Leopard
LEOPARD
A fierce wild beast of the feline genus, beautifully spotted with a diversity of colors; it has small eyes, wide jaws, sharp teeth, round ears, a large tail; five claws on the fore feet, and four on those behind. It is swift, craft, and cruel; dangerous to all domestic cattle, and even to man, Jer 5:6 13:23 Da 10:6 Hos 13:7 Hab 1:8 . Its name, leopard, implies that it has something of the lion and of the panther in its nature. It seems from Scripture that the leopard could not be rare in Palestine. Its Hebrew name occurs significantly in several names of places; as Beth-nimrah, the haunt of leopards, Num 32:36 . So in Nimrah, Nimrim, and perhaps Nimrod the mighty hunter. Isaiah, describing the happy reign of the Messiah, says, Isa 11:6, “The leopard shall lie down with the kid, and the calf and the young lion and the fatling together.” The spouse in the Canticles speaks of the mountains of the leopards, Son 4:8 ; that is to say, such as Lebanon and Hermon, where wild beasts dwelt.
Fuente: American Tract Society Bible Dictionary
Leopard
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The Greek word seems to have been used indiscriminately by the classical writers to designate leopard, panther, or ounce. The only NT reference to the leopard is in Rev 13:2, where it occurs in the description of the Wild Beast from the sea-the beast which I saw was like unto a leopard. The concrete reality, of which the Wild Beast was the abstract emblem, was of course the Roman Empire. To the mind of the Seer, the attitude adopted by Rome towards the early Christian Church was that of a leopard. She exhibited the same agility (cf. Hab 1:8) and cunning (cf. Hos 13:7), as well as the same ruthless cruelty, as that much-dreaded inhabitant of Palestine and the East.
The leopard (Felis pardus, Arab. nimr, Heb. nmr) is still found round the Dead Sea, in Gilead and Bashan, and also occasionally in Lebanon and the wooded districts of the west; but, judging from the numerous allusions in the OT and the occurrence of the word in place-names (e.g. Beth-Nimrah or Nimrah), it is reasonable to suppose that it was more common in early times. It usually lurks near wells or watering-places (cf. waters of Nimrim, Isa 15:6, Jer 48:34), and in the outskirts of villages (cf. Jer 5:6), to pounce at night upon cattle and dogs. The beautifully spotted skins are often sold in the markets and are used as rugs and saddle-covers, while sometimes they are worn as an article of clothing.
The Felis pardus is found over the whole of Africa, S. Asia, China, Japan, and the islands of the Malay Archipelago.
Another animal of the leopard tribe, the well-known cheeta or hunting-leopard of India (Felis jubatus), is sometimes found in the hills of Galilee and in the neighbourhood of Tabor, but its occurrence is rare. It is much tamer than the Felis pardus, and in India it is often domesticated and kept for hunting antelopes and other animals.
Literature.-H. B. Tristram, SWP [Note: WP Memoirs of Survey of Western Palestine.] vii. [1884], p. 18f., The Natural History of the Bible10, 1911, pp. 111-114; H. B. Swete, The Apocalypse of St. John2, 1907, p. 162; Hastings Single-vol. Dictionary of the Bible 540f.; Hasting’s Dictionary of the Bible (5 vols) iii. 95; Encyclopaedia Biblica iii. 2762f.; W. M. Thomson, The Land and the Book, 1864, p. 444f.
P. S. P. Handcock.
Fuente: Dictionary of the Apostolic Church
Leopard
Leopard. The huge cats known as leopards were familiar in Palestine, and the Hebrews had good reason to fear them. Smaller and lighter than lions, leopards are better hunters. They are swift, wary, and intelligent; and they can climb trees as easily as a domestic cat. A leopard is also strong enough to drag his prey to a tree branch, where he can devour it out of reach of lions or hyenas. Although leopards do not usually attack human beings, Jeremiah portrayed them symbolically as an instrument of God’s judgment: “A leopard will watch over their cities. Everyone who goes out from there shall be torn in pieces” (Jer 5:6).
The books of Daniel and Revelation use the leopard as a symbol of swiftness in cruelty (Dan 7:6; Rev 13:2). Isaiah suggested that a day of peace would come when the savage leopard would not harm a young goat (Isa 11:6).
