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Lamentations 2:20

Context
Jerusalem Speaks:

ר (Resh)

2:20 Look, O Lord! Consider! 1 

Whom have you ever afflicted 2  like this?

Should women eat their offspring, 3 

their healthy infants? 4 

Should priest and prophet

be killed in the Lord’s 5  sanctuary?

Ezekiel 9:5-7

Context

9:5 While I listened, he said to the others, 6  “Go through the city after him and strike people down; do no let your eye pity nor spare 7  anyone! 9:6 Old men, young men, young women, little children, and women – wipe them out! But do not touch anyone who has the mark. Begin at my sanctuary!” So they began with the elders who were at the front of the temple.

9:7 He said to them, “Defile the temple and fill the courtyards with corpses. Go!” So they went out and struck people down throughout the city.

Ezekiel 9:1

Context
The Execution of Idolaters

9:1 Then he shouted in my ears, “Approach, 8  you who are to visit destruction on the city, each with his destructive weapon in his hand!”

Ezekiel 4:17

Context
4:17 because they will lack bread and water. Each one will be terrified, and they will rot for their iniquity. 9 

Ezekiel 4:1

Context
Ominous Object Lessons

4:1 “And you, son of man, take a brick 10  and set it in front of you. Inscribe 11  a city on it – Jerusalem.

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[2:20]  1 tn Heb “Look, O Lord! See!” When used in collocation with verbs of cognition, רָאָה (raah) means “to see for oneself” or “to take notice” (1 Sam 26:12). The parallelism between seeing and understanding is often emphasized (e.g., Exod 16:6; Isa 5:19; 29:15; Job 11:11; Eccl 6:5). See also 1:11 and cf. 1:9, 12, 20; 3:50, 59, 60; 5:1.

[2:20]  2 tn For the nuance “afflict” see the note at 1:12.

[2:20]  3 tn Heb “their fruit.” The term פְּרִי (pÿri, “fruit”) is used figuratively to refer to children as the fruit of a mother’s womb (e.g., Gen 30:2; Deut 7:13; 28:4, 11, 18, 53; 30:9; Pss 21:11; 127:3; 132:11; Isa 13:18; Mic 6:7).

[2:20]  4 tn Heb “infants of healthy childbirth.” The genitive-construct phrase עֹלֲלֵי טִפֻּחִים (’olale tippukhim) functions as an attributive genitive construction: “healthy newborn infants.” The noun טִפֻּחִים (tippukhim) appears only here. It is related to the verb טָפַח (tafakh), meaning “to give birth to a healthy child” or “to raise children” depending on whether the Arabic or Akkadian cognate is emphasized. For the related verb, see below at 2:22.

[2:20]  5 tc The MT reads אֲדֹנָי (’adonay, “the Lord”) here rather than יהוה (YHWH, “the Lord”) as at the beginning of the verse. See the tc note at 1:14.

[9:5]  6 tn Heb “to these he said in my ears.”

[9:5]  7 tn The meaning of the Hebrew term is primarily emotional: “to pity,” which in context implies an action, as in being moved by pity in order to spare them from the horror of their punishment.

[9:1]  8 tc Heb “they approached.” Reading the imperative assumes the same consonantal text but different vowels.

[4:17]  9 tn Or “in their punishment.” Ezek 4:16-17 alludes to Lev 26:26, 39. The phrase “in/for [a person’s] iniquity” occurs fourteen times in Ezekiel: here, 3:18, 19; 7:13, 16; 18: 17, 18, 19, 20; 24:23; 33:6, 8, 9; 39:23. The Hebrew word for “iniquity” may also mean the “punishment for iniquity.”

[4:1]  10 sn Ancient Near Eastern bricks were 10 to 24 inches long and 6 to 13 1/2 inches wide.

[4:1]  11 tn Or perhaps “draw.”



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