as part of the equipment both of shepherds in their common life and of proselytes coming on a pilgrimage to [[Jerusalem]] (Lightfoot, Hot. Heb. on &nbsp;Matthew 10:10). The ζώνη, on the other hand, was the loose girdle, in the folds of which money was often kept for the sake of safety, (See [[Girdle]]); the βαλλάντιον (''Sacculus,'' Vulg.), was the smaller bag used exclusively for money (&nbsp;Luke 12:33). (See Bag). </p> <p> Lightfoot, on the authority of rabbi Nathan, describes the scrip as "a kind of vesture, which was a little upper garment in which were many places sewed, where they put anything they met with that they had occasion to use; so that this was a kind of apron with divers purses or pockets made in it, in which the [[Jews]] put their necessaries as we do in our pockets, Which apron they could readily put off or on, wear or lay aside, as they saw occasion. As in such an apron they had their pockets, so in the scarf or girdle wherewithal they girded their undercoats they had their purses. Their girdles were ordinarily of linen, and in them they kept their money when they travelled or went from home on their business" (Temple Service, 9:121). (See [[Purse]]). </p> <p> [[Notwithstanding]] the great hospitality of the Orientals, travellers cannot always calculate upon obtaining a supply of food in their cottages, for most of the peasants are so poor that they can rarely afford to keep more provisions than will meet the immediate wants of their families. Pedestrian travellers and shepherds are therefore accustomed to take with them a satchel, or wallet, in which they carry some dry food and other little articles likely to be useful on a journey. It was in such a bag that David carried the pebble with which he smote the boasting champion of the [[Philistines]] (&nbsp;1 Samuel 17:40). When Christ sent forth his apostles, he forbade them to provide themselves with these satchels; and nothing can more forcibly show the completeness of their dependence on [[Divine]] Providence, while executing their mission, than their neglecting to supply themselves with what all other travellers would have regarded as an indispensable requisite (&nbsp;Matthew 10:10; &nbsp;Mark 6:8; &nbsp;Luke 9:3; comp. &nbsp;Luke 22:35-36). They were to appear in ever), town or village as men unlike all other travellers, freely doing without that which others looked on as essential. The fresh rule given in &nbsp;Luke 22:35-36, perhaps, also, the facts that [[Judas]] was the bearer of the bag (γλωσσόκομον '','' &nbsp;John 12:6), and that when the disciples were without bread they were ashamed of their forgetfulness (&nbsp;Mark 8:14-16), show that the command was not intended to be permanent. The scrip is often made of haircloth, and is of various forms. In Palestine, however, it is usually made of leather (Porter, ''Damascus,'' 2:109). In the south of Spain, where many of the usages introduced by the Mohammedan conquerors are still retained, the scrip is usually of goat-skin, and is generally carried over the shoulder. The purse, which some inaccurate commentators have confounded with the scrip, was always Suspended from the girdle. A kind of sanctity is attributed to the scrip by some of the Eastern Jews, as it preserves their food from being polluted by being brought into con tact with those whom they are taught to regard as unclean or profane (see Hackett, ''Illustrations Of Scripture,'' p. 91). Thomson found the farmers, in the vicinity of the Lake of Gennesaret, carrying wallets made of the skins of kids stripped off whole and roughly tanned; and he supposes these to be the scrip of the Bible (Land and Book, i, 532 sq.). </p>
<p> an old Saxon name for satchel (Bible Educator, 4:209). is used in the A.V. as a rendering of the Heb. '''''יַלְקוּט''''' '', Yalkut'' (from '''''לָקַט''''' , to collect; Sept. '''''Συλλογή''''' ), in &nbsp;1 Samuel 17:40, where it appears as a synonym for '''''כְּלִי''''' '''''חָרֹעִים''''' ( '''''Τὸ''''' '''''Κάδιον''''' '''''Τὸ''''' '''''Ποιμενικόν''''' ) '','' the bag in which the shepherds of Palestine carried their food or other necessaries. In [[Symmachus]] and the Vulg. pera, and in the marginal reading of A.V. "scrip," appear in &nbsp;2 Kings 4:42 for the '''''צִקְלוֹן''''' , ''Tsiklon,'' which in the text of the A. 57. is translated [[Husk]] (comp. Gesen. s.v.). The '''''Ππήρα''''' of the New Test. appears in our Lord's command to his disciples as distinguished from the '''''Ζώνη''''' (&nbsp;Matthew 10:10; &nbsp;Mark 6:8) and the '''''Βαλλάντιον''''' (&nbsp;Luke 10:4; &nbsp;Luke 22:35-36), and its nature and use are sufficiently defined by the lexicographers. The English word has a meaning