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2 Chronicles 5:6

Context
5:6 Now King Solomon and all the Israelites who had assembled with him went on ahead of the ark and sacrificed more sheep and cattle than could be counted or numbered. 1 

2 Chronicles 11:21

Context
11:21 Rehoboam loved Maacah daughter of Absalom more than his other wives and concubines. 2  He had eighteen wives and sixty concubines; he fathered twenty-eight sons and sixty daughters.

2 Chronicles 25:9

Context
25:9 Amaziah asked the prophet: 3  “But what should I do about the hundred talents of silver I paid the Israelite troops?” The prophet 4  replied, “The Lord is capable of giving you more than that.”

2 Chronicles 33:9

Context
33:9 But Manasseh misled the people of 5  Judah and the residents of Jerusalem so that they sinned more than the nations whom the Lord had destroyed ahead of the Israelites.

1 tn Heb “And King Solomon and all the assembly of Israel, those who had been gathered to him, [were] before the ark, sacrificing sheep and cattle which could not be counted or numbered because of the abundance.”

2 sn Concubines were slave women in ancient Near Eastern societies who were the legal property of their master, but who could have legitimate sexual relations with their master. A concubine’s status was more elevated than a mere servant, but she was not free and did not have the legal rights of a free wife. The children of a concubine could, in some instances, become equal heirs with the children of the free wife. After the period of the Judges concubines may have become more of a royal prerogative (2 Sam 21:10-14; 1 Kgs 11:3).

3 tn Heb “said to the man of God.”

4 tn Heb “man of God.”

5 tn Heb “misled Judah.” The words “the people of” are supplied in the translation for clarity. The Hebrew text uses the name “Judah” here by metonymy for the people of Judah.



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