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2 Chronicles 2:8

Context
2:8 Send me cedars, evergreens, and algum 1  trees from Lebanon, for I know your servants are adept 2  at cutting down trees in Lebanon. My servants will work with your servants

2 Chronicles 6:30

Context
6:30 then listen from your heavenly dwelling place, forgive their sin, 3  and act favorably toward each one based on your evaluation of their motives. 4  (Indeed you are the only one who can correctly evaluate the motives of all people.) 5 

2 Chronicles 8:18

Context
8:18 Huram sent him ships and some of his sailors, men who were well acquainted with the sea. They sailed with Solomon’s men to Ophir, 6  and took from there 450 talents 7  of gold, which they brought back to King Solomon.

2 Chronicles 32:13

Context
32:13 Are you not aware of what I and my predecessors 8  have done to all the nations of the surrounding lands? Have the gods of the surrounding lands actually been able to rescue their lands from my power? 9 
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[2:8]  1 tn This is probably a variant name for almug trees; see 9:10-11 and the parallel passage in 1 Kgs 10:11-12; cf. NLT. One or the other probably arose through metathesis of letters.

[2:8]  2 tn Heb “know.”

[6:30]  3 tn The words “their sin” are not in the Hebrew text, but are supplied for clarification.

[6:30]  4 tn Heb “and act and give to each one according to all his ways because you know his heart.” In the Hebrew text vv. 28-30a actually contain one lengthy conditional sentence, which the translation has divided up for stylistic reasons.

[6:30]  5 tn Heb “Indeed you know, you alone, the heart of all the sons of mankind.”

[8:18]  5 tn Heb “and Huram sent to him by the hand of his servants, ships, and servants [who] know the sea, and they came with the servants of Solomon to Ophir.”

[8:18]  6 tn The Hebrew word כִּכַּר (kikar, “circle”) refers generally to something that is round. When used of metals it can refer to a disk-shaped weight made of the metal or, by extension, to a standard unit of weight. According to the older (Babylonian) standard the “talent” weighed 130 lbs. (58.9 kg), but later this was lowered to 108.3 lbs. (49.1 kg). More recent research suggests the “light” standard talent was 67.3 lbs. (30.6 kg). Using this as the standard for calculation, the weight of the gold was 30,285 lbs. (13,770 kg).

[32:13]  7 tn Heb “fathers” (also in vv. 14, 15), but in this context the term does not necessarily refer to Sennacherib’s ancestors, but to his predecessors on the Assyrian throne.

[32:13]  8 tn Heb “hand.”



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