Jeremiah 48:26-27
Context48:26 “Moab has vaunted itself against me.
So make him drunk with the wine of my wrath 1
until he splashes 2 around in his own vomit,
until others treat him as a laughingstock.
48:27 For did not you people of Moab laugh at the people of Israel?
Did you think that they were nothing but thieves, 3
that you shook your head in contempt 4
every time you talked about them? 5
Jeremiah 48:39
Context48:39 Oh, how shattered Moab will be!
Oh, how her people will wail!
Oh, how she will turn away 6 in shame!
Moab will become an object of ridicule,
a terrifying sight to all the nations that surround her.”
1 tn Heb “Make him drunk because he has magnified himself against the
2 tn The meaning of this word is uncertain. It is usually used of clapping the hands or the thigh in helpless anger or disgust. Hence J. Bright (Jeremiah [AB], 321) paraphrases “shall vomit helplessly.” HALOT 722 s.v. II סָפַק relates this to an Aramaic word and see a homonym meaning “vomit” or “spew out.” The translation is that of BDB 706 s.v. סָפַק Qal.3, “splash (fall with a splash),” from the same root that refers to slapping or clapping the thigh.
3 tn Heb “were they caught among thieves?”
4 tn Heb “that you shook yourself.” But see the same verb in 18:16 in the active voice with the object “head” in a very similar context of contempt or derision.
5 tc The reading here presupposes the emendation of דְבָרֶיךָ (dÿvarekha, “your words”) to דַבֶּרְךָ (dabberkha, “your speaking”), suggested by BHS (cf. fn c) on the basis of one of the Greek versions (Symmachus). For the idiom cf. BDB 191 s.v. דַּי 2.c.α.
6 tn Heb “turn her back.”