Fuente: Plants Animals Of Bible
Leopard
(Heb. , namer’, so called as being spotted, Son 4:8; Isa 11:6; Jer 5:6; Jer 13:23; Hos 13:7; Hab 1:8; Chald. , nemar’, Dan 7:6; Gr. , Dan 7:6; Rev 13:2; Sir 28:23). Though zoologists differ in opinion respecting the identity of the leopard and the panther, and dispute, supposing them to be distinct, how these names should be respectively applied, and by what marks the animals should be distinguished, nevertheless there can be no doubt that the namer of the Bible is that great spotted feline which anciently infested the Syrian mountains, and even now occurs in the wooded ranges of Lebanon, for the Arabs still use nimer, the same word slightly modified, to denote that animal. The Abyssinian name differs scarcely from either; and in all these tongues it means spotted. Pigikris, according to Kirscher, is the Coptic name; and in English “leopard” has been adopted as the most appropriate to represent both the Hebrew word and the Greek (which is imitated in the Tallmudic , Mishna, Baba Mez. 8:2), although the Latin leopardus is not found in any author anterior to the fourth century, and is derived from a gross mistake in natural history. Gesenius (Thes. Heb. p. 443) contends that the scriptural animal was rather striped than spotted (, Jer 13:23), and thinks that not improbably the tiger was also comprised under this name, as the Hebrews had no specific name for that animal (Thesaur. p. 889). The panther (Felis pardus of Linn.) lives in Africa (Strabo, 17:828; Pliny, 10:94), Arabia (Strabo, 16:774, 777), as well as on Lebanon (Seetzen, 18:343; Burckhardt, Trav. 1:99), and the Hills of middle Palestine (Schubert, 3:119), not to mention more distant countries, as India, America, etc. The most graphic description of the (African and Arabian) panther is by Ehrenberg (Symbol. phys. Mammal, lec. 2, pl. 17).
The variety of leopard, or rather panther, of Syria is considerably below the stature of a lioness, but very heavy in proportion to its bulk. Its general form is so well known as to require no description beyond stating that the spots are rather more irregular, and the color more mixed with whitish, than in the other pantherine felins, excepting the Felis Uncia or Felis Irbis of High Asia, which is shaggy and almost white (Sonnini, Trav. 1:395). It is a nocturnal, cat-like animal in habits, dangerous to all domestic cattle, and sometimes even to man (comp. Plin. 10:94; Hom. Hymn in Ven. 71; Oppian, Cyneg. 3:76 sq.; Cvrill. Alex. in Hos. l. c.; Tsetz. Chiliad. 2:45; Poiret, Voyage, 1:224). In the Scriptures it is constantly placed in juxtaposition with the lion (Isa 11:6; Jer 5:6; Hos 13:7 : Sir 28:23 [27]; comps. AElian, V. H. 14:4) or the wolf. The swiftness of this animal, to which Habakkuk (Hab 1:8) compares the Chaldean horses, and to which Daniel (Dan 7:6) alludes in the winged leopard, is well known. So great is the flexibility of its body that it is able to take surprising leaps, to climb trees, or to crawl snake-like upon the ground. Jeremiah and Hosea (as above) allude to the insidious habit of this animal, which is abundantly confirmed by the observations of travelers: the leopard will take up its position in some spot near a village, and watch for some favorable opportunity for plunder. From the Canticles (as above) we learn that the hilly ranges of Lebanon were in ancient times frequented by these animals, and it is now not uncommonly seen in and about Lebanon, and the southern maritime mountains of Syria (Kitto, Pict. Bible, note on Son 4:8).
There is in Asia Minor a species or variety of panther, much larger than the Syrian, not unfrequent on the borders of the snowy tracts even of Mount Ida, above ancient Troy; and the group of these spotted animals is spread over the whole of Southern Asia to Africa. From several names of places (e.g. Beth-Nimrah, etc.), it appears that, in the earlier ages of Israelitish dominion, it was sufficiently numerous in Palestine, and recent travelers have encountered it there (see Bibliotheca Sacra, 1848, p. 669; Lynch’s Expedition, p. 212). Leopard skins were worn as a part of ceremonial costume by the superiors of the Egyptian priesthood, and by other personages in Nubia; and the animal itself is represented in the processions of tributary nations (Wilkinson, 1:285, 291, 319). In Dan 7:7, the third stage of the prophetical vision is symbolized under the form of a leopard with wings, representing the rapidly formed Macedonian empire; its four heads corresponding to the division of Alexander’s dominions among his four generals. In Rev 13:2, the same animal is made a type of the spiritual power of the Roman hierarchy, supported by the secular power in maintaining Paganism in opposition to Christianity. See generally Bochart, Hieroz. 2:100 sq.; Schoder, Specin. hieroz. 1:46 sq.; Wemyss, Clavis Symbolica, s.v.; Wood, Bible Animals, p. 29 sq.; Thomson, Land and Book, 2:156 sq.
