This word is used in Scripture, variously, but in all it means to convey an idea of great bitterness. The drink of bitter sorrow, is called, "the water of gall." (Jer. 8. 14.) And sin is sometimes described under the figure of "the gall of bitterness, and bond of iniquity." (Acts 8. 23.) Moses, describing the apostacy of any man or woman, or family, or tribe in Israel, calls it, "the root that beareth gall and wormwood." (Deut. 29. 18.) And elsewhere, speaking of Israel’s enemies, and their sad prospects, strongly marks the bitternesseven of their comforts under this figure. "For their vine is of the vine of Sodom, and of the fields of Gomorrah; their grapes are grapes of gall, their clusters are bitter." (Deut. xxx2: 32.) The Lord Jesus, speaking of his sufferings on the cross, noticeth "the gall the Jews gave him to eat, and the vinegar to drink." We are told, that in his thirst they gave the Lord "wine mingled with myrrh. It was a custom with the Romans in their execution of criminals, to blunt their pains in this way. Bitter myrrh, with wine or vinegar, hada tendency, it was thought, to accomplish this purpose. And thus they treated "the Lord of life and glory." But how little did they know, what thirst of soul Jesus felt in that earnestness and vehemeney he endured for the salvation of his people. Solomon had before said, "Give strong drink unto him that is ready to perish, and wine to those that be of heavy hearts; let him drink and forget his poverty, and remember his misery no more." (Prov. xxxi. 6, 7.) The strong drink of Jesus was the cup of salvation for hisredeemed. To Jesus "a cup of trembling;" to them the cup of rejoicing. Here he was to see "the travail of his soul, and be satisfied." In drinking of this draught, bitter as it was, and to the dregs, Jesus forgot all his sorrows, and remembered his misery no more. Oh! that the drunkards of Ephraim would seriously lay this to heart. Oh! that every follower of the Lord Jesus would now take "the cup of salvation, and call upon the name of the Lord."
Gall occurs in its primary and proper meaning, as denoting the substance secreted in the gall-bladder of animals, commonly called bile in the following passages; Job 16:13, ’He poureth out my gall.’ The metaphors in this verse are taken from the practice of huntsmen, who first surround the beast, then shoot it, and next take out the entrails. The meaning, as given by Bp. Heath, is, ’he entirely destroyeth me.’ Job 20:14 (describing the remorse of a wicked man), ’the gall of adders’ (which according to the ancients is the seat of their poison). Job 20:25, where, to describe the certainty of a wicked man’s destruction, it is said, ’the glittering sword cometh out of his gall.’ In the story of Tobit the gall of a fish is said to have been used to cure his father’s blindness (Tob 6:8; Tob 11:10; Tob 11:13). Pliny refers to the use of the same substance for diseases of the eye. Galen and other writers praise the use of the liver of the silurus in cases of dimness of sight.
Gall is also employed in the Authorized Version as the meaning of the word Rosh, which is generally considered to signify some plant. This we may infer from its being frequently mentioned along with ’wormwood,’ as in Deu 29:18, ’lest there should be among you a root that beareth gall (rosh) and wormwood; so also in Jer 9:15; Jer 23:15; and in Lam 3:19, ’Remembering mine affliction and my misery, the wormwood and the gall. That it was a berry-bearing plant, has been inferred from Deu 32:32, ’For their vine is of the vine of Sodom, and their grapes are grapes of gall (rosh), their clusters are bitter.’ In Jer 8:14, ’water of gall’ (rosh), is mentioned; which may be either the expressed juice of the fruit or of the plant, or a bitter infusion made from it. That it was a plant is very evident from Hos 10:4, where it is said ’their judgment springeth up as hemlock (rosh) in the furrows of the field.’
Though rosh is generally acknowledged to indicate some plant, yet a variety of opinions have been entertained respecting its identification: some, as the Auth. Vers. in Hos 10:4, and Amo 6:12, consider cicuta or hemlock to be the plant intended, but there is little or no proof adduced that this is the case.
