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Isaiah 25:8

Context

25:8 he will swallow up death permanently. 1 

The sovereign Lord will wipe away the tears from every face,

and remove his people’s disgrace from all the earth.

Indeed, the Lord has announced it! 2 

Isaiah 33:2

Context

33:2 Lord, be merciful to us! We wait for you.

Give us strength each morning! 3 

Deliver us when distress comes. 4 

Isaiah 33:2

Context

33:2 Lord, be merciful to us! We wait for you.

Give us strength each morning! 5 

Deliver us when distress comes. 6 

Isaiah 19:3

Context

19:3 The Egyptians will panic, 7 

and I will confuse their strategy. 8 

They will seek guidance from the idols and from the spirits of the dead,

from the pits used to conjure up underworld spirits, and from the magicians. 9 

Isaiah 19:2

Context

19:2 “I will provoke civil strife in Egypt, 10 

brothers will fight with each other,

as will neighbors,

cities, and kingdoms. 11 

Isaiah 15:4

Context

15:4 The people of 12  Heshbon and Elealeh cry out,

their voices are heard as far away as Jahaz.

For this reason Moab’s soldiers shout in distress;

their courage wavers. 13 

Psalms 50:15

Context

50:15 Pray to me when you are in trouble! 14 

I will deliver you, and you will honor me!” 15 

Psalms 91:15

Context

91:15 When he calls out to me, I will answer him.

I will be with him when he is in trouble;

I will rescue him and bring him honor.

Psalms 116:3-4

Context

116:3 The ropes of death tightened around me, 16 

the snares 17  of Sheol confronted me.

I was confronted 18  with trouble and sorrow.

116:4 I called on the name of the Lord,

“Please Lord, rescue my life!”

Jeremiah 30:7

Context

30:7 Alas, what a terrible time of trouble it is! 19 

There has never been any like it.

It is a time of trouble for the descendants of Jacob,

but some of them will be rescued out of it. 20 

Hosea 5:15--6:1

Context

5:15 Then I will return again to my lair

until they have suffered their punishment. 21 

Then they will seek me; 22 

in their distress they will earnestly seek me.

Superficial Repentance Breeds False Assurance of God’s Forgiveness

6:1 “Come on! Let’s return to the Lord!

He himself has torn us to pieces,

but he will heal us!

He has injured 23  us,

but he will bandage our wounds!

Revelation 3:19

Context
3:19 All those 24  I love, I rebuke and discipline. So be earnest and repent!
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[25:8]  1 sn The image of the Lord “swallowing” death would be especially powerful, for death was viewed in Canaanite mythology and culture as a hungry enemy that swallows its victims. See the note at 5:14.

[25:8]  2 tn Heb “has spoken” (so NAB, NASB, NIV, NRSV, NLT).

[33:2]  3 tn Heb “Be their arm each morning.” “Arm” is a symbol for strength. The mem suffixed to the noun has been traditionally understood as a third person suffix, but this is contrary to the context, where the people speak of themselves in the first person. The mem (מ) is probably enclitic with ellipsis of the pronoun, which can be supplied from the context. See J. N. Oswalt, Isaiah (NICOT), 1:589, n. 1.

[33:2]  4 tn Heb “[Be] also our deliverance in the time of distress.”

[33:2]  5 tn Heb “Be their arm each morning.” “Arm” is a symbol for strength. The mem suffixed to the noun has been traditionally understood as a third person suffix, but this is contrary to the context, where the people speak of themselves in the first person. The mem (מ) is probably enclitic with ellipsis of the pronoun, which can be supplied from the context. See J. N. Oswalt, Isaiah (NICOT), 1:589, n. 1.

[33:2]  6 tn Heb “[Be] also our deliverance in the time of distress.”

[19:3]  7 tn Heb “and the spirit of Egypt will be laid waste in its midst.”

[19:3]  8 tn The verb בָּלַע (bala’, “confuse”) is a homonym of the more common בָּלַע (bala’, “swallow”); see HALOT 135 s.v. I בלע.

