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Český ekumenický překlad
Jeremiáš 1:13
Bible Study Resources
Concordances:
- Nave'sDictionaries:
- EastonEncyclopedias:
- InternationalParallel Translations
Opět stalo se slovo Hospodinovo ke mně po druhé, řkoucí: Co vidíš? I řekl jsem: Vidím hrnec, an vře, a přední strana jeho k straně půlnoční.
Bible Verse Review
from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge
the second time: Genesis 41:32, 2 Corinthians 13:1, 2 Corinthians 13:2
I see: Ezekiel 11:3, Ezekiel 11:7, Ezekiel 24:3-14
toward the north: Heb. from the face of the north
Reciprocal: Job 41:20 - General Jeremiah 4:6 - for I will Ezekiel 1:4 - a whirlwind
Gill's Notes on the Bible
And the word of the Lord came unto me the second time,.... In the same vision:
saying, what seest thou? besides the almond tree rod; which perhaps was now removed out of sight, and another object appears:
and I said, I see a seething pot; a pot with fire under it, boiling and bubbling up:
and the face thereof was towards the north; either the mouth of the pot where it boiled up, which might be turned to the north in the vision; or that side of the pot, as Kimchi thinks, on which the liquor was poured out; it may be that side of it on which the fire was put to cause it to boil; and so denotes from what quarter the fire came, and was put under it, and the wind that blew it up. The Targum paraphrases the words thus,
"and I said, I see a king boiling as a pot, and the banner of his army, which was brought and came from the north.''
The explanation follows:
Barnes' Notes on the Bible
The first vision was for the support of the prophetâs own faith during his long struggle with his countrymen: the second explains to him the general nature of his mission. He was to be the bearer of tidings of a great national calamity about to break forth item the north. He sees a caldron. It was a vessel of metal Ezekiel 24:11, large enough to prepare the meal of a numerous community 2 Kings 4:38, and broad at the top, as it was also used for washing purposes Psalms 60:8. This caldron was boiling furiously.
The face ... - More correctly the margin, i. e toward the south. We must suppose this caldron set upon a pile of inflammable materials. As they consume it settles down unevenly, with the highest side toward the north, so that its face is turned the other way and looks southward. Should it still continue so to settle, the time must finally come when it will be overturned, and will pour the whole mass of its boiling contents upon the south.
Clarke's Notes on the Bible
Verse Jeremiah 1:13. A seething pot - toward the north. — We find, from Ezekiel, Ezekiel 24:3, c., that a boiling pot was an emblem of war, and the desolations it produces. Some have thought that by the seething pot Judea is intended, agitated by the invasion of the Chaldeans, whose land lay north of Judea. But Dr. Blayney contends that ××¤× × ×¦×¤×× × mippeney tsaphonah should be translated, From the face of the north, as it is in the margin for, from the next verse, it appears that the evil was to come from the north; and therefore the steam, which was designed as an emblem of that evil, must have arisen from that quarter also. The pot denotes the empire of the Babylonians and Chaldeans lying to the north of Judea, and pouring forth its multitudes like a thick vapour, to overspread the land. Either of these interpretations will suit the text.