Biblia

Goat

Goat

GOAT

A well-known animal, resembling the sheep, but covered with hair instead of wool. Large flocks of them were kept by the Jews, Gen 27:9 1Sa 25:2 2Ch 17:11 . They were regarded as clean for sacrifice, Exo 12:5 Lev 3:12 Num 15:27 ; and their milk and the young kids were much used for food, Deu 14:4 Jdg 6:19 Pro 27:27 Luk 15:29 . The common leather bottles were made of their skins. Several kinds of goats were kept in Palestine: one kind having long hair, like the Angora, and another, long and broad ears. This kind is probably referred to in 1Sa 3:12, and is still the common goat of Palestine.Herodotus says, that at Mendes, in Lower Egypt, both the male and female goat were worshipped. The heathen god Pan was represented with the face and thighs of a goat. The heathen paid divine honors also to real goats, as appears in the table of Isis. The abominations committed during the feast of these infamous deities cannot be told.WILD GOATS are mentioned in 1Sa 24:2 Job 39:1 Psa 104:18 . This is doubtless the Ibex, or mountain goat, a large and vigorous animal still found in the mountains in the peninsula of Sinai, and east and south of the Dead Sea.These goats are very similar to the bouquetin or chamois of the Alps. They feed in flocks of a score or two, wit one of their number acting as a sentinel. At the slightest alarm, they are gone in an instant, darting fearlessly over the rocks, and falling on their horns from a great height without injury. Their horns are two or three feet long, and are sold by the Arabs for knife-handles, etc. For SCAPEGOAT, see EXPIATION.

Fuente: American Tract Society Bible Dictionary

Goat

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The Greek word signifies a he-goat (Lat. hircus), and is used in the Septuagint as the equivalent of the Heb. words , , (all = he-goat). The only NT references to the goat outside the Gospels are in the Epistle to the Hebrews (Heb 9:12-13; Heb 9:19; Heb 10:4). In Heb 9:12; Heb 9:19 it is associated with calves (i.e. bullocks), and there is doubtless an allusion in these two passages to the sacrificial rites of the Day of Atonement. On this occasion, the high priest offered up a bullock as a sin-offering for himself (Lev 16:11), and a goat as a sin-offering for the people (Lev 16:15). The usual phrase to designate sacrifices in general is used in Heb 9:13; Heb 10:4, bulls and goats or goats and bulls.

The general meaning of Heb 9:12 ff. is quite clear. The writer says: if-and you admit this-the blood of goats and bullocks, as on the Day of Atonement, could sanctify unto the cleanness of the flesh, how much more could the Blood of Christ, the Divine-Human sacrifice, cleanse the conscience from dead works to serve the living God!

In Heb 10:4 the writer abandons his rhetorical style and categorically asserts that it is impossible for the blood of bulls and goats to take away sins. He here uses the general term for sacrifices, and thereby denies that any of the sacrifices of the old Law ever did or ever could take away sins.

Many different breeds of domesticated goats are known in Syria, the most common of which is the mamber or ordinary black goat. These animals attain a large size, and pendent ears about a foot long are their most characteristic feature. Their peculiar ears are apparently alluded to in Amo 3:12. They generally have horns and short beards. Another breed found in N. Palestine is the angora, which has very long hair. Goats supplied most of the milk of Palestine (cf. Pro 27:27), and the young were often killed for food, being regarded as special delicacies, as they are to-day (cf. Gen 27:9, Luk 15:29). Their long silky hair was woven into curtains, coverings of tents, etc. (cf. Exo 35:26, Num 31:20), and as goats-hair cloth, called cilicium, was made in the province of which Tarsus, the birth-place of St. Paul, was the capital, and was exported thence to be used in tent-making, it is reasonable to suppose that the Apostle was engaged in this very trade (Act 18:3). Their skins were sometimes used as clothing, and doubtless the hairy mantle of the prophets (cf. Zec 13:4) was made of this material (cf. also Heb 11:37), but they were more often converted into bottles. The early inhabitants of Palestine (cf. Gen 21:19, Jos 9:4, 1Sa 25:18, Mat 9:17, Mar 2:22, Luk 5:37), just like the modern Bedouins, utilized the skins of their cattle and their flocks for the purpose of storing oil, wine, milk, or water, as the case might be. The animals whose skins were generally chosen for the purpose were the sheep and the goat as at the present day, while the skin of the ox was used for very large bottles. The legs, or at all events the lower part of the legs, together with the head, are first removed, the animal is next skinned from the neck downwards, great care being taken to avoid tearing the skin; all apertures are then carefully closed, and the neck is fitted with a leather thong which serves as a cork.

In view of the numerous uses which the goat has been made to subserve, it is not surprising to find that it was highly valued in ancient times even as it is now. A large part of the wealth of Laban and of the wages he paid to Jacob consisted of goats, while a thousand goats is mentioned as one of the principal items in Nabals property (1Sa 25:2). They thrive in hilly and scantily watered districts, where they are much more abundant than sheep, and pasture where there is much brush-wood, the luxuriant grasses of the plains being too succulent for their taste (Tristram in Smiths Dict. of the Bible 2 1200b). They are largely responsible for the barrenness of the hills, and the general absence of trees in Palestine.

Literature.-H. B. Tristram, Natural History of the Bible10, 1911, p. 88ff.; Smiths Dict. of the Bible , s.v.; SWP [Note: WP Memoirs of Survey of Western Palestine.] vii. 6; E. C. Wickham, The Epistle to the Hebrews, 1910, p. 68; B. F. Westcott, The Epistle to the Hebrews2, 1892, p. 258ff.; R. Lyddeker, in Murrays Dict. of the Bible , s.v.; Hasting’s Dictionary of the Bible (5 vols) ii. 195f.; Hastings Single-vol. Dictionary of the Bible , p. 298f.; Encyclopaedia Biblica ii. 1742ff.; J. C. Geikie, The Holy Land and the Bible, 1903, pp. 40, 80-85, 113.

P. S. P. Handcock.

Fuente: Dictionary of the Apostolic Church

Goat

Goat. In Bible times, Hebrew shepherds treasured the goat because it was such a useful animal. They wove its hair into a type of rough cloth. They drank the goat’s milk which is sweet and more nutritious than cow’s milk– ideal for making cheese. They even used goatskin bottles to transport water and wine. When the hide of these containers wore thin, they leaked and had to be patched (Jos 9:4; Mat 9:17).

