Second Sunday after Easter
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Isaiah 23:10
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- InternationalParallel Translations
Overflow your land like the Nile, daughter of Tarshish;there is no longer anything to restrain you.
Pass through your land as the Nile, daughter of Tarshish; there is no restraint any more.
Pass through thy land as a river, O daughter of Tarshish: there is no more strength.
Cross over your land like the Nile, O daughter of Tarshish; there is no restraint anymore.
Overflow your land like the Nile, you daughter of Tarshish, There is no more restraint.
Go through your land, people of Tarshish, like the Nile goes through Egypt. There is no harbor for you now!
Overflow your land like [the overflow of] the Nile, O Daughter of Tarshish; There is no more restraint [on you to make you pay tribute to Tyre].
Pass through your land as the Nile, daughter of Tarshish; there is no restraint any more.
Passe through thy lande like a flood to the daughter of Tarshish: there is no more strength.
Overflow your land like the Nile, O daughter of Tarshish;There is no more restraint.
Overflow your land like the Nile, O daughter of Tarshish; there is no longer a harbor.
People of Tyre, your harbor is destroyed! You will have to become farmers just like the Egyptians.
People of Tarshish! Nothing restricts you now. You can flow freely over your land just like the Nile River.
Overflow thy land like the Nile, daughter of Tarshish: there is no more restraint.
Pass through your land like a river, O daughter of Tarshish; there is no one to drive you away.
Go and farm the land, you people in the colonies in Spain! There is no one to protect you any more.
Cross over your own land like the Nile, daughter of Tarshish; there is no longer a harbor.
Pass through your land as the Nile, O daughter of Tarshish; there is no more strength.
Go thorow thy londe (o thou doughter of the see) as men go ouer the water, and there is not a gyrdle more.
Pass through thy land as the Nile, O daughter of Tarshish; there is no restraint any more.
Let your land be worked with the plough, O daughter of Tarshish; there is no longer any harbour.
Overflow thy land as the Nile, O daughter of Tarshish! there is no girdle any more.
Passe through thy land as a riuer O daughter of Tarshish: there is no more strength.
Get thee out of thy lande like a fludde vnto the daughter of Tharsis, for thou hast no more strength.
Till thy land; for ships no more come out of Carthage.
Pass through thy land as the Nile, O daughter of Tarshish; there is no girdle about thee any more.
Thou douyter of the see, passe thi lond as a flood; a girdil is no more to thee.
Pass through your land as the Nile, O daughter of Tarshish; there is no restraint anymore.
Pass through thy land as a river, O daughter of Tarshish: [there is] no more strength.
Daughter Tarshish, travel back to your land, as one crosses the Nile; there is no longer any marketplace in Tyre.
Overflow through your land like the River, [fn] O daughter of Tarshish;There is no more strength.
Come, people of Tarshish, sweep over the land like the flooding Nile, for Tyre is defenseless.
Flow over your land like the Nile, O people of Tarshish. There is nothing holding you back any more.
Cross over to your own land, O ships of Tarshish; this is a harbor no more.
Pass through thy land as the Nile, - O daughter of Tarshish, there is no restraint any longer!
Pass thy land as a river, O daughter of the sea, thou hast a girdle no more.
Overflow your land like the Nile, O daughter of Tarshish; there is no restraint any more.
Pass through thy land as a brook, Daughter of Tarshish, there is no more a girdle.
Overflow your land like the Nile, O daughter of Tarshish, There is no more restraint.
Contextual Overview
Bible Verse Review
from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge
O daughter: Isaiah 23:12
no more: Isaiah 23:14, 1 Samuel 28:20, Job 12:21, Lamentations 1:6, Haggai 2:22, Romans 5:6
strength: Heb. girdle, Psalms 18:32
Reciprocal: 1 Kings 10:22 - Tharshish 2 Kings 19:21 - the daughter Job 24:18 - swift Isaiah 23:6 - Pass Ezekiel 26:18 - at thy Ezekiel 27:12 - General Jonah 1:3 - Tarshish
Cross-References
Sarah lived to be 127 years old.
Then he left his dead wife and went to talk to the Hittites. He said,
"I am only a foreigner staying in your country. I have no place to bury my wife. Please give me some land so that I can bury her."
The servant took ten of Abraham's camels and left that place. The servant carried with him many different kinds of beautiful gifts. He went to Mesopotamia, to Nahor's city.
Hamor and Shechem went to the meeting place of their city. They spoke to the men of the city and said,
All the men who heard this in the meeting place agreed with Hamor and Shechem. And every man was circumcised at that time.
"Those were the days when I went to the city gate and sat in the public meeting of the elders.
Then he will give wisdom to the judges who rule his people. He will give strength to the people who are in battles at the city gates.
Jesus got into a boat and went back across the lake to his own town.
Gill's Notes on the Bible
Pass through thy land as a river, O daughter of Tarshish,.... Or, "of the sea", as the Vulgate Latin; meaning Tyre, which was situated in the sea, and did, as it were, spring from it, and was fortified by it, and supported by ships of merchandise on it, from various places; but now, being about to be destroyed, the inhabitants of it are called upon to pass through it, and get out of it as fast as they could, even as swiftly as a river runs, and in great abundance or multitudes. Kimchi thinks the Tyrians are bid to pass to the daughter of Tarshish, that is, to Tarshish itself, to make their escape out of their own land, and flee thither for safety; this the accents will not admit of, there being an "athnach" upon the word "river"; rather the merchants of Tarshish, that were in Tyre, are exhorted to depart to their own land with all possible haste, lest they should be involved in its ruin; though the Targum inclines to the other sense,
"pass out of thy land, as the waters of a river flee to a province of the sea:''
[there is] no more strength; in Tyre, to defend themselves against the enemy, to protect their trade, and the merchants that traded with them; or, "no more girdle" e; about it; no more girt about with walls, ramparts, and other fortifications, or with soldiers and shipping, or with the sea, with which it was encompassed, while an island, but now no more, being joined to the continent by the enemy. Some think, because girdles were a part of merchandise, Proverbs 31