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(0.30) (Psa 16:5)

tc Heb “you take hold of my lot.” The form תּוֹמִיךְ (tomikh) should be emended to a participle, תוֹמֵךְ (tomekh). The psalmist pictures the Lord as casting his lot (a method used to allot landed property) for him, thus assuring that he will receive a fertile piece of land (see v. 6). As in the previous line, land represents security and economic stability, thus “you make my future secure.”

(0.30) (Jos 1:4)

tn Heb “all the land of the Hittites.” The expression “the land of the Hittites” does not refer to Anatolia (modern Turkey), where the ancient Hittite kingdom of the second millennium b.c. was located, but rather to Syria, the “Hatti land” mentioned in inscriptions of the first millennium b.c. (see HALOT 363-64 s.v. חִתִּי). The phrase is omitted in the LXX and may be a scribal addition.

(0.30) (Exo 6:4)

tn Heb “the land of their sojournings.” The noun מְגֻרִים (megurim) is a reminder that the patriarchs did not receive the promises. It is also an indication that those living in the age of promise did not experience the full meaning of the name of the covenant God. The “land of their sojournings” is the land of Canaan where the family lived (גָּרוּ, garu) as foreigners, without owning property or having the rights of kinship with the surrounding population.

(0.30) (Act 27:5)

tn Grk “the depths,” the deep area of a sea far enough from land that it is not protected by the coast (L&N 1.73).

(0.30) (Act 7:39)

sn To obey. Again the theme of the speech is noted. The nation disobeyed the way of God and opted for Egypt over the promised land.

(0.30) (Act 7:8)

sn God gave…the covenant. Note how the covenant of promise came before Abraham’s entry into the land and before the building of the temple.

(0.30) (Act 5:4)

tn Grk “it”; the referent of the pronoun (the money generated from the sale of the land) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

(0.30) (Act 1:12)

tn Or “from the hill.” The Greek term ὄρος (oros) refers to a relatively high elevation of land in contrast with βουνός (bounos, “hill”).

(0.30) (Luk 14:18)

sn I have bought a field. An examination of newly bought land was a common practice. It was this person’s priority.

(0.30) (Mat 14:24)

tn Grk “The boat was already many stades from the land.” A stade (στάδιον, stadion) was a unit of distance about 607 feet (185 meters) long.

(0.30) (Zec 9:1)

sn The land of Hadrach was a northern region stretching from Aleppo in the north to Damascus in the south (cf. NLT “Aram”).

(0.30) (Zec 2:13)

sn The sense here is that God in heaven is about to undertake an occupation of his earthly realm (v. 12) by restoring his people to the promised land.

(0.30) (Hag 2:4)

tn Heb “the people of the land” (עַם הָאָרֶץ, ʿam haʾarets); this is a technical term referring to free citizens as opposed to slaves.

(0.30) (Amo 8:12)

tn That is, from the Mediterranean Sea in the west to the Dead Sea in the east—namely, across the whole land.

(0.30) (Jer 51:43)

tn Heb “Her towns have become a desolation, a dry land and a desert, a land any man does not live in them [i.e., “her towns”] and a son of man [= human being] does not pass through them.” Here the present translation has followed the suggestion of BHS and a number of the modern commentaries in deleting the second occurrence of the word “land,” in which case the words that follow are not a relative clause but independent statements. A number of modern English versions appear to ignore the third plural feminine suffixes that refer back to the cities and apply the statements that follow to the land.

(0.30) (Jer 50:1)

tn Heb “The word that the Lord spoke concerning Babylon, concerning the land of the Chaldeans, by the hand of Jeremiah the prophet.”

(0.30) (Jer 46:19)

tn Heb “inhabitants of daughter Egypt.” Like the phrase “daughter Zion,” “daughter Egypt” is a poetic personification of the land, here perhaps to stress the idea of defenselessness.

(0.30) (Jer 46:13)

tn Heb “The word that the Lord spoke to the prophet Jeremiah about the coming of Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon to attack the land of Egypt.”

(0.30) (Jer 32:22)

tn For an alternative translation of the expression “a land flowing with milk and honey,” see the translator’s note on 11:5.

(0.30) (Jer 25:12)

tn Heb “the land of the Chaldeans.” See the study note on 21:4 for the use of the term “Chaldeans.”



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