Goats often grazed with sheep in mixed flocks. Unlike their gentle and helpless cousins, goats were independent, willful, and curious. Bible writers sometimes used goats to symbolize irresponsible leadership (Jer 50:8; Zec 10:3). In Jesus’ parable of the Great Judgment (Mat 25:32-33), the goats represented the unrighteous who could not enter His kingdom.

Goats were often sacrificed in the worship system of ancient Israel. In an early ritual, the Hebrews used two goats. They sacrificed one, sprinkling its blood upon the back of the other. This scapegoat was then sent into the wilderness, symbolically bearing the sins of the people (Lev 16:10).

Young goats are referred to as kids in the Bible (Gen 27:9; Gen 27:16; Num 7:87). The wild goat of Palestine is known as the ibex (Deu 14:5), (RSV, NIV; mountain goat, NKJV; pygarg, KJV; satyr, KJV, RSV).

Fuente: Plants Animals Of Bible

Goat

an animal of the genus Capra, found in every part of the world, and easily domesticated. There are various names or appelations given to the goat in the original text of the Scriptures. SEE CATTLE.

1. Most frequently , ez, generally said to denote the she-goat (as it is rendered in Gen 15:9; Gen 30:35; Gen 31:38; Gen 32:14; Num 15:27), and in several passages undoubtedly so used (Gen 31:38; Gen 32:14; Num 15:27; Pro 27:27); but it is equally certain that it is used also to denote the he-goat (Exo 12:5; Lev 4:23; Num 28:15; 2Ch 29:21; Dan 8:5; Dan 8:8, etc.), which the etymology would seem to show was the original sense. In most of the passages in which it occurs it may denote either the male or the female animal (Gen 27:16; Gen 30:32-33; Gen 37:31; Lev 1:10; Lev 3:12; Lev 7:23; Lev 22:19; 1Sa 25:2; 1Ki 20:27). It is used also to designate a kid (as rendered in Gen 38:17; Gen 38:20; Num 15:11; Jdg 6:19; Jdg 13:15; Jdg 13:19; Jdg 15:1; 1Sa 16:20 [1Ki 20:27; 2Ch 35:7]). From this we are led to conclude that properly it is the generic designation of the animal in its domestic state, a conclusion which seems to be fully established by such usages as , a kid of the goats, , a flock of “goats,” i.e. any of the goat species (Geas. 27:9; Deu 14:4). Hochart (Hieroz. book 2, c. 51) derives the word froes , oz, strength; Gesenius and Finrst prefer tracing it up to , azaz’, to become strong; in either case the ground-idea is the superior strength of the goat as compared with the sheep; Syr. ozo; Arab. onaz (where the n represents the rejected of ); Phomen. oz. of which ozza or azza is the feminine form. Whether there is any affinity between this and the Sanse. dga, fem. agae, Gr. , , Gott. gaitan, and our goat, may be doubted. In the Sept. is usually represented by , in a few instances by ; and when is used elliptically to denote goat’s hair (as in Exo 26:7; Exo 36:14; Num 31:20), the Sept. renders , , or ; is 1Sa 19:13 it gives the strange rendering , reading for (comp. Joseph. Ant. 6:11, 4). SEE BOLSTER.

2. The next most frequent term is , attud, which is used only in the plur. . In the A.V. it is translated sometimes “rams” (Gen 31:10; Gen 31:12), often “he-goats” (Num 7:17-88; Psalms 1, 9; Isa 1:11; Jer 51:40; Eze 34:17), but usually simply “goats” (Deu 22:14; Psalms 1, 13; Psa 66:15; Pro 27:26; Isa 34:6; Eze 27:21; Eze 39:18; Zec 10:3). The singular occus frequently in Arabic atud, and is defined is the Kasnu’s as a young goat of a year old (Bochart, Hieroz. book 2, chapter 53, page 646, where other authorities are adduced). The name is derived from , atad to set a place, prepare, and hence Bochart infers it describes the animal as fully grown, and so prepared for all its functions and uses; Gesenius, a goat four months old; while others think no more is implied by the name than that this animal was strong and vigorous. The attudim were used in sacrifice (Psa 66:15), and formed an article of commerce (Eze 27:21; Pro 27:26). In Jer 1:8, the word is employed for the leaders of a flock (“chief ones”); and in Isa 14:9, and Zec 10:3, it is used metaphorically for princes or chiefs. SEE HE-GOAT.

3. , gedi’, is the young of the goat, a kid. The name is derived by Frst from the obsolete verb , gadat’, to canstalorth, so that it is equivalent to the Latin faetus, but was afterwards restricted to one kind, that of the goat. Gesenius traces it to , yodeh’, to crop, and supposes the name was given to it from its cropping the herbage. Both etymologies are purely conjectural. The phrase , kid of the goats, is frequently used. See above. The reason of this Kischi finds in the generic sense of as applicable originally to the young either of the sheep or goat, so that it required the addition of to specialize its meaning, until it came by usage to denote only the latter. Ibn-Ezra thinks the addition was made because the gedi, being yet tender, could not be separated from its mother. The flesh of the kid was esteemed a delicacy by the Hebrews. SEE KID.

4. , sar’, signifies properly a he-goat, being derived from , to bristle, i.e., the shaggy (“he-goat,” only 2Ch 29:23; “goat,” in Lev 4:24; Lev 9:15; x,16; 16:7-27; Num 28:22; Num 29:22-38; Eze 43:25; “satyr,” in Isa 13:21; Isa 34:14; “devil,” in Lev 17:7; elsewhere “kid”). It occurs frequently in Leviticus and Numbers ( ), and is the goat of the sin-offering (Lev 9:3; Lev 9:15; Lev 10:16). The word is used as an adjective with in Dan 8:21, “and the goat, the rough one, is the king of Javan,” and also in Gen 27:11; Gen 27:23, “a hairy man.” SEE SATYR. The fem. , seirah’, a she-goat, likewise occurs (“kid,” Lev 4:28; Lev 5:6). SEE SACRIFICE.

5. , tsaphir’, occurs in 2Ch 29:21, and in Dan 8:5; Dan 8:8; it is followed by , and signifies a “he-goat” of the-goats. Gesenius derives it from , tsaphar’, to leap, indicative of the sex. It is a .word found only in the later books of the O.T. In Ezr 6:17, we find the Chald. form of the word, , tsephirs.

6. , ta’yish, a buck, is from a root , to strike. It is invariably rendered “he-goat” (Gen 30:35; Gen 32:15; Pro 30:31; 2Ch 17:11).

