Olive-Oil
olive oil
Oil obtained from the pulp of olives. It is mixed with balsam in the making of chrism, which is used in the administration of certain sacraments. It represents the copious outpouring of sacramental grace which gives strength to the soul as oil does to the body. In the Old Testament God commanded that a lamp filled with purest oil of olives should always burn in the Tabernacle of the Testimony (Exodus 27); it was also used in many religious ceremonies, e.g., coronation of kings, consecration of the high priest, and ordination of the Levites, and was prominent in Mosaic ordinances (Exodus 30; Leviticus 8; Deuteronomy 28).
Fuente: New Catholic Dictionary
Olive-Oil
(fully , olive of oil, Deu 8:8; briefly Exo 30:24, or , simply, 2Ki 18:21; A. V. oil olive), the product of the fruit of the olive-tree, being emphatically the oil of the East, answering to butter, cream, and fat for the table, as well as for illumination. Olive-oil is much used as an article of food in the countries in which it is produced, and to a smaller extent in other countries, to which it is exported also for medicinal and other uses. A good illustration of the use of olive-oil for food is furnished by 2Ch 2:10, where we are told that Solomon provided Hiram’s men with twenty thousand baths of oil. Comp. Ezr 3:7. Too much of this product was supplied for home consumption: hence we find the country sending it as an export to Tyre (Eze 27:17) and to Egypt (Hos 12:1). This oil was used inn coronations: thus it was an emblem of sovereignty (1Sa 10:1; 1Sa 12:3; 1Sa 12:5), It was also mixed with the offerings in sacrifice (Lev 2:1-2; Lev 2:6; Lev 2:15). Even in the wilderness very strict directions were given that, in the tabernacle, the Israelites were to have pure oil olive beaten for the light, to cause the lamp to burn always (Exo 27:20), . For the burning of it in common lamps, see Mat 25:3-4; Mat 25:8. The use of it on the hair and skin was customary, and indicative of cheerfulness (Psa 23:5; Mat 6:17). It was also employed medicinally in. surgical cases (Luk 10:34). See, again, Mar 6:13; Jam 5:14, for its use in combination with prayer on behalf of the sick. SEE OIL.
In the south of France and in Italy, where the olive culture is conducted most carefully, the fruit is gathered by hand in November; and after passing through a mill, which separates the pulp or flesh from the hard stone, the pulp is put into bags of rushes and subjected to a gentle pressure. The result is the virgin oil, greenish in its tint, and highly prized for its purity. In Palestine several methods are practiced for extracting the oil. SEE OLIVE.