Some have concluded that it must be darnel, which is remarkable among grasses for its poisonous and intoxicating properties. It is, however, rather sweetish in taste, and its seeds being intermixed with corn, are sometimes made into bread. It is well known to grow in cornfields, and would therefore suit the passage of Hosea; but it has not a berry-like fruit, nor would it yield any juice: the infusion in water, however, might be so understood, though it would not be very bitter or disagreeable in taste. Hiller adduces the centaury as a bitter plant, which corresponds with much of what is required. Two kinds of centaury, the larger and smaller, and both conspicuous for their bitterness, were known to the ancients. The latter is one of the family of gentians, and still continues to be employed as a medicine on account of its bitter and tonic properties. From the extreme bitterness of taste, from growing in fields, and being a native of warm countries, some plant like centaury, and of the tribe of gentians, might answer all the passages in which rosh is mentioned, with the exception of that (Deu 32:32) where it is supposed to have a berried fruit. Dr. Harris, quoting Blaney on Jer 8:14, says, ’In Psa 69:21, which is justly considered as a prophecy of our Savior’s sufferings, it is said, “they gave me gall to eat.” And accordingly it is recorded in the history, Mat 27:34, “They gave him vinegar to drink, mingled with gall.” But in the parallel passage (Mar 15:23) it is said to “wine mingled with myrrh,” a very bitter ingredient. From whence I am induced to think that perhaps rosh may be used as a general name for whatever is exceedingly bitter; and consequently, when the sense requires, it may be put specially for any bitter herb or plant.’
A general name for anything very bitter. In Job 16:13 20:14,25, it means the animal secretion usually called the bile. In many other places, where a different word is used in the original, it refers to some better and noxious plant, according to some, the poppy. See Deu 29:18 Jer 9:15 23:15. In Hos 10:4 1Sa 6:12, the Hebrew word is translated "hemlock". In Mat 27:34, it is said they gave Jesus to drink, vinegar mixed with gall, which in Mar 15:23, is called wine mingled with myrrh. It was probably the sour wine which the Roman soldiers used to drink, mingled with myrrh and other bitter substances, very much like the "bitters" of modern times, Psa 69:21 . The word gall is often used figuratively for great troubles, wickedness, depravity, etc., Jer 8:14 1Sa 6:12 Mal 8:23 .\par
Gall.
1. Mereerah, denoting "that which is bitter"; hence the term is applied to the "bile" or "gall" (the fluid secreted by the liver), from its intense bitterness, Job 16:13; Job 20:25, it is also used of the "poison" of serpents, Job 20:14, which the ancients erroneously believed was their gall.
2. Rosh, generally translated "gall" in the English Bible, is in Hos 10:4 rendered "hemlock" in Deu 32:33 and Job 20:16, rosh denotes the "poison" or "venom" of serpents.
From Deu 29:18 and Lam 3:19, compared with Hos 10:4, it is evident that the Hebrew term denotes some bitter and perhaps poisonous plant. Other writers have supposed, and with some reason, from Deu 32:32 that some berry-bearing plant must be intended. Gesenius understands poppies; in which case the gall mingled with the wine offered to our Lord at his crucifixion, and refused by him, would be an anaesthetic, and tend to diminish the sense of suffering. Dr. Richardson, "Ten Lectures on Alcohol," p. 23, thinks these drinks were given to the crucified to diminish the suffering through their intoxicating effects.
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The vinegar offered to our Lord was mingled with "gall" according to Matthew, with "myrrh" according to Mark (Mar 15:23). The myrrh was the usual seasoning of Roman wine; the gall was added to stupefy, but our Lord would meet His agony in full consciousness. Bengel supposes the gall was added in wantonness. Matthew designated the drink according to the prophetic aspect, Psa 69:21; Mark according to its outward appearance.
(Two entries below)
the representative in the A.V. of two Hebrew words and one Greek.