7. In the N.T. the words rendered goat in Mat 25:32-33, are and = a young goat or kid; and in Heb 9:12-13; Heb 9:19; Heb 10:4, = hegoat. Goat-skins, in Heb 11:37, are in the Greek ; and in Jdg 2:17, v is rendered goats.

8. For the undomesticated species several Heb. terms are employed: (I.) , yael’, only in the plur. , wild or mountain goats, rendered “wild goats” in the passages of Scripture in which the word occurs, viz. 1Sa 24:2; Job 39:1; and Psa 104:18. The word is from a root , to ascend or climb, and is the Heb. name of the ibex, which abounds in the mountainous parts of the ancient territory of Moab. In Job 39:1, the Sept. have . In Pro 5:19, the fem. , yaalah’, “roe” occurs. See ROE. (2.) , akko’, rendered wild goat in Deu 14:5, and occurs only in this passage. It is a contracted form of , according to Lee, who renders it gazelle, but it is probably larger, more ‘nearly approaching the tragelaphus or goat-deer (Shaw, Supplement, page 76). SEE WILD GOAT.

9. Other terms less directly significant of this animal are, (1.) , chasiph’, a flock, i.e., little flock: “two little flocks of kid”‘ (1Ki 20:27); and (2.) , seh, one of the flock of sheep and goats mixed (Lev 22:28, and frequently “goat” or “kid” in the margin). See FLOCK.

10. For the , Azazel’ (” scape-goat,” Lev 16:8; Lev 16:10; Lev 16:26), SEE AZAZEL.

The races either known to or kept by the Hebrew people were probably, 1. The domestic Syrian long-eared breed, with horns rather small and variously bent; the ears longer than the head, and pendulous; hair long, often black. 2. The Angora, or rather Anadoli breed of Asia Minor, with long hair, more or less fine. 3. The Egyptian breed, with small spiral horns, long brown hair, very long ears. 4. A breed from Upper Egypt, without horns, having the nasal bones singularly elevated, the nose contracted, with the lower jaw protruding the incisors, and the female with udder very low, and purse-shaped.

There appear to be two or three varieties of the common goat (Hircus cegagrus) at present bred in Palestine and Syria, but whether they are identical with those which were reared by the ancient Hebrews it is not possible to say. The most marked varieties are the Syrian goat (Capra Mambrica, Linn.), with long, thick, pendent ears, which are often, says Russell (Nat. Hist. of Aleppo, 2:150, 2d edit.), a foot long, and the Angora goat (Capra Angorensis, Linn.), with fine long hair. The Syrian goat is mentioned by Aristotle (Hist. An. 9:27, 3). There is also a variety that differs but little from British specimens. Goats have from the earliest ages been considered important animals in rural economy, both on account of the milk they afford and the excellency of the flesh of the young animals. The goat is figured on the Egyptian monuments (see Wilkinson’s Ancient Egypt. 1:223). Colossians Ham. Smith (Griffiths, An. King. 4:308) describes three Egyptian breeds: one with long hair, depressed horns, ears small and pendent; another with horns very spiral, and ears longer than the head; and a third, which occurs in Upper Egypt, without horns.

Besides the domestic goats, Western Asia is possessed of one or more wild species all large and vigorous mountain animals, resembling the ibex or bouquetin of the Alps. Of these, Southern Syria, Arabia, Sinai, and the borders of the Red Sea contain at least one species, known to the Arabs by the name of Beden or Beddan, and Taytal the Capra Jaela of Ham. Smith, and Capra Sinaitica of Ehrenberg. We take this animal to be that noticed under the name of , yael or jaal (1Sa 24:2; Job 39:1; Psalm civ. 18; Pro 5:19). The male is considerably taller and more robust than the larger he-goats, the horns forming regular curves backwards, and with from 15 to 24 transverse elevated cross-ridges, being sometimes near three feet long, and exceedingly ponderous: there is a beard under the chin, and the fur is dark brown; but the limbs are white, with regular black marks down the front of the legs, with rings of the same color above the knees and on the pasterns. The females are smaller than the males, more slenderly made, brighter rufous, and with the white and black markings on the legs not so distinctly visible. This species live in troops of 15 or 20, and plunge down precipices with the same fearless impetuosity that distinguishes the ibex. Their horns are sold by the Arabs for knife handles, etc.; but the animals themselves are fast diminishing in number. SEE IBEX.

In Deu 14:5, , ako is translated “wild goat.” Schultens (Origines Hebraicae) conjectures that the name arose from its shyness, and Dr. Harris points out what he takes to be a confirmation of this conjecture in Shaw’s travels, who, from the translations of the Sept. and Vulgate, makes it a goat-deer or tragelaphus, under a mistaken view of the classification and habitat of that animal. Akko, therefore, if it be not a second name of the zemer, which we refer to the kebsh, or wild sheep SEE CHAMOIS, as the species must be sought among ruminants that were accessible for food to the Hebrews, we should be inclined to view as the name of one of the gazelles, probably the ahu (Ant. Subgutturosa), unless the Abyssinian ibex (Capra Walie) had formerly extended into Arabia, and it could be shown that it is a distinct species. SEE WILD GOAT.

