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Text -- Jonah 1:17--2:10 (NET)

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Context
Jonah Prays
1:17 The Lord sent a huge fish to swallow Jonah, and Jonah was in the stomach of the fish three days and three nights. 2:1 Jonah prayed to the Lord his God from the stomach of the fish 2:2 and said, “I called out to the Lord from my distress, and he answered me; from the belly of Sheol I cried out for help, and you heard my prayer. 2:3 You threw me into the deep waters, into the middle of the sea; the ocean current engulfed me; all the mighty waves you sent swept over me. 2:4 I thought I had been banished from your sight, that I would never again see your holy temple! 2:5 Water engulfed me up to my neck; the deep ocean surrounded me; seaweed was wrapped around my head. 2:6 I went down to the very bottoms of the mountains; the gates of the netherworld barred me in forever; but you brought me up from the Pit, O Lord, my God. 2:7 When my life was ebbing away, I called out to the Lord, and my prayer came to your holy temple. 2:8 Those who worship worthless idols forfeit the mercy that could be theirs. 2:9 But as for me, I promise to offer a sacrifice to you with a public declaration of praise; I will surely do what I have promised. Salvation belongs to the Lord!” 2:10 Then the Lord commanded the fish and it disgorged Jonah on dry land.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Jonah a son of Amittai; the prophet God sent to Nineveh,the prophet who was swallowed by the great fish; son of Amittai
 · Sheol the place of the dead


Dictionary Themes and Topics: Fish | Jonah | Missions | Backsliders | Afflictions and Adversities | Conviction | Faith | Repentance | BELLY | Flag | Despondency | Prayer | Miracles | Church | God | Hades | Hell | Idolatry | Praise | Types | more
Table of Contents

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Jon 1:17 Heb “great.”

NET Notes: Jon 2:2 Heb “voice” (so KJV, NAB, NASB, NRSV); NIV “my cry.” The term קוֹל (qol, “voice”) function...

NET Notes: Jon 2:3 Verses 3 and 5 multiply terms describing Jonah’s watery plight. The images used in v. 3 appear also in 2 Sam 22:5-6; Pss 42:7; 51:11; 69:1-2, 14...

NET Notes: Jon 2:4 Heb “Will I ever see your holy temple again?” The rhetorical question expresses denial: Jonah despaired of ever seeing the temple again.

NET Notes: Jon 2:5 The noun סוּף (suf) normally refers to “reeds” – freshwater plants that grow in Egyptian rivers and marshes ...

NET Notes: Jon 2:6 Jonah pictures himself as being at the very gates of the netherworld (v. 6b) and now within the Pit itself (v. 6c). He is speaking rhetorically, for h...

NET Notes: Jon 2:7 For similar ideas see 2 Chr 30:27; Pss 77:3; 142:3; 143:4-5.

NET Notes: Jon 2:8 Heb “abandon their mercy/loyalty.” The meaning of חַסְדָּם יַעֲ...

NET Notes: Jon 2:9 Or “comes from the Lord.” For similar uses of the preposition lamed (לְ, lÿ) to convey a sort of ownership in which the o...

NET Notes: Jon 2:10 Heb “spoke to.” The fish functions as a literary foil to highlight Jonah’s hesitancy to obey God up to this point. In contrast to Jo...

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