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Topical Bible: Pelican

<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd"><html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><head><meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=utf-8" /><meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width; initial-scale=1.0;"/><title>Topical Bible: Pelican</title><link rel="canonical" href="https://biblehub.com/topical/p/pelican.htm" /><link rel="stylesheet" href="/newtopical.css" type="text/css" media="Screen" /><link rel="stylesheet" href="/print.css" type="text/css" media="Print" /><script type="application/javascript" src="https://scripts.webcontentassessor.com/scripts/8a2459b64f9cac8122fc7f2eac4409c8555fac9383016db59c4c26e3d5b8b157"></script><script src='https://qd.admetricspro.com/js/biblehub/biblehub-layout-loader-revcatch.js'></script><script id='HyDgbd_1s' src='https://prebidads.revcatch.com/ads.js' type='text/javascript' async></script><script>(function(w,d,b,s,i){var cts=d.createElement(s);cts.async=true;cts.id='catchscript'; cts.dataset.appid=i;cts.src='https://app.protectsubrev.com/catch_rp.js?cb='+Math.random(); document.head.appendChild(cts); }) (window,document,'head','script','rc-anksrH');</script></head><!-- Google tag (gtag.js) --> <script async src="https://www.googletagmanager.com/gtag/js?id=G-LR4HSKRP2H"></script> <script> window.dataLayer = window.dataLayer || []; function gtag(){dataLayer.push(arguments);} gtag('js', new Date()); gtag('config', 'G-LR4HSKRP2H'); </script><body><div id="fx"><table width="100%" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" id="fx2"><tr><td><iframe width="100%" height="30" scrolling="no" src="/topical/vmenus/leviticus/11-18.htm" align="left" frameborder="0"></iframe></td></tr></table></div><div id="blnk"></div><div align="center"><table width="100%" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" class="maintable"><tr><td><div id="fx5"><table width="100%" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" id="fx6"><tr><td><iframe width="100%" height="245" scrolling="no" src="//biblehu.com/bmcde/p/pelican.htm" frameborder="0"></iframe></td></tr></table></div></td></tr></table></div><div align="center"><table width="100%" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" class="maintable3"><tr><td><table width="100%" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" align="center" id="announce"><tr><td><div id="l1"><div id="breadcrumbs"><a href="/">Bible</a> > <a href="/topical/">Topical</a> > Pelican</div><div id="anc"><iframe src="/anc.htm" width="100%" height="27" scrolling="no" frameborder="0"></iframe></div><div id="anc2"><table width="100%" border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" align="center"><tr><td><iframe src="/anc2.htm" width="100%" height="27" scrolling="no" frameborder="0"></iframe></td></tr></table></div></div></td></tr></table><div id="movebox2"><table border="0" align="center" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0"><tr><td><div id="topheading"><a href="/topical/p/pelias.htm" title="Pelias">&#9668;</a> Pelican <a href="/topical/naves/p/pelican--general_scriptures_concerning.htm" title="Pelican: General Scriptures Concerning">&#9658;</a></div></td></tr></table></div><div align="center" class="maintable2"><table border="0" cellspacing="0" cellpadding="0" align="center"><tr><td><div id="topverse">Jump to: <a href="#smi" title="Smith's Bible Dictionary">Smith's</a> &#8226; <a href="#saa" title="Scripture Alphabet of Animals">SAA</a> &#8226; <a href="#amt" title="American Tract Society Bible Dictionary">ATS</a> &#8226; <a href="#isb" title="International Standard Bible Encyclopedia">ISBE</a> &#8226; <a href="#web" title="Webster's Dictionary">Webster's</a> &#8226; <a href="#cnc" title="Multiversion Concordance">Concordance</a> &#8226; <a href="#thes" title="Bible Thesaurus">Thesaurus</a> &#8226; <a href="#heb" title="Strong's Hebrew Concordance">Hebrew</a> &#8226; <a href="#lib" title="Library">Library</a> &#8226; <a href="#sub" title="Subtopics">Subtopics</a> &#8226; <a href="#rel" title="Related Terms">Terms</a></div><div id="leftbox"><div class="padleft"><a name="te" id="te"></a><div class="vheading2">Topical Encyclopedia</div>The pelican is a large water bird known for its distinctive long beak and large throat pouch, which it uses to catch fish. In the Bible, the pelican is mentioned in several passages, often symbolizing desolation and abandonment. The Hebrew word for pelican is "&#1511;&#1464;&#1488;&#1463;&#1514;" (qa'ath), which is sometimes translated as "cormorant" in older versions of the Bible, but modern translations, including the Berean Standard Bible, use "pelican."