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(0.30) (Psa 65:5)

sn All the ends of the earth trust in you. This idealistic portrayal of universal worship is typical hymnic hyperbole, though it does anticipate eschatological reality.

(0.30) (Psa 53:4)

tn Heb “the workers of wickedness.” See Pss 5:5; 6:8. Ps 14:4 adds כֹּל (kol, “all of”) before “workers of wickedness.”

(0.30) (Psa 35:28)

tn Heb “all the day your praise.” The verb “proclaim” is understood by ellipsis in the second line (see the previous line).

(0.30) (Psa 25:10)

tn Heb “all the paths of the Lord are faithful and trustworthy.” The Lord’s “paths” refer here to his characteristic actions.

(0.30) (Job 37:7)

tn Heb “by the hand of every man he seals.” This line is intended to mean that with the heavy rains God suspends all agricultural activity.

(0.30) (Job 29:3)

sn Lamp and light are symbols of God’s blessings of life and all the prosperous and good things it includes.

(0.30) (Job 28:5)

sn The verse has been properly understood, on the whole, as comparing the earth above and all its produce with the upheaval down below.

(0.30) (Job 27:18)

tn The Hebrew word is the word for “booth,” as in the Feast of Booths. The word describes something that is flimsy; it is not substantial at all.

(0.30) (Job 26:11)

sn The idea here is that when the earth quakes, or when there is thunder in the heavens, these all represent God’s rebuke, for they create terror.

(0.30) (Job 20:21)

tn Heb “for his eating,” which is frequently rendered “for his gluttony.” It refers, of course, to all the desires he has to take things from other people.

(0.30) (Job 19:27)

tn Heb “fail/grow faint in my breast.” Job is saying that he has expended all his energy with his longing for vindication.

(0.30) (Job 19:5)

sn Job’s friends have been using his shame, his humiliation in all his sufferings, as proof against him in their case.

(0.30) (Job 18:11)

sn Bildad is referring here to all the things that afflict a person and cause terror. It would then be a metonymy of effect, the cause being the afflictions.

(0.30) (Job 18:2)

tn The verb is plural, and so most commentators make it singular. But it seems from the context that Bildad is addressing all of them, and not just Job.

(0.30) (Job 12:8)

tn A. B. Davidson (Job, 90) offers a solution by taking “earth” to mean all the lower forms of life that teem in the earth (a metonymy of subject).

(0.30) (Job 8:2)

sn “These things” refers to all of Job’s speech, the general drift of which seems to Bildad to question the justice of God.

(0.30) (Job 7:17)

tn The verse is a rhetorical question; it is intended to mean that man is too little for God to be making so much over him in all this.

(0.30) (Job 3:12)

sn The sufferer is looking back over all the possible chances of death, including when he was brought forth, placed on the knees or lap, and breastfed.

(0.30) (Est 7:7)

sn There is great irony here in that the man who set out to destroy all the Jews now finds himself begging for his own life from a Jew.

(0.30) (Est 1:20)

tc The phrase “vast though it is” is not included in the LXX, although it is retained by almost all English versions.



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