NETBible KJV GRK-HEB XRef Names Arts Hymns

  Discovery Box

2 Kings 11:14

Context
11:14 Then she saw 1  the king standing by the pillar, according to custom. The officers stood beside the king with their trumpets and all the people of the land were celebrating and blowing trumpets. Athaliah tore her clothes and screamed, “Treason, treason!” 2 

2 Kings 11:17

Context

11:17 Jehoiada then drew up a covenant between the Lord and the king and people, stipulating that they should be loyal to the Lord. 3 

2 Kings 11:2

Context
11:2 So Jehosheba, the daughter of King Joram and sister of Ahaziah, took Ahaziah’s son Joash and sneaked 4  him away from the rest of the royal descendants who were to be executed. She hid him and his nurse in the room where the bed covers were stored. 5  So he was hidden from Athaliah and escaped execution. 6 

2 Kings 23:13

Context
23:13 The king ruined the high places east of Jerusalem, south of the Mount of Destruction, 7  that King Solomon of Israel had built for the detestable Sidonian goddess Astarte, the detestable Moabite god Chemosh, and the horrible Ammonite god Milcom.

2 Kings 1:1

Context
Elijah Confronts the King and His Commanders

1:1 After Ahab died, Moab rebelled against Israel. 8 

2 Kings 1:1

Context
Elijah Confronts the King and His Commanders

1:1 After Ahab died, Moab rebelled against Israel. 9 

Drag to resizeDrag to resize

[11:14]  1 tn Heb “and she saw, and look.”

[11:14]  2 tn Or “conspiracy, conspiracy.”

[11:17]  3 tn Heb “and Jehoiada made a covenant between the Lord and [between] the king and [between] the people, to become a people for the Lord, and between the king and [between] the people.” The final words of the verse (“and between the king and [between] the people”) are probably accidentally repeated from earlier in the verse. They do not appear in the parallel account in 2 Chr 23:16. If retained, they probably point to an agreement governing how the king and people should relate to one another.

[11:2]  4 tn Heb “stole.”

[11:2]  5 tn Heb “him and his nurse in an inner room of beds.” The verb is missing in the Hebrew text. The parallel passage in 2 Chr 22:11 has “and she put” at the beginning of the clause. M. Cogan and H. Tadmor (II Kings [AB], 126) regard the Chronicles passage as an editorial attempt to clarify the difficulty of the original text. They prefer to take “him and his nurse” as objects of the verb “stole” and understand “in the bedroom” as the place where the royal descendants were executed. The phrase בַּחֲדַר הַמִּטּוֹת (bakhadar hammittot), “an inner room of beds,” is sometimes understood as referring to a bedroom (HALOT 293 s.v. חֶדֶר), though some prefer to see here a “room where the covers and cloths were kept for the beds (HALOT 573 s.v. מִטָּת). In either case, it may have been a temporary hideout, for v. 3 indicates that the child hid in the temple for six years.

[11:2]  6 tn Heb “and they hid him from Athaliah and he was not put to death.” The subject of the plural verb (“they hid”) is probably indefinite.

[23:13]  7 sn This is a derogatory name for the Mount of Olives, involving a wordplay between מָשְׁחָה (mashÿkhah), “anointing,” and מַשְׁחִית (mashÿkhit), “destruction.” See HALOT 644 s.v. מַשְׁחִית and M. Cogan and H. Tadmor, II Kings (AB), 289.

[1:1]  8 sn This statement may fit better with the final paragraph of 1 Kgs 22.

[1:1]  9 sn This statement may fit better with the final paragraph of 1 Kgs 22.



created in 0.03 seconds
powered by
bible.org - YLSA