Dogs in Easton's Bible Dictionary
frequently mentioned both in the Old and New Testaments.
Dogs
were used by the Hebrews as a watch for their houses
(Isa.
56:10), and for guarding their flocks (Job 30:1).
There were
also then as now troops of semi-wild dogs that
wandered about
devouring dead bodies and the offal of the streets
(1 Kings
14:11; 16:4; 21:19, 23; 22:38; Ps. 59:6, 14).
As the dog was an unclean animal, the terms "dog,"
"dog's
head," "dead dog," were used as terms of reproach or
of
humiliation (1 Sam. 24:14; 2 Sam. 3:8; 9:8; 16:9).
Paul calls
false apostles "dogs" (Phil. 3:2). Those who are
shut out of the
kingdom of heaven are also so designated (Rev.
22:15).
Persecutors are called "dogs" (Ps. 22:16). Hazael's
words, "Thy
servant which is but a dog" (2 Kings 8:13), are
spoken in mock
humility=impossible that one so contemptible as he
should attain
to such power.
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