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Difference between revisions of "Liver"

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== American Tract Society Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_16566" /> ==
<p> Leviticus 3:4 . This organ in man was regarded by the ancients as the seat of the passions. Idolaters consulted the liver of the victim offered in sacrifice, for purposes of divination, Ezekiel 21:21 . </p>
       
== Easton's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_32386" /> ==
Exodus 29:13,22Leviticus 3:4,1,10,15Ezekiel 21:21 Leviticus 4:97:4
       
== Holman Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_41892" /> ==
Leviticus 3:43:103:15Ezekiel 21:21Lamentations 2:11Genesis 49:6Psalm 16:9Psalm 57:8
       
== Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_52439" /> ==
== Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible <ref name="term_52439" /> ==
<p> <strong> LIVER </strong> ( <em> kâbçdh </em> ). <strong> 1 </strong> . In the great majority of cases where the liver is mentioned, it is in connexion with the law of sacrifice as prescribed in P [Note: Priestly Narrative.] ( Exodus 29:13; Exodus 29:22 , Leviticus 3:4; Leviticus 3:10; Leviticus 3:16 etc.), and always in association with the <strong> caul </strong> ( <em> yôthereth </em> ). The LXX [Note: Septuagint.] , followed by [[Josephus]] ( <em> [[Ant]] </em> . III. ix. 2), takes <em> yôthereth </em> to be a lobe of the liver; but it is now agreed that it denotes the fatty mass at the opening of that organ. According to Semitic ideas, a peculiar holiness belonged to the liver and kidneys (wh. see), together with the fat attached to them; the reason being that they were regarded as the special seats not only of emotion but of life itself. Because of its sacredness the liver with its fat was not to be eaten, but was to be offered in sacrifice to J″ [Note: Jahweh.] . <strong> 2 </strong> . Proverbs 7:23 ‘till a dart strike through his liver,’ Lamentations 2:11 ‘my liver is poured upon the earth’ (cf. Job 16:13 ‘he poureth out my gall upon the ground’) are further illustrations of the physiological ideas referred to above. [[Either]] they are strong expressions for a deadly disease, or they denote sorrowful emotion of the most poignant kind. <strong> 3 </strong> . In Ezekiel 21:21 the king of Babylon, at the parting of the way, ‘looked in the liver’ as one of the three forms of divination he employed. <strong> 4 </strong> . In [[Tob]] 6:4-16; Tob 8:2 the liver of a fish is used for the purpose of exorcism. See, further, art. [[Magic]] [[Divination]] and Sorcery, p. 568 b . </p> <p> J. C. Lambert. </p>
<p> <strong> LIVER </strong> ( <em> kâbçdh </em> ). <strong> 1 </strong> . In the great majority of cases where the liver is mentioned, it is in connexion with the law of sacrifice as prescribed in P [Note: Priestly Narrative.] ( Exodus 29:13; Exodus 29:22 , Leviticus 3:4; Leviticus 3:10; Leviticus 3:16 etc.), and always in association with the <strong> caul </strong> ( <em> yôthereth </em> ). The LXX [Note: Septuagint.] , followed by [[Josephus]] ( <em> [[Ant]] </em> . III. ix. 2), takes <em> yôthereth </em> to be a lobe of the liver; but it is now agreed that it denotes the fatty mass at the opening of that organ. According to Semitic ideas, a peculiar holiness belonged to the liver and kidneys (wh. see), together with the fat attached to them; the reason being that they were regarded as the special seats not only of emotion but of life itself. Because of its sacredness the liver with its fat was not to be eaten, but was to be offered in sacrifice to J″ [Note: Jahweh.] . <strong> 2 </strong> . Proverbs 7:23 ‘till a dart strike through his liver,’ Lamentations 2:11 ‘my liver is poured upon the earth’ (cf. Job 16:13 ‘he poureth out my gall upon the ground’) are further illustrations of the physiological ideas referred to above. [[Either]] they are strong expressions for a deadly disease, or they denote sorrowful emotion of the most poignant kind. <strong> 3 </strong> . In Ezekiel 21:21 the king of Babylon, at the parting of the way, ‘looked in the liver’ as one of the three forms of divination he employed. <strong> 4 </strong> . In [[Tob]] 6:4-16; Tob 8:2 the liver of a fish is used for the purpose of exorcism. See, further, art. [[Magic]] [[Divination]] and Sorcery, p. 568 b . </p> <p> J. C. Lambert. </p>
       
