Jeremiah 51:11
ContextFill your quivers! 2
The Lord will arouse a spirit of hostility in 3 the kings of Media. 4
For he intends to destroy Babylonia.
For that is how the Lord will get his revenge –
how he will get his revenge for the Babylonians’ destruction of his temple. 5
Jeremiah 51:28
Context51:28 Prepare the nations to do battle against her. 6
Prepare the kings of the Medes.
Prepare their governors and all their leaders. 7
Prepare all the countries they rule to do battle against her. 8
Isaiah 13:17
Context13:17 Look, I am stirring up the Medes to attack them; 9
they are not concerned about silver,
nor are they interested in gold. 10
Daniel 5:28
Context5:28 As for peres 11 – your kingdom is divided and given over to the Medes and Persians.”
[51:11] 1 sn The imperatives here and in v. 12 are directed to the soldiers in the armies of the kings from the north (here identified as the kings of Media [see also 50:3, 9; 51:27-28]). They have often been addressed in this prophecy as though they were a present force (see 50:14-16; 50:21 [and the study note there]; 50:26, 29; 51:3) though the passage as a whole is prophetic of the future. This gives some idea of the ideal stance that the prophets adopted when they spoke of the future as though already past (the use of the Hebrew prophetic perfect which has been referred to often in the translator’s notes).
[51:11] 2 tn The meaning of this word is debated. The most thorough discussion of this word including etymology and usage in the OT and Qumran is in HALOT 1409-10 s.v. שֶׁלֶט, where the rendering “quiver” is accepted for all the uses of this word in the OT. For a more readily accessible discussion for English readers see W. L. Holladay, Jeremiah (Hermeneia), 2:422-23. The meaning “quiver” fits better with the verb “fill” than the meaning “shield” which is adopted in BDB 1020 s.v. שֶׁלֶט. “Quiver” is the meaning adopted also in NRSV, REB, NAB, and NJPS.
[51:11] 3 tn Heb “The
[51:11] 4 sn Media was a country in what is now northwestern Iran. At the time this prophecy was probably written they were the dominating force in the northern region, the most likely enemy to Babylon. By the time Babylon fell in 538
[51:11] 5 tn Heb “For it is the vengeance of the
[51:28] 6 tn See the first translator’s note on 51:27 and compare also 6:4 and the study note there.
[51:28] 7 tn See the translator’s note at 51:23 for the rendering of the terms here.
[51:28] 8 tc The Hebrew text has a confusing switch of possessive pronouns in this verse: “Consecrate the nations against her, the kings of the Medes, her governors and prefects, and all the land of his dominion.” This has led to a number of different resolutions. The LXX (the Greek version) renders the word “kings” as singular and levels all the pronouns to “his,” paraphrasing the final clause and combining it with “king of the Medes” to read “and of all the earth.” The Latin Vulgate levels them all to the third masculine plural, and this is followed by the present translation as well as a number of other modern English versions (NASB, NIV, NRSV, TEV, NCV). The ASV and NJPS understand the feminine to refer to Media, i.e., “her governors and all her prefects” and understand the masculine in the last line to be a distributive singular referring back to the lands each of the governors and prefects ruled over. This is probably correct but since governors and prefects refer to officials appointed over provinces and vassal states it amounts to much the same interpretation that the Latin Vulgate, the present translation, and other modern English versions have given.
[13:17] 9 tn Heb “against them”; NLT “against Babylon.”
[13:17] 10 sn They cannot be bought off, for they have a lust for bloodshed.
[5:28] 11 sn Peres (פְּרֵס) is the singular form of פַרְסִין (pharsin) in v. 25.