From very remote antiquity goats have formed an important part of pastoral wealth in the East. They are not mentioned by name in the enumeration of Abram’s possessions (Gen 12:16), nor in those of Job (Job 1:3; Job 42:12); but perhaps they are included under the generic term of “flocks,” which Lot (Gen 13:5), and, a fortiori, Abram possessed; and a she-goat formed part of the sacrifice offered by Abram on the occasion of the promise of Isaac (Gen 15:9). In the account of the miraculous increase of Jacob’s cattle (Gen 31:10; Gen 31:12) we find goats conspicuously mentioned. Their milk has always constituted an important article of food in Palestine (Kitto, Pict. Palestine, 2:304). Fairbairn. Goats were extensively reared among the Israelites (Lev 3:12; Lev 9:15; Exo 12:5, etc.); their milk was used as food (Pro 27:27); their flesh was eaten (Deu 14:4; Gen 27:9); their hair was used for the curtains of the tabernacle (Exo 26:7; Exo 36:14) and for stuffing bolsters (1Sa 19:13); their skills were sometimes used as clothing (Heb 11:37). Notwithstanding the offensive lasciviousness which causes it to be significantly separated from sheep, the goat was employed by the people of Israel in many respects as their representative. It was a pure animal for sacrifice (Exo 12:5), and a kid might be substituted as equivalent to a lamb: it formed a principal part of the Hebrew flocks, and both the milk and the young kids were daily articles of food. Among the poorer and more sober shepherd families, the slaughter of a kid was a token of hospitality to strangers, or of unusual festivity; and the prohibition, thrice repeated in the Mosaic law, “not to seethe a kid in its mother’s milk” (Exo 23:19; Exo 34:26; and Deu 14:21), may have originated partly in a desire to recommend abstemiousness, which the legislators and moralists of the East have since invariably enforced with success, and partly with a view to discountenance a practice which was connected with idolatrous festivals, and the rites they involved. It is from goatskins that the leathern bottles to contain wine and other liquids are made in the Levant. For this purpose, after the head and feet are cut away, the case or hide is drawn off the carcass over the neck, without opening the belly; and the extremities being secured, it is dried with the hair in or outside, according to the use it is intended for. The old worn-out skins are liable to burst: hence the obvious propriety of putting new wine into new bottles (Mat 9:17). Harmner (Obs. 4:162) appears to have rightly referred the allusion in Amo 3:12 to the long-eared race of goats: ” As the shepherd taketh out of the mouth of the lion two legs or a piece of ear, so shall the children of Israel be taken out that dwell in Samaria and Damascus.” Kitto. The passage in Son 4:1, which compares, the hair of the beloved to “a flock of goats that eat of Mount Gilead,” probably alludes to the fine hair of the Angora breed. In Pro 30:31, a he-goat is mentioned as one of the “four things which are comely in going;” in allusion, probably, to the stately march of the leader of the flock, which was always associated in the minds of the Hebrews with the notion of dignity. Hence the metaphor in Isa 14:9, “all the, chief ones (margin, “great goats”) of the earth.” So the Alexandrine version of the Sept. understands the allusion (comp. Theocr. Id. 8:49; Virgil, Ecc 8:7). Smith. Goats, from their offensiveness, mischievous and libidinous disposition, etc., are symbols of the wicked, who are, at the clay of judgment, to be finally separated from the good (Mat 25:33). SEE SHEEP.

From Lev 17:7, it appears that the rebellious Hebrews, while in the desert, fell into the idolatrous worship of the he-goat (rendered “devils,” comp. 2Ch 11:15), after the example of the Egyptians, under whose influences they had grown up. Herodotus says (1:46) that at Mendes, in Lower Egypt, both the male and female goat were worshipped; that the god Pan had the face and thighs of a goat; not that they believed him to be of this figure, but because it had been customary to represent him thus. They paid divine honors, also, to real goats, as appears in the table of His. The Sairim (” wild beasts”) of Isa 13:21 were, according to the popular notion, supposed to be wild men SEE APE in the form of he-goats, living in unfrequented, solitary places, and represented as dancing and calling to each other. Calmet. SEE SPECTRE.

A he-goat was the symbol of the Macedonian empire in the prophetic vision of Daniel (Dan 8:5) a goat that had a notable born between his eyes. It is interesting to know that this was the recognized symbol of their nation by the Macedonians themselves.

There are coins of Archelaus, king of Macedon (B.C. 413), having as their reverse a one-horned goat; and there is a gem in the Florentine collection, a on which are engraved two heads united at their occiputs, the one that of a ram, the other that of a one-horned goat. By this is expressed the union of the Persian and Macedonian kingdoms, and Mr. T. Combe, who gives us the information, thinks that “it is extremely probable that the gem was engraved after the conquest of Persia by Alexander the Great.” SEE MACEDDONIA.

Fuente: Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature

Goat

(1.) Heb. ‘ez, the she-goat (Gen. 15:9; 30:35; 31:38). This Hebrew word is also used for the he-goat (Ex. 12:5; Lev. 4:23; Num. 28:15), and to denote a kid (Gen. 38:17, 20). Hence it may be regarded as the generic name of the animal as domesticated. It literally means “strength,” and points to the superior strength of the goat as compared with the sheep.

(2.) Heb. ‘attud, only in plural; rendered “rams” (Gen. 31:10, 12); he-goats (Num. 7:17-88; Isa. 1:11); goats (Deut. 32:14; Ps. 50:13). They were used in sacrifice (Ps. 66:15). This word is used metaphorically for princes or chiefs in Isa. 14:9, and in Zech. 10:3 as leaders. (Comp. Jer. 50:8.)

(3.) Heb. gedi, properly a kid. Its flesh was a delicacy among the Hebrews (Gen. 27:9, 14, 17; Judg. 6:19).

(4.) Heb. sa’ir, meaning the “shaggy,” a hairy goat, a he-goat (2 Chr. 29:23); “a goat” (Lev. 4:24); “satyr” (Isa. 13:21); “devils” (Lev. 17:7). It is the goat of the sin-offering (Lev. 9:3, 15; 10:16).

(5.) Heb. tsaphir, a he-goat of the goats (2 Chr. 29:21). In Dan. 8:5, 8 it is used as a symbol of the Macedonian empire.

(6.) Heb. tayish, a “striker” or “butter,” rendered “he-goat” (Gen. 30:35; 32:14).

(7.) Heb. ‘azazel (q.v.), the “scapegoat” (Lev. 16:8, 10, 26).

(8.) There are two Hebrew words used to denote the undomesticated goat:, _Yael_, only in plural mountain goats (1 Sam. 24:2; Job 39:1; Ps.104:18). It is derived from a word meaning “to climb.” It is the ibex, which abounded in the mountainous parts of Moab. And _’akko_, only in Deut. 14:5, the wild goat.

Goats are mentioned in the New Testament in Matt. 25:32, 33; Heb. 9:12, 13, 19; 10:4. They represent oppressors and wicked men (Ezek. 34:17; 39:18; Matt. 25:33).

Several varieties of the goat were familiar to the Hebrews. They had an important place in their rural economy on account of the milk they afforded and the excellency of the flesh of the kid. They formed an important part of pastoral wealth (Gen. 31:10, 12; 32:14; 1 Sam. 25:2).

Fuente: Easton’s Bible Dictionary

Goat

1. Wild goat, yeliym, the ibex of ancient Moab.

2. The goat deer, or else gazelle, aqow.

3. The atuwd, “he goat”, the leader of the flock; hence the chief ones of the earth, leaders in mighty wickedness; the ram represents headstrong wantonness and offensive lust (Isa 14:9; Zec 10:3; compare Mat 25:32-33; Eze 34:17). As the word “shepherds” describes what they ought to have been, so “he goats” what they were; heading the flock, they were foremost in sin, so they shall be foremost in punishment. In Son 4:1 the hair of the bride is said to be “as a flock of goats that appear from mount Gilead,” alluding to the fine silky hair of some breeds of goat, the angora and others. Amos (Amo 3:12) speaks of a shepherd “taking out of the mouth of the lion a piece of an ear,” alluding to the long pendulous ears of the Syrian breed. In Pro 30:31 a he goat is mentioned as one of the “four things comely in going,” in allusion to the stately march of the leader of the flock.

