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Rebuke
Rebuke [NAVE]
REBUKECain rebukes God, Gen. 4:13, 14.
Pharaoh rebukes Abraham, for calling his wife his sister, Gen. 12:18, 19.
Abimelech rebukes Abraham for a like offense, Gen. 20:9, 10.
Abimelech rebukes Isaac for similar conduct, Gen. 26:9, 10.
Isaac and Laban rebuke each other, Gen. 31:26-42.
Jacob rebukes Simeon and Levi for slaying Hamor and Shechem, Gen. 34:30.
Reuben rebukes his brethren for their treatment of Joseph, Gen. 42:22.
Israelites rebuke Moses and tempt God, Ex. 17:7.
Deborah rebukes Israel in her epic, Judg. 5:16-23.
David rebukes Joab for slaying Abner, 2 Sam. 3:28-31.
Joab rebukes David for lamenting the death of Absalom, 2 Sam. 19:5-7.
Jesus rebukes his disciples on account of their unbelief, Matt. 8:26; 14:31; 16:8-11; 17:17; Mark 4:40; Luke 8:25; for slowness of heart, Matt. 15:16; 16:8, 9, 11; Mark 7:18; Luke 24:25; John 14:9; for sleeping in Gethsemane, Matt. 26:40; Mark 14:27; for forbidding children to be brought to him, Matt. 19:14; Mark 10:14; Luke 18:16.
REBUKE [ISBE]
REBUKE - re-buk': As a verb "rebuke" is in the Old Testament the translation of ga`ar and yakhach; another word, ribh, in Neh 5:7, is in the Revised Version (British and American) translated "contended with." "Rebuke" (noun) is most frequently the translation of ge`arah; also in the King James Version of cherpah (Isa 25:8; Jer 15:15, the Revised Version (British and American) "reproach"), and of a few other words signifying reproach, etc. "Rebuker" (mucar, literally, "correction," "chastisement") in Hos 5:2 has the Revised Version margin "Hebrew `rebuke.'" In the New Testament "to rebuke" is most often the translation of epitimao (Mt 8:26; 16:22; 17:18, etc.); also in the King James Version of elegcho, always in the Revised Version (British and American) rendered "reprove" (1 Tim 5:20; Tit 1:13; 2:15; Heb 12:5; Rev 3:19). Another word is epipletto (once, 1 Tim 5:1); "without rebuke" in Phil 2:15 is in the Revised Version (British and American) "without blemish." On the other hand, the Revised Version (British and American) has "rebuke" for several words in the King James Version, as for "reprove" (2 Ki 19:4; Isa 37:4), "reproof" (Job 26:11; Prov 17:10), "charged" (Mk 10:48). In Isa 2:4; Mic 4:3, the English Revised Version has "reprove" for "rebuke," and in the margin "decide concerning," which is text in the American Standard Revised Version. In Ecclesiasticus 11:7 we have the wise counsel: "Understand first, and then rebuke" (epitimao).W. L. Walker
Also see definition of "Rebuke" in Word Study