<br><br><b>Biblical References:</b><br><br>1. <b><a href="/leviticus/11-18.htm">Leviticus 11:18</a></b> and <b><a href="/deuteronomy/14-17.htm">Deuteronomy 14:17</a></b>: In these passages, the pelican is listed among the unclean birds that the Israelites were forbidden to eat. The inclusion of the pelican in this list underscores its association with impurity and its role in the natural order as a scavenger. The Berean Standard Bible states: "the stork, any kind of heron, the hoopoe, and the bat."<br><br>2. <b><a href="/psalms/102-6.htm">Psalm 102:6</a></b>: The psalmist uses the imagery of a pelican to express feelings of isolation and despair. The verse reads, "I am like a pelican of the wilderness; I am like an owl of the desert." Here, the pelican is depicted as a solitary creature, dwelling in desolate places, which reflects the psalmist's own sense of loneliness and abandonment.<br><br>3. <b><a href="/isaiah/34-11.htm">Isaiah 34:11</a></b>: In this prophetic passage, the pelican is mentioned in the context of divine judgment and desolation. The Berean Standard Bible translates this verse as: "The desert owl and screech owl will possess it; the great owl and the raven will dwell in it. The LORD will stretch out over Edom the measuring line of chaos and the plumb line of destruction." The pelican, along with other birds, symbolizes the utter desolation that will come upon the land as a result of God's judgment.<br><br>4. <b><a href="/zephaniah/2-14.htm">Zephaniah 2:14</a></b>: This verse also uses the pelican as a symbol of desolation. It describes the destruction of Nineveh, stating, "Flocks and herds will lie down in her midst, creatures of every kind. The desert owl and the screech owl will roost on her columns. Their calls will echo through the windows; rubble will be in the doorways; the beams of cedar will be exposed." The presence of the pelican in this imagery reinforces the theme of ruin and abandonment.<br><br><b>Symbolism and Interpretation:</b><br><br>In biblical literature, the pelican is often associated with desolation and solitude. Its habitat in deserted and barren places makes it a fitting symbol for the themes of judgment and abandonment found in the prophetic and poetic texts. The pelican's solitary nature and its presence in uninhabited regions serve as a metaphor for the spiritual and physical desolation that can result from sin and divine judgment.<br><br>The pelican's role as an unclean bird in the dietary laws of Leviticus and Deuteronomy further emphasizes its symbolic association with impurity and separation from the holy. This reflects the broader biblical theme of distinguishing between the clean and unclean, the holy and the profane, as part of the covenantal relationship between God and His people.<br><br>Overall, the pelican in the Bible serves as a powerful image of desolation, judgment, and the consequences of turning away from God. Its presence in the scriptures invites reflection on the themes of isolation, repentance, and the hope for restoration.<a name="smi" id="smi"></a><div class="vheading2">Smith's Bible Dictionary</div><span class="encheading">Pelican</span><p>(Heb. <i>kaath</i> , sometimes translated "cormorant," as (<a href="/isaiah/34-11.htm">Isaiah 34:11</a>; <a href="/zephaniah/2-14.htm">Zephaniah 2:14</a>) though in the margin correctly rendered "pelican"), a voracious waterbird, found most abundantly in tropical regions. It is equal to the swan in size. (It has a flat bill fifteen inches long, and the female has under the bill a pouch capable of great distension. It is capacious enough to hold fish sufficient for the dinner of half a dozen men. The young are fed from this pouch, which is emptied of the food by pressing the pouch against the breast. The pelican's bill has a crimson tip, and the contrast of this red tip against the white breast probably gave rise to the tradition that the bird tore her own breast to feed her young with her blood. The flesh of the pelican was forbidden to the Jews. (<a href="/leviticus/11-18.htm">Leviticus 11:18</a>) --ED.) The psalmist in comparing his pitiable condition to the pelican, (<a href="/psalms/102-6.htm">Psalms 102:6</a>) probably has reference to its general aspect as it sits in apparent melancholy mood, with its bill resting on its breast.