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(0.30) (Jer 27:19)

tn The words “movable bronze” are not in the text. They have been supplied in the translation to help identify the referent. See the study note for further reference.

(0.30) (Jer 27:19)

tn The words “two bronze” are not in the text. They have been supplied in the translation to help identify the referent.

(0.30) (Jer 27:19)

tn The words “the large bronze basin called” are not in the text. They have been supplied in the translation to help identify the referent.

(0.30) (Jer 25:27)

tn Heb “Tell them, ‘Thus says the Lord….’” The translation is intended to eliminate one level of imbedded quotation marks to help avoid confusion.

(0.30) (Jer 25:28)

tn Heb “Tell them, ‘Thus says the Lord…’” The translation is intended to eliminate one level of imbedded quote marks to help avoid confusion.

(0.30) (Jer 22:20)

sn If the passages in this section are chronologically ordered, this refers to the help that Jehoiakim relied on when he rebelled against Nebuchadnezzar.

(0.30) (Jer 13:16)

tn Heb “you stumble on the mountains at twilight.” The added words are again supplied in the translation to help explain the metaphor to the uninitiated reader.

(0.30) (Isa 45:22)

tn The Niphal imperative with prefixed vav (ו) indicates purpose after the preceding imperative. The Niphal probably has a tolerative sense, “allow yourselves to be delivered, accept help.”

(0.30) (Isa 38:3)

tn Heb “walked before you.” For a helpful discussion of the background and meaning of this Hebrew idiom, see M. Cogan and H. Tadmor, II Kings (AB), 254.

(0.30) (Pro 31:6)

sn Wine and beer should be given to those distressed and dying in order to ease their suffering and help them forget.

(0.30) (Pro 11:7)

tn The pronoun “his” does not occur in the Hebrew text, but has been added to help make sense of the Masoretic text.

(0.30) (Psa 135:18)

sn Because the idols are lifeless, they cannot help their worshipers in times of crisis. Consequently the worshipers end up as dead as the gods in which they trust.

(0.30) (Psa 121:1)

tn The Hebrew term מֵאַיִן (meʾayin) is interrogative, not relative, in function. Rather than directly stating that his source of help descends from the hills, the psalmist is asking, “From where does my help come?” Nevertheless, the first line does indicate that he is looking toward the hills for help, probably indicating that he is looking up toward the sky, or up toward the temple, in anticipation of supernatural intervention. The psalmist assumes the dramatic role of one needing help. He answers his own question in v. 2.

(0.30) (Psa 115:8)

sn Because the idols are lifeless, they cannot help their worshipers in times of crisis. Consequently the worshipers end up as dead as the gods in which they trust.

(0.30) (Psa 70:1)

sn Psalm 70. This psalm is almost identical to Ps 40:13-17. The psalmist asks for God’s help and for divine retribution against his enemies.

(0.30) (Psa 59:4)

tn Heb “arise to meet me and see.” The Hebrew verb קָרָא (qaraʾ, “to meet; to encounter”) here carries the nuance of “to help.”

(0.30) (Psa 22:1)

sn From the psalmist’s perspective it seems that God has abandoned him, for he fails to answer his cry for help (vv. 1b-2).

(0.30) (Psa 9:12)

tn Heb “the cry for help of the oppressed.” In this context the “oppressed” are the psalmist and those he represents, whom the hostile nations have threatened.

(0.30) (Job 30:13)

tn The sense of “restraining” for “helping” was proposed by Dillmann and supported by G. R. Driver (see AJSL 52 [1935/36]: 163).

(0.30) (Job 10:2)

tn The Hiphil imperative of יָדַע (yadaʿ) would more literally be “cause me to know.” It is a plea for God to help him understand the afflictions.



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