Lion in Easton's Bible Dictionary
the most powerful of all carnivorous animals. Although not
now
found in Israel, they must have been in ancient
times very
numerous there. They had their lairs in the forests
(Jer. 5:6;
12:8; Amos 3:4), in the caves of the mountains
(Cant. 4:8; Nah.
2:12), and in the canebrakes on the banks of the
Jordan (Jer.
49:19; 50:44; Zech. 11:3).
No fewer than at least six different words are used
in the Old
Testament for the lion. (1.) _Gor_ (i.e., a
"suckling"), the
lion's whelp (Gen. 49:9; Jer. 51:38, etc.). (2.)
_Kephir_ (i.e.,
"shaggy"), the young lion (Judg. 14:5; Job 4:10; Ps.
91:13;
104:21), a term which is also used figuratively of
cruel enemies
(Ps. 34:10; 35:17; 58:6; Jer. 2:15). (3.) _'Ari_
(i.e., the
"puller" in pieces), denoting the lion in general,
without
reference to age or sex (Num. 23:24; 2 Sam. 17:10,
etc.). (4.)
_Shahal_ (the "roarer"), the mature lion (Job 4:10;
Ps. 91:13;
Prov. 26:13; Hos. 5:14). (5.) _Laish_, so called
from its
strength and bravery (Job 4:11; Prov. 30:30; Isa.
30:6). The
capital of Northern Dan received its name from this
word. (6.)
_Labi_, from a root meaning "to roar," a grown lion
or lioness
(Gen. 49:9; Num. 23:24; 24:9; Ezek. 19:2; Nah.
2:11).
The lion of Israel was properly of the Asiatic
variety,
distinguished from the African variety, which is
larger. Yet it
not only attacked flocks in the presence of the
shepherd, but
also laid waste towns and villages (2 Kings 17:25,
26) and
devoured men (1 Kings 13:24, 25). Shepherds
sometimes,
single-handed, encountered lions and slew them (1
Sam. 17:34,
35; Amos 3:12). Samson seized a young lion with his
hands and
"rent him as he would have rent a kid" (Judg. 14:5,
6). The
strength (Judg. 14:18), courage (2 Sam. 17:10), and
ferocity
(Gen. 49:9) of the lion were proverbial.
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