Fuente: Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature
Leopard
(Heb. namer, so called because spotted, Cant. 4:8), was that great spotted feline which anciently infested the mountains of Syria, more appropriately called a panther (Felis pardus). Its fierceness (Isa. 11:6), its watching for its prey (Jer. 5:6), its swiftness (Hab. 1:8), and the spots of its skin (Jer. 13:23), are noticed. This word is used symbolically (Dan. 7:6; Rev. 13:2).
Fuente: Easton’s Bible Dictionary
Leopard
Famed for swiftness and agility (Hab 1:8); “you would fancy it was flying” (Oppian Cyneg., iii. 76); it climbs trees, and can crawl along the ground. Hence the symbol for Greece and Alexander’s rapid victories (Dan 7:6; Rev 13:2). The prevalence of leopards anciently in Palestine is marked by the many places named from them (namer, Hebrew): Nimrah, Nimrim, Beth Nimrah. “The mountains of the leopard” (Son 4:8), namely, Lebanon and Hermon, where still they are found; “the mountains of prey” (Psa 76:4), symbolizing the rapacious world kingdoms. They spring with successive rapid bounds. They cunningly lie in wait in thickets and often near villages for their prey, as distinguished from the lion’s bold, open attack (Jer 5:6; Hos 13:7): “as a leopard by the way, I will observe (lie in wait for) them.” Its unalterable spots represent man’s inability to change himself (Jer 13:23); yet the leopard in the millennium shall “lie down with the kid” (Isa 11:6).
Fuente: Fausset’s Bible Dictionary
Leopard
LEOPARD (nmr).This animal (Felis pardus, Arab. [Note: Arabic.] nimr) is still found at times in the wilder parts of Palestine. Its beautiful spotted skin (Jer 5:6) is from time to time brought into the towns for sale. Some dervishes clothe themselves in a leopards skin. Its fierceness (Hos 13:7), its agility (Hab 1:8), and untamableness (Isa 11:6) are all mentioned. The name Nimr is a favourite one with the Arabs, who admire these qualities. In the names waters of Nimrm (leopards, Isa 15:6, Jer 48:34) and Beth-nimrah (f. leopard, Num 32:3-36) references to the leopard also occur; cf. the mountains of nmrm (i.e. the leopards, Son 4:8). The cheetah (Felix jubata) is found also in Galilee, and it too may have been included under the Heb. word nmr.
E. W. G. Masterman.
Fuente: Hastings’ Dictionary of the Bible
Leopard
leperd ((1) , namer (Son 4:8; Isa 11:6; Jer 5:6; Jer 13:23; Hos 13:7; Hab 1:8); compare Arabic nimr, leopard. (2) Chaldaic , nemar (Dan 7:6). (3) , pardalis (Rev 13:2; Ecclesiasticus 28:23); compare , nimrm, Nimrim (Isa 15:6; Jer 48:34), , nimrah, Nimrah (Num 32:3), and , beth-nimrah, Beth-nimrah (Num 32:36; Jos 13:27)): The leopard is found throughout Africa and ranges through Southern Asia from Asia Minor to Japan, being absent from Siberia and Central Asia. Its range is much the same as that of the lion, which latter, however, does not extend so far to the East. Like other animals of wide range, it has local varieties, but these shade into each other imperceptibly, and the one specific name, Felis pardus, includes all. Leopards live in some of the valleys East and South of the Dead Sea, and in the mountains of Sinai and Northwestern Arabia. They have but rarely been seen of recent years in Lebanon or the more settled portions of Palestine. So far as can be judged from skins which are available for comparison, the leopard of Palestine is rather light in color, and is not as large as. some found in Africa or India. It is not certain that the place-names, NIMRIM, NIMRAH, and BETH-NIMRAH (which see), have to do with namer, leopard, but their location is in Moab, where leopards are well known, even at the present day. One of the valleys entering the Dead Sea from the East, South of the Arnon, is called Wadi-en-Numeir (valley of the little leopard; numeir, diminutive of nimr).
