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Wordswarms From Years PastAdjacent WordsGeranialesgeraniin Geraniine Geranine geraniol Geranium geranium family Geranium maculatum Geranium molle Geranium pratense Geranium richardsonii Geranium robertianum Geranium viscosissimum Gerant Gerard Gerard Depardieu Gerard Kuiper Gerard Manley Hopkins Gerard Peter Kuiper gerardia Gerardia pedicularia Gerardia virginica Gerardus Mercator GERASA; GERASENES Gerbe Gerbera Gerbera jamesonii Gerbert Full-text Search for "Gerar" 1703 |
Gerar definitions
Hitchcock Bible Dictionarysame as Gera Easton's Bible Dictionarya region; lodging-place, a very ancient town and district in the south border of Palestine, which was ruled over by a king named Abimelech (Gen. 10:19; 20:1, 2). Abraham sojourned here, and perhaps Isaac was born in this place. Both of these patriarchs were guilty of the sin of here denying their wives, and both of them entered into a treaty with the king before they departed to Beersheba (21:23-34; 26). It seems to have been a rich pastoral country (2 Chr. 14:12-18). Isaac here reaped an hundred-fold, and was blessed of God (Gen. 26:12). The "valley of Gerar" (Gen. 26:17) was probably the modern Wady el-Jerdr. International Standard Bible Encyclopediage'-rar (gerar, "circle," "region"; Gerara): A town in the Philistine plain South of Gaza (Ge 10:19), where both Abraham and Isaac ' sojourned for a time, and where they came into contact with Abimelech, king of Gerar (Ge 20 and 26, passim). The place has not been fully identified, but the site is probably in one of the branches of Wady Sheri`a, at a place called Um Jerrar, near the coast Southwest of Gaza and 9 miles from it (SWP, III, 389-90). The site answers fairly well to the statements of Eusebius and Jerome, Eusebius, Onomasticon, that it was 25 (Roman) miles South of Eleutheropolis (Beit Jibrin). It is actually 30 English miles, but distances were not very accurately determined in early times. Gerar was known in the first 5 centuries AD, when it was the seat of a bishopric, and its bishop, Marcian, attended the Council of Chalcedon 451 AD, It was also the seat of a monastery. |