(0.99687205882353) | (1Pe 2:22) |
2 sn A quotation from Isa 53:9. |
(0.74161291176471) | (Ezr 1:1) |
2 sn The first year of Cyrus would be ca. 539 |
(0.63374323529412) | (Isa 21:11) |
3 sn The “night” probably here symbolizes distress and difficult times. See BDB 539 s.v. לַיְלָה. |
(0.56111745098039) | (Act 22:28) |
3 tn BDAG 495-96 s.v. καί 2.b has “intensive: even…Ac 5:39; 22:28.” |
(0.56111745098039) | (Act 26:14) |
3 tn “Goads” are pointed sticks used to direct a draft animal (an idiom for stubborn resistance). See BDAG 539-40 s.v. κέντρον 2. |
(0.48849166666667) | (Luk 5:39) |
1 tc The Western textual tradition (D it) lacks 5:39. The verse is unique to Luke, so the omission by these |
(0.41586588235294) | (Ezr 5:13) |
1 sn Cyrus was actually a Persian king, but when he conquered Babylon in 539 |
(0.41586588235294) | (Pro 1:22) |
4 sn The term לֵצִים (leysim, “scoffers; mockers”) comes from the root לִיץ (lits, “to scorn; to mock; to speak indirectly” (BDB 539 s.v. לִיץ). They are cynical and defiant freethinkers who ridicule the righteous and all for which they stand (e.g., Ps 1:1). |
(0.41586588235294) | (Dan 5:30) |
2 sn The year was 539 |
(0.41586588235294) | (Mat 6:13) |
2 tn The term πονηροῦ (ponhrou) may be understood as specific and personified, referring to the devil, or possibly as a general reference to evil. It is most likely personified since it is articular (τοῦ πονηροῦ, tou ponhrou). Cf. also “the evildoer” in 5:39, which is the same construction. |
(0.41586588235294) | (Luk 12:58) |
2 sn The officer (πράκτωρ, praktwr) was a civil official who functioned like a bailiff and was in charge of debtor’s prison. The use of the term, however, does not automatically demand a Hellenistic setting (BDAG 859 s.v.; K. H. Rengstorf, TDNT 8:539; C. Maurer, TDNT 6:642). |
(0.34324012745098) | (Pro 1:6) |
3 tn The noun מְלִיצָה (mÿlitsah) means “allusive expression; enigma” in general, and “proverb, parable” in particular (BDB 539 s.v.; HALOT 590 s.v.). The related noun מֵלִיץ means “interpreter” (Gen 42:23). The related Arabic root means “to turn aside,” so this Hebrew term might refer to a saying that has a “hidden meaning” to its words; see H. N. Richardson, “Some Notes on לִיץ and Its Derivatives,” VT 5 (1955): 163-79. |
(0.34324012745098) | (Dan 1:21) |
1 sn The Persian king Cyrus’ first year in control of Babylon was 539 |
(0.34324012745098) | (Dan 5:1) |
1 sn As is clear from the extra-biblical records, it was actually Nabonidus (ca. 556-539 |
(0.3069272254902) | (Ezr 1:1) |
5 sn Cf. Jer 29:10; 25:11-14. Jeremiah had prophesied that after a time of seventy years the Jews would return “to this place.” How these seventy years are to be reckoned is a matter of debate among scholars. Some understand the period to refer to the approximate length of Babylon’s ascendancy as a world power, beginning either with the fall of Nineveh (612 |
(0.3069272254902) | (Jer 50:3) |
1 sn A nation from the north refers to Medo-Persia which at the time of the conquest of Babylon in 539 |