(1.00) | (Deu 17:8) | 2 tn Heb “between claim and claim.” |
(0.51) | (Psa 49:11) | 2 sn Naming their lands after themselves is a claim of possession. |
(0.51) | (Psa 9:4) | 1 tn Heb “for you accomplished my justice and my legal claim.” |
(0.40) | (Luk 19:39) | 3 sn Teacher, rebuke your disciples. The Pharisees were complaining that the claims were too great. |
(0.40) | (Mic 7:18) | 1 sn The rhetorical question expects the answer, “No one!” The claim is supported by the following description. |
(0.40) | (Job 34:6) | 3 tn Heb “without transgression,” but this is parallel to the first part where the claim is innocence. |
(0.40) | (Job 31:30) | 1 tn This verse would then be a parenthesis in which he stops to claim his innocence. |
(0.40) | (Deu 28:60) | 2 tn Heb “will cling to you” (so NIV); NLT “will claim you.” |
(0.36) | (Luk 22:71) | 2 sn We have heard it ourselves. The Sanhedrin regarded the answer as convicting Jesus. They saw it as blasphemous to claim such intimacy and shared authority with God, a claim so serious and convicting that no further testimony was needed. |
(0.35) | (1Jo 2:11) | 2 sn 1 John 2:3-11. The section 2:3-11 contains three claims to intimate knowledge of God, each introduced by the phrase the one who says (participles in the Greek text) in 2:4, 6, and 9. As with the three claims beginning with “if” in the previous section (1:6, 8, 10), these indirectly reflect the claims of the opponents. Each claim is followed by the author’s evaluation and its implications. |
(0.35) | (Luk 22:70) | 2 sn The members of the council understood the force of the claim and asked Jesus about another title, Son of God. |
(0.35) | (Mat 10:32) | 1 tn Or “confesses”; cf. BDAG 708 s.v. ὁμολογέω 4, “to acknowledge someth., ordinarily in public, acknowledge, claim, profess, praise.” |
(0.35) | (Pro 8:22) | 3 sn The claim of wisdom in this passage is that she was foundational to all that God would do. |
(0.35) | (Job 15:3) | 1 sn Eliphaz draws on Job’s claim with this word (cf. Job 13:3), but will declare it hollow. |
(0.31) | (Luk 23:2) | 2 sn They began to accuse him. There were three charges: (1) disturbing Jewish peace; (2) fomenting rebellion through advocating not paying taxes (a lie—20:20-26); and (3) claiming to be a political threat to Rome, by claiming to be a king, an allusion to Jesus’ messianic claims. The second and third charges were a direct challenge to Roman authority. Pilate would be forced to do something about them. |
(0.30) | (Rev 3:9) | 3 tn Here καί (kai) has been translated as “yet” to indicate the contrast between what these people claimed and what they were. |
(0.30) | (Act 23:9) | 5 sn “We find nothing wrong with this man.” Here is another declaration of innocence. These leaders recognized the possibility that Paul might have the right to make his claim. |
(0.30) | (Act 15:5) | 2 sn The Greek word used here (δεῖ, dei) is a strong term that expresses divine necessity. The claim is that God commanded the circumcision of Gentiles. |
(0.30) | (Joh 8:59) | 2 sn Jesus’ Jewish listeners understood his claim to deity, rejected it, and picked up stones to throw at him for what they considered blasphemy. |
(0.30) | (Luk 23:15) | 1 sn With the statement “he has done nothing,” Pilate makes another claim that Jesus is innocent of any crime worthy of death. |