4. Sair, the goat of the sin-offering (Lev 9:3), “the rough hairy goat” (Dan 8:21). Sa’ir is used of devils (Lev 17:7), “the evil spirits of the desert” (Isa 13:21; Isa 34:14).

5. Azazeel, “the scape-goat” (Lev 16:8; Lev 16:10; Lev 16:26 margin) (See ATONEMENT, DAY OF.) The “he goat” represented Graeco-Macedonia; Caranus, the first king of Macedon, was in legend led by goats to Edessa, his capital, which he named “the goat city.” The one-horned goat is on coins of Archclaus king of Macedon, and a pilaster of Persepolis. So Dan 8:5.

Fuente: Fausset’s Bible Dictionary

Goat

GOAT.See Animals, p. 63b.

Fuente: A Dictionary Of Christ And The Gospels

Goat

GOAT.(1) z, used generically, both sexes, Gen 30:35, Exo 12:5, Ezr 6:17 etc. (2) tsphr (root to leap), he-goat, 2Ch 29:21, Ezr 8:35, Dan 8:5; Dan 8:8. (3) sr (root hairy), usually a he-goat, e.g. Dan 8:21 rough goat; serah, Lev 5:6 she-goat; serm, tr. [Note: translate or translation.] devils 2Ch 11:15, satyrs Isa 13:21; Isa 34:14. See Satyr. (4) attd, only in pl. attdm, he-goats Gen 31:10; Gen 31:12, AVm [Note: Authorized Version margin.] and RV [Note: Revised Version.] chief ones Isa 14:8, but RVm [Note: Revised Version margin.] he-goats. (5) taysh, he-goat, Pro 30:31 etc. In NT eriphos, eriphion, Mat 25:32-33; tragos, Heb 9:12-13; Heb 9:19; Heb 10:4. Goats are among the most valued possessions of the people of Palestine. Nabal had a thousand goats (1Sa 25:2; see also Gen 30:33; Gen 30:35; Gen 32:14 etc.). They are led to pasture with the sheep, but are from time to time separated from them for milking, herding, and even feeding (Mat 25:32). Goats thrive on extraordinarily bare pasturage, but they do immeasurable destruction to young trees and shrubs, and are responsible for much of the barrenness of the hills. Goats supply most of the milk used in Palestine (Pro 27:27); they are also killed for food, especially the young kids (Gen 27:9, Jdg 6:19; Jdg 13:15 etc.). The Syrian goat (Capra mambrica) is black or grey, exceptionally white, and has shaggy hair and remarkably long ears. Goats hair is extensively woven into cloaks and material for tents (Exo 26:7; Exo 36:14), and their skins are tanned entire to make water-bottles. See Bottle.

Wild goat.(1) yl (cf. proper name Jael), used in pl. yelm, 1Sa 24:2, Psa 104:18, and Job 39:1. (2) akk, Deu 14:5. Probably both these terms refer to the wild goat or ibex, Capra beden, the beden or goats of Moses of the Arabs. It is common on the inaccessible cliffs round the Dead Sea, some of which are known as jebel el-beden, the mountains of the wild goats (cf. 1Sa 24:2). The ibex is very shy, and difficult to shoot. Though about the size of an ordinary goat, its great curved horns, often 3 feet long, give it a much more imposing appearance.

E. W. G. Masterman.

Fuente: Hastings’ Dictionary of the Bible

Goat

This animal was one of the clean beasts, and used in the Jewish church both for food and sacrifice. (Lev 16:5) and the veil of the tabernacle was made of the hair of the goat. (Exo 25:4) But in the after ages of the church, the goat became figurative of the ungodly. And, perhaps, this arose from the calves and devils (literally goats), which Jeroboam set up for idol worship. (See 2Co 11:14-15) Hence the Lord is represented by the prophet, as punishing the goats; that is, the worshippers of those dunghill idols. (Zec 10:3) Hence also another prophet exclaims, “Hell from beneath is moved for thee, to meet thee at thy coming; it stirreth up the dead for thee, even all the chief ones of the earth;” The margin of the Bible hath it, even all the great goats of the earth; meaning the princes and great men. (Isa 14:9) Hence our blessed Lord, in describing the solemn events of the last day, describes the wicked and ungodly as goats on his left hand, destined for destruction. (Mat 25:33)

I have been more particular on this subject, in order to explain wherefore it is, that as the goat was by the Lord’s own appointment of the clean beasts both for good and sacrifice, that the Lord Jesus and his servant should make the goat a figure, or emblem, of the reprobate, and as distinguished from the sheep of his fold. And this the account of the goat set up as an idol by Jeroboam, and sacrificed to by the people in direct opposition to the God of Israel, very fully explains.

While I am upon this subject of the goat, it may not be unacceptable to the pious reader, to say a few words on the very striking ceremony appointed by the Lord of the scape goat on the great day of atonement. I need not describe the ceremony itself, for the reader will find a full account thereof, Lev 16:1-34. There is somewhat most wonderfully interesting when this service of the scape goat is considered with an eye to Christ. The high priest laying both his hands on the head of the beast, and making a confession over him of all the iniquities of the children of Israel, with all their transgressions in all their sins, as if transferring both the sin and guilt from themselves to another; certainly this had no meaning but in reference to the Lord Jesus Christ; and certainly, beheld in allusion to him, the whole service becomes plain and obvious. The Suretyship of Christ is hereby most blessedly shadowed forth; and both the law of God and the justice of God in that Suretyship evidently satisfied. Indeed, the type falls short of the thing itself in one point; for the scape goat was altogether passive in the act, but Christ, in his voluntary surrender of himself, manifested a willing offering. On the part of God the Father, the type, and the thing signified by the type, became one and the same. For though it is out of any creature’s power, to make a transfer of sin to another, yet it is not beyond the sovereignty and prerogative of God. And when the Lord Jesus, at the call of God, stood up from everlasting as the covenant Head of his people, his voluntary offering gave efficacy to the whole. In this he undertook to answer for all their sins, and to do away the whole of their guilt and pollution by the sacrifice of himself. Hence JEHOVAH is represented by the prophet, as “laying upon him the iniquity of us all.” (Isa 53:6) And Jesus is no less represented as saying, “Lo, I come to do thy will, O God.” (Psa 40:7-8)

