Stubble
Stubble
is the rendering in the A.V. of two Heb. and one Gr. word:
1. Usually , kash (which is invariably so rendered), so called from its dryness, which denotes the dry halm of grain, partly as left standing in the fields (Exo 5:12), and then sometimes burned over (Exo 15:7; Isa 5:24; Isa 47:14; Joe 2:5; Nah 1:10; Oba 1:18), and partly as broken up into chaff by treading out the grain, and so separated by ventilation (Job 13:25; Job 42:20 [28]; Psalm 83:24; Isa 40:24; Isa 41:2; Jer 13:24). SEE CHAFF.
2. Once , teben (Job 21:18), properly straw, as used for provender. SEE STRAW.
3. Once (1Co 3:12), which denotes in general the stalk of grain after the ears are removed (Xenoph. 1Co 3:5; 1Co 3:18; Sept. for , Exo 15:7; Joe 2:5). In Egypt the reapers only cut off the ears of the corn with the sickle, leaving the straw, which they deemed worthless, to rot on the ground. Hence when the cruel Pharaoh commanded the Hebrew brick makers to gather straw for themselves (Exo 5:12), though guilty of excessive tyranny, he did not, as some have supposed, ordain a physical impossibility. SEE BRICK.
Fuente: Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature
Stubble
STUBBLE.See Straw.
Fuente: Hastings’ Dictionary of the Bible
Stubble
stub’l (, kash (Exo 5:12, etc.); , kalame (The Wisdom of Solomon 3:7; 1Co 3:12)): These Hebrew and Greek forms are used of the stalks of wheat, etc., left knee-high in the field by the reapers. , tebhen (Job 21:18), is a mixture of chopped straw and chaff produced in threshing, which is winnowed out by the fan (compare Jer 23:28; Isa 5:24; Mat 3:12). When tebhen was withheld from them the Israelites had to utilize kash for the manufacture of their bricks (Exo 5:12).
Fuente: International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
Stubble
Figurative of the wicked
Exo 15:7; Job 21:18; Psa 83:13; Isa 5:24; Isa 40:24; Isa 41:2; Isa 47:14; Jer 13:24; Joe 2:5; Nah 1:10; Mal 4:1
Fuente: Nave’s Topical Bible
Stubble
“a stalk of corn,” denotes “straw” or “stubble;” in 1Co 3:12, metaphorically of the effect of the most worthless form of unprofitable doctrine, in the lives and conduct of those in a church who are the subjects of such teaching; the teachings received and the persons who receive them are associated; the latter are “the doctrine exhibited in concrete form” (Lightfoot).
Fuente: Vine’s Dictionary of New Testament Words
Stubble
Job 13:25 (b) Job uses this figure to describe himself as one who has been cut down, cast out and is no longer useful.
Isa 33:11 (b) This is a type of the results of a worthless life spent in sin and in rebellion against GOD.
1Co 3:12 (a) Many of the works which Christians do in the Name of the Lord have no value. They produce nothing for the glory of GOD, and will be destroyed at the judgment seat of CHRIST.