[19:3]  9 tn Heb “they will inquire of the idols and of the spirits of the dead and of the ritual pits and of the magicians.” Hebrew אוֹב (’ov, “ritual pit”) refers to a pit used by a magician to conjure up underworld spirits. See the note on “incantations” in 8:19.

[19:2]  10 tn Heb I will provoke Egypt against Egypt” (NAB similar).

[19:2]  11 tn Heb “and they will fight, a man against his brother, and a man against his neighbor, city against city, kingdom against kingdom.” Civil strife will extend all the way from the domestic level to the provincial arena.

[15:4]  12 tn The words “the people of” are supplied in the translation for clarification.

[15:4]  13 tc The Hebrew text has, “For this reason the soldiers of Moab shout, his inner being quivers for him.” To achieve tighter parallelism, some emend the first line, changing חֲלֻצֵי (khalutse, “soldiers”) to חַלְצֵי (khaltse, “loins”) and יָרִיעוּ (yariu, “they shout,” from רוּעַ, rua’) to יָרְעוּ (yoru, “they quiver”), a verb from יָרַע (yara’), which also appears in the next line. One can then translate v. 4b as “For this reason the insides of the Moabites quiver, their whole body shakes” (cf. NAB, NRSV).

[50:15]  14 tn Heb “call [to] me in a day of trouble.”

[50:15]  15 sn In vv. 7-15 the Lord makes it clear that he was not rebuking Israel because they had failed to offer sacrifices (v. 8a). On the contrary, they had been faithful in doing so (v. 8b). However, their understanding of the essence of their relationship with God was confused. Apparently they believed that he needed/desired such sacrifices and that offering them would ensure their prosperity. But the Lord owns all the animals of the world and did not need Israel’s meager sacrifices (vv. 9-13). Other aspects of the relationship were more important to the Lord. He desired Israel to be thankful for his blessings (v. 14a), to demonstrate gratitude for his intervention by repaying the vows they made to him (v. 14b), and to acknowledge their absolute dependence on him (v. 15a). Rather than viewing their sacrifices as somehow essential to God’s well-being, they needed to understand their dependence on him.

[116:3]  16 tn Heb “surrounded me.”

[116:3]  17 tn The Hebrew noun מצר (“straits; distress”) occurs only here, Ps 118:5 and Lam 1:3. If retained, it refers to Sheol as a place where one is confined or severely restricted (cf. BDB 865 s.v. מֵצַר, “the straits of Sheol”; NIV “the anguish of the grave”; NRSV “the pangs of Sheol”). However, HALOT 624 s.v. מֵצַר suggests an emendation to מְצָדֵי (mÿtsadey, “snares of”), a rare noun attested in Job 19:6 and Eccl 7:26. This proposal, which is reflected in the translation, produces better parallelism with “ropes” in the preceding line.

[116:3]  18 tn The translation assumes the prefixed verbal form is a preterite. The psalmist recalls the crisis from which the Lord delivered him.

[30:7]  19 tn Heb “Alas [or Woe] for that day will be great.” For the use of the particle “Alas” to signal a time of terrible trouble, even to sound the death knell for someone, see the translator’s note on 22:13.

[30:7]  20 tn Heb “It is a time of trouble for Jacob but he will be saved out of it.”

[5:15]  21 tn The verb יֶאְשְׁמוּ (yeshÿmu, Qal imperfect 3rd person masculine plural from אָשַׁם, ’asham, “to be guilty”) means “to bear their punishment” (Ps 34:22-23; Prov 30:10; Isa 24:6; Jer 2:3; Hos 5:15; 10:2; 14:1; Zech 11:5; Ezek 6:6; BDB 79 s.v. אָשַׁם 3). Many English versions translate this as “admit their guilt” (NIV, NLT) or “acknowledge their guilt” (NASB, NRSV), but cf. NAB “pay for their guilt” and TEV “have suffered enough for their sins.”

[5:15]  22 tn Heb “seek my face” (so KJV, NASB, NIV, NRSV); NAB “seek my presence.”

[6:1]  23 tn “has struck”; NRSV “struck down.”

[3:19]  24 tn The Greek pronoun ὅσος (Josos) means “as many as” and can be translated “All those” or “Everyone.”



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