NETBible KJV GRK-HEB XRef Names Arts Hymns

  Discovery Box

Jeremiah 33:3

Context
33:3 ‘Call on me in prayer and I will answer you. I will show you great and mysterious 1  things which you still do not know about.’

Jeremiah 49:9

Context

49:9 If grape pickers came to pick your grapes,

would they not leave a few grapes behind? 2 

If robbers came at night,

would they not pillage only what they needed? 3 

Drag to resizeDrag to resize

[33:3]  1 tn This passive participle or adjective is normally used to describe cities or walls as “fortified” or “inaccessible.” All the lexicons, however, agree in seeing it used here metaphorically of “secret” or “mysterious” things, things that Jeremiah could not know apart from the Lord’s revelation. G. L. Keown, P. J. Scalise, and T. G. Smothers (Jeremiah 26-52 [WBC], 170) make the interesting observation that the word is used here in a context in which the fortifications of Jerusalem are about to fall to the Babylonians; the fortified things in God’s secret counsel fall through answer to prayer.

[49:9]  2 tn The translation of this verse is generally based on the parallels in Obad 5. There the second line has a ה interrogative in front of it. The question can still be assumed because questions can be asked in Hebrew without a formal marker (cf. GKC 473 §150.a and BDB 519 s.v. לֹא 1.a[e] and compare usage in 2 Kgs 5:26).

[49:9]  3 tn The tense and nuance of the verb translated “pillage” are both different than the verb in Obad 5. There the verb is the imperfect of גָּנַב (ganav, “to steal”). Here the verb is the perfect of a verb which means to “ruin” or “spoil.” The English versions and commentaries, however, almost all render the verb here in much the same way as in Obad 5. The nuance must mean they only “ruin, destroy” (by stealing) only as much as they need (Heb “their sufficiency”), and the verb is used as metonymical substitute, effect for cause. The perfect must be some kind of a future perfect; “would they not have destroyed only…” The negative question is carried over by ellipsis from the preceding lines.



TIP #02: Try using wildcards "*" or "?" for b?tter wor* searches. [ALL]
created in 0.18 seconds
powered by
bible.org - YLSA