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Exodus 19:24

Context
19:24 The Lord said to him, “Go, get down, and come up, and Aaron with you, but do not let the priests and the people force their way through to come up to the Lord, lest he break through against them.”

Exodus 33:1

Context

33:1 The Lord said to Moses, “Go up 1  from here, you and the people whom you brought up out of the land of Egypt, to the land I promised on oath 2  to Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob, saying, ‘I will give it to your descendants.’ 3 

Deuteronomy 9:12

Context
9:12 And he said to me, “Get up, go down at once from here because your people whom you brought out of Egypt have sinned! They have quickly turned from the way I commanded them and have made for themselves a cast metal image.” 4 

Daniel 9:24

Context

9:24 “Seventy weeks 5  have been determined

concerning your people and your holy city

to put an end to 6  rebellion,

to bring sin 7  to completion, 8 

to atone for iniquity,

to bring in perpetual 9  righteousness,

to seal up 10  the prophetic vision, 11 

and to anoint a most holy place. 12 

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[33:1]  1 tn The two imperatives underscore the immediacy of the demand: “go, go up,” meaning “get going up” or “be on your way.”

[33:1]  2 tn Or “the land which I swore.”

[33:1]  3 tn Heb “seed.”

[9:12]  4 tc Heb “a casting.” The MT reads מַסֵּכָה (massekhah, “a cast thing”) but some mss and Smr add עֵגֶל (’egel, “calf”), “a molten calf” or the like (Exod 32:8). Perhaps Moses here omits reference to the calf out of contempt for it.

[9:24]  5 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]  6 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]  7 tc The present translation reads the Qere (singular), rather than the Kethib (plural).

[9:24]  8 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]  9 tn Or “everlasting.”

[9:24]  10 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]  11 tn Heb “vision and prophecy.” The expression is a hendiadys.

[9:24]  12 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.



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