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1 Samuel 15:30

Context
15:30 Saul 1  again replied, “I have sinned. But please honor me before the elders of my people and before Israel. Go back with me so I may worship the Lord your God.”

Exodus 9:27

Context

9:27 So Pharaoh sent and summoned Moses and Aaron and said to them, “I have sinned this time! 2  The Lord is righteous, and I and my people are guilty. 3 

Exodus 10:16

Context

10:16 4 Then Pharaoh quickly 5  summoned Moses and Aaron and said, “I have sinned 6  against the Lord your God and against you!

Numbers 22:34

Context
22:34 Balaam said to the angel of the Lord, “I have sinned, for I did not know that you stood against me in the road. 7  So now, if it is evil in your sight, 8  I will go back home.” 9 

Numbers 22:2

Context
22:2 Balak son of Zippor saw all that the Israelites had done to the Amorites.

Numbers 12:13

Context

12:13 Then Moses cried to the Lord, “Heal her now, O God.” 10 

Matthew 27:4

Context
27:4 saying, “I have sinned by betraying innocent blood!” But they said, “What is that to us? You take care of it yourself!”
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[15:30]  1 tn Heb “he”; the referent (Saul) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

[9:27]  2 sn Pharaoh now is struck by the judgment and acknowledges that he is at fault. But the context shows that this penitence was short-lived. What exactly he meant by this confession is uncertain. On the surface his words seem to represent a recognition that he was in the wrong and Yahweh right.

[9:27]  3 tn The word רָשָׁע (rasha’) can mean “ungodly, wicked, guilty, criminal.” Pharaoh here is saying that Yahweh is right, and the Egyptians are not – so they are at fault, guilty. S. R. Driver says the words are used in their forensic sense (in the right or wrong standing legally) and not in the ethical sense of morally right and wrong (Exodus, 75).

[10:16]  4 sn The third part of the passage now begins, the confrontation that resulted from the onslaught of the plague. Pharaoh goes a step further here – he confesses he has sinned and adds a request for forgiveness. But his acknowledgment does not go far enough, for this is not genuine confession. Since his heart was not yet submissive, his confession was vain.

[10:16]  5 tn The Piel preterite וַיְמַהֵר (vaymaher) could be translated “and he hastened,” but here it is joined with the following infinitive construct to form the hendiadys. “He hurried to summon” means “He summoned quickly.”

[10:16]  6 sn The severity of the plague prompted Pharaoh to confess his sin against Yahweh and them, now in much stronger terms than before. He also wants forgiveness – but in all probability what he wants is relief from the consequences of his sin. He pretended to convey to Moses that this was it, that he was through sinning, so he asked for forgiveness “only this time.”

[22:34]  7 sn Balaam is not here making a general confession of sin. What he is admitting to is a procedural mistake. The basic meaning of the word is “to miss the mark.” He now knows he took the wrong way, i.e., in coming to curse Israel.

[22:34]  8 sn The reference is to Balaam’s way. He is saying that if what he is doing is so perverse, so evil, he will turn around and go home. Of course, it did not appear that he had much of a chance of going forward.

[22:34]  9 tn The verb is the cohortative from “return”: I will return [me].

[12:13]  10 tc Some scholars emend אֵל (’el, “God”) to עַל(’al, “no”). The effect of this change may be seen in the NAB: “‘Please, not this! Pray, heal her!’”



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