Kid
Kid
Goat
Fuente: Plants Animals Of Bible
Kid
(properly , gedi’, so called from cropping the herbage; more fully, , “kid of the goats;” fem. , gediyah’, a she-kid, Cant. i, 8; also , son of a goat, 2Ch 35:7, orig.; sometimes for , a goat, itself, Num 15:11; 1Ki 20:27; likewise , si’r, hairy, i.e. a goat, Genesis 35:31; Lev 4:23; Lev 9:3; Lev 16:5; Lev 23:19, etc.; fern. , seirah, Lev 4:28; Lev 5:6; Greek , Luk 15:29; “goat,” Mat 25:32, Mat 25:33 , diminutive), the young of the goat, reckoned a great delicacy among the ancients; and it appears to have been served for food in preference to the lamb (Gen 27:9; Gen 38:17; Jdg 6:19; Jdg 14:6; 1Sa 16:20). It still continues to be a choice dish among the Arabs. By the Mosaic law, the Hebrews were forbidden to dress a kid in the milk of its dam; and this remarkable prohibition is repeated three several times (Exo 23:19; Exo 34:26; Deu 14:21). This law has been variously understood. However, it is generally supposed that it was intended to guard the Hebrews against some idolatrous or superstitious practice of the neighboring heathen nations. The practice is quite common with modern Orientals (Thomson, Land and Book, i, 135). Kids were also among the sacrificial offerings (Exo 12:3, margin; Lev 4:23-26; Num 7:16-87). SEE GOAT.
Fuente: Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature
Kid
the young of the goat. It was much used for food (Gen. 27:9; 38:17; Judg. 6:19; 14:6). The Mosaic law forbade to dress a kid in the milk of its dam, a law which is thrice repeated (Ex. 23:19; 34:26; Deut. 14:21). Among the various reasons assigned for this law, that appears to be the most satisfactory which regards it as “a protest against cruelty and outraging the order of nature.” A kid cooked in its mother’s milk is “a gross, unwholesome dish, and calculated to kindle animal and ferocious passions, and on this account Moses may have forbidden it. Besides, it is even yet associated with immoderate feasting; and originally, I suspect,” says Dr. Thomson (Land and the Book), “was connected with idolatrous sacrifices.”
Fuente: Easton’s Bible Dictionary
Kid
(See FOOD), on the prohibition to “seethe” or boil it in its “mother’s milk”: Deu 14:21).
Fuente: Fausset’s Bible Dictionary
Kid
KID.See Goat, and (for Exo 23:19) Magic, p. 569b.
Fuente: Hastings’ Dictionary of the Bible
Kid
(1) , gedh (Exo 23:19, etc.); (2) feminine gedhyah (Isa 11:6, etc.); (3) , gedh izzm, English Versions of the Bible kid, literally, kid of the goats, the King James Version margin (Jdg 6:19, etc.); (4) , ez, literally, goat (Deu 14:21; 1Ki 20:27);. (5) , ser izzm, the King James Version kid of the goats, the Revised Version (British and American) he-goat (Gen 37:31; Lev 9:3, etc.); (6) , eriphos (Luk 15:29). See GOAT.
Fuente: International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
Kid
A kid of the goats is constantly mentioned for the sin offering. Num 7:16-87, etc. As an article of food the kid is considered a dainty: it was with kids that Rebekah prepared the savoury meat as venison, wherewith Jacob deceived his father. Gen 27:9.
Fuente: Concise Bible Dictionary
Kid
Kid. See Goat.
Fuente: Smith’s Bible Dictionary
Kid
* For KID see GOAT
Fuente: Vine’s Dictionary of New Testament Words
Kid
, the young of the goat. Among the Hebrews the kid was reckoned a great delicacy; and appears to have been served for food in preference to the lamb. (See Goat.) It continues to be a choice dish in the neighbouring countries. After drinking, says Salt, cafe a la Sultane, as it is termed by French writers, hookahs were offered to us; and soon afterward, to my great surprise, dinner was announced. We accordingly retired with the dola of Aden to another apartment, where a kid, broiled and cut into small pieces, with a quantity of pillaued rice, was served up to us, agreeably to the fashion of the country. No people in the world is more straitened than the Abyssinians with respect to the necessaries of life: a little juwarry bread, a small quantity of fish, an adequate supply of goat’s and camel’s milk, and a kid on very particular occasions, constitute the whole of their subsistence. As soon as we arrived at the village of Howakil, a very neat hut was prepared for me; and as the evening was far advanced, I consented to stay for the night. Nothing could exceed the kindness of these good people; a kid was killed, and a quantity of fresh milk was brought and presented in straw baskets made of the leaves of the doom tree, seared over with wax, a manufacture in which the natives of these islands particularly excel. The village of Engedi, situate in the neighbourhood of Jericho, derives its name from the Hebrew word , a fountain,, and , a kid. It is suggested by the situation among lofty rocks, which, overhanging the valleys, are very precipitous. A fountain of pure water rises near the summit, which the inhabitants called Engedi, the fountain of the goat, because it is hardly accessible to any other creature.
Fuente: Biblical and Theological Dictionary
Kid
Deu 14:21 (b) This is a type of the life of a young person. The milk which should have sustained the little kid was used instead to boil it. The Lord does not want us to use for destructive purposes that which He has given us for constructive use. The practice of stewing the kid in the mother’s milk was observed by oriental farmers as a means of blessing on their crops. They would make the stew, mix water with it to give volume, and then sprinkle this over the fields in order to make them fertile and more productive. The Lord warns people not to resort to these heathen expedients but rather to look to Him and depend upon Him for blessing on their fields and crops. (See also Exo 23:19 and Exo 34:26). (See also under MILK).
1Sa 10:3 (c) This is probably a type of the Lord JESUS, the young man, offered as a sacrifice. As each of these three men had an entire kid for himself, so each believer may have all of the Lord JESUS for himself. CHRIST is not divided. All of His ministry, all of His work, all of His grace is for each individual believer.
Luk 15:29 (c) This is a type of the Lord JESUS unrecognized, unused, and unappreciated by those who should have known Him best.