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Lévitique 13.39 [Références croisées TSKe]

Texte (français et anglais)

LSG Lv 13:39 le sacrificateur l'examinera. S'il y a sur la peau de son corps des taches d'un blanc pâle, ce ne sont que des taches qui ont fait éruption sur la peau: il est pur.

KJV Lv 13:39 Then the priest shall look: and, behold, if the bright spots in the skin of their flesh be darkish white; it is a freckled spot that groweth in the skin; he is clean.

Références liées

if the bright
Ecclésiaste 7:20 Non, il n'y a sur la terre point d'homme juste qui fasse le bien et qui ne pèche jamais.
Romains 7:22 Car je prends plaisir à la loi de Dieu, selon l'homme intérieur ;
Romains 7:23 mais je vois dans mes membres une autre loi, qui lutte contre la loi de mon entendement, et qui me rend captif de la loi du péché, qui est dans mes membres.
Romains 7:24 Misérable que je suis ! Qui me délivrera du corps de cette mort ?...
Romains 7:25 Grâces soient rendues à Dieu par Jésus Christ notre Seigneur !... Ainsi donc, moi-même, je suis par l'entendement esclave de la loi de Dieu, et je suis par la chair esclave de la loi du péché.
Jacques 3:2 Nous bronchons tous de plusieurs manières. Si quelqu'un ne bronche point en paroles, c'est un homme parfait, capable de tenir tout son corps en bride.
a freckled spot
The word bohak, from the Syriac behak, to be white, or shining, here rendered "a freckled spot," is used by the Arabs to denote a kind of leprosy, of which Niebuhr says, " Bohak is neither contagious nor dangerous. A black boy at Mocha, who was affected with this eruption, had here and there upon his body white spots. We were told that the use of sulphur had relieved this boy for a time, but had not entirely removed the disease." He adds subsequently from Forskal's papers, "The Arabs call a sort of leprosy, in which some little spots shew themselves here and there on the body, behaq; and it is without doubt the same as is named bohak, (Lev. 13). They believe it to be so far from contagious, that one may sleep with a person affected without danger. "On the 15th day of May, 1765, I myself first saw the Bohak leprosy in a Jew at Mocha. The spots in this disease are of an unequal size. They do not shine; are not perceptibly higher than the skin; and do not change the colour of the hair. Their colour is an obscure white, inclining to red. The rest of the skin of the patient was darker than that of the people of the country in general; but the spots were not so white as the skin of an European, when not sun-burnt. The spots in this leprosy do not appear on the hands, or near the navel, but on the neck and face, yet not on that part where the hair grows thick. They gradually spread, and continue sometimes only about two months, but in some cases one or two years, and then disappear by degrees, of themselves. This disorder is neither contagious nor hereditary, nor does it occasion any inconvenience." Hence a person infected with the bohak is declared clean.

Versets de Lévitique 13

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