(0.37) | (Mat 13:19) | 2 sn The word of Jesus has the potential to save if it germinates in a person’s heart, something the devil is very much against. |
(0.37) | (Zep 1:8) | 2 sn The very dress of the royal court, foreign styles of clothing, revealed the degree to which Judah had assimilated foreign customs. |
(0.37) | (Mic 3:2) | 5 sn Micah compares the social injustice perpetrated by the house of Jacob/Israel to cannibalism because it threatens the very lives of the oppressed. |
(0.37) | (Eze 21:7) | 2 sn This expression depicts in a very vivid way how they will be overcome with fear. See the note on the same phrase in 7:17. |
(0.37) | (Jer 3:23) | 1 tn Heb “Truly in vain from the hills the noise/commotion [and from] the mountains.” The syntax of the Hebrew sentence is very elliptical here. |
(0.37) | (Pro 6:5) | 2 tc Heb “hand” (so KJV, NAB, NRSV). Some mss and versions have it as “trap,” which may very well represent an interpretation too. |
(0.37) | (Psa 92:5) | 1 tn Heb “very deep [are] your thoughts.” God’s “thoughts” refer here to his moral design of the world, as outlined in vv. 6-15. |
(0.37) | (Psa 6:3) | 1 tn Heb “my being is very terrified.” The suffixed form of נֶפֶשׁ (nefesh, “being”) is often equivalent to a pronoun in poetic texts. |
(0.37) | (2Ch 24:24) | 1 tn Heb “though with a small amount of men the army of Aram came, the Lord gave into their hand an army [that was] very large.” |
(0.37) | (Jdg 11:35) | 1 tn Heb “you have brought me very low,” or “you have knocked me to my knees.” The infinitive absolute precedes the verb for emphasis. |
(0.37) | (Jos 22:5) | 1 tn Heb “But be very careful to do the commandment and the law which Moses, the Lord’s servant, commanded you, to love.” |
(0.37) | (Num 25:3) | 1 sn The evidence indicates that Moab was part of the very corrupt Canaanite world, a world that was given over to the fertility ritual of the times. |
(0.37) | (Num 23:10) | 2 tn The perfect tense can also be classified as a potential nuance. It does not occur very often, but does occur several times. |
(0.37) | (Num 16:30) | 2 tn The figures are personifications, but they vividly describe the catastrophe to follow—which was very much like a mouth swallowing them. |
(0.37) | (Lev 10:16) | 1 sn This is the very same male goat offered in Lev 9:15 (cf. the note on Lev 10:1 above). |
(0.37) | (Exo 12:17) | 1 tn Heb “on the bone of this day.” The expression means “the substance of the day,” the day itself, the very day (S. R. Driver, Exodus, 95). |
(0.37) | (Exo 4:14) | 4 tn The construction uses the Piel infinitive absolute and the Piel imperfect to express the idea that he spoke very well: דַבֵּר יְדַבֵּר (dabber yedabber). |
(0.37) | (Gen 39:17) | 2 sn That Hebrew slave. Now, when speaking to her husband, Potiphar’s wife refers to Joseph as a Hebrew slave, a very demeaning description. |
(0.37) | (Gen 22:2) | 2 sn Take your son…Isaac. The instructions are very clear, but the details are deliberate. With every additional description the commandment becomes more challenging. |
(0.37) | (Gen 19:23) | 1 sn The sun had just risen. There was very little time for Lot to escape between dawn (v. 15) and sunrise (here). |