<a name="saa" id="saa"></a><div class="vheading2">Scripture Alphabet Of Animals</div><span class="encheading">Pelican</span><p>The pelican is a large bird, and a curious one. It sometimes measures nearly six feet from the top of the head to the end of the tail; and you know that this is the height of a tall man. It may be called a water- bird, because it lives on the sea-coast, or on the borders of lakes and rivers and lives upon fish only. It has a very long bill, and under this is a curious bag or pouch to hold the fish which it takes. When there is nothing in it, you would hardly notice it, because it is drawn up close under the bill; but it is so large that it will hold two or three gallons of water.</p><p>When the pelican goes to seek for its food, it flies up into the air for some distance, then turns its head on one side, and with one eye looks sharply down into the water until it sees a fish. Then it darts down very swiftly, and is almost sure to seize it. Instead of eating the fish at once, it usually stores it away in its pouch, and watches for another. When its bag is filled, it flies away to some lonely place to satisfy its hunger, or to feed its young. In order to get out the fish, it presses its bill against its breast; and this has led some people to believe that it pierces its breast, and feeds its young ones with its own blood. Of course this is only a fable.</p><p>The pelican likes to live in lonely places, such as a rocky island in the midst of the ocean, where nobody will come near to disturb it: it is for this reason that David says in <a href="/context/psalms/102.htm">Psalm 102</a>, <i>"I am like a pelican in the wilderness,"</i> or solitary place. I suppose he wrote this Psalm when he was very sorrowful; perhaps when Saul was pursuing him, and trying to take his life.</p> <a name="amt" id="amt"></a><div class="vheading2">ATS Bible Dictionary</div><span class="encheading">Pelican</span><p>Le 11:18, sometimes translated cormorant, <a href="/isaiah/34-11.htm">Isaiah 34:11</a> <a href="/zephaniah/2-14.htm">Zephaniah 2:14</a>; a voracious waterfowl, somewhat gregarious and migratory, frequenting tropical climates, and still found on the waters of Egypt and Palestine. It fully equals the swan in size, and resembles it in shape and color. Its plumage is of a grayish white, except the long feathers, which are black. Its great peculiarity is its broad, flat bill, fifteen inches long; and the pouch of the female under the bill, used for the temporary storage of food, and said to be able to hold fifteen quarts. When empty, this pouch is not seen; but when full, it presents a very singular appearance. The pelican is a dull, indolent, and melancholy bird; and its voice is harsh and dissonant, <a href="/psalms/102-6.htm">Psalm 102:6</a>. Its Hebrew name is probably derived from its habit of emptying its pouch of the food stored in it, by compressing it against its breast. The young then receive their food from their mother's bill; and the current tradition that she tears her own breast to feed them with her blood, may have this origin. The pelican's bill also, terminating in a strong, curved, crimson tip and resting on the white breast might seem to be tinged with blood. </p><a name="web" id="web"></a><div class="vheading2">Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary</div>1. (<I>n.</I>) Any large webfooted bird of the genus Pelecanus, of which about a dozen species are known. They have an enormous bill, to the lower edge of which is attached a pouch in which captured fishes are temporarily stored.<p>2. (<I>n.</I>) A retort or still having a curved tube or tubes leading back from the head to the body for continuous condensation and redistillation.