the Week of Proper 6 / Ordinary 11
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Sagradas Escrituras
JeremÃas 51:3
Bible Study Resources
Concordances:
- Nave'sDictionaries:
- AmericanEncyclopedias:
- CondensedParallel Translations
Que no entese el entesador su arco, ni se levante con su coraza; no perdonéis a sus jóvenes; entregad a la destrucción todo su ejército.
Diré al flechero que entesa su arco, y al que se pone orgulloso con su loriga: No perdonéis á sus mancebos, destruid todo su ejército.
Diré al arquero que entesa su arco, y al que se enorgullece en su coraza: No perdonéis a sus jóvenes, destruid todo su ejército.
Bible Verse Review
from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge
let the: Jeremiah 50:14, Jeremiah 50:41, Jeremiah 50:42
brigandine: Jeremiah 46:4
spare: Jeremiah 9:21, Jeremiah 50:27, Jeremiah 50:30, Deuteronomy 32:25, Psalms 137:9, Isaiah 13:10-18, James 2:13
destroy: Jeremiah 50:21
Reciprocal: Isaiah 13:15 - General Isaiah 14:22 - I will Isaiah 21:2 - all the Jeremiah 49:26 - General
Gill's Notes on the Bible
Against [him that] bendeth let the archer bend his bow,.... These are either the words of the Lord to the Medes and Persians, to the archers among them, to bend their bows and level their arrows against the Chaldeans, who had bent their bows and shot their arrows against others; or of the Medes and Persians stirring up one another to draw their bows, and fight manfully against the enemy:
and against [him that] lifteth up himself in his brigandine; or coat of mail; that swaggers about in it, proud of it, and putting his confidence in it, as if out of all danger. The sense is, that they should direct their arrows both against those that were more lightly or more heavily armed; since by them they might do execution among the one and the other:
and spare ye not her young men; because of their youth, beauty, and strength:
destroy ye utterly all her host; her whole army, whether officers or common soldiers; or let them be accoutred in what manner they will. The Targum is,
"consume all her substance.''
Barnes' Notes on the Bible
The man who bends the bow, and the heavy-armed soldier who vaunts himself in his coat of mail (Jeremiah 46:4 note), represent the Babylonians who defend the city.