33:1 The Lord said to Moses, “Go up 1 from here, you and the people whom you brought up out of the land of Egypt, to the land I promised on oath 2 to Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob, saying, ‘I will give it to your descendants.’ 3
9:24 “Seventy weeks 5 have been determined
concerning your people and your holy city
to put an end to 6 rebellion,
to bring sin 7 to completion, 8
to atone for iniquity,
to bring in perpetual 9 righteousness,
to seal up 10 the prophetic vision, 11
and to anoint a most holy place. 12
1 tn The two imperatives underscore the immediacy of the demand: “go, go up,” meaning “get going up” or “be on your way.”
2 tn Or “the land which I swore.”
3 tn Heb “seed.”
4 tc Heb “a casting.” The MT reads מַסֵּכָה (massekhah, “a cast thing”) but some
5 tn Heb “sevens.” Elsewhere the term is used of a literal week (a period of seven days), cf. Gen 29:27-28; Exod 34:22; Lev 12:5; Num 28:26; Deut 16:9-10; 2 Chr 8:13; Jer 5:24; Dan 10:2-3. Gabriel unfolds the future as if it were a calendar of successive weeks. Most understand the reference here as periods of seventy “sevens” of years, or a total of 490 years.
6 tc Or “to finish.” The present translation reads the Qere (from the root תָּמַם, tamam) with many witnesses. The Kethib has “to seal up” (from the root הָתַם, hatam), a confusion with a reference later in the verse to sealing up the vision.
7 tc The present translation reads the Qere (singular), rather than the Kethib (plural).
8 tn The Hebrew phrase לְכַלֵּא (lÿkhalle’) is apparently an alternative (metaplastic) spelling of the root כָּלָה (kalah, “to complete, finish”), rather than a form of כָּלָא (kala’, “to shut up, restrain”), as has sometimes been supposed.
9 tn Or “everlasting.”
10 sn The act of sealing in the OT is a sign of authentication. Cf. 1 Kgs 21:8; Jer 32:10, 11, 44.
11 tn Heb “vision and prophecy.” The expression is a hendiadys.
12 tn Or “the most holy place” (NASB, NLT); or “a most holy one”; or “the most holy one,” though the expression is used of places or objects elsewhere, not people.