I would just ask the reader, whether such a view doth not bring comfort to the soul, in thus beholding the transfer of sin, with all its defilement, taken from our poor nature, and put upon the person of Christ. How blessed must it have been in God the Holy Ghost, to have had the representation made of it in an age so distant from the thing itself, as if to testify the Lord’s approbation of it in the people’s safety. Though the Scriptures are silent upon it, yet the history of the scape goat among the Jews, has handed down by tradition the account, which is not uninteresting. It is said, that when the two goats were led into the inner court of the temple and presented to the high priest, according to the Lord’s appointment of casting lots, (Lev 16:8) the scape goat, or as the margin of the Bible expresseth it, the Azazel, had then a fillet, or a narrow piece of scarlet, fastened to its head, which soon became white. And hence the prophet is supposed to allude when saying, “though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be white as snow; though they be red like crimson, they shall be as wool.” (Isa 1:18) The scape goat was then sent away, by the hand of some fit man, or as the margin of the Bible hath it, by a man of opportunity, into the wilderness. Some of the Jews say, that the edge of the wilderness had a precipice where the Azazel fell over, and was dashed to pieces. But the “wilderness which no man went through, and none inhabited,” carried with it the same idea, that “the iniquity of Israel when, sought for, there should be none; and the sins of Judah, and they should not be found.” (Jer 50:20) When the Lord puts away sin, in Scripture language it is said, “that he remembers it no more.” (Heb 8:12 with Jer 31:34)

Fuente: The Poor Mans Concordance and Dictionary to the Sacred Scriptures

Goat

got:

1. Names

The common generic word for goat is , ez (compare Arabic anz, she-goat; , ax), used often for she-goat (Gen 15:9; Num 15:27), also with , gedh, kid, as , gedh izzm, kid of the goats (Gen 38:17), also with , sar, he-goat, as , ser izzm, kid of the goats or he-goat, or translated simply kids, as in 1Ki 20:27, The children of Israel encamped before them like two little flocks of kids. Next, frequently used is , sar, literally, hairy (compare Arabic shar, hair; , cher, hedgehog; Latin hircus, goat; hirtus, hairy; also German Haar; English hair), like ez and attudh used of goats for offerings. The goat which is sent into the wilderness bearing the sins of the people is sar (Lev 16:7-22). The same name is used of devils (Lev 17:7; 2Ch 11:15, the Revised Version (British and American) he-goats) and of satyrs (Isa 13:21; Isa 34:14, the Revised Version, margin he-goats, the American Standard Revised Version wild goats). Compare also , serath izzm, a female from the flock (Lev 4:28; Lev 5:6). The male or leader of the flock is , attudh; Arabic atud, yearling he-goat; figuratively chief ones (Isa 14:9; compare Jer 50:8). A later word for he-goat, used also figuratively, is , caphr (2Ch 29:21; Ezr 8:35; Dan 8:5, Dan 8:8, Dan 8:21). In Pro 30:31, one of the four things which are stately in going is the he-goat, , tayish (Arabic tais, he-goat), also mentioned in Gen 30:35; Gen 32:14 among the possessions of Laban and Jacob, and in 2Ch 17:11 among the animals given as tribute by the Arabians to Jehoshaphat. In Heb 9:12, Heb 9:13, Heb 9:19; Heb 10:4, we have , tragos, the ordinary Greek word for goat; in Mat 25:32, Mat 25:33, , eriphos, and its diminutive , erphion; in Heb 11:37 , derma ageion, goatskin, from aix (see supra). Kid is , gedh (compare En-gedi (1Sa 23:29), etc.), feminine , gedhyah (Son 1:8), but also ez, gedh izzm, ser izzm, serath izzm, bene izzm, and eriphos. There remain , yael (1Sa 24:2; Job 39:1; Psa 104:18), English Versions of the Bible wild goat; , yaalah (Pro 5:19), the King James Version roe, the Revised Version (British and American) doe; , ‘akko (Deu 14:5), English Versions of the Bible wild goat; and , zemer (Deu 14:5), English Versions of the Bible chamois.

2. Wild Goats

The original of our domestic goats is believed to be the Persian wild goat or pasang, Capra aegagrus, which inhabits some of the Greek islands, Asia Minor, Syria, Mesopotamia, Persia, Afghanistan, and Northwestern India. It is called wal (compare Hebrew yael) by the Arabs, who in the North apply the same name to its near relative, the Sinaitic ibex, Capra beden. The last, doubtless the wild goat (yael) of the Bible, inhabits Southern Palestine, Arabia, Sinai, and Eastern Egypt, and within its range is uniformly called beden by the Arabs. It is thought by the writer that the chamois (zemer) of Deu 14:5 may be the Persian wild goat. The word occurs only in this passage in the list of clean animals. See CHAMOIS; DEER; ZOOLOGY. Wild goats are found only in Southern Europe, Southwestern Asia, and Northeastern Africa. They include the well-known, but now nearly extinct, Alpine ibex, steinbok, or bouquetin, the markhor, and the Himalayan ibex, which has enormous horns. The so-called Rocky Mountain goat is not properly a goat, but is an animal intermediate between goats and antelopes.

3. Domestic Goats

Domestic goats differ greatly among themselves in the color and length of their hair, in the size and shape of their ears, and in the size and shape of their horns, which are usually larger in the males, but in some breeds may be absent in both sexes. A very constant feature in both wild and domestic goats is the bearded chin of the male. The goats of Palestine and Syria are usually black (Son 4:1), though sometimes partly or entirely white or brown. Their hair is usually long, hanging down from their bodies. The horns are commonly curved outward and backward, but in one very handsome breed they extend nearly outward with slight but graceful curves, sometimes attaining a span of 2 ft. or more in the old males. The profile of the face is distinctly convex. They are herded in the largest numbers in the mountainous or hilly districts, and vie with their wild congeners in climbing into apparently impossible places. They feed not only on herbs, but also on shrubs and small trees, to which they are most destructive. They are largely responsible for the deforested condition of Judea and Lebanon. They reach up the trees to the height of a man, holding themselves nearly or quite erect, and even walk out on low branches.

4. Economy

Apart from the ancient use in sacrifice, which still survives among Moslems, goats are most valuable animals. Their flesh is eaten, and may be had when neither mutton nor beef can be found. Their milk is drunk and made into cheese and semn, a sort of clarified butter much used in cooking. Their hair is woven into tents (Son 1:5), carpets, cloaks, sacks, slings, and various camel, horse and mule trappings. Their skins are made into bottles (no’dh; Greek askos; Arabic kirbeh) for water, oil, semn, and other liquids (compare also Heb 11:37).