In the Bible leopard occurs mainly in figurative expressions, as a large and fierce beast. The leopard is mentioned with the lion and bear in Dan 7:6; Hos 13:7; Rev 13:2; with the lion, wolf and bear in Isa 11:6; with the lion and wolf in Jer 5:6; with the lion alone in Ecclesiasticus 28:23; with the wolf alone in Hab 1:8. The leopard is smaller than the lion and the tiger, but is more active than either. Its swiftness is referred to in Hab 1:8 : Their horses also (of the Chaldeans) are swifter than leopards. The spots of the leopard are referred to in Jer 13:23 : Can the Ethiopian change his skin, or the leopard his spots?
The Greek , pardalis, and , panther, were both applied to the leopard. Panther is sometimes used of large leopards, while in America, with its corrupt form painter, it is one of the names applied to the cougar or puma, Felis concolor, which, as the specific name implies, is not spotted like the leopard, or striped like the tiger.
Fuente: International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
Leopard
Fig. 243Leopard
Leopard (Son 4:8; Isa 11:6; Jer 5:6; Jer 13:23; Hos 13:7; Hab 1:8; Dan 7:6; Rev 13:2; Sir 28:23). Though zoologists differ in opinion respecting the identity of the leopard and the panther, and dispute, supposing them to be distinct, how these names should be respectively applied, and by what marks the animals should be distinguished, nevertheless there can be no doubt that the leopard of the Bible is that great spotted feline which anciently infested the Syrian mountains, and even now occurs in the wooded ranges of Libanus. The variety of leopard, or rather panther, of Syria, is considerably below the stature of a lioness, but very heavy in proportion to its bulk. Its general form is so well known as to require no description beyond stating, that the spots are rather more irregular, and the color more mixed with whitish, than in the other pantherine felinae, excepting the Felis Uncia, or Felis Irbis, of High Asia, which is shaggy and almost white. It is a nocturnal, catlike animal in habits, dangerous to all domestic cattle, and sometimes even to man. In the Scriptures it is constantly placed in juxtaposition with the lion or the wolf; which last, if the hyena be intended, forms a natural association. There is in Asia Minor a species or variety of panther, much larger than the Syrian, not infrequent on the borders of the snowy tracts even of Mount Ida, above ancient Troy; and the group of these spotted animals is spread over the whole of Southern Asia to Africa. From several names of places, it appears that, in the earlier ages of Israelitish dominion, it was sufficiently numerous in Palestine. Leopard skins were worn as a part of ceremonial costume by the superiors of the Egyptian priesthood, and by other personages in Nubia; and the animal itself is represented in the processions of tributary nations.
Fuente: Popular Cyclopedia Biblical Literature
Leopard
The Hebrew word, namer, signifies a ‘spotted’ animal. This well-known wild animal is introduced by the prophet as an illustration: as the leopard cannot change its spots, no more can rebellious man change his nature. Jer 13:23. The leopard is also represented as lying in wait and watching its prey, and acting with swiftness. Jer 5:6; Hos 13:7; Hab 1:8. The Grecian kingdom was compared to a leopard with four wings, Dan 7:6; and it answered to this in the rapidity of its conquests. The future Roman empire is symbolically likened to a leopard, but having the feet of a bear, and the mouth of a lion: that is, like no known beast, but symbolically uniting the characteristics of the three former powers. Rev 13:2. In the millennium “the leopard shall lie down with the kid.” Isa 11:6. The common leopard is the Leopardus varius.
Fuente: Concise Bible Dictionary
Leopard
A carnivorous animal
Son 4:8
Fierceness of
Jer 5:6; Jer 13:23; Hos 13:7; Hab 1:8
Figurative:
– General references
Dan 7:6
– Taming of, the triumph of the gospel
Isa 11:6
Fuente: Nave’s Topical Bible
Leopard
Leopard. Isa 11:6. An animal of the cat tribe, which is often mentioned by the sacred writers. The Hebrew name is nimrah. Num 32:8. Beth-nimrah, Num 32:36, means the house of the leopards; and in Son 4:8, are mentioned the mountains of the leopards. Allusions are made in the Bible to its manner of watching for its prey, Jer 5:6; Hos 13:7; its fleetness, Hab 1:8; its fierceness and cruelty, Isa 11:6, and in Dan 7:6 it is made the emblem of power.