== King James Dictionary <ref name="term_61195" /> ==
<p> LIV'ER, n. One who lives. </p> <p> And try if life be worth the liver's care. </p> <p> It is often used with a word of qualification as a high liver a loose liver, &c. </p> <p> LIV'ER, n. </p> <p> A viscus or intestine of considerable size and of a reddish color, convex on the anterior and superior side, and of an unequal surface on the inferior and posterior side. It is situated under the false ribs, in the right hypochondrium. It consists of two lobes, of a glandular substance, and destined for the secretion of the bile. </p>
          
          
== Morrish Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_67314" /> ==
== Morrish Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_67314" /> ==
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== Webster's Dictionary <ref name="term_139506" /> ==
== Webster's Dictionary <ref name="term_139506" /> ==
<p> (1): </p> <p> (n.) A very large glandular and vascular organ in the visceral cavity of all vertebrates. </p> <p> (2): </p> <p> (n.) One who, or that which, lives. </p> <p> (3): </p> <p> (n.) A resident; a dweller; as, a liver in Brooklyn. </p> <p> (4): </p> <p> (n.) One whose course of life has some marked characteristic (expressed by an adjective); as, a free liver. </p> <p> (5): </p> <p> (n.) The glossy ibis (Ibis falcinellus); - said to have given its name to the city of Liverpool. </p>
<p> (1): </p> <p> (n.) A very large glandular and vascular organ in the visceral cavity of all vertebrates. </p> <p> (2): </p> <p> (n.) One who, or that which, lives. </p> <p> (3): </p> <p> (n.) A resident; a dweller; as, a liver in Brooklyn. </p> <p> (4): </p> <p> (n.) One whose course of life has some marked characteristic (expressed by an adjective); as, a free liver. </p> <p> (5): </p> <p> (n.) The glossy ibis (Ibis falcinellus); - said to have given its name to the city of Liverpool. </p>
       
== King James Dictionary <ref name="term_61195" /> ==
<p> LIV'ER, n. One who lives. </p> <p> And try if life be worth the liver's care. </p> <p> It is often used with a word of qualification as a high liver a loose liver, &c. </p> <p> LIV'ER, n. </p> <p> A viscus or intestine of considerable size and of a reddish color, convex on the anterior and superior side, and of an unequal surface on the inferior and posterior side. It is situated under the false ribs, in the right hypochondrium. It consists of two lobes, of a glandular substance, and destined for the secretion of the bile. </p>
       
== Holman Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_41892" /> ==
Leviticus 3:43:103:15Ezekiel 21:21Lamentations 2:11Genesis 49:6Psalm 16:9Psalm 57:8
       
== Easton's Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_32386" /> ==
Exodus 29:13,22Leviticus 3:4,1,10,15Ezekiel 21:21 Leviticus 4:97:4
       
== American Tract Society Bible Dictionary <ref name="term_16566" /> ==
<p> Leviticus 3:4 . This organ in man was regarded by the ancients as the seat of the passions. Idolaters consulted the liver of the victim offered in sacrifice, for purposes of divination, Ezekiel 21:21 . </p>
       