<a name="isb" id="isb"></a><div class="vheading2">International Standard Bible Encyclopedia</div><span class="encheading">PELICAN</span><p>pel'-kan (qa'ath; Latin Pelecanus onocrotalus Septuagint reads pelekan, in Leviticus and Psalms, but has 3 other readings, that are rather confusing, in the other places)): Any bird of the genus Pelecanus. The Hebrew qi' means "to vomit." The name was applied to the bird because it swallowed large quantities of fish and then disgorged them to its nestlings. In the performance of this act it pressed the large beak, in the white species, tipped with red, against the crop and slightly lifted the wings. In ancient times, people, seeing this, believed that the bird was puncturing its breast and feeding its young with its blood. From this idea arose the custom of using a pelican with lifted wings in heraldry or as a symbol of Christ and of charity. (See Fictitious Creatures in Art, 182-86, London, Chapman and Hall, 1906.) Palestine knew a white and a brownish-gray bird, both close to 6 ft. long and having over a 12 ft. sweep of wing. They lived around the Dead Sea, fished beside the Jordan and abounded in greatest numbers in the wildernesses of the Mediterranean shore. The brown pelicans were larger than the white. Each of them had a long beak, peculiar throat pouch and webbed feet. They built large nests, 5 and 6 ft. across, from dead twigs of bushes, and laid two or three eggs. The brown birds deposited a creamy-white egg with a rosy flush; the white, a white egg with bluish tints. The young were naked at first, then covered with down, and remained in the nest until full feathered and able to fly. This compelled the parent birds to feed them for a long time, and they carried such quantities of fish to a nest that the young could not consume all of them and many were dropped on the ground. The tropical sun soon made the location unbearable to mortals. Perching pelicans were the ugliest birds imaginable, but when their immense brown or white bodies swept in a 12 ft. spread across the land and over sea, they made an impressive picture. They are included, with good reason, in the list of abominations (see <a href="/leviticus/11-18.htm">Leviticus 11:18</a> <a href="/deuteronomy/14-17.htm">Deuteronomy 14:17</a>). They are next mentioned in <a href="/psalms/102-6.htm">Psalm 102:6</a>:<br><br>"I am like a pelican of the wilderness;<br><br>I am become as an owl of the waste places."<br><br>Here David from the depths of affliction likened himself to a pelican as it appears when it perches in the wilderness. See <a href="/isaiah/34-11.htm">Isaiah 34:11</a>: "But the pelican and the porcupine shall possess it; and the owl and the raven shall dwell therein: and he will stretch over it the line of confusion, and the plummet of emptiness." Here the bird is used to complete the picture of desolation that was to prevail after the destruction of Edom. The other reference concerns the destruction of Nineveh and is found in Zechariah 2:14: "And herds shall lie down in the midst of her, all the beasts of the nations: both the pelican and the porcupine shall lodge in the capitals thereof; their voice shall sing in the windows; desolation shall be in the thresholds: for he hath laid bare the cedar-work."<br><br>Gene Stratton-Porter<p><a name="heb" id="heb"></a><div class="vheading2">Strong's Hebrew</div><a href="/hebrew/6893.htm"><span class="l">6893. qaath -- (a bird) perhaps <b>pelican</b></span></a><br><b>...</b> 6892, 6893. qaath or qaath. 6894 . (a bird) perhaps <b>pelican</b>. Transliteration:<br> qaath or qaath Phonetic Spelling: (kaw-ath&#39;) Short Definition: <b>pelican</b>. <b>...</b> <br><font color="#ff6600" size="-1">/hebrew/6893.htm</font><font color="#ff6600" size="-1"> - 6k</font><p> <a href="/hebrew/7994.htm"><span class="l">7994. shalak -- (bird of prey) probably cormorant</span></a><br><b>...</b> cormorant. From shalak; bird of prey, usually thought to be the <b>pelican</b> (from casting<br> itself into the sea) -- cormorant. see HEBREW shalak. 7993, 7994. <b>...</b> <br><font color="#ff6600" size="-1">/hebrew/7994.htm</font><font color="#ff6600" size="-1"> - 6k</font><a name="lib" id="lib"></a><div class="vheading2">Library</div><p><a href="/library/francis/treatise_on_the_love_of_god/chapter_xiv_of_some_other.htm"><span class="l">Of Some Other Means by which Holy Love Wounds the Heart.