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Numbers 24:22

Context

24:22 Nevertheless the Kenite will be consumed. 1 

How long will Asshur take you away captive?”

Numbers 24:24

Context

24:24 Ships will come from the coast of Kittim, 2 

and will afflict Asshur, 3  and will afflict Eber,

and he will also perish forever.” 4 

Ezra 4:2

Context
4:2 they came to Zerubbabel and the leaders 5  and said to them, “Let us help you build, 6  for like you we seek your God and we have been sacrificing to him 7  from the time 8  of King Esarhaddon 9  of Assyria, who brought us here.” 10 

Psalms 83:8

Context

83:8 Even Assyria has allied with them,

lending its strength to the descendants of Lot. 11  (Selah)

Ezekiel 27:23

Context
27:23 Haran, Kanneh, Eden, merchants from Sheba, Asshur, and Kilmad were your clients.

Ezekiel 32:22

Context

32:22 “Assyria is there with all her assembly around her grave, 12  all of them struck down by the sword. 13 

Hosea 14:3

Context

14:3 Assyria cannot save us;

we will not ride warhorses.

We will never again say, ‘Our gods’

to what our own hands have made.

For only you will show compassion to Orphan Israel!” 14 

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[24:22]  1 tc Heb “Nevertheless Cain will be wasted; how long will Asshur take you captive?” Cain was believed to be the ancestor of the Kenites. The NAB has “yet destined for burning, even as I watch, are your inhabitants.” Asshur may refer to a north Arabian group of people of Abrahamic stock (Gen 25:3), and not the Assyrian empire.

[24:24]  2 tc The MT is difficult. The Kittim refers normally to Cyprus, or any maritime people to the west. W. F. Albright proposed emending the line to “islands will gather in the north, ships from the distant sea” (“The Oracles of Balaam,” JBL 63 [1944]: 222-23). Some commentators accept that reading as the original state of the text, since the present MT makes little sense.

[24:24]  3 tn Or perhaps “Assyria” (so NCV, TEV, CEV, NLT).

[24:24]  4 tn Or “it will end in utter destruction.”

[4:2]  5 tn Heb “the heads of the fathers.” So also in v. 3.

[4:2]  6 tn Heb “Let us build with you.”

[4:2]  7 tc The translation reads with the Qere, a Qumran MS, the LXX, the Syriac Peshitta, and the Arabic version וְלוֹ (vÿlo, “and him”) rather than the Kethib of the MT, וְלֹא (vÿlo’, “and not”).

[4:2]  8 tn Heb “days.”

[4:2]  9 sn Esarhaddon was king of Assyria ca. 681-669 b.c.

[4:2]  10 sn The Assyrian policy had been to resettle Samaria with peoples from other areas (cf. 2 Kgs 17:24-34). These immigrants acknowledged Yahweh as well as other deities in some cases. The Jews who returned from the Exile regarded them with suspicion and were not hospitable to their offer of help in rebuilding the temple.

[83:8]  11 tn Heb “they are an arm for the sons of Lot.” The “arm” is here a symbol of military might.

[32:22]  12 tn Heb “around him his graves.” The masculine pronominal suffixes are problematic; the expression is best emended to correspond to the phrase “around her grave” in v. 23. See D. I. Block, Ezekiel (NICOT), 2:219.

[32:22]  13 tn Heb “all of them slain, the ones felled by the sword.” See as well vv. 23-24.

[14:3]  14 tn Heb “For the orphan is shown compassion by you.” The present translation takes “orphan” as a figurative reference to Israel, which is specified in the translation for clarity.



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