{"query": "Easton: Pan", "count": 8, "results": [{"id": "card_n_e87676aeee29", "title": "Easton: Pan", "shelf": "dictionary", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "A vessel of metal or earthenware used in culinary operations; a cooking-pan or frying-pan frequently referred to in the Old Testament (Lev. 2:5; 6:21; Num. 11:8; 1 Sam. 2:14, etc.). The “ash-pans” men"}, {"id": "card_n_eb4ae8e2d2cb", "title": "Easton: Hearth", "shelf": "dictionary", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "Heb. ah (Jer. 36:22, 23; R.V., “brazier”), meaning a large pot like a brazier, a portable furnace in which fire was kept in the king’s winter apartment. Heb. kiyor (Zech. 12:6; R.V., “pan”), a fire-pa"}, {"id": "card_n_4d8e46a15883", "title": "Easton: Laver", "shelf": "dictionary", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "(Heb. kiyor), a “basin” for boiling in, a “pan” for cooking (1 Sam. 2:14), a “fire-pan” or hearth (Zech. 12:6), the sacred wash-bowl of the tabernacle and temple (Ex. 30:18, 28; 31:9; 35:16; 38:8; 39:"}, {"id": "card_n_73b38a12349d", "title": "Easton: Jubal", "shelf": "dictionary", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "Jubilee, music, Lamech’s second son by Adah, of the line of Cain. He was the inventor of “the harp” (Heb. kinnor, properly “lyre”) and “the organ” (Heb. ‘ugab, properly “mouth-organ” or Pan’s pipe), G"}, {"id": "card_n_bbf8f191a3c3", "title": "Easton: Pipe", "shelf": "dictionary", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "(1 Sam. 10:5; 1 Kings 1:40; Isa. 5:12; 30:29). The Hebrew word halil, so rendered, means “bored through,” and is the name given to various kinds of wind instruments, as the fife, flute, Pan-pipes, etc"}, {"id": "card_n_94d3141f07db", "title": "Easton: Music, Instrumental", "shelf": "dictionary", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "Among instruments of music used by the Hebrews a principal place is given to stringed instruments. These were, (1.) The kinnor, the “harp.” (2.) The nebel, “a skin bottle,” rendered “psaltery.” (3.) T"}, {"id": "card_n_ebea07e0d389", "title": "Easton: Censer", "shelf": "dictionary", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "The vessel in which incense was presented on “the golden altar” before the Lord in the temple (Ex. 30:1-9). The priest filled the censer with live coal from the sacred fire on the altar of burnt-offer"}, {"id": "card_n_df17dff4236b", "title": "Easton: Caesara Philippi", "shelf": "dictionary", "surface": "secular", "snippet": "A city on the northeast of the marshy plain of el-Huleh, 120 miles north of Jerusalem, and 20 miles north of the Sea of Galilee, at the “upper source” of the Jordan, and near the base of Mount Hermon."}]}