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  1. In Hebrew "weeping" is בּכי, בּכה, בּכוּת, not בּכא, Rnan, in the fourth chapter of his Vie de Jsus, understands the expression to mean the last station of those who journey from northern Palestine on this side of the Jordan towards Jerusalem, viz., Ain el-Haramı̂je, in a narrow and gloomy valley where a black stream of ...

    • 5 Commentaries

      Psalm 84:5. Blessed is the man whose strength is in thee —...

    • TTB

      LONGING FOR THE HOUSE OF GOD Psa_84:1-12 This is one of the...

    • Guzik

      Guzik Bible Commentary © 2013 David Guzik - No distribution...

    • Sermon

      Every true Christian will find his valley of Baca ending on...

    • WES

      84:6 Baca - A dry valley in the way to Jerusalem, here put...

    • Darby

      Psalm 84 contemplates the blessedness of going up to the...

    • Gray

      To the chief Musician upon Gittith, A Psalm for the sons of...

    • Gill

      The way to Zion, or to the house and ordinances of God...

  2. In Psalm 84, we are introduced to the Valley of Weeping. In some translations, it is called the Valley of Baca, a Hebrew word that derives from bakah (baw-kaw), meaning to weep, bemoan, bewail, complain, make lamentation, and mourn with tears.

  3. Jan 4, 2022 · The Hebrew word baca is related to bakah, which means “to weep.”. Baca refers to a type of “weeping” tree; that is, one that drips resin or gum-like tears, such as a balsam, mulberry, or aspen tree. In 2 Samuel 5:23, bakaim is translated as “balsam trees” (ESV).

  4. BACA, THE VALLEY OF bā’ kə (בָּכָא). Presumably the “Valley of Weeping” according to the LXX, Jerome, the Syr. and Luther in Psalm 84:6. Renan (Vie de Jesus, ch. IV) interprets it as the last stage of the pilgrimage from N Pal. to Jerusalem: Ain el-Haramija, a gloomy, narrow valley where brackish water trickles out of the rocks ...

  5. By: Morris Jastrow, Jr., Frants Buhl. A valley mentioned in Ps. lxxxiv. 7 [6 A. V.]. Since it is there said that pilgrims transform the valley into a land of wells, the old translators gave to "Baca" the meaning of a "valley of weeping"; but it signifies rather any valley lacking water.

  6. Mar 4, 2019 · And he said, “Thus says the LORD: ‘Make this valley full of ditches.’” (2 Kings 3:16) This was an unusual word from God in an unusual situation. The armies of Israel, Judah, and Edom were stuck in the hot desert and dying of thirst.

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  8. It is clear from the narrative that the men of Judah did as God had commanded them, and made the valley full of ditches. These Hebrew soldiers gave a good example of submissive practical faith. 1.

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