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1 Samuel 6:5

Context
6:5 You should make images of the sores and images of the mice 1  that are destroying the land. You should honor the God of Israel. Perhaps he will release his grip on you, your gods, and your land. 2 

1 Samuel 6:1

Context
The Philistines Return the Ark

6:1 When the ark of the Lord had been in the land 3  of the Philistines for seven months, 4 

1 Samuel 20:31

Context
20:31 For as long as 5  this son of Jesse is alive on the earth, you and your kingdom will not be established. Now, send some men 6  and bring him to me. For he is as good as dead!” 7 

Jonah 3:9

Context
3:9 Who knows? 8  Perhaps God might be willing to change his mind and relent 9  and turn from his fierce anger 10  so that we might not die.” 11 

Jonah 3:2

Context
3:2 “Go immediately 12  to Nineveh, that large city, 13  and proclaim to 14  it the message that I tell you.”

Jonah 2:1

Context
2:1 Jonah prayed to the Lord his God from the stomach of the fish
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[6:5]  1 tn Heb “your mice.” A Qumran ms has simply “the mice.”

[6:5]  2 tn Heb “Perhaps he will lighten his hand from upon you and from upon your gods and from upon your land.”

[6:1]  3 tn Heb “field.”

[6:1]  4 tc The LXX adds “and their land swarmed with mice.”

[20:31]  5 tn Heb “all the days that.”

[20:31]  6 tn The words “some men” are supplied in the translation for stylistic reasons.

[20:31]  7 tn Heb “a son of death.”

[3:9]  8 sn The king expresses his uncertainty whether Jonah’s message constituted a conditional announcement or an unconditional decree. Jeremiah 18 emphasizes that God sometimes gives people an opportunity to repent when they hear an announcement of judgment. However, as Amos and Isaiah learned, if a people refused to repent over a period of time, the patience of God could be exhausted. The offer of repentance in a conditional announcement of judgment can be withdrawn and in its place an unconditional decree of judgment issued. In many cases it is difficult to determine on the front end whether or not a prophetic message of coming judgment is conditional or unconditional, thus explaining the king’s uncertainty.

[3:9]  9 tn “he might turn and relent.” The two verbs יָשׁוּב וְנִחַם (yashub vÿnikham) may function independently (“turn and repent”) or form a verbal hendiadys (“be willing to turn”; see IBHS 540 §32.3b). The imperfect יָשׁוּב and the perfect with prefixed vav וְנִחַם form a future-time narrative sequence. Both verbs function in a modal sense, denoting possibility, as the introductory interrogative suggests (“Who knows…?”). When used in reference to past actions, שׁוּב (shub) can mean “to be sorry” or “to regret” that someone did something in the past, and when used in reference to future planned actions, it can mean “to change one’s mind” about doing something or “to relent” from sending judgment (BDB 997 s.v. שׁוּב 6). The verb נִחַם (nikham) can mean “to be sorry” about past actions (e.g., Gen 6:6, 7; 1 Sam 15:11, 35) and “to change one’s mind” about future actions (BDB 637 s.v. נחם 2). These two verbs are used together elsewhere in passages that consider the question of whether or not God will change his mind and relent from judgment he has threatened (e.g., Jer 4:28). The verbal root שׁוּב is used four times in vv. 8-10, twice of the Ninevites “repenting” from their moral evil and twice of God “relenting” from his threatened calamity. This repetition creates a wordplay that emphasizes the appropriateness of God’s response: if the people repent, God might relent.

[3:9]  10 tn Heb “from the burning of his nose/face.” See Exod 4:14; 22:24; 32:12; Num 25:4; 32:14; Deut 9:19.

[3:9]  11 tn The imperfect verb נֹאבֵד (noved, “we might not die”) functions in a modal sense, denoting possibility. The king’s hope parallels that of the ship’s captain in 1:6. See also Exod 32:7-14; 2 Sam 12:14-22; 1 Kgs 8:33-43; 21:17-29; Jer 18:6-8; Joel 2:11-15.

[3:2]  12 sn The commands of 1:2 are repeated here. See the note there on the combination of “arise” and “go.”

[3:2]  13 tn Heb “Nineveh, the great city.”

[3:2]  14 tn The verb קָרָא (qara’, “proclaim”) is repeated from 1:2 but with a significant variation. The phrase in 1:2 was the adversative קְרָא עָל (qÿra’ ’al, “proclaim against”), which often designates an announcement of threatened judgment (1 Kgs 13:4, 32; Jer 49:29; Lam 1:15). However, here the phrase is the more positive קְרָא אֶל (qÿra’ ’el, “proclaim to”) which often designates an oracle of deliverance or a call to repentance, with an accompanying offer of deliverance that is either explicit or implied (Deut 20:10; Isa 40:2; Zech 1:4; HALOT 1129 s.v. קרא 8; BDB 895 s.v. קָרָא 3.a). This shift from the adversative preposition עַל (“against”) to the more positive preposition אֶל (“to”) might signal a shift in God’s intentions or perhaps it simply makes his original intention more clear. While God threatened to judge Nineveh, he was very willing to relent and forgive when the people repented from their sins (3:8-10). Jonah later complains that he knew that God was likely to relent from the threatened judgment all along (4:2).



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