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_48569" /> ==
<p> (כָּבֵד, akbesd', so called as being the heaviest of the viscera) occurs in Exodus 29:13; Exodus 29:22; Leviticus 3:4; Leviticus 3:10; Leviticus 3:15; Leviticus 4:9; Leviticus 7:4; Leviticus 8:16; Leviticus 8:25; Leviticus 9:10; Leviticus 9:19; Proverbs 7:23; Lamentations 2:11; Ezekiel 21:21. In the [[Pentateuch]] it forms part of the phrase translated in the Authorized Version "the caul that is above the liver," but which [[Gesenius]] (Thesaur. Heb. pages 645, 646), reasoning from the root, understands to be the great lobe of the liver itself rather than the caul over it, which latter, he observes, is inconsiderable in size, and has but little fat. Jahn thinks the smaller lobe to be meant. The phrase is also rendered in the Sept. "the lobe or lower pendent of the liver," the chief object of attention in the art of hepatoscopy, or divination by the liver, among the ancients. (Jerome gives "the net of the liver," "the suet," and "the fat;" see Bochart. Hieroz. 1:498.) (See [[Caul]]). </p> <p> It appears from the same passages that it was burnt upon the altar, and not eaten as sacrificial food (Jahn, Bibl. Archaeol. § 378, n. 7). The liver was supposed by the ancient [[Greeks]] and Romans to be the seat of the passions pride, love, etc. (see Anacreon, [[Ode]] 3, fin.; Theocritus, Idyll. 11:16; Horace, Carri. 1:13, 4; 25, 15; 4:1, 12; and the Notes of the Delphin edition. Comp. also Persius, Sat. v. 129; Juvenal, Sat. 5:647). Some have argued that the same symbol prevailed among the [[Jews]] (rendering כְּבֹדַי, in [[Genesis]] 49:6, "my liver," instead of "my honor," Sept. τὰ ἣπατακ; compare the [[Hebrew]] of Psalms 16:9; Psalms 57:9; Psalms 108:2), but Gesenius (Hebr. Lex. s.v. כָּבוֹד ) denies this signification in those passages. Wounds in the liver were supposed to be mortal; thus the expression in Proverbs 7:23, "a dart through his liver," and Lamentations 2:11, "my liver is poured out upon the earth," are each of them a periphrasis for death itself. tEschylus uses a similar phrase to describe a mortal wound (Agamemnon, 1:442). (See [[Heart]]). </p> <p> The passage in Ezekiel 21:21 contains an interesting reference to the most ancient of all modes of divination, by the inspection of the viscera of animals, and even of mankind, sacrificially slaughtered for the purpose. It is there said that the king of Babylon, among other modes of divination referred to in the same verse, "looked upon the liver." The liver was always considered the most important organ in the ancient art of Extispicium, or divination by the entrails. Philostratus felicitously describes it as "the prophesying tripod of all divination" (Life of Apollonius, 8:7, 5). The rules by which the Greeks and Romans judged of it are amply detailed in Adams's Romuan Antiquities, page 261 sq. (Lond. 1834), and in Potter's Archaologia Graeca, 1:316 (Lond. 1775). Vitruvius suggests a plausible theory of the first rise of hepatoscopy. He says the ancients inspected the livers of those animals which frequented the places where they wished to settle, and if they found the liver, to which they chiefly ascribed the process of sangnification, was injured, they concluded that the water and nourishment collected in such localities were unwholesome (1:4). But divination is coeval and coextensive with a belief in the divinity. Cicero ascribes divination by this and other means to what he calls "the heroic ages," by which term we know he means a period antecedent to all historical documents (De Dirinationze). Prometheus, in the play of that title (1:474 sq.), lays claim to having taught mankind the different kinds of divination, and that of extispicy among the rest; and Prometheus, according to Servius (ad Virg. Ecl. 6:42), instructed the Assyrians; and we know from sacred record that [[Assyria]] was one, of the countries first peopled. It is further important to remark that the first recorded instance of divination is that of the teraphim of Laban, a native of Padan-Aram, a district bordering on that country (1 Samuel 19:13; 1 Samuel 19:16), but by which teraphim both the Sept. and [[Josephus]] understood "the liver of goats" (Ant. 6:11, 4). (See Terapeism). See generally Whiston's Josephus, page 169, note (Edinb. 1828); Bochart, 1:41, [[De]] Caprarum Nominibus; Encyclopaedia Metropolitanal, s.v. Divination; Rosenmü ller's [[Scholia]] on the several passages referred to; Perizonius, ad AElian. 2:31; Peucer, De Praecipuis Divinationum Generibus, etc. (Wittemberg, 1560). (See [[Divination]]). </p>
          
