Horse in Fausset's Bible Dictionary
In Scripture used for war-like purposes, not agriculture
(except in treading out grain for threshing, Isaiah 28:28,
where for "horsemen" translated "horses".) Job's magnificent
description refers to the war horse (Isaiah 39:19-25), "hast
thou clothed his neck with thunder?" i.e. with the power of
inspiring terror. Rather "with majesty" (Umbreit), "with
quivering mane" (Maurer). The Greek connection between mane
(fobee) and terror (fobos) favors A.V. which is more poetic.
"Canst thou make him afraid (rather 'make him spring') as a
grasshopper?" So in Joel 2:4 war horses are compared to
locusts. Their heads are so like that the Italian for
"locust" is cavaletta, "little horse." "The glory of his
nostrils is terrible: he paweth in the valley and rejoiceth
in strength, he goeth on," etc.; "he swalloweth the ground
with fierceness," i.e. draws it in fierce impatience toward
him with his hoof, as if he would "swallow" it.
"Neither believeth he (for joy) that it is the sound
of the trumpet," rather "he will not stand still at the
sound." "He saith among the trumpets, Ha, ha!" his
mettlesome neighing expressing his eagerness for battle,
which "he smelleth," snuffeth, i.e. discerneth, "the thunder
(i.e. thundering voice) of the captains." (See CHARIOT.) The
donkey is the emblem of peace. The bride is compared to "a
company of horses in Pharaoh's chariots" (Song of Solomon
1:9), namely, in ardor and beauty (Song of Solomon 1:4,
"run"; Song of Solomon 1:5, "comely"), and in forming "a
company" militant, orderly, and numerous (Revelation 19:7;
Revelation 19:14). The qualities which seemed preeminent in
the enemy Pharaoh's hosts at the Red Sea really belonged to
Israel. Maurer translated "I compare thee to my mare in
chariots of (i.e. received from) Pharaoh," but the plural
"chariots" requires the collective sense "a company of
horses."
The "cutting off of the horse from Jerusalem"
prophetically symbolizes the cessation of war (Zechariah
9:10). Not the horse's speed or utility but his "strength"
is his characteristic in Scripture (Psalm 33:17). Two names
are used in Hebrew, both Persian in origin: sus from Susa,
and parash from Pares. The sus was of stronger make, used
for the war chariot; the parash more for riding. Perhaps in
Exodus 14:9 "horsemen" mean "chariot riders." Certainly no
Egyptian monument represents horsemen. Translated in 1 Kings
4:26, "forty (rather 'four,' a copyist's error, as 2
Chronicles 9:25 proves. Also 1400 chariots suit 4000 horses,
two horses for each chariot and a reserve horse: 2
Chronicles 1:14; 1 Kings 10:26) thousand chariot horses and
twelve thousand riding (i.e. cavalry) horses"; Ezekiel
27:14, "with (chariot) horses and riding horses" (KJV
"horsemen".)
Isaiah 21:7, "a chariot with a couple of horsemen";
rather "a cavalcade of horsemen riding in pairs." In 1 Kings
4:28; Esther 8:14; Micah 1:13, rekesh "dromedary"; rather "a
courser," a "racehorse," for such purposes as the royal
post. In 1 Kings 10:28-29, the sense seems that the
Egyptians regularly brought horses to a mart in S. Israel
(Septuagint and Vulgate name the mart in their translation),
of the Hebrew Koa. In A. V. Mi-Kveh is translated "linen
yarn") and handed them to the king's dealers at a fixed
price, 150 shekels for one horse, 600 for a chariot,
including its two draught horses and one reserve horse. In
Genesis 12:15 horses are not mentioned among the possessions
which Abram acquired during his sojourn in Egypt. But in
Genesis 47:17 they stand foremost among the Egyptians'
possessions. In later times, the greater contact of Egypt
with Canaanite and Arab nomads' accounts for the
introduction of horses.
The camel, one of Abram's possessions in Egypt, is
not mentioned in Joseph's time nor on the Egyptian
monuments. Their early possession of the desert of Sinai
makes it certain they knew and must have used the camel
there, "the ship of the desert," but they avoid mentioning
it as being unclean. Saddles were not used until a late
period. Horses' hoofs hard "as flint" were a good point in
days when shoeing was unknown (Isaiah 5:28). White horses
were emblematic of victory (Revelation 6:2; Revelation
19:11; Revelation 19:14). Horses were consecrated to the
sun, since that luminary was supposed to drive a fiery
chariot through the sky (2 Kings 23:11). They were driven in
procession to meet the rising sun.
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