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Psalms 119:11

Context

119:11 In my heart I store up 1  your words, 2 

so I might not sin against you.

Psalms 119:83

Context

119:83 For 3  I am like a wineskin 4  dried up in smoke. 5 

I do not forget your statutes.

Psalms 119:93

Context

119:93 I will never forget your precepts,

for by them you have revived me.

Psalms 119:109

Context

119:109 My life is in continual danger, 6 

but I do not forget your law.

Psalms 119:141

Context

119:141 I am insignificant and despised,

yet I do not forget your precepts.

Psalms 119:176

Context

119:176 I have wandered off like a lost sheep. 7 

Come looking for your servant,

for I do not forget your commands.

Proverbs 3:1

Context
Exhortations to Seek Wisdom and Walk with the Lord 8 

3:1 My child, 9  do not forget my teaching,

but let your heart keep 10  my commandments,

James 1:23-24

Context
1:23 For if someone merely listens to the message and does not live it out, he is like someone 11  who gazes at his own face 12  in a mirror. 1:24 For he gazes at himself and then goes out and immediately forgets 13  what sort of person he was.
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[119:11]  1 tn Or “hide.”

[119:11]  2 tn Heb “your word.” Some medieval Hebrew mss as well as the LXX read the plural, “your words.”

[119:83]  3 tn Or “even though.”

[119:83]  4 tn The Hebrew word נֹאד (nod, “leather container”) refers to a container made from animal skin which is used to hold wine or milk (see Josh 9:4, 13; Judg 4:19; 1 Sam 16:20).

[119:83]  5 tn Heb “in the smoke.”

[119:109]  6 tn Heb “my life [is] in my hands continually.”

[119:176]  7 tn Heb “I stray like a lost sheep.” It is possible that the point of the metaphor is vulnerability: The psalmist, who is threatened by his enemies, feels as vulnerable as a straying, lost sheep. This would not suggest, however, that he has wandered from God’s path (see the second half of the verse, as well as v. 110).

[3:1]  8 sn The chapter begins with an introductory exhortation (1-4), followed by an admonition to be faithful to the Lord (5-12). Wisdom is commended as the most valuable possession (13-18), essential to creation (19-20), and the way to a long and safe life (21-26). There then follows a warning to avoid unneighborliness (27-30) and emulating the wicked (31-35).

[3:1]  9 tn Heb “my son” (likewise in vv. 11, 21).

[3:1]  10 tn The verb יִצֹּר (yitsor) is a Qal jussive and the noun לִבֶּךָ (libbekha, “your heart”) functions as the subject: “let your heart keep my commandments.”

[1:23]  11 tn The word for “man” or “individual” is ἀνήρ (anhr), which often means “male” or “man (as opposed to woman).” However, as BDAG 79 s.v. 2 says, here it is “equivalent to τὶς someone, a person.”

[1:23]  12 tn Grk “the face of his beginning [or origin].”

[1:24]  13 tn Grk “and he has gone out and immediately has forgotten.”



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