- Animals in the Bible
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unreferenced = January 2008
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OR = March 2008TheBible names over 120species ofanimal s but, as it is not a book ofscience , does not offer any kind ofbiological classification . The sacred books were composed by a people almost exclusively given tohusbandry andpastoral life and hence in constant communication with nature. To this people references to the animal world and animal customs were quite natural. As may be expected, the more a particular animal abounded in theHoly Land , the more frequent allusions to it may be found.A closer examination of the way in which references to animals are introduced, the frequency of allusions to certain species, and the date of the documents in which they are found gives a fair idea of the conditions of the area at different stages of its history. The species, for instance, called in
Hebrew 're'em', was very probably theaurochs , or wildox and totally disappeared about the time of theBabylonian captivity . The wildass , thelion and a few others long ago becameextinct inPalestine . Other species alluded to in the Bible are now extremely scarce.The Bible mentions animals from varying regions of the
Middle East . Theostrich , for instance, a denizen of the torrid regions, and thecamel , of the waterless districts around Palestine, are mentioned side by side with theroebuck anddeer of the woody summits ofLebanon . This variety, greater probably in Palestine than in any other country in the samelatitude , is attributed to the great extremes ofelevation andtemperature in this small area. Palestinianfauna is not as rich today as it was during the Biblical times. The land is barren today but was well wooded when the Bible was written, especially on the hills east of theJordan River .Although no regular classification is to be sought for in the Bible, animal creation is there practically divided into four classes, according to the four different modes of locomotion. Among the animals, some walk, others fly, many are essentially swimmers and several crawl on the ground. This classification, more empiric than
logical , would not by any means satisfy a modernscientist . It must be known, however, if we wish fairly to understand the language of the Scriptures on the matters connected therewith. The first class, the behemôth, or beasts, in the Biblical parlance, includes allquadruped s living on the earth, with the exception of theamphibia and such small animals as moles, mice, and the like.Beasts are divided into
cattle , or domesticated (behemoth in the strict sense), and beasts of the field, i.e.wild animal s. Thefowl s, which constitute the second class, include not only thebird s, but also "all things that fly", even if they "go upon four feet", as the different kinds oflocust s. Of the many "living beings that swim in the water" no particular species is mentioned; the "greatwhale s" are set apart in that class, while the rest are divided according to whether they have, or have not,fin s and scales (Leviticus 11:9, 10).The
reptile s, or "creeping things", form the fourth class. References to this class are relatively few. However, it should be noticed that the "creeping things" include not only the reptiles properly so called, but also all short-legged animals orinsect s which seem to crawl rather than to walk, such as moles,lizard s, etc. From a religious viewpoint, all these animals are divided into two classes, clean and unclean, according to whether they can, or cannot, be eaten. [Moses, et al. The Bible. Jerusalem: ]"See also the
list of the animals in the Bible ".----References
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