(0.99751884210526) | (Eze 26:1) |
1 sn April 23, 587 |
(0.99751884210526) | (Eze 29:1) |
1 tn January 7, 587 |
(0.99751884210526) | (Eze 30:20) |
1 tn April 29, 587 |
(0.99751884210526) | (Eze 31:1) |
1 sn June 21, 587 |
(0.71055463157895) | (Act 7:7) |
3 tn Or “and serve,” but with religious/cultic overtones (BDAG 587 s.v. λατρεύω). |
(0.63881353684211) | (Eze 34:12) |
1 sn The imagery may reflect the overthrow of the Israelites by the Babylonians in 587/6 |
(0.49533141052632) | (Eze 25:12) |
4 sn Edom apparently in some way assisted in the destruction of Jerusalem in 587/6 |
(0.42359035789474) | (Jer 13:19) |
3 sn The statements are poetic exaggerations (hyperbole), as most commentaries note. Even in the exile of 587 |
(0.42359035789474) | (Jer 21:2) |
2 sn Nebuchadnezzar was the second and greatest king of Babylon. He is known in the Bible both for his two conquests of Jerusalem in 597 |
(0.42359035789474) | (Lam 1:7) |
2 sn As elsewhere in chap. 1, Jerusalem is personified as remembering the catastrophic days of 587 |
(0.38771981052632) | (Jer 42:19) |
1 tn Heb “Know for certain that I warn you…” The idea of “for certain” is intended to reflect the emphatic use of the infinitive absolute before the volitive use of the imperfect (see IBHS 587-88 §35.3.1h and 509 §31.5b). The substitution “of this:” for “that” has been made to shorten the sentence in conformity with contemporary English style. |
(0.38771981052632) | (Lam 4:4) |
2 tn Heb “there is not a divider to them.” The term פָּרַשׂ (paras), Qal active participle ms from פָּרַס (paras, “to divide”) refers to the action of breaking bread in two before giving it to a person to eat (Isa 58:7; Jer 16:7; Lam 4:4). The form פָּרַשׂ (paras) is the alternate spelling of the more common פָּרַס (paras). |
(0.38771981052632) | (Act 26:7) |
2 tn Or “earnestly worship.” The object of this service, God, is omitted but implied: BDAG 587 s.v. λατρεύω states, “Without the dat. of the one to whom service is given: ἐν ἐκτενείᾳ νύκτα κ. ἡμέραν λ. serve (God) earnestly night and day Ac 26:7.” Although clear from the context in Greek, “God” must be supplied as the recipient of the service for the modern English reader. |
(0.35184929473684) | (Jer 21:1) |
2 sn Zedekiah was the last king of Judah. He ruled from 597 |
(0.35184929473684) | (Jer 50:17) |
2 sn If the prophecies which are referred to in Jer 51:59-64 refer to all that is contained in Jer 50–51 (as some believe), this would have referred to the disasters of 605 |
(0.35184929473684) | (Lam 3:19) |
2 tn The two nouns עָנְיִי וּמְרוּדִי (’onyi umÿrudi, lit., “my poverty and my homelessness”) form a nominal hendiadys in which one noun functions adjectivally and the other retains its full nominal sense: “my impoverished homelessness” or “homeless poor” (GKC 397-98 §124.e). The nearly identical phrase is used in Lam 1:7 and Isa 58:7 (see GKC 226 §83.c), suggesting this was a Hebrew idiom. Jerusalem’s inhabitants were impoverished and homeless. |
(0.31597877894737) | (Neh 6:2) |
1 tn It is not entirely clear whether the Hebrew word כְּפִירִים (kÿfirim) is a place-name not mentioned elsewhere in the OT (as indicated in the present translation; so also NAB, NASB) or whether it means “in [one of] the villages” (so, e.g., NIV, NRSV, NLT; see BDB 499 s.v.; HALOT 493 s.v.). The LXX and Vulgate understand it in the latter sense. Some scholars connect this term with the identically spelled word כּפירים (“lions”) as a figurative description of princes or warriors (e.g., Pss 34:11; 35:17; 58:7; Jer 2:15; Ezek 32:2, 13; Nah 2:14; see HALOT 493 s.v.): “let us meet together with the leaders in the plain of Ono.” |
(0.31597877894737) | (Jer 27:19) |
4 sn The bronze stands are the movable bronze stands described in 1 Kgs 7:27-37. They were the stands for the bronze basins described in 1 Kgs 7:38-39. According to 2 Chr 4:6 the latter were used to wash the burnt offerings. The priests would have been very concerned especially about the big bronze basin and the movable stands and their basins because they involved their ritual purification apart from which they would have had no sanctity. These articles (or furnishings in this case) were broken up and the bronze carried away to Babylon along with all the other bronze, silver, and gold furnishings when the temple and the city were destroyed in 587 |
(0.31597877894737) | (Jer 32:2) |
2 sn According to Jer 39:1 the siege began in Zedekiah’s ninth year (i.e., in 589/88 |
(0.31597877894737) | (Jer 36:2) |
3 sn This refers to the messages that Jeremiah delivered during the last eighteen years of Josiah, the three month reign of Jehoahaz and the first four years of Jehoiakim’s reign (the period between Josiah’s thirteenth year [cf. 1:2] and the fourth year of Jehoiakim [v. 1]). The exact content of this scroll is unknown since many of the messages in the present book are undated. It is also not known what relation this scroll had to the present form of the book of Jeremiah, since this scroll was destroyed and another one written that contained more than this one did (cf. v. 32). Since Jeremiah continued his ministry down to the fall of Jerusalem in 587/6 |