5. Religious and Figurative

Just as the kid was often slaughtered for an honored guest (Jdg 6:19; Jdg 13:19), so the kid or goat was frequently taken for sacrifice (Lev 4:23; Lev 9:15; Lev 16:7; Num 15:24; Ezr 8:35; Eze 45:23; Heb 9:12). A goat was one of the clean animals (seh izzm, Deu 14:4). In Daniel, the powerful king out of the West is typified as a goat with a single horn (Dan 8:5). One of the older goats is the leader of the flock. In some parts of the country the goatherd makes different ones leaders by turns, the leader being trained to keep near the goat-herd and not to eat so long as he wears the bell. In Isa 14:9, …. stirreth up the dead for thee, even all the chief ones of the earth, the word translated chief ones is attudh, he-goat. Again, in Jer 50:8, we have Go forth out of the land of the Chaldeans, and be as the he-goats before the flocks. In Mat 25:32, in the scene of the last judgment, we find He shall separate them one from another, as the shepherd separateth the sheep from the goats. It is not infrequent to find a flock including both goats and sheep grazing over the mountains, but they are usually folded separately.

Fuente: International Standard Bible Encyclopedia

Goat

Syrian Goat

The races of this animal either known to or kept by the Hebrew people were probably1. The domestic Syrian long-eared breed, with horns rather small and variously bent; the ears longer than the head, and pendulous; hair long, often black;2. The Angora, or rather Anadoli breed of Asia Minor, with long hair, more or less fine;3. The Egyptian breed, with small spiral horns, long brown hair, very long ears;4. A breed from Upper Egypt without horns, having the nasal bones singularly elevated, the nose contracted, with the lower jaw protruding the incisors, and the female with udder very low and purse-shaped. This race, the most degraded by climate and treatment of all the domestic varieties, is clad in long coarse hair, commonly of a rufous brown color, and so early distinct, that the earlier monuments of Egypt represent it with obvious precision.

The natural history of the domestic goat requires no illustration in this place, and its economic uses demand only a few words. Notwithstanding the offensive lasciviousness which causes it to be significantly separated from sheep, the goat was employed by the people of Israel in many respects as their representative. It was a pure animal for sacrifice (Exo 12:5), and a kid might be substituted as equivalent to a lamb: it formed a principal part of the Hebrew flocks; and both the milk and the young kids were daily articles of food. Among the poorer and more sober shepherd families, the slaughter of a kid was a token of hospitality to strangers, or of unusual festivity; and the prohibition, thrice repeated in the Mosaic law, ‘not to seethe a kid in its mother’s milk’ (Exo 23:19; Exo 34:26; and Deu 14:21), may have originated partly in a desire to recommend abstemiousness, which the legislators and moralists of the East have since invariably enforced with success, and partly with a view to discountenance a practice which was connected with idolatrous festivals, and the rites they involved. It is from goatskins that the leathern bottles to contain wine and other liquids are made in the Levant. For this purpose, after the head and feet are cut away, the case or hide is drawn off the carcass over the neck, without opening the belly; and the extremities being secured, it is dried with the hair in or outside, according to the use it is intended for. The old worn-out skins are liable to burst: hence the obvious propriety of putting new wine into new bottles (Mat 9:17). Harmer appears to have rightly referred the allusion in Amo 3:12, to the long-eared race of goats: ‘As the shepherd taketh out of the mouth of the lion two legs or a piece of ear, so shall the children of Israel be taken out that dwell in Samaria and Damascus.’

Wild Goat of Sinai

Beside the domestic goats. Western Asia is possessed of one or more wild speciesall large and vigorous mountain animals, resembling the ibex or bouquetin of the Alps. Of these, Southern Syria, Arabia, Sinai, and the borders of the Red Sea, contain at least one species, known to the Arabs by the name of Beden or Beddan, and Taytal. We take this animal to be that noticed in 1Sa 24:2; Job 39:1; Psa 104:18; Pro 5:19. The male is considerably taller and more robust than the larger he-goats, the horns forming regular curves backwards, and with from 15 to 24 transverse elevated cross ridges, being sometimes near three feet long, and exceedingly ponderous: there is a beard under the chin, and the fur is dark brown; but the limbs are white, with regular black marks down the front of the legs, with rings of the same color above the knees and on the pasterns. The females are smaller than the males, more slenderly made, brighter rufous, and with the white and black markings on the legs not so distinctly visible. This species live in troops of 15 or 20, and plunge down precipices with the same fearless impetuosity which distinguishes the ibex. Their horns are sold by the Arabs for knife-handles, etc.; but the animals themselves are fast diminishing in number.

Fuente: Popular Cyclopedia Biblical Literature

Goat

The well-known animal, regarded as clean under the Levitical economy, and having a large place in the sacrifices. Goats formed an important item in the property of the patriarchs. In Daniel’s prophecy of the kingdoms, that of Greece was compared to a ‘rough he goat,’ but with a notable horn between his eyes. Dan 8:5; Dan 8:8; Dan 8:21. The goats, in the sessional judgement of the living nations, represent the lost, in contrast to the saved, who are compared to sheep. Mat 25:32-33. THE WILD GOATS were larger animals and lived on the mountains. 1Sa 24:2; Job 39:1; Psa 104:18.

Fuente: Concise Bible Dictionary

Goat

Designated as one of the clean animals to be eaten

Deu 14:4; Lev 11:1-8

Used:

For food

Gen 27:9; 1Sa 16:20

For the paschal feast

Exo 12:5; 2Ch 35:7

As a sacrifice:

b By Abraham

Gen 15:9

b By Gideon

Jdg 6:19

b By Manoah

Jdg 13:19

Milk of, used for food

Pro 27:27

Hair of, used for:

Clothing

Num 31:20

Pillows

1Sa 19:13

Curtains of the tabernacle

Exo 26:7; Exo 35:23; Exo 36:14

Tents

Tabernacles

Regulations of Mosaic law required that a kid should not be:

