with´ẽrd ( נבל , nābhēl , "to fade away," "to be dried up"): (1) Used figuratively to express leanness of soul, spiritual impotence, a low condition of spiritual life, a lack of moral nourishment: "My heart is smitten like grass, and withereth" ( Psalm 102:4 ). The contrasting figure emphasizes this idea: "All my fountains are in thee" (Psalm 87:7 ). Also Psalm 1:3 , where the freshness and beauty of the righteous man's life are thus described: "And he shall be like a tree planted by the streams of water,... whose leaf also doth not wither." In the New Testament ξηραίνω , xēraı́nō , "to wither," is used to carry out the same idea of moral decay, or malnutrition of soul (Matthew 13:6; Matthew 21:19 ). (2) "Wither" also had a physiological meaning, expressing both in the Old Testament and in the New Testament the idea of bodily impotence, especially, though not exclusively, of the limbs. Jeroboam was struck suddenly with paralysis of the arm, which is said to have "dried up" (1 Kings 13:4-6 ); "probably due to sudden hemorrhage affecting some part of the brain, which may under certain circumstances be only temporary" (HDB , 1-vol, 599). "Their skin cleaveth to their bones; it is withered" (Lamentations 4:8 ).
In the New Testament (Matthew 12:10; Mark 3:1; Luke 6:6 ) "withered hand" was probably our modern "infantile paralysis," which may leave one or more limbs shrunken and powerless without detriment to the general health.
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