1. Mererah’ or merorah’ (
2. Rosh (
Gall
For several centuries the abbey of St. Gall held one of the highest places in the order. Its schools enjoyed wide reputation. Its members held a distinguished place among the scholars of medieval Germany; and many of them, as, for example, Notker, are known to have cultivated not only the ordinary learning of the schools, but also physic, mathematics, and astronomy. The school of St. Gall, too, was one of the most eminent for the cultivation of music, and its MSS., preserved in its library, have been extensively made use of by the restorers of ancient ecclesiastical music. A town of considerable importance grew up around the monastery, and was called by the same name; and as the wealth and influence which attached to the dignity of the abbot began to make it an object of ambition to rich and powerful families, we find the succession of abbots, in the 13th and 14th centuries, sadly degenerated from their pious and learned predecessors in the office. A stringent reform was enforced about the time of the Council of Constance; but the burghers of St. Gall had grown dissatisfied under this rule, and on the outbreak of the Reformation in 1525 they threw off their subjection, and embraced the new doctrines. At the close, however, of the religious war in 1532, the Catholic religion was re-established, and the abbot reinstated, though with diminished authority, in his ancient dignity. At the French Revolution, the abbey of St. Gall was secularized (1798), and its revenues were soon afterwards sequestrated (1805). By a later ecclesiastical arrangement, the abbacy of St. Gall was raised to the dignity of a bishopric, which in 1823 was united to that of Chur. They were afterwards, however, separated, and in 1847 St. Gall was erected into a bishopric, with a distinct jurisdiction." — Chambers, Encyclopaedia, s.v.; Herzog, Real-Encyklopädie, 4:643.
Gall. A word which in the A. V. represents two or more Hebrew words. 1. The Hebrew word rôsh, rendered "hemlock" in Hos 10:4; Amo 6:12, R. V., "gall," is generally rendered "gall," Deu 29:18; Psa 69:21, meaning most probably the poppy; and thus Jer 8:14, "water of gall," would be poppy-juice. It stands sometimes for poison generally. Deu 32:32. 2. Another word, merĕrah, or merorah, means the gall of the human body, Job 16:13; Job 20:25, and that of asps, Job 20:14, the poison being supposed to lie in the gall. The Greek cholç means a bitter humor of man or beast, taking sometimes a more general signification. Mat 27:34. It is used metaphorically in Act 8:23. The draught offered to our Lord at his crucifixion is said by Matthew to be mingled with gall, by Mark with myrrh. Mat 27:34; Mar 15:23. If the two refer to the same act, Mark specifies the ingredient, while Matthew shows that the effect was to render the mixture bitter: as we say, "bitter as gall."
1. merorah, the gall or bile of animals. It is symbolical of ’bitterness:’ "he poureth out my gall upon the ground." Job 16:13. It is also used for the ’poison’ of asps. Job 20:14; Job 20:25.
2. rosh,
GALL (
In LXX Septuagint
David Smith.
GALL.—(1) rôsh, some very bitter plant, Deu 29:18, Lam 3:19; ‘water of gall,’ Jer 8:14; Jer 9:16; tr.
E. W. G. Masterman.
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Jer 8:14 (b) A word which is used as a type of the bitterness in life’s experiences. In this case it was bitterness because of the oppression and the destruction from invading armies. There are those who live on the bitterness of past experiences. They carry hatred in their hearts because of former injustices. They keep these evil things alive in the heart. So they are said to "drink gall."
Lam 3:19 (c) This may be taken as a prophetic utterance concerning the bitter experiences of the Saviour on Calvary.
Amo 6:12 (a) Strangely enough men’s hearts are so wicked that they turn GOD’s blessings into curses. That which GOD does for their good they renounce and feel bitter at GOD because of His actions. (See under "PLOW").
Act 8:23 (b) By this word is described the unhappy and wretched condition of this man who was deceived about the Holy Spirit.
Gall. A bitter, poisonous herb. This may have been the poppy or some other wild poisonous plant. Gall is used figuratively to mean a bitter punishment ( Jer 8:14; Jer 9:15; Jer 23:15) or any bitter experience ( Act 8:23). Gall and vinegar were offered to Jesus on the cross ( Mat 27:34), but He refused the drink.