</span></a> <br><b>...</b> The <b>pelican</b> builds her nest upon the ground, wherefore serpents often sting<br> her young ones. Now when this happens, the <b>pelican</b>, as <b>...</b> <br><font color="#ff6600" size="-1">/.../francis/treatise on the love of god/chapter xiv of some other.htm</font><p><a href="/library/augustine/exposition_on_the_book_of_psalms/psalm_cii.htm"><span class="l">Psalm CII.</span></a> <br><b>...</b> 7. &quot;I am become like a <b>pelican</b> in the wilderness, and like an owl among ruined walls&quot;<br> (ver.6). Behold three birds and three places: the <b>pelican</b>, the owl, and <b>...</b> <br><font color="#ff6600" size="-1">/.../christianbookshelf.org/augustine/exposition on the book of psalms/psalm cii.htm</font><p><a href="/library/chesterton/whats_wrong_with_the_world/chapter_42_a_cultivated_conservative.htm"><span class="l">A Cultivated Conservative Friend of Mine once Exhibited Great <b>...</b></span></a> <br><b>...</b> The ant was an almost heraldic symbol of industry, as the lion was of courage,<br> or, for the matter of that, the <b>pelican</b> of charity. <b>...</b> <br><font color="#ff6600" size="-1">/.../chesterton/whats wrong with the world/chapter 42 a cultivated conservative.htm</font><p><a href="/library/eucherius/the_formulae_of_st_eucherius_of_lyons/iv_on_the_animals.htm"><span class="l">On the Animals</span></a> <br><b>...</b> [Is.34:13]. The <b>pelican</b> is the Lord Jesus Christ in his passion or the holy man<br> given to solitude; in the psalm: I have become solitary like a <b>pelican</b>. <b>...</b> <br><font color="#ff6600" size="-1">/.../eucherius/the formulae of st eucherius of lyons/iv on the animals.htm</font><p><a href="/library/regester/the_worship_of_the_church/index_2.htm"><span class="l">The Worship of the Church</span></a> <br><b>...</b> 79 Passion-flower . . . . . 83 Paten . . . . . 39<br> <b>Pelican</b> . . . . . 70 Pentalpha . . . . . <b>...</b> <br><font color="#ff6600" size="-1">//christianbookshelf.org/regester/the worship of the church/index 2.htm</font><p><a href="/library/various/select_masterpieces_of_biblical_literature/v_isaiahs_discourse.htm"><span class="l">Isaiah&#39;s Discourse</span></a> <br><b>...</b> But the <b>pelican</b> and the porcupine shall possess it; and the owl and the raven shall<br> dwell therein: and he shall stretch over it the line of confusion, and the <b>...</b> <br><font color="#ff6600" size="-1">/.../various/select masterpieces of biblical literature/v isaiahs discourse.htm</font><p><a href="/library/anonymous/scottish_psalter_and_paraphrases/psalm_102.htm"><span class="l">Psalm 102</span></a> <br><b>...</b> 5By reason of my groaning voice. my bones cleave to my skin. ^6Like <b>pelican</b> in<br> wilderness. forsaken I have been: I like an owl in desert am,. <b>...</b> <br><font color="#ff6600" size="-1">/.../christianbookshelf.org/anonymous/scottish psalter and paraphrases/psalm 102.htm</font><p><a href="/library/anonymous/scottish_psalter_and_paraphrases/psalm_102_2.htm"><span class="l">Psalm 102</span></a> <br><b>...</b> My flesh consumed is, my skin,. All parch&#39;d, doth cleave unto my bones.<br> ^6The <b>pelican</b> of wilderness,. The owl in desert, I do match; <b>...</b> <br><font color="#ff6600" size="-1">/.../anonymous/scottish psalter and paraphrases/psalm 102 2.htm</font><p><a href="/library/cassian/the_conferences_of_john_cassian/chapter_vi_of_the_system.htm"><span class="l">Of the System of the Anchorites and Its Beginning.</span></a> <br><b>...</b> and hold his peace because he hath taken it up upon himself,&quot; and there sing in<br> heart and deed these words of the Psalmist: &quot;I am become like a <b>pelican</b> in the <b>...</b> <br><font color="#ff6600" size="-1">/.../cassian/the conferences of john cassian/chapter vi of the system.htm</font><p><a href="/library/cassian/the_conferences_of_john_cassian/chapter_viii_the_answer_to.htm"><span class="l">The Answer to the Question Proposed.</span></a> <br><b>...</b> He shall sit solitary and hold his peace, because he hath taken it upon himself;&quot;<br> the Psalmist also: &quot;I am become like a <b>pelican</b> in the desert. <b>...