Oxford Biblical Studies Online: Isaiah: Chapter 2 CommentaryOxford University Press
Therefore shall heaven be shaken, And earth leap out of its place, At the fury of the lord of Hosts On the day of His burning wrath.”Isaiah 13:13(The Israel Bible™) A 5.1 magnitude earthquake hit at 5 AM local time on Friday less than 30 miles from the... ...
Isaiah 26:19-21 “Your dead will live; their corpses will rise. You who lie in the dust awake and shout for joy. For your dew is as the dew of the dawn, And the earth will give birth to the departed spirits. Come, my people, enter into your rooms, And close your doors behind ...
— Little is known respecting the circumstances of Isaiah's life. Kimchi (A.D. 1230) says in his commentary on Isa 1:1, "We know not.his race, nor of what tribe he was." His father's name was Amoz (Isa 1:1), whom the fathers of the Church confound with the prophet Amos, ...
Volume 1: Commentary on Isaiah 1–5. By H. G. M. Williamson. The distinguished International Critical Commentary series (ICC), launched in the late nineteenth century and never completed, has been overtaken by the new ICC, which brings to bear on the interpretation of the biblical books the...
Mathew Henry in his famous commentary stated the following about verse 7 of 1 Peter 3: “The reasons are, Because she is the weaker vessel by nature and constitution, and so ought to be defended: but then the wife is, in other and higher respects, equal to her husband; they are heirs...
As in the other volumes of the New International Version Application Commentary, this book, a Silver Medallion award winner, helps the reader not only to understand accurately what the text of Isaiah says, but also what it means and how that meaning can apply to living in the twenty-first ...
Twitter Google Share on Facebook Yahweh (redirected fromBiblical Lord) Thesaurus Encyclopedia Yah·weh (yä′wā, -wĕ)alsoYah·veh(-vā, -vĕ)orJah·veh(yä′vā, -vĕ)orJah·weh(yä′wā, -wĕ) n. A name for God thought to represent the original pronunciation of the Tetra...
Three of the most important Biblical texts from Qumran are: (1) The Isaiah Scroll from Cave 1 which has two different text types, with about 1,375 differences from the MT. (2) The Habakkuk Commentary from Cave 1 which uses the pesher method of interpretation, and the name Yahweh is ...
It can hardly be Petra, as supposed by Vitringa (on Isaiah, i, p. 624), nor the Asor placed by Eusebius 8 miles west of Philadelphia (Hitzig, Jesaias, p. 196), but probably is a designation of the confines of Arabia with south-eastern Palestine, inhabited by nomade tribes dwelling ...