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Psalms 119:96

Context

119:96 I realize that everything has its limits,

but your commands are beyond full comprehension. 1 

Hosea 8:12

Context

8:12 I spelled out my law for him in great detail,

but they regard it as something totally unknown 2  to them!

Hosea 8:2

Context

8:2 Israel cries out to me,

“My God, we acknowledge you!”

Colossians 3:13

Context
3:13 bearing with one another and forgiving 3  one another, if someone happens to have 4  a complaint against anyone else. Just as the Lord has forgiven you, so you also forgive others. 5 

Hebrews 8:5

Context
8:5 The place where they serve is 6  a sketch 7  and shadow of the heavenly sanctuary, just as Moses was warned by God as he was about to complete the tabernacle. For he says, “See that you make everything according to the design 8  shown to you on the mountain.” 9 

Hebrews 10:1

Context
Concluding Exposition: Old and New Sacrifices Contrasted

10:1 For the law possesses a shadow of the good things to come but not the reality itself, and is therefore completely unable, by the same sacrifices offered continually, year after year, to perfect those who come to worship. 10 

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[119:96]  1 tn Heb “to every perfection I have seen an end, your command is very wide.” God’s law is beyond full comprehension, which is why the psalmist continually studies it (vv. 95, 97).

[8:12]  2 tn Heb “foreign” or “alien”; NASB, NRSV “as a strange thing.”

[3:13]  3 tn For the translation of χαριζόμενοι (carizomenoi) as “forgiving,” see BDAG 1078 s.v. χαρίζομαι 3. The two participles “bearing” (ἀνεχόμενοι, anecomenoi) and “forgiving” (χαριζόμενοι) express the means by which the action of the finite verb “clothe yourselves” is to be carried out.

[3:13]  4 tn Grk “if someone has”; the term “happens,” though not in the Greek text, is inserted to bring out the force of the third class condition.

[3:13]  5 tn The expression “forgive others” is not in the Greek text, but is implied. It is included in the translation to make the sentence complete and more comprehensible to the English reader.

[8:5]  6 tn Grk “who serve in,” referring to the Levitical priests, but focusing on the provisional and typological nature of the tabernacle in which they served.

[8:5]  7 tn Or “prototype,” “outline.” The Greek word ὑπόδειγμα (Jupodeigma) does not mean “copy,” as it is often translated; it means “something to be copied,” a basis for imitation. BDAG 1037 s.v. 2 lists both Heb 8:5 and 9:23 under the second category of usage, “an indication of someth. that appears at a subsequent time,” emphasizing the temporal progression between the earthly and heavenly sanctuaries.

[8:5]  8 tn The word τύπος (tupos) here has the meaning “an archetype serving as a model, type, pattern, model” (BDAG 1020 s.v. 6.a). This is in keeping with the horizontal imagery accepted for this verse (see sn on “sketch” earlier in the verse). Here Moses was shown the future heavenly sanctuary which, though it did not yet exist, became the outline for the earthly sanctuary.

[8:5]  9 sn A quotation from Exod 25:40.

[10:1]  10 tn Grk “those who approach.”



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