</b> <br><font color="#ff6600" size="-1">/.../cassian/the conferences of john cassian/chapter viii the answer to.htm</font><a name="thes" id="thes"></a><div class="vheading2">Thesaurus</div><a href="/topical/p/pelican.htm"><span class="l"><b>Pelican</b> (5 Occurrences)</span></a><br><b>...</b> Standard Bible Encyclopedia. <b>PELICAN</b>. <b>...</b> From this idea arose the custom of using a<br><b>pelican</b> with lifted wings in heraldry or as a symbol of Christ and of charity. <b>...</b><br><font color="#ff6600" size="-1">/p/pelican.htm - 11k</font><p><a href="/topical/c/cormorant.htm"><span class="l">Cormorant (4 Occurrences)</span></a><br><b>...</b> 14:17), Hebrews shalak, &quot;plunging,&quot; or &quot;darting down,&quot; (the Phalacrocorax carbo),<br> ranked among the &quot;unclean&quot; birds; of the same family group as the <b>pelican</b>. <b>...</b><br><font color="#ff6600" size="-1">/c/cormorant.htm - 10k</font><p><a href="/topical/v/vulture.htm"><span class="l">Vulture (16 Occurrences)</span></a><br><b>...</b> They fed on carcasses of animals that killed each other, ate putrid fish under the<br> nests of <b>pelican</b> and cormorant, followed caravans across the desert, and <b>...</b><br><font color="#ff6600" size="-1">/v/vulture.htm - 14k</font><p><a href="/topical/p/pelicans.htm"><span class="l">Pelicans</span></a><br><b>...</b> Are frequently met with at the waters of Merom and the Sea of Galilee. The <b>pelican</b><br> is ranked among unclean birds (Leviticus 11:18; Deuteronomy 14:17). <b>...</b><br><font color="#ff6600" size="-1">/p/pelicans.htm - 7k</font><p><a href="/topical/b/bittern.htm"><span class="l">Bittern (4 Occurrences)</span></a><br><b>...</b> cormorant and the bittern shall possess it.&quot; In the Revised Version (British and<br> American), &quot;cormorant&quot; and &quot;bittern&quot; are changed to &quot;<b>pelican</b>&quot; and &quot;porcupine <b>...</b><br><font color="#ff6600" size="-1">/b/bittern.htm - 14k</font><p><a href="/topical/c/chameleon.htm"><span class="l">Chameleon (1 Occurrence)</span></a><br><b>...</b> referred to the chameleon on account of the chameleon's habit of puffing up its<br> body with air and hissing, and in the other passages to the <b>pelican</b>, on account <b>...</b><br><font color="#ff6600" size="-1">/c/chameleon.htm - 11k</font><p><a href="/topical/s/swan.htm"><span class="l">Swan (2 Occurrences)</span></a><br><b>...</b> cygnus; Anglo-Saxon: swan and swon): Mentioned only in old versions and the Revised<br> Version margin in Leviticus 11:18: &quot;the swan, and the <b>pelican</b>, and the gier <b>...</b><br><font color="#ff6600" size="-1">/s/swan.htm - 8k</font><p><a href="/topical/o/owl.htm"><span class="l">Owl (11 Occurrences)</span></a><br><b>...</b> those that produced such impressions of desolation in the Books of Isaiah, Jeremiah,<br> Job, and Micah is referred to in Psalm 102:6: &quot;I am like a <b>pelican</b> of the <b>...</b><br><font color="#ff6600" size="-1">/o/owl.htm - 18k</font><p><a href="/topical/g/gier-eagle.htm"><span class="l">Gier-eagle (4 Occurrences)</span></a><br><b>...</b> Leviticus 11:18 And the swan, and the <b>pelican</b>, and the gier-eagle, (WBS). <b>...</b> Deuteronomy<br> 14:17 And the <b>pelican</b>, and the gier-eagle, and the cormorant, (WBS YLT). <b>...</b><br><font color="#ff6600" size="-1">/g/gier-eagle.htm - 8k</font><p><a href="/topical/g/gier.htm"><span class="l">Gier (2 Occurrences)</span></a><br><b>...</b> Multi-Version Concordance Gier (2 Occurrences). Leviticus 11:18 And the<br> swan, and the <b>pelican</b>, and the gier eagle, (KJV WBS YLT). <b>...