| (0.50764806060606) | (Psa 78:61) |
2 tn Heb “and his splendor into the hand of an enemy.” The expression “his splendor” also refers metonymically to the ark of the covenant. |
| (0.50764806060606) | (Pro 12:24) |
4 tn Heb “will be for slave labor.” The term מַס (mas, “slave labor”) refers to a person forced into labor from slavery. |
| (0.50764806060606) | (Pro 16:1) |
1 sn Humans may set things in order, plan out what they are going to say, but God sovereignly enables them to put their thoughts into words. |
| (0.50764806060606) | (Pro 20:8) |
3 sn The phrase with his eyes indicates that the king will closely examine or look into all the cases that come before him. |
| (0.50764806060606) | (Pro 20:25) |
1 sn It would be a “snare” because it would lead people into financial difficulties; Leviticus 27 talks about foolish or rash vows. |
| (0.50764806060606) | (Pro 22:1) |
2 tn “To be chosen rather than” is a translation of the Niphal participle with the comparative degree taken into consideration. Cf. CEV “worth much more than.” |
| (0.50764806060606) | (Pro 30:22) |
2 sn The expression stuffed with food probably represents prosperity in general. So the line portrays someone who suddenly comes into wealth, but continues to be boorish and irreligious. |
| (0.50764806060606) | (Pro 30:28) |
1 sn The point of this saying is that a weak creature like a lizard, that is so easily caught, cannot be prevented from getting into the most significant places. |
| (0.50764806060606) | (Isa 7:6) |
1 tn Heb “and let us break it open for ourselves”; NASB “make for ourselves a breach in its walls”; NLT “fight our way into.” |
| (0.50764806060606) | (Isa 65:7) |
3 tn Heb “I will measure out their pay [from the] beginning into their lap,” i.e., he will give them everything they have earned. |
| (0.50764806060606) | (Jer 51:53) |
1 tn Or “ascends [into] heaven.” Note the use of the phrase in Deut 30:12; 2 Kgs 2:11; and Amos 9:2. |
| (0.50764806060606) | (Dan 8:10) |
1 tn Traditionally, “host.” The term refers to God’s heavenly angelic assembly, which he sometimes leads into battle as an army. |
| (0.50764806060606) | (Jon 2:3) |
1 tn Or “You had thrown me.” Verse 3 begins the detailed description of Jonah’s plight, which resulted from being thrown into the sea. |
| (0.50764806060606) | (Mic 7:19) |
4 sn In this metaphor the |
| (0.50764806060606) | (Zep 3:20) |
3 tn Heb “I will make you into a name and praise among all the peoples of the earth.” Here the word “name” carries the nuance of “good reputation.” |
| (0.50764806060606) | (Mat 5:41) |
1 sn If anyone forces you to go one mile. In NT times Roman soldiers had the authority to press civilians into service to carry loads for them. |
| (0.50764806060606) | (Mat 6:13) |
1 sn The request do not lead us into temptation is not to suggest God causes temptation, but is a rhetorical way to ask for his protection from sin. |
| (0.50764806060606) | (Mat 27:60) |
2 tn That is, cut or carved into an outcropping of natural rock, resulting in a cave-like structure (see L&N 19.25). |
| (0.50764806060606) | (Mar 3:8) |
4 sn These last two locations, Tyre and Sidon, represented an expansion outside of traditional Jewish territory. Jesus’ reputation continued to expand into new regions. |
| (0.50764806060606) | (Mar 6:48) |
1 tn This verse is one complete sentence in the Greek text, but it has been broken into two sentences in English for clarity. |


