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(1.00) (Act 7:42)

tn Or “stars.”

(0.80) (Psa 148:3)

tn Heb “stars of light.”

(0.70) (Mat 2:9)

tn Grk “and behold the star.”

(0.70) (Job 22:12)

tn Heb “head of the stars.”

(0.60) (Phi 2:15)

tn Or “as stars in the universe.”

(0.43) (Job 3:9)

tn Heb “the stars of its dawn.” The word נֶשֶׁף (neshef) can mean “twilight” or “dawn.” In this context the morning stars are in mind. Job wishes that the morning stars—that should announce the day—go out.

(0.43) (Gen 1:16)

tn Heb “and the stars.” Now the term “stars” is added as a third object of the verb “made.” Perhaps the language is phenomenological, meaning that the stars appeared in the sky from this time forward.

(0.40) (Rev 2:1)

sn On seven stars in his right hand see 1:16.

(0.40) (Neh 4:21)

tn Heb “from the coming up of the dawn till the coming forth of the stars.”

(0.35) (Rev 8:11)

tn Here καί (kai) has been translated as “so” to indicate the implied result of the star falling on the waters.

(0.35) (Isa 14:13)

sn In Canaanite mythology the stars of El were astral deities under the authority of the high god El.

(0.30) (Rev 12:1)

sn Sunmoonstars. This imagery is frequently identified with the nation Israel because of Joseph’s dream in Gen 37.

(0.30) (Num 24:17)

sn The “scepter” is metonymical for a king who will rise to power. NEB strangely rendered this as “comet” to make a parallel with “star.”

(0.28) (Rev 8:11)

sn Wormwood refers to a particularly bitter herb with medicinal value. According to L&N 3.21, “The English term wormwood is derived from the use of the plant as a medicine to kill intestinal worms.” This remark about the star’s name is parenthetical in nature.

(0.28) (Dan 8:10)

sn In prescientific Israelite thinking the stars were associated with the angelic members of God’s heavenly assembly. See Judg 5:20; Job 38:7; Isa 40:26. In west Semitic mythology the stars were members of the high god’s divine assembly (see Isa 14:13).

(0.28) (Ecc 12:2)

tn Heb “the light and the moon and the stars.” The phrase “the light and the moon” is a hendiadys (two separate terms denoting one idea) or perhaps even a hendiatris (three separate terms denoting one idea) for “the light of the moon and stars” (e.g., Gen 1:14).

(0.28) (Job 38:15)

sn What is active at night, the violence symbolized by the raised arm, is broken with the dawn. G. R. Driver thought the whole verse referred to stars, and that the arm is the navigator’s term for the line of stars (“Two astronomical passages in the Old Testament,” JTS 4 [1953]: 208-12).

(0.26) (Jud 1:13)

sn The imagery of a star seems to fit the nautical theme that Jude is developing. Stars were of course the guides to sailors at night, just as teachers are responsible to lead the flock through a benighted world. But false teachers, as wayward stars, are not fixed and hence offer unreliable, even disastrous guidance. They are thus both the dangerous reefs on which the ships could be destroyed and the false guides, leading them into these rocks. There is a special irony that these lights will be snuffed out, reserved for the darkest depths of eternal darkness.

(0.26) (Job 38:7)

sn The expression “morning stars” (Heb “stars of the morning”) is here placed in parallelism to the angels, “the sons of God.” It may refer to the angels under the imagery of the stars, or, as some prefer, it may poetically include all creation. There is a parallel also with the foundation of the temple which was accompanied by song (see Ezra 3:10, 11). But then the account of the building of the original tabernacle was designed to mirror creation (see M. Fishbane, Biblical Text and Texture).

(0.25) (Rev 22:16)

tn On this expression BDAG 892 s.v. πρωϊνός states, “early, belonging to the morning ὁ ἀστὴρ ὁ πρ. the morning star, Venus Rv 2:28; 22:16.”



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