</b><br><font color="#ff6600" size="-1">/g/gier.htm - 7k</font><p><a name="res" id="res"></a><div class="vheading2">Resources</div><a href="https://clyx.com/term/pelican.htm">Pelican: Dictionary and Thesaurus &#124; Clyx.com</a><br /><br /><a href="/concordance/">Bible Concordance</a> &#8226; <a href="/dictionary/">Bible Dictionary</a> &#8226; <a href="/encyclopedia/">Bible Encyclopedia</a> &#8226; <a href="/topical/">Topical Bible</a> &#8226; <a href="/thesaurus/">Bible Thesuarus</a></div></div><div id="centbox"><div class="padcent"><a name="cnc" id="cnc"></a><div class="vheading2">Concordance</div><span class="encheading">Pelican (5 Occurrences)</span><p><span class="rtext"><a href="/leviticus/11-18.htm">Leviticus 11:18</a></span><br />And the swan, and the <span class="boldtext">pelican</span>, and the gier eagle,<br /><span class="source">(KJV JPS ASV BBE DBY WBS YLT NAS RSV)</span><p><span class="rtext"><a href="/deuteronomy/14-17.htm">Deuteronomy 14:17</a></span><br />and the <span class="boldtext">pelican</span>, and the vulture, and the cormorant,<br /><span class="source">(WEB KJV JPS ASV BBE DBY WBS YLT NAS RSV)</span><p><span class="rtext"><a href="/psalms/102-6.htm">Psalms 102:6</a></span><br />I am like a <span class="boldtext">pelican</span> of the wilderness. I have become as an owl of the waste places. <br /><span class="source">(WEB KJV JPS ASV DBY WBS YLT NAS)</span><p><span class="rtext"><a href="/isaiah/34-11.htm">Isaiah 34:11</a></span><br />But the <span class="boldtext">pelican</span> and the porcupine will possess it. The owl and the raven will dwell in it. He will stretch the line of confusion over it, and the plumb line of emptiness.<br /><span class="source">(WEB JPS ASV DBY YLT NAS)</span><p><span class="rtext"><a href="/zephaniah/2-14.htm">Zephaniah 2:14</a></span><br />Herds will lie down in the midst of her, all the animals of the nations. Both the <span class="boldtext">pelican</span> and the porcupine will lodge in its capitals. Their calls will echo through the windows. Desolation will be in the thresholds, for he has laid bare the cedar beams.<br /><span class="source">(WEB JPS ASV BBE DBY YLT NAS)</span><a name="sub" id="sub"></a><div class="vheading2">Subtopics</div><p class="pspc"><a href="/topical/p/pelican.htm">Pelican</a></p><p class="pspc"><a href="/topical/naves/p/pelican--general_scriptures_concerning.htm">Pelican: General Scriptures Concerning</a></p><a name="rel" id="rel"></a><div class="vheading2">Related Terms</div><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/c/cormorant.htm">Cormorant (4 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/v/vulture.htm">Vulture (16 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/p/pelicans.htm">Pelicans</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/b/bittern.htm">Bittern (4 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/c/chameleon.htm">Chameleon (1 Occurrence)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/s/swan.htm">Swan (2 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/o/owl.htm">Owl (11 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/g/gier-eagle.htm">Gier-eagle (4 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/g/gier.htm">Gier (2 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/p/porcupine.htm">Porcupine (3 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/c/carrion.htm">Carrion (3 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/c/carrion-vulture.htm">Carrion-vulture (2 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/h/hedgehog.htm">Hedgehog (3 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/h/hedge-hog.htm">Hedge-hog (2 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/e/eagle.htm">Eagle (27 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/b/birds.htm">Birds (125 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/a/abomination.htm">Abomination (78 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/v/vacancy.htm">Vacancy (3 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/z/zoology.htm">Zoology</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/k/knobs.htm">Knobs (9 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/u/unclean.htm">Unclean (393 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/o/osprey.htm">Osprey (4 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/l/living-places.htm">Living-places (17 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/g/gannet.htm">Gannet (2 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/w/water-hen.htm">Water-hen (2 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/t/thresholds.htm">Thresholds (11 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/r/resemble.htm">Resemble (15 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/r/roost.htm">Roost (4 