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Text -- Isaiah 2:6-22 (NET)

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Context
The Lord’s Day of Judgment
2:6 Indeed, O Lord, you have abandoned your people, the descendants of Jacob. For diviners from the east are everywhere; they consult omen readers like the Philistines do. Plenty of foreigners are around. 2:7 Their land is full of gold and silver; there is no end to their wealth. Their land is full of horses; there is no end to their chariots. 2:8 Their land is full of worthless idols; they worship the product of their own hands, what their own fingers have fashioned. 2:9 Men bow down to them in homage, they lie flat on the ground in worship. Don’t spare them! 2:10 Go up into the rocky cliffs, hide in the ground. Get away from the dreadful judgment of the Lord, from his royal splendor! 2:11 Proud men will be brought low, arrogant men will be humiliated; the Lord alone will be exalted in that day. 2:12 Indeed, the Lord who commands armies has planned a day of judgment, for all the high and mighty, for all who are proud– they will be humiliated; 2:13 for all the cedars of Lebanon, that are so high and mighty, for all the oaks of Bashan; 2:14 for all the tall mountains, for all the high hills, 2:15 for every high tower, for every fortified wall, 2:16 for all the large ships, ships, for all the impressive ships. 2:17 Proud men will be humiliated, arrogant men will be brought low; the Lord alone will be exalted in that day. 2:18 The worthless idols will be completely eliminated. 2:19 They will go into caves in the rocky cliffs and into holes in the ground, trying to escape the dreadful judgment of the Lord and his royal splendor, when he rises up to terrify the earth. 2:20 At that time men will throw their silver and gold idols, which they made for themselves to worship, into the caves where rodents and bats live, 2:21 so they themselves can go into the crevices of the rocky cliffs and the openings under the rocky overhangs, trying to escape the dreadful judgment of the Lord and his royal splendor, when he rises up to terrify the earth. 2:22 Stop trusting in human beings, whose life’s breath is in their nostrils. For why should they be given special consideration?
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Bashan a region east of Lake Galilee between Mt. Hermon and Wadi Yarmuk
 · Jacob the second so of a pair of twins born to Isaac and Rebeccaa; ancestor of the 12 tribes of Israel,the nation of Israel,a person, male,son of Isaac; Israel the man and nation
 · Lebanon a mountain range and the adjoining regions (IBD)
 · Philistines a sea people coming from Crete in 1200BC to the coast of Canaan
 · Tarshish son of Javan son of Japheth son of Noah,son of Bilhan, great grandson of Benjamin son of Israel,one of the seven princes of Persia under Ahasuerus,a region known for its ports friendly to the ships of Israel,A ship built strong and equiped for long range trading.


Dictionary Themes and Topics: Idolatry | Isaiah | PETER, SIMON | Judgments | Pride | Fear of God | Mole | Glory | IMAGES | FEAR | COMMERCE | HEZEKIAH (2) | Bashan | APPAREL | Cedar | MANASSEH (3) | Bat | Day | Picture | Tarshish | more
Table of Contents

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Isa 2:6 Heb “and with the children of foreigners they [?].” The precise meaning of the final word is uncertain. Some take this verb (I ש...

NET Notes: Isa 2:7 Judah’s royal bureaucracy had accumulated great wealth and military might, in violation of Deut 17:16-17.

NET Notes: Isa 2:8 Or “bow down to” (NIV, NRSV).

NET Notes: Isa 2:9 Heb “don’t lift them up.” The idiom “lift up” (נָשָׂא with לְ, nasa̵...

NET Notes: Isa 2:10 Heb “from the dread of the Lord,” that is, from the dread that he produces in the objects of his judgment.” The words “get awa...

NET Notes: Isa 2:11 Or “elevated”; CEV “honored.”

NET Notes: Isa 2:12 Or “against” (NAB, NASB, NRSV).

NET Notes: Isa 2:13 The cedars of Lebanon and oaks of Bashan were well-known for their size and prominence. They make apt symbols here for powerful men who think of thems...

NET Notes: Isa 2:14 The high mountains and hills symbolize the apparent security of proud men, as do the high tower and fortified wall of v. 15.

NET Notes: Isa 2:16 The ships mentioned in this verse were the best of their class, and therefore an apt metaphor for the proud men being denounced in this speech.

NET Notes: Isa 2:17 Or “elevated”; NCV “praised”; CEV “honored.”

NET Notes: Isa 2:18 Heb “will completely pass away”; ASV “shall utterly pass away.”

NET Notes: Isa 2:19 Or “land.” It is not certain if these verses are describing the judgment of Judah (see vv. 6-9) or a more universal judgment on all proud ...

NET Notes: Isa 2:20 Heb “to the shrews and to the bats.” On the meaning of חֲפַרְפָּרָה...

NET Notes: Isa 2:21 Or “land.” It is not certain if these verses are describing the judgment of Judah (see vv. 6-9) or a more universal judgment on all proud ...

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