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Jerome's Latin Vulgate
Ecclesiasticus 24:12
et calamitas opprimet portas.
Bible Study Resources
Concordances:
- Nave'sDictionaries:
- AmericanEncyclopedias:
- TheParallel Translations
Relicta est in urbe solitudo, et calamitas opprimet portas.
Relicta est in urbe solitudo, et in ruinam confracta est porta;
Bible Verse Review
from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge
Isaiah 32:14, Jeremiah 9:11, Lamentations 1:1, Lamentations 1:4, Lamentations 2:9, Lamentations 5:18, Micah 1:9, Micah 1:12, Matthew 22:7
Reciprocal: Isaiah 5:6 - I will lay Isaiah 9:19 - is the land Isaiah 24:10 - city Jeremiah 4:27 - yet Jeremiah 34:22 - and I will Jeremiah 44:2 - a desolation Ezekiel 12:20 - General Amos 5:18 - the day of the Lord is
Gill's Notes on the Bible
In the city is left desolation,.... And nothing else, palaces, houses, and temples burnt, and inhabitants destroyed; none but devils, foul spirits, and hateful and unclean birds, inhabiting it,
Revelation 18:2:
and the gate is smitten with destruction; or "gates", the singular for the plural; none passing and repassing through them, as formerly, and themselves utterly destroyed. This, according to Kimchi, shall be in the days of the Messiah, in the times of Gog and Magog.
Barnes' Notes on the Bible
And the gate is smitten with destruction - The word rendered ‘destruction’ may denote ‘a crash’ (Gesenius). The idea is, that the gates of the city, once so secure, are how battered down and demolished, so that the enemy ran enter freely. Thus far is a description of the calamities that would come upon the nation. The following verses show that, though the desolation would be general, a few of the inhabitants would be left - circumstance thrown in to mitigate the prospect. of the impending ruin.