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/e/echo.htm">Echo (2 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/e/emptiness.htm">Emptiness (17 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/d/doorstep.htm">Doorstep (11 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/d/droves.htm">Droves (17 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/p/plummet.htm">Plummet (4 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/p/pelias.htm">Pelias</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/p/plumb.htm">Plumb (6 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/p/plummets.htm">Plummets (1 Occurrence)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/c/crouched.htm">Crouched (4 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/c/columns.htm">Columns (17 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/c/crane.htm">Crane (2 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/c/chapiters.htm">Chapiters (15 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/c/cedar-work.htm">Cedar-work (1 Occurrence)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/c/croak.htm">Croak (1 Occurrence)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/s/screech.htm">Screech (4 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/s/satyr.htm">Satyr</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/h/horned.htm">Horned (5 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/c/capitals.htm">Capitals (21 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/r/rubble.htm">Rubble (17 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/r/ruins.htm">Ruins (84 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/r/range.htm">Range (9 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/d/doorways.htm">Doorways (26 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/b/beams.htm">Beams (28 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/w/windows.htm">Windows (27 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/r/raven.htm">Raven (7 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/c/concordance.htm">Concordance</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/w/window.htm">Window (24 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/e/exposed.htm">Exposed (39 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/n/nest.htm">Nest (22 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/n/nightmonster.htm">Nightmonster</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/n/night-monster.htm">Night-monster</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/t/tops.htm">Tops (37 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/e/elamites.htm">Elamites (2 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/t/threshold.htm">Threshold (28 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/h/hoot.htm">Hoot (1 Occurrence)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/e/elam.htm">Elam (24 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/d/desolate.htm">Desolate (189 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/c/calls.htm">Calls (62 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/w/wanderings.htm">Wanderings (7 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/s/stretch.htm">Stretch (73 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/v/voices.htm">Voices (76 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/l/lodge.htm">Lodge (64 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/u/uncovered.htm">Uncovered (78 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/h/hen.htm">Hen (7 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/c/creatures.htm">Creatures (83 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/c/confusion.htm">Confusion (71 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/c/cedar.htm">Cedar (61 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/h/herds.htm">Herds (72 Occurrences)</a></p><p class="pspc2"><a href="/topical/i/israel.htm">Israel (27466 Occurrences)</a></div></div></td></tr></table></div><div id="left"><a href="/topical/p/pelias.htm" onmouseover='lft.src="/leftgif.png"' onmouseout='lft.src="/left.png"' title="Pelias"><img src="/left.png" name="lft" border="0" alt="Pelias" /></a></div><div id="right"><a 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