Killed for food before it was eight days old

Lev 22:27

Seethed in its mother’s milk

Exo 23:19

Numerous

Deu 32:14; Son 4:1; Son 6:5; 1Sa 25:2; 2Ch 17:11

Wild goat in Palestine

1Sa 24:2; Psa 104:18

Fuente: Nave’s Topical Bible

Goat

Goat. There are many varieties of the goat; four were most likely known to the Hebrews: 1. The domestic Syrian long-eared breed, with horns rather small and variously bent; the ears longer than the head, and pendulous; hair long, often black. 2. The Angora, or rather Anadolia breed of Asia Minor, with long hair, more or less fine. 3. The Egyptian goat, with small spiral horns, long brown hair, and very long ears. 4. A goat of Upper Egypt without horns, having the nasal bones singularly elevated, the nose contracted, with the lower jaw protruding the incisors. Gen 15:9. Several words are used in Hebrew for this animal. Goats constituted a large part of Hebrew flocks; for the milk and the flesh were articles of food. Gen 27:9; 1Sa 25:2; Pro 27:27. As clean animals they were used in sacrifice, Exo 12:5; Heb 9:13; and their hair was manufactured into a thick cloth. Of this, one of the coverings of the tabernacle was made, Exo 25:4; Exo 26:7; and it was on this material that in all probability Paul was employed. Act 18:3. There is a Hebrew word also which occurs four times, rendered thrice “wild goats.” 1Sa 24:2; Job 39:1; Psa 104:18, and once “roe,” R. V. “doe,” Pro 5:19. This, there can be little doubt, is the ibex, which is specially formed for climbing, its forelegs being shorter than the hinder. The word translated “devils,” R. V. “he-goats,” in Lev 17:7; 2Ch 11:15, is one of the ordinary terms for a goat, signifying hairy. This animal is sometimes introduced in Scripture symbolically, as in Dan 8:5; Dan 8:21; comp. Mat 25:32-33.

Fuente: People’s Dictionary of the Bible

Goat

Goat. There appear to be two or three varieties of the common goat, Hircus agagrus, at present bred in Palestine and Syria, but whether they are identical with those which were reared by the ancient Hebrews, it is not possible to say.

The most marked varieties are the Syrian goat, Capra mammorica, and the Angora goat, Capra angorensis, with fine long hair. As to the “wild goats,” 1Sa 24:2; Job 39:1; Psa 104:18, it is not at all improbable that some species of ibex is denoted.

Fuente: Smith’s Bible Dictionary

GOAT

Goat he-goat is the symbol of the kingdom of Greece. Dan 8:5-8; Dan 8:21. Two centuries before the time of Daniel, the Macedonians were denominated Egeada, or the people of the goat; and they assumed a goat as their national ensign.

Fuente: A Symbolical Dictionary

Goat

denotes “a kid or goat,” Mat 25:32 (RV, marg., “kids”); Luk 15:29, “a kid;” some mss. have No. 2 here, indicating a sneer on the part of the elder son, that his father had never given him even a tiny kid.

a diminutive of No. 1, is used in Mat 25:33. In Mat 25:32 eriphos is purely figurative; in Mat 25:33, where the application is made, though metaphorically, the change to the diminutive is suggestive of the contempt which those so described bring upon themselves by their refusal to assist the needy.

denotes “a he-goat,” Heb 9:12,13,19; Heb 10:4, the male prefiguring the strength by which Christ laid down His own life in expiatory sacrifice.

Fuente: Vine’s Dictionary of New Testament Words

Goat

. There are other names or appellations given to the goat, as,

1. , 1Ki 20:27, which means the ram-goat, or leader of the flock.

2. , a word which never occurs but in the plural, and means, the best prepared, or choicest of the flock; and metaphorically princes, as, Zec 10:3, I will visit the goats, saith the Lord, that is, I will begin my vengeance with the princes of the people. Hell from beneath is moved for thee, to meet thee at thy coming; it stirreth up the dead for thee, even all the great goats of the earth, Isa 14:9; all the kings, all the great men. And Jeremiah, speaking of the princes of the Jews, says, Remove out of the midst of Babylon, and be as the he-goats before the flocks, Jeremiah 1, 8.

3. , a name for the goat, of Chaldee origin, and found only in Ezr 6:17; Ezr 8:35; Dan 8:5; Dan 8:21.

4. , from , a goat, and , to wander about, Lev 16:8, the scape-goat.

5. , hairy, or shaggy, whence , the shaggy ones. In Lev 17:7, it is said, And they shall no more offer their sacrifices unto devils, (seirim, hairy ones,) after whom they have gone a whoring. The word here means idolatrous images of goats, worshipped by the Egyptians. It is the same word that is translated satyrs, in Isa 13:21; where the LXX render it , demons. But here they have , to vain things or idols, which comes to the same sense. What gives light to so obscure a passage is what we read in Maimonides, that the Zabian idolaters worshipped demons under the figure of goats, imagining them to appear in that form, whence they called them by the names of seirim; and that this custom, being spread among other nations, gave occasion to this precept. In like manner we learn from Herodotus, that the Egyptians of Mendes held goats to be sacred animals, and represented the god Pan with the legs and head of that animal. From those ancient idolaters the same notion seems to have been derived by the Greeks and Romans, who represented their Pan, their fauns, satyrs, and other idols, in the form of goats: from all which it is highly probable, that the Israelites had learned in Egypt to worship certain demons, or sylvan deities, under the symbolical figure of goats. Though the phrase, after whom they have gone a whoring, is equivalent in Scripture to that of committing idolatry, yet we are not to suppose that it is not to be taken in a literal sense in many places, even where it is used in connection with idolatrous acts of worship. It is well known that Baal-peor and Ashtaroth were worshipped with unclean rites, and that public prostitution formed a grand part of the worship of many deities among the Egyptians, Moabites, Canaanites, &c.

The goat was one of the clean beasts which the Israelites might both eat and offer in sacrifice. The kid, , is often mentioned as a food, in a way that implies that it was considered as a delicacy. The , or wild goat, mentioned Deu 14:5, and no where else in the Hebrew Bible, is supposed to be the tragelaphus, or goat-deer. Schultens conjectures that this animal might have its name, ob fugacitatem, from its shyness, or running away. The word , occurs 1Sa 24:3; Job 39:1; Psa 104:18; Pro 5:19 : and various have been the sentiments of interpreters on the animal intended by it. Bochart insists that it is the ibex, or rock-goat. The root whence the name is derived, signifies to ascend, to mount; and the ibex is famous for clambering, climbing, and leaping, on the most craggy precipices. The Arab writers attribute to the jaal very long horns, bending backward; consequently it cannot be the chamois. The horns of the jaal are reckoned among the valuable articles of traffic, Eze 27:15. The ibex is finely shaped, graceful in its motions, and gentle in its manners. The female is particularly celebrated by natural historians for tender affection to her young, and the incessant vigilance with which she watches over their safety; and also for ardent attachment and fidelity to her mate.

Fuente: Biblical and Theological Dictionary