Daniel 9:16
Context9:16 O Lord, according to all your justice, 1 please turn your raging anger 2 away from your city Jerusalem, your holy mountain. For due to our sins and the iniquities of our ancestors, Jerusalem and your people are mocked by all our neighbors.
Daniel 9:24
Context9:24 “Seventy weeks 3 have been determined
concerning your people and your holy city
to put an end to 4 rebellion,
to bring sin 5 to completion, 6
to atone for iniquity,
to bring in perpetual 7 righteousness,
to seal up 8 the prophetic vision, 9
and to anoint a most holy place. 10
Daniel 9:26
Context9:26 Now after the sixty-two weeks,
an anointed one will be cut off and have nothing. 11
As for the city and the sanctuary,
the people of the coming prince will destroy 12 them.
But his end will come speedily 13 like a flood. 14
Until the end of the war that has been decreed
there will be destruction.
Daniel 12:7
Context12:7 Then I heard the man clothed in linen who was over the waters of the river as he raised both his right and left hands to the sky 15 and made an oath by the one who lives forever: “It is for a time, times, and half a time. Then, when the power of the one who shatters 16 the holy people has been exhausted, all these things will be finished.”


[9:16] 1 tn Or “righteousness.”
[9:16] 2 tn Heb “your anger and your rage.” The synonyms are joined here to emphasize the degree of God’s anger. This is best expressed in English by making one of the terms adjectival (cf. NLT “your furious anger”; CEV “terribly angry”).
[9:24] 3 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.
[9:24] 4 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.
[9:24] 5 tc The present translation reads the Qere (singular), rather than the Kethib (plural).
[9:24] 6 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.
[9:24] 8 sn The act of sealing in the OT is a sign of authentication. Cf. 1 Kgs 21:8; Jer 32:10, 11, 44.
[9:24] 9 tn Heb “vision and prophecy.” The expression is a hendiadys.
[9:24] 10 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.
[9:26] 5 sn The expression have nothing is difficult. Presumably it refers to an absence of support or assistance for the anointed one at the time of his “cutting off.” The KJV rendering “but not for himself,” apparently suggesting a vicarious death, cannot be defended.
[9:26] 6 tc Some witnesses (e.g., the Syriac) understand a passive verb and the preposition עִם (’im, “with) rather than the noun עַם (’am, “people”), thus reading “the city and the sanctuary will be destroyed with the coming prince.”
[9:26] 7 tn The words “will come speedily” are not in the Hebrew text but have been added in the translation for clarity.
[9:26] 8 sn Flood here is a metaphor for sudden destruction.
[12:7] 7 tn Or “to the heavens.” The Hebrew term שָׁמַיִם (shamayim) may be translated “heavens” or “sky” depending on the context.
[12:7] 8 tc The present translation reads יַד־נֹפֵץ (yad-nofets, “hand of one who shatters”) rather than the MT נַפֵּץ־יַד (nappets-yad, “to shatter the hand”).