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Ezekiel 1:27

Context
1:27 I saw an amber glow 1  like a fire enclosed all around 2  from his waist up. From his waist down I saw something that looked like fire. There was a brilliant light around it,

Ezekiel 7:13

Context
7:13 The customer will no longer pay the seller 3  while both parties are alive, for the vision against their whole crowd 4  will not be revoked. Each person, for his iniquity, 5  will fail to preserve his life.

Ezekiel 8:2

Context
8:2 As I watched, I noticed 6  a form that appeared to be a man. 7  From his waist downward was something like fire, 8  and from his waist upward something like a brightness, 9  like an amber glow. 10 

Ezekiel 13:22

Context
13:22 This is because you have disheartened the righteous person with lies (although I have not grieved him), and because you have encouraged the wicked person not to turn from his evil conduct and preserve his life.

Ezekiel 30:22

Context
30:22 Therefore this is what the sovereign Lord says: Look, 11  I am against 12  Pharaoh king of Egypt, and I will break his arms, the strong arm and the broken one, and I will make the sword drop from his hand.

Ezekiel 33:9

Context
33:9 But if you warn the wicked man to change his behavior, 13  and he refuses to change, 14  he will die for his iniquity, but you have saved your own life.

Ezekiel 33:13

Context
33:13 Suppose I tell the righteous that he will certainly live, but he becomes confident in his righteousness and commits iniquity. None of his righteous deeds will be remembered; because of the iniquity he has committed he will die.

Ezekiel 34:12

Context
34:12 As a shepherd seeks out his flock when he is among his scattered sheep, so I will seek out my flock. I will rescue them from all the places where they have been scattered on a cloudy, dark day. 15 

1 tn See Ezek 1:4.

2 tc The LXX lacks this phrase. Its absence from the LXX may be explained as a case of haplography resulting from homoioteleuton, skipping from כְּמַרְאֵה (kÿmareh) to מִמַּרְאֵה (mimmareh). On the other hand, the LXX presents a much more balanced verse structure when it is recognized that the final words of this verse belong in the next sentence.

3 tc The translation follows the LXX for the first line of the verse, although the LXX has lost the second line due to homoioteleuton (similar endings of the clauses). The MT reads “The seller will not return to the sale.” This Hebrew reading has been construed as a reference to land redemption, the temporary sale of the use of property, with property rights returned to the seller in the year of Jubilee. But the context has no other indicator that land redemption is in view. If correct, the LXX evidence suggests that one of the cases of “the customer” has been replaced by “the seller” in the MT, perhaps due to hoimoioarcton (similar beginnings of the words).

4 tn The Hebrew word refers to the din or noise made by a crowd, and by extension may refer to the crowd itself.

5 tn Or “in their punishment.” The phrase “in/for [a person’s] iniquity” occurs fourteen times in Ezekiel: here and in v. 16; 3:18, 19; 4:17; 18:17, 18, 19, 20; 24:23; 33:6, 8, 9; 39:23. The Hebrew word for “iniquity” may also mean the “punishment for iniquity.”

6 tn The word הִנֵּה (hinneh, traditionally “behold”) indicates becoming aware of something and has been translated here as a verb (so also throughout the chapter).

7 tc The MT reads “fire” rather than “man,” the reading of the LXX. The nouns are very similar in Hebrew.

8 tc The MT reads “what appeared to be his waist and downwards was fire.” The LXX omits “what appeared to be,” reading “from his waist to below was fire.” Suggesting that “like what appeared to be” belongs before “fire,” D. I. Block (Ezekiel [NICOT], 1:277) points out the resulting poetic symmetry of form with the next line as followed in the translation here.

9 tc The LXX omits “like a brightness.”

10 tn See Ezek 1:4.

11 tn The word h!nn@h indicates becoming aware of something and has been translated here as a verb.

12 tn Or “I challenge you.” The phrase “I am against you” may be a formula for challenging someone to combat or a duel. See D. I. Block, Ezekiel (NICOT), 1:201-2, and P. Humbert, “Die Herausforderungsformel ‘h!nn#n' ?l?K>,’” ZAW 45 (1933): 101-8.

13 tn Heb “from his way to turn from it.”

14 tn Heb “and he does not turn from his way.”

15 sn The imagery may reflect the overthrow of the Israelites by the Babylonians in 587/6 b.c.



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