Locusts in Easton's Bible Dictionary
There are ten Hebrew words used in Scripture to signify
locust.
In the New Testament locusts are mentioned as
forming part of
the food of John the Baptist (Matt. 3:4; Mark 1:6).
By the
Mosaic law they were reckoned "clean," so that he
could lawfully
eat them. The name also occurs in Rev. 9:3, 7, in
allusion to
this Oriental devastating insect.
Locusts belong to the class of Orthoptera, i.e.,
straight-winged. They are of many species. The
ordinary Syrian
locust resembles the grasshopper, but is larger and
more
destructive. "The legs and thighs of these insects
are so
powerful that they can leap to a height of two
hundred times the
length of their bodies. When so raised they spread
their wings
and fly so close together as to appear like one
compact moving
mass." Locusts are prepared as food in various ways.
Sometimes
they are pounded, and then mixed with flour and
water, and baked
into cakes; "sometimes boiled, roasted, or stewed in
butter, and
then eaten." They were eaten in a preserved state by
the ancient
Assyrians.
The devastations they make in Eastern lands are
often very
appalling. The invasions of locusts are the heaviest
calamites
that can befall a country. "Their numbers exceed
computation:
the hebrews called them 'the countless,' and the
Arabs knew them
as 'the darkeners of the sun.' Unable to guide their
own flight,
though capable of crossing large spaces, they are at
the mercy
of the wind, which bears them as blind instruments
of Providence
to the doomed region given over to them for the
time.
Innumerable as the drops of water or the sands of
the seashore,
their flight obscures the sun and casts a thick
shadow on the
earth (Ex. 10:15; Judg. 6:5; 7:12; Jer. 46:23; Joel
2:10). It
seems indeed as if a great aerial mountain, many
miles in
breadth, were advancing with a slow, unresting
progress. Woe to
the countries beneath them if the wind fall and let
them alight!
They descend unnumbered as flakes of snow and hide
the ground.
It may be 'like the garden of Eden before them, but
behind them
is a desolate wilderness. At their approach the
people are in
anguish; all faces lose their colour' (Joel 2:6). No
walls can
stop them; no ditches arrest them; fires kindled in
their path
are forthwith extinguished by the myriads of their
dead, and the
countless armies march on (Joel 2:8, 9). If a door
or a window
be open, they enter and destroy everything of wood
in the house.
Every terrace, court, and inner chamber is filled
with them in a
moment. Such an awful visitation swept over Egypt
(Ex. 10:1-19),
consuming before it every green thing, and stripping
the trees,
till the land was bared of all signs of vegetation.
A strong
north-west wind from the Mediterranean swept the
locusts into
the Red Sea.", Geikie's Hours, etc., ii., 149.
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