the Week of Proper 15 / Ordinary 20
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Clementine Latin Vulgate
Lamentationes 36:12
Bible Study Resources
Concordances:
- Nave'sDictionaries:
- CharlesEncyclopedias:
- InternationalParallel Translations
Et adducam super vos homines, populum meum Israël,
et hæreditate possidebunt te:
et eris eis in hæreditatem,
et non addes ultra ut absque eis sis.
Et adducam super vos homines, populum meum Israel, et hereditate possidebunt te, et eris eis in hereditatem et non addes ultra ut eos facias absque liberis.
Bible Verse Review
from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge
I will cause: The prophet is still personifying the mountains, valleys, and wastes of Judea.
they shall: Jeremiah 32:15, Jeremiah 32:44, Obadiah 1:17-21
no more: Ezekiel 36:13, Numbers 13:32, Jeremiah 15:7
Reciprocal: Micah 2:10 - it shall Zechariah 8:12 - to possess
Gill's Notes on the Bible
Yea, I will cause men to walk upon you,.... And not beasts, as during the captivity; and that without fear of wild beasts, or any enemy; and not as travellers upon them, but as inhabitants of them; who shall walk to and fro upon them, as the owners of them, and doing their proper business there:
even my people Israel; and them only: some read it, "with my people Israel" i; as if other men, Gentiles called by grace, should dwell with the Jews at this time, particularly at their restoration in the latter day; which may be true, and, which seems to be the sense of the whole sixtieth chapter of Isaiah's prophecy:
and they shall possess thee, and thou shall be their inheritance; that is, thou mountain; a change of number, meaning everyone of the mountains, even the whole land of Canaan, which was given to the Israelites for an inheritance; and was typical of the eternal inheritance in heaven:
and thou shall no more henceforth bereave them; of men, or of children; or be no more the cause of their being childless, or of bereaving them of men; sins committed on the mountains being the cause of provoking the Lord to bereave them; or men should be no more killed upon them, as they had been.
i את עמי ישראל "cum populo meo Israele", Junius & Tremcellius.