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Isaiah 10:16-18

Context

10:16 For this reason 1  the sovereign master, the Lord who commands armies, will make his healthy ones emaciated. 2  His majestic glory will go up in smoke. 3 

10:17 The light of Israel 4  will become a fire,

their Holy One 5  will become a flame;

it will burn and consume the Assyrian king’s 6  briers

and his thorns in one day.

10:18 The splendor of his forest and his orchard

will be completely destroyed, 7 

as when a sick man’s life ebbs away. 8 

Isaiah 27:4

Context

27:4 I am not angry.

I wish I could confront some thorns and briers!

Then I would march against them 9  for battle;

I would set them 10  all on fire,

Hebrews 6:8

Context
6:8 But if it produces thorns and thistles, it is useless and about to be cursed; 11  its fate is to be burned.
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[10:16]  1 sn The irrational arrogance of the Assyrians (v. 15) will prompt the judgment about to be described.

[10:16]  2 tn Heb “will send leanness against his healthy ones”; NASB, NIV “will send a wasting disease.”

[10:16]  3 tc Heb “and in the place of his glory burning will burn, like the burning of fire.” The highly repetitive text (יֵקַד יְקֹד כִּיקוֹד אֵשׁ, yeqad yiqod kiqodesh) may be dittographic; if the second consonantal sequence יקד is omitted, the text would read “and in the place of his glory, it will burn like the burning of fire.”

[10:17]  4 tn In this context the “Light of Israel” is a divine title (note the parallel title “his holy one”). The title points to God’s royal splendor, which overshadows and, when transformed into fire, destroys the “majestic glory” of the king of Assyria (v. 16b).

[10:17]  5 sn See the note on the phrase “the Holy One of Israel” in 1:4.

[10:17]  6 tn Heb “his.” In vv. 17-19 the Assyrian king and his empire is compared to a great forest and orchard that are destroyed by fire (symbolic of the Lord).

[10:18]  7 tn Heb “from breath to flesh it will destroy.” The expression “from breath to flesh” refers to the two basic components of a person, the immaterial (life’s breath) and the material (flesh). Here the phrase is used idiomatically to indicate totality.

[10:18]  8 tn The precise meaning of this line is uncertain. מָסַס (masas), which is used elsewhere of substances dissolving or melting, may here mean “waste away” or “despair.” נָסַס (nasas), which appears only here, may mean “be sick” or “stagger, despair.” See BDB 651 s.v. I נָסַס and HALOT 703 s.v. I נסס. One might translate the line literally, “like the wasting away of one who is sick” (cf. NRSV “as when an invalid wastes away”).

[27:4]  9 tn Heb “it.” The feminine singular suffix apparently refers back to the expression “thorns and briers,” understood in a collective sense. For other examples of a cohortative expressing resolve after a hypothetical statement introduced by נָתַן with מִי (miwith natan), see Judg 9:29; Jer 9:1-2; Ps 55:6.

[27:4]  10 tn Heb “it.” The feminine singular suffix apparently refers back to the expression “thorns and briers,” understood in a collective sense.

[6:8]  11 tn Grk “near to a curse.”



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