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Deuteronomy 28:37

Context
28:37 You will become an occasion of horror, a proverb, and an object of ridicule to all the peoples to whom the Lord will drive you.

Deuteronomy 28:59

Context
28:59 then the Lord will increase your punishments and those of your descendants – great and long-lasting afflictions and severe, enduring illnesses.

Deuteronomy 29:20

Context
29:20 The Lord will be unwilling to forgive him, and his intense anger 1  will rage 2  against that man; all the curses 3  written in this scroll will fall upon him 4  and the Lord will obliterate his name from memory. 5 

Deuteronomy 29:28

Context
29:28 So the Lord has uprooted them from their land in anger, wrath, and great rage and has deported them to another land, as is clear today.”

Isaiah 8:18

Context

8:18 Look, I and the sons whom the Lord has given me 6  are reminders and object lessons 7  in Israel, sent from the Lord who commands armies, who lives on Mount Zion.

Jeremiah 19:8

Context
19:8 I will make this city an object of horror, a thing to be hissed at. All who pass by it will be filled with horror and will hiss out their scorn 8  because of all the disasters that have happened to it. 9 

Jeremiah 25:18

Context
25:18 I made Jerusalem 10  and the cities of Judah, its kings and its officials drink it. 11  I did it so Judah would become a ruin. I did it so Judah, its kings, and its officials would become an object 12  of horror and of hissing scorn, an example used in curses. 13  Such is already becoming the case! 14 

Ezekiel 14:8

Context
14:8 I will set my face against that person and will make him an object lesson and a byword 15  and will cut him off from among my people. Then you will know that I am the Lord.

Ezekiel 23:32-33

Context
23:32 “This is what the sovereign Lord says: “You will drink your sister’s deep and wide cup; 16  you will be scorned and derided, for it holds a great deal. 23:33 You will be overcome by 17  drunkenness and sorrow. The cup of your sister Samaria is a cup of horror and desolation.

Ezekiel 36:20

Context
36:20 But when they arrived in the nations where they went, they profaned my holy name. It was said of them, ‘These are the people of the Lord, yet they have departed from his land.’

Ezekiel 36:1

Context
Blessings on the Mountains of Israel

36:1 “As for you, son of man, prophesy to the mountains of Israel, and say: ‘O mountains of Israel, hear the word of the Lord!

Colossians 1:11

Context
1:11 being strengthened with all power according to his glorious might for the display of 18  all patience and steadfastness, joyfully
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[29:20]  1 tn Heb “the wrath of the Lord and his zeal.” The expression is a hendiadys, a figure in which the second noun becomes adjectival to the first.

[29:20]  2 tn Heb “smoke,” or “smolder.”

[29:20]  3 tn Heb “the entire oath.”

[29:20]  4 tn Or “will lie in wait against him.”

[29:20]  5 tn Heb “blot out his name from under the sky.”

[8:18]  6 sn This refers to Shear-jashub (7:3) and Maher-Shalal-Hash-Baz (8:1, 3).

[8:18]  7 tn Or “signs and portents” (NAB, NRSV). The names of all three individuals has symbolic value. Isaiah’s name (which meant “the Lord delivers”) was a reminder that the Lord was the nation’s only source of protection; Shear-jashub’s name was meant, at least originally, to encourage Ahaz (see the note at 7:3), and Maher-Shalal-Hash-Baz’s name was a guarantee that God would defeat Israel and Syria (see the note at 8:4). The word מוֹפֶת (mofet, “portent”) can often refer to some miraculous event, but in 20:3 it is used, along with its synonym אוֹת (’ot, “sign”) of Isaiah’s walking around half-naked as an object lesson of what would soon happen to the Egyptians.

[19:8]  8 sn See 18:16 and the study note there.

[19:8]  9 tn Heb “all its smitings.” This word has been used several times for the metaphorical “wounds” that Israel has suffered as a result of the blows from its enemies. See, e.g., 14:17. It is used in the Hebrew Bible of scourging, both literally and metaphorically (cf. Deut 25:3; Isa 10:26), and of slaughter and defeat (1 Sam 4:10; Josh 10:20). Here it refers to the results of the crushing blows at the hands of her enemies which has made her the object of scorn.

[25:18]  10 map For location see Map5 B1; Map6 F3; Map7 E2; Map8 F2; Map10 B3; JP1 F4; JP2 F4; JP3 F4; JP4 F4.

[25:18]  11 tn The words “I made” and “drink it” are not in the text. The text from v. 18 to v. 26 contains a list of the nations that Jeremiah “made drink it.” The words are supplied in the translation here and at the beginning of v. 19 for the sake of clarity. See also the note on v. 26.

[25:18]  12 tn Heb “in order to make them a ruin, an object of…” The sentence is broken up and the antecedents are made specific for the sake of clarity and English style.

[25:18]  13 tn See the study note on 24:9 for explanation.

[25:18]  14 tn Heb “as it is today.” This phrase would obviously be more appropriate after all these things had happened as is the case in 44:6, 23 where the verbs referring to these conditions are past. Some see this phrase as a marginal gloss added after the tragedies of 597 b.c. or 586 b.c. However, it may refer here to the beginning stages where Judah has already suffered the loss of Josiah, of its freedom, of some of its temple treasures, and of some of its leaders (Dan 1:1-3. The different date for Jehoiakim there is due to the different method of counting the king’s first year; the third year there is the same as the fourth year in 25:1).

[14:8]  15 tn Heb “proverbs.”

[23:32]  16 sn The image of a deep and wide cup suggests the degree of punishment; it will be extensive and leave the victim helpless.

[23:33]  17 tn Heb “filled with.”

[1:11]  18 tn The expression “for the display of” is an attempt to convey in English the force of the Greek preposition εἰς (eis) in this context.



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