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Jeremiah 13:6

Context
13:6 Many days later the Lord said to me, “Go at once to Perath and get 1  the shorts I ordered you to bury there.”

Jeremiah 25:14

Context
25:14 For many nations and great kings will make slaves of the king of Babylon and his nation 2  too. I will repay them for all they have done!’” 3 

Jeremiah 28:8

Context
28:8 From earliest times, the prophets who preceded you and me invariably 4  prophesied war, disaster, 5  and plagues against many countries and great kingdoms.

Jeremiah 50:41

Context

50:41 “Look! An army is about to come from the north.

A mighty nation and many kings 6  are stirring into action

in faraway parts of the earth.

1 tn Heb “Get from there.” The words “from there” are not necessary to the English sentence. They would lead to a redundancy later in the verse, i.e., “from there…bury there.”

2 tn Heb “make slaves of them.” The verb form here indicates that the action is as good as done (the Hebrew prophetic perfect). For the use of the verb rendered “makes slaves” see parallel usage in Lev 25:39, 46 (cf. BDB 713 s.v. עָבַד 3).

3 tn Heb “according to their deeds and according to the work of their hands.” The two phrases are synonymous; it would be hard to represent them both in translation without being redundant. The translation attempts to represent them by the qualifier “all” before the first phrase.

4 tn The word “invariably” is not in the text but is implicit in the context and in the tense of the Hebrew verb. It is supplied in the translation for clarity and to help bring out the contrast in the next verse.

5 tc Many Hebrew mss read “starvation/famine” which is the second member of a common triad “sword, famine, and plague” in Jeremiah. This triad occurs thirteen times in the book and undoubtedly influenced a later scribe to read “starvation [= famine]” here. For this triad see the note on 14:14. The words “disaster and plagues” are missing in the LXX.

6 sn A mighty nation and many kings is an allusion to the Medo-Persian empire and the vassal kings who provided forces for the Medo-Persian armies.



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