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Jude 1:16

Context
1:16 These people are grumblers and 1  fault-finders who go 2  wherever their desires lead them, 3  and they give bombastic speeches, 4  enchanting folks 5  for their own gain. 6 

Nehemiah 9:17

Context
9:17 They refused to obey and did not recall your miracles that you had performed among them. Instead, they rebelled and appointed a leader to return to their bondage in Egypt. 7  But you are a God of forgiveness, merciful and compassionate, slow to get angry and unfailing in your loyal love. 8  You did not abandon them,

Psalms 78:38

Context

78:38 Yet he is compassionate.

He forgives sin and does not destroy.

He often holds back his anger,

and does not stir up his fury. 9 

Psalms 86:5

Context

86:5 Certainly 10  O Lord, you are kind 11  and forgiving,

and show great faithfulness to all who cry out to you.

Psalms 86:15

Context

86:15 But you, O Lord, are a compassionate and merciful God.

You are patient 12  and demonstrate great loyal love and faithfulness. 13 

Psalms 145:8

Context

145:8 The Lord is merciful and compassionate;

he is patient 14  and demonstrates great loyal love. 15 

Hosea 11:8

Context
The Divine Dilemma: Judgment or Mercy?

11:8 How can I give you up, 16  O Ephraim?

How can I surrender you, O Israel?

How can I treat you like Admah?

How can I make you like Zeboiim?

I have had a change of heart! 17 

All my tender compassions are aroused! 18 

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[1:16]  1 tn “And” is not in Greek, but is supplied for the sake of English style.

[1:16]  2 tn Or “going.” Though the participle is anarthrous, so also is the subject. Thus, the participle could be either adverbial or adjectival.

[1:16]  3 tn Grk “(who go/going) according to their own lusts.”

[1:16]  4 tn Grk “and their mouth speaks bombastic things.”

[1:16]  5 sn Enchanting folks (Grk “awing faces”) refers to the fact that the speeches of these false teachers are powerful and seductive.

[1:16]  6 tn Or “to their own advantage.”

[9:17]  7 tc The present translation follows a few medieval Hebrew MSS and the LXX in reading בְּמִצְרָיִם (bÿmitsrayim, “in Egypt”; so also NAB, NASB, NRSV, TEV, NLT) rather than the MT reading בְּמִרְיָם (bÿmiryam, “in their rebellion”).

[9:17]  8 tc The translation follows the Qere reading חֶסֶד (khesed, “loyal love”) rather than the Kethib reading וְחֶסֶד (vÿkhesed, “and loyal love”) of the MT.

[78:38]  9 tn One could translate v. 38 in the past tense (“he was compassionate…forgave sin and did not destroy…held back his anger, and did not stir up his fury”), but the imperfect verbal forms are probably best understood as generalizing. Verse 38 steps back briefly from the narrational summary of Israel’s history and lays the theological basis for v. 39, which focuses on God’s mercy toward sinful Israel.

[86:5]  10 tn Or “for.”

[86:5]  11 tn Heb “good.”

[86:15]  12 tn Heb “slow to anger.”

[86:15]  13 tn Heb “and great of loyal love and faithfulness.”

[145:8]  14 tn Heb “slow to anger” (see Pss 86:15; 103:8).

[145:8]  15 tn Heb “and great of loyal love” (see Pss 86:15; 103:8).

[11:8]  16 tn The imperfect verbs in 11:8 function as imperfects of capability. See IBHS 564 §34.1a.

[11:8]  17 tn The phrase נֶהְפַּךְ עָלַי לִבִּי (nehpakhalay libbi) is an idiom that can be taken in two ways: (1) emotional sense: to describe a tumult of emotions, not just a clash of ideas, that are afflicting a person (Lam 1:20; HALOT 253 s.v. הפך 1.c) and (2) volitional sense: to describe a decisive change of policy, that is, a reversal of sentiment from amity to hatred (Exod 14:5; Ps 105:25; BDB 245 s.v. הָפַךְ 1; HALOT 253 s.v. 3). The English versions alternate between these two: (1) emotional discomfort and tension over the prospect of destroying Israel: “mine heart is turned within me” (KJV), “my heart recoils within me” (RSV, NRSV), “My heart is turned over within Me” (NASB), “My heart is torn within me” (NLT); and (2) volitional reversal of previous decision to totally destroy Israel: “I have had a change of heart” (NJPS), “my heart is changed within me” (NIV), and “my heart will not let me do it!” (TEV). Both BDB 245 s.v. 1.b and HALOT 253 s.v. 3 suggest that the idiom describes a decisive change of heart (reversal of decision to totally destroy Israel once and for all) rather than emotional turbulence of God shifting back and forth between whether to destroy or spare Israel. This volitional nuance is supported by the modal function of the 1st person common singular imperfects in 11:8 (“I will not carry out my fierce anger…I will not destroy Ephraim…I will not come in wrath”) and by the prophetic announcement of future restoration in 11:10-11. Clearly, a dramatic reversal both in tone and in divine intention occurs between 11:5-11.

[11:8]  18 tn The Niphal of כָּמַר (kamar) means “to grow warm, tender” (BDB 485 s.v. כָּמַר), as its use in a simile with the oven demonstrates (Lam 5:10). It is used several times to describe the arousal of the most tender affection (Gen 43:30; 1 Kgs 3:26; Hos 11:8; BDB 485 s.v. 1; HALOT 482 s.v. כמר 1). Cf. NRSV “my compassion grows warm and tender.”



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