Bishop Colensos Objections to the Historical Character of the Pentateuch And Th

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Bishop Colensos Objections to the Historical Character of the Pentateuch And Th
A Abraham Benisch
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Thus in verses 36 and 37 we read: " His owner shall sui-ely pay ox for (nnn) ox . . . Five oxen shall he pay for (nriH) the ox, and four sheep for (nnn) the sheep. " Yet, in verse 32, nnn, under analogous circumstances, is omitted; for there we read: " Thirty shekels of silver shall he give to his master, " evidently meaning for the slave killed; that is in Hebrew Vnnn, not expressed, although understood. Again, ver. 34, we read: " The owner of the pit shall pay. " Pay for what? Evidently for t...he ox or ass referred to in the preceding verse. Yet vnnn is again left out. A similar passage we find in 1 Kings XX. 39; one of the sons of the prophets addressed the King thus: "Thy servant went out into the midst of the war; and behold a man turned aside, and brought a man unto me, and said, Keep this man; if by any means he be missing, then shall thy life be for (nnn) his life, or else thou shalt weigh a talent of silver. " Here for him (Vnnn) is evidently understood, and again idiomatically omitted, it being left to the mind of the hearer or reader inwardly to supply this word.

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