          
== International Standard Bible Encyclopedia <ref name="term_5770" /> ==
== International Standard Bible Encyclopedia <ref name="term_5770" /> ==
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== Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature <ref name="term_16085" /> ==
== Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature <ref name="term_16085" /> ==
<p> [[Liver]] occurs in;;;;;;;;;;;;; . In all the instances where the word occurs in the Pentateuch, it forms part of the phrase translated in the Authorized Version 'the caul that is above the liver,' but which [[Gesenius]] understands to be the great lobe of the liver itself, rather than the caul over it. Jahn thinks the smaller lobe is meant. It appears from the same passages that it was burnt upon the altar, and not eaten as sacrificial food. The liver was supposed by the ancient Jews, Greeks, and Romans, to be the seat of the passions, pride, love, etc. Thus, , 'with their assembly let not' literally 'my liver be united.' Wounds in the liver were supposed to be mortal; thus the expressions in , 'a dart through his liver,' and , 'my liver is poured out upon the earth,' are each of them a periphrasis for death itself. The passage in Ezekiel contains an interesting reference to the most ancient of all modes of divination, by the inspection of the viscera of animals and even of mankind sacrificially slaughtered for the purpose. It is there said that the king of Babylon, among other modes of divination, referred to in the same verse, 'looked upon the liver.' The liver was always considered the most important organ in the ancient art of divination by the entrails. Philostratus felicitously describes it as 'the prophesying tripod of all divination.' It is an interesting inquiry how this regard to it originated. Vitruvius suggests a plausible theory of the first rise of divination by the liver. He says the ancients inspected the livers of those animals which frequented the places where they wished to settle; and if they found the liver, to which they chiefly ascribed the process of sanguification, was injured, they concluded that the water and nourishment collected in such localities were unwholesome . But divination is coeval and coextensive with a belief in the divinity. We know that as early as the days of [[Cain]] and [[Abel]] there were certain means of communication between [[God]] and man, and that those means were connected with the sacrifice of animals; and we prefer to consider those means as the source of divination in later ages, conceiving that when the real tokens of the divine interest with which the primitive families of man were favored ceased, in consequence of the multiplying of human transgressions, their descendants endeavored to obtain counsel and information by the same external observances. We believe that thus only will the minute resemblances be accounted for, which we discover between the different methods of divination, utterly untraceable to reason, but which have prevailed from unknown antiquity among the most distant regions. It is further important to remark that the first recorded instance of divination is that of the teraphim of Laban, a native of Padan-aram, a district bordering on that country , but by which teraphim both the Sept. and [[Josephus]] understood 'the liver of goats.' </p>
<p> [[Liver]] occurs in;;;;;;;;;;;;; . In all the instances where the word occurs in the Pentateuch, it forms part of the phrase translated in the Authorized Version 'the caul that is above the liver,' but which [[Gesenius]] understands to be the great lobe of the liver itself, rather than the caul over it. Jahn thinks the smaller lobe is meant. It appears from the same passages that it was burnt upon the altar, and not eaten as sacrificial food. The liver was supposed by the ancient Jews, Greeks, and Romans, to be the seat of the passions, pride, love, etc. Thus, , 'with their assembly let not' literally 'my liver be united.' Wounds in the liver were supposed to be mortal; thus the expressions in , 'a dart through his liver,' and , 'my liver is poured out upon the earth,' are each of them a periphrasis for death itself. The passage in Ezekiel contains an interesting reference to the most ancient of all modes of divination, by the inspection of the viscera of animals and even of mankind sacrificially slaughtered for the purpose. It is there said that the king of Babylon, among other modes of divination, referred to in the same verse, 'looked upon the liver.' The liver was always considered the most important organ in the ancient art of divination by the entrails. Philostratus felicitously describes it as 'the prophesying tripod of all divination.' It is an interesting inquiry how this regard to it originated. Vitruvius suggests a plausible theory of the first rise of divination by the liver. He says the ancients inspected the livers of those animals which frequented the places where they wished to settle; and if they found the liver, to which they chiefly ascribed the process of sanguification, was injured, they concluded that the water and nourishment collected in such localities were unwholesome . But divination is coeval and coextensive with a belief in the divinity. We know that as early as the days of [[Cain]] and [[Abel]] there were certain means of communication between [[God]] and man, and that those means were connected with the sacrifice of animals; and we prefer to consider those means as the source of divination in later ages, conceiving that when the real tokens of the divine interest with which the primitive families of man were favored ceased, in consequence of the multiplying of human transgressions, their descendants endeavored to obtain counsel and information by the same external observances. We believe that thus only will the minute resemblances be accounted for, which we discover between the different methods of divination, utterly untraceable to reason, but which have prevailed from unknown antiquity among the most distant regions. It is further important to remark that the first recorded instance of divination is that of the teraphim of Laban, a native of Padan-aram, a district bordering on that country , but by which teraphim both the Sept. and [[Josephus]] understood 'the liver of goats.' </p>
       
== Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature <ref name="term_48569" /> ==
<p> (כָּבֵד, akbesd', so called as being the heaviest of the viscera) occurs in Exodus 29:13; Exodus 29:22; Leviticus 3:4; Leviticus 3:10; Leviticus 3:15; Leviticus 4:9; Leviticus 7:4; Leviticus 8:16; Leviticus 8:25; Leviticus 9:10; Leviticus 9:19; Proverbs 7:23; Lamentations 2:11; Ezekiel 21:21. In the [[Pentateuch]] it forms part of the phrase translated in the Authorized Version "the caul that is above the liver," but which [[Gesenius]] (Thesaur. Heb. pages 645, 646), reasoning from the root, understands to be the great lobe of the liver itself rather than the caul over it, which latter, he observes, is inconsiderable in size, and has but little fat. Jahn thinks the smaller lobe to be meant. The phrase is also rendered in the Sept. "the lobe or lower pendent of the liver," the chief object of attention in the art of hepatoscopy, or divination by the liver, among the ancients. (Jerome gives "the net of the liver," "the suet," and "the fat;" see Bochart. Hieroz. 1:498.) (See [[Caul]]). </p> <p> It appears from the same passages that it was burnt upon the altar, and not eaten as sacrificial food (Jahn, Bibl. Archaeol. § 378, n. 7). The liver was supposed by the ancient [[Greeks]] and Romans to be the seat of the passions pride, love, etc. (see Anacreon, [[Ode]] 3, fin.; Theocritus, Idyll. 11:16; Horace, Carri. 1:13, 4; 25, 15; 4:1, 12; and the [[Notes]] of the Delphin edition. Comp. also Persius, Sat. v. 129; Juvenal, Sat. 5:647). Some have argued that the same symbol prevailed among the [[Jews]] (rendering כְּבֹדַי, in [[Genesis]] 49:6, "my liver," instead of "my honor," Sept. τὰ ἣπατακ; compare the [[Hebrew]] of Psalms 16:9; Psalms 57:9; Psalms 108:2), but Gesenius (Hebr. Lex. s.v. כָּבוֹד ) denies this signification in those passages. Wounds in the liver were supposed to be mortal; thus the expression in Proverbs 7:23, "a dart through his liver," and Lamentations 2:11, "my liver is poured out upon the earth," are each of them a periphrasis for death itself. tEschylus uses a similar phrase to describe a mortal wound (Agamemnon, 1:442). (See [[Heart]]). </p> <p> The passage in Ezekiel 21:21 contains an interesting reference to the most ancient of all modes of divination, by the inspection of the viscera of animals, and even of mankind, sacrificially slaughtered for the purpose. It is there said that the king of Babylon, among other modes of divination referred to in the same verse, "looked upon the liver." The liver was always considered the most important organ in the ancient art of Extispicium, or divination by the entrails. Philostratus felicitously describes it as "the prophesying tripod of all divination" (Life of Apollonius, 8:7, 5). The rules by which the Greeks and Romans judged of it are amply detailed in Adams's Romuan Antiquities, page 261 sq. (Lond. 1834), and in Potter's Archaologia Graeca, 1:316 (Lond. 1775). Vitruvius suggests a plausible theory of the first rise of hepatoscopy. He says the ancients inspected the livers of those animals which frequented the places where they wished to settle, and if they found the liver, to which they chiefly ascribed the process of sangnification, was injured, they concluded that the water and nourishment collected in such localities were unwholesome (1:4). But divination is coeval and coextensive with a belief in the divinity. Cicero ascribes divination by this and other means to what he calls "the heroic ages," by which term we know he means a period antecedent to all historical documents (De Dirinationze). Prometheus, in the play of that title (1:474 sq.), lays claim to having taught mankind the different kinds of divination, and that of extispicy among the rest; and Prometheus, according to Servius (ad Virg. Ecl. 6:42), instructed the Assyrians; and we know from sacred record that [[Assyria]] was one, of the countries first peopled. It is further important to remark that the first recorded instance of divination is that of the teraphim of Laban, a native of Padan-Aram, a district bordering on that country (1 Samuel 19:13; 1 Samuel 19:16), but by which teraphim both the Sept. and [[Josephus]] understood "the liver of goats" (Ant. 6:11, 4). (See Terapeism). See generally Whiston's Josephus, page 169, note (Edinb. 1828); Bochart, 1:41, [[De]] Caprarum Nominibus; Encyclopaedia Metropolitanal, s.v. Divination; Rosenmü ller's [[Scholia]] on the several passages referred to; Perizonius, ad AElian. 2:31; Peucer, De Praecipuis Divinationum Generibus, etc. (Wittemberg, 1560). (See [[Divination]]). </p>
          