precisely equivalent to that of the Greek. Connected, as it probably is, with ''Scrape, Scrap,'' the scrip was used for articles of food. It belonged especially to shepherds ( ''A S You Like It,'' act iii, sc. 2). It was made of leather (Milton, ''Comus,'' 626). The later sense of [[Scrip]] as a written certificate is, it need hardly be said, of different origin or meaning; the word, on its first use in English, was written ''Script'' (Chaucer). The scrip of the ancient peasants was of leather, used especially to carry their food on a journey ( '''''Ἡ''''' '''''Θηκὴ''''' '''''Τῶν''''' '''''Ἄρτων''''' , Suid.; '''''Δέρμα''''' '''''Τι''''' '''''Ἀρτόφορον''''' '','' Ammon.), and slung over their shoulders. In the Talmudic writers the word '''''תרמיל''''' is used as denoting the same thing, and is named as part of the equipment both of shepherds in their common life and of proselytes coming on a pilgrimage to [[Jerusalem]] (Lightfoot, Hot. Heb. on &nbsp;Matthew 10:10). The '''''Ζώνη''''' , on the other hand, was the loose girdle, in the folds of which money was often kept for the sake of safety, (See [[Girdle]]); the '''''Βαλλάντιον''''' ( ''Sacculus,'' Vulg.), was the smaller bag used exclusively for money (&nbsp;Luke 12:33). (See Bag). </p> <p> Lightfoot, on the authority of rabbi Nathan, describes the scrip as "a kind of vesture, which was a little upper garment in which were many places sewed, where they put anything they met with that they had occasion to use; so that this was a kind of apron with divers purses or pockets made in it, in which the [[Jews]] put their necessaries as we do in our pockets, Which apron they could readily put off or on, wear or lay aside, as they saw occasion. As in such an apron they had their pockets, so in the scarf or girdle wherewithal they girded their undercoats they had their purses. Their girdles were ordinarily of linen, and in them they kept their money when they travelled or went from home on their business" (Temple Service, 9:121). (See [[Purse]]). </p> <p> [[Notwithstanding]] the great hospitality of the Orientals, travellers cannot always calculate upon obtaining a supply of food in their cottages, for most of the peasants are so poor that they can rarely afford to keep more provisions than will meet the immediate wants of their families. Pedestrian travellers and shepherds are therefore accustomed to take with them a satchel, or wallet, in which they carry some dry food and other little articles likely to be useful on a journey. It was in such a bag that David carried the pebble with which he smote the boasting champion of the [[Philistines]] (&nbsp;1 Samuel 17:40). When Christ sent forth his apostles, he forbade them to provide themselves with these satchels; and nothing can more forcibly show the completeness of their dependence on [[Divine]] Providence, while executing their mission, than their neglecting to supply themselves with what all other travellers would have regarded as an indispensable requisite (&nbsp;Matthew 10:10; &nbsp;Mark 6:8; &nbsp;Luke 9:3; comp. &nbsp;Luke 22:35-36). They were to appear in ever), town or village as men unlike all other travellers, freely doing without that which others looked on as essential. The fresh rule given in &nbsp;Luke 22:35-36, perhaps, also, the facts that [[Judas]] was the bearer of the bag ( '''''Γλωσσόκομον''''' '','' &nbsp;John 12:6), and that when the disciples were without bread they were ashamed of their forgetfulness (&nbsp;Mark 8:14-16), show that the command was not intended to be permanent. The scrip is often made of haircloth, and is of various forms. In Palestine, however, it is usually made of leather (Porter, ''Damascus,'' 2:109). In the south of Spain, where many of the usages introduced by the Mohammedan conquerors are still retained, the scrip is usually of goat-skin, and is generally carried over the shoulder. The purse, which some inaccurate commentators have confounded with the scrip, was always Suspended from the girdle. A kind of sanctity is attributed to the scrip by some of the Eastern Jews, as it preserves their food from being polluted by being brought into con tact with those whom they are taught to regard as unclean or profane (see Hackett, ''Illustrations Of Scripture,'' p. 91). Thomson found the farmers, in the vicinity of the Lake of Gennesaret, carrying wallets made of the skins of kids stripped off whole and roughly tanned; and he supposes these to be the scrip of the Bible (Land and Book, i, 532 sq.). </p>
          
          
== International Standard Bible Encyclopedia <ref name="term_7999" /> ==
== International Standard Bible Encyclopedia <ref name="term_7999" /> ==