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Alkitab Terjemahan Lama
Yehezkiel 12:4
Bible Study Resources
Concordances:
- Nave'sDictionaries:
- BridgewayEncyclopedias:
- InternationalParallel Translations
Bawalah barang-barangmu itu ke luar seperti barang-barang seorang buangan pada siang hari di hadapan mata mereka; dan engkau sendiri harus keluar pada malam hari di hadapan mata mereka, seperti seorang yang harus keluar dan pergi ke pembuangan.
Bawalah barang-barangmu itu ke luar seperti barang-barang seorang buangan pada siang hari di hadapan mata mereka; dan engkau sendiri harus keluar pada malam hari di hadapan mata mereka, seperti seorang yang harus keluar dan pergi ke pembuangan.
Bible Verse Review
from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge
at even: Ezekiel 12:12, 2 Kings 25:4, Jeremiah 39:4, Jeremiah 52:7
they that go forth into: Heb. the goings forth of
Reciprocal: Genesis 45:20 - stuff Jeremiah 46:19 - furnish thyself to go into captivity Ezekiel 12:3 - stuff
Gill's Notes on the Bible
Then shall thou bring forth thy stuff by day in their sight,.... Bring it forth, that they may be spectators of it; and "by day", that it might be manifest to them what was carried out; and this day by day, till all was removed:
as stuff for removing; that is intended to be removed from one place to another, and is carried away in the daytime, in the view of everyone:
and thou shall go forth at even in their sight; as a man, having removed his goods in the daytime, goes forth himself at evening: this denotes the flight of Zedekiah from Jerusalem in the night, Jeremiah 39:4;
as they that go forth into captivity: with a sorrowful countenance, in a mournful habit, and with airs and gestures showing anger, anxiety, and distress; with a bundle on their shoulders, and a staff in their hands.
Barnes' Notes on the Bible
The particulars which Ezekiel here foretold actually occurred (compare 2 Kings 25:4; Jeremiah 39:4); but at this time Zedekiah seemed to be prosperous, and the Jews at Jerusalem expected, it is clear, a long continuance of his prosperity (see Ezekiel 17:1 note).
The prophetic character of the passage is undoubted (the prophet is declared to be “a sign,” Ezekiel 12:6) - the genuineness of the book and of the position of the passage in the book, are beyond dispute; in the historical event we have an exact fulfillment. The only legitimate inference is that the prophet received his knowledge from above.