          
==References ==
==References ==
<references>
<references>


<ref name="term_16566"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/american-tract-society-bible-dictionary/liver Liver from American Tract Society Bible Dictionary]</ref>
<ref name="term_52439"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/hastings-dictionary-of-the-bible/liver Liver from Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_67314"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/morrish-bible-dictionary/liver Liver from Morrish Bible Dictionary]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_139506"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/webster-s-dictionary/liver Liver from Webster's Dictionary]</ref>
          
          
<ref name="term_32386"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/easton-s-bible-dictionary/liver Liver from Easton's Bible Dictionary]</ref>
<ref name="term_61195"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/king-james-dictionary/liver Liver from King James Dictionary]</ref>
          
          
<ref name="term_41892"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/holman-bible-dictionary/liver Liver from Holman Bible Dictionary]</ref>
<ref name="term_41892"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/holman-bible-dictionary/liver Liver from Holman Bible Dictionary]</ref>
          
          
<ref name="term_52439"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/hastings-dictionary-of-the-bible/liver Liver from Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible]</ref>
<ref name="term_32386"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/easton-s-bible-dictionary/liver Liver from Easton's Bible Dictionary]</ref>
          
          
<ref name="term_61195"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/king-james-dictionary/liver Liver from King James Dictionary]</ref>
<ref name="term_16566"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/american-tract-society-bible-dictionary/liver Liver from American Tract Society Bible Dictionary]</ref>
          
          
<ref name="term_67314"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/morrish-bible-dictionary/liver Liver from Morrish Bible Dictionary]</ref>
<ref name="term_48569"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/cyclopedia-of-biblical-theological-and-ecclesiastical-literature/liver Liver from Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_139506"> [https://bibleportal.com/dictionary/webster-s-dictionary/liver Liver from Webster's Dictionary]</ref>
          
          
<ref name="term_5770"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/international-standard-bible-encyclopedia/liver Liver from International Standard Bible Encyclopedia]</ref>
<ref name="term_5770"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/international-standard-bible-encyclopedia/liver Liver from International Standard Bible Encyclopedia]</ref>
          
          
<ref name="term_16085"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/kitto-s-popular-cyclopedia-of-biblial-literature/liver Liver from Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature]</ref>
<ref name="term_16085"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/kitto-s-popular-cyclopedia-of-biblial-literature/liver Liver from Kitto's Popular Cyclopedia of Biblial Literature]</ref>
       
<ref name="term_48569"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/cyclopedia-of-biblical-theological-and-ecclesiastical-literature/liver Liver from Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature]</ref>
          
          
</references>
</references>