Fuente: People’s Dictionary of the Bible
Leopard
Leopard. (Hebrew, namer). Leopard is invariably given, by the Authorized Version, as the translation of the Hebrew word, which occurs in the seven following passages: Son 4:8; Isa 11:6; Jer 5:6; Jer 13:23; Dan 7:6; Hos 13:7; Hab 1:8. Leopard occurs also in Sir. 28:23 and in Rev 13:2.
From Son 4:8, we learn that the hilly ranges of Lebanon were, in ancient times, frequented by these animals. They are now not uncommonly seen in and about Lebanon and the southern maritime mountains of Syria. Under the name namer, which means “spotted”, it is not improbable that another animal, namely the cheetah (Gueparda jubata), may be included; which is tamed by the Mohammedans of Syria, who employ it in hunting the gazelle.
Fuente: Smith’s Bible Dictionary
LEOPARD
See Beast
Fuente: A Symbolical Dictionary
LEOPARD
See under BEAST.
Fuente: A Symbolical Dictionary
Leopard
denotes “a leopard or a panther,” an animal characterized by swiftness of movement and sudden spring, in Dan 7:6 symbolic of the activities of Alexander the Great, and the formation of the Grecian kingdom, the third seen in the vision there recorded. In Rev 13:2 the imperial power, described there also as a “beast,” is seen to concentrate in himself the characteristics of those mentioned in Dan. 7.
Fuente: Vine’s Dictionary of New Testament Words
Leopard
Son 4:8; Isa 11:6; Jer 5:6; Jer 13:23; Hos 13:7; Hab 1:8; Dan 7:6; , Rev 13:2; Sir 28:23. There can be no doubt that the pard or leopard is the animal mentioned. Bochart shows that the name is similar in the Chaldee, Syriac, Arabic, and Ethiopic. The LXX uniformly render it by ; and Jerom, pardus. Probably, these animals were numerous in Palestine; as we find places with a name intimating their having been the haunts of leopards: Nimrah, Num 32:3; Beth-Nimrah, Num 32:36; Jos 13:27; and waters of Nimrim, Isa 15:6; Jer 48:34; and mountains of leopards, Son 4:8. Nimrod might have his name from this animal; He was a mighty hunter before the Lord; wherefore it is said, Even as Nimrod the mighty hunter before the Lord, Gen 10:9. It is supposed, however, that his predations were not confined to the brute creation. Dr. Geddes remarks, that the word hunter expresses too little. He was a freebooter, in the worst sense of the word; a lawless despot:
Proud Nimrod first the bloody chase began, A mighty hunter, and his prey was man.
Isaiah, describing the happy state of the reign of Messiah, says, The leopard shall lie down with the kid, Isa 11:6. Even animals shall lose their fierceness and cruelty, and become gentle and tame. Jer 5:6, mentions the artful ambuscades of this animal; and in Jer 13:23, alludes to his spots: Can a Cushite change his skin; or a leopard his spots? Then may ye prevail with them to do good who are habituated to do evil; and Hab 1:8, refers to its alertness.
Fuente: Biblical and Theological Dictionary
Leopard
Jer 5:6 (b) This animal which is so quick in its actions and so swift in its pursuit is a picture of the swift destroyers mentioned in the passage. They would come suddenly with fierceness and attack with cruelty.
Jer 13:23 (a) The spots on the leopard are from birth. It is an inherent marking. So the sinner is born with evil and wicked tendencies which are permanent in his life. He cannot change them nor obliterate them in any way. Only a divine power could remove them. The sinner is helpless in his sins. Only the divine Son of GOD can change him and make him whiter than snow. This animal represents also the sinner who admits he has “spots of sin” on him, but thinks there is lots of good in him. GOD will not save him, until he admits he is all bad.
Hos 13:7 (a) In this passage the lion represents power, the leopard represents swiftness, the bear represents silence and certainty, and these are characteristics of the GOD whom they abandoned.
Rev 13:2 (a) This animal represents the antichrist, who though pretending to be a man of peace will really be a cruel monster, killing all his enemies, violating his oath and showing swift and certain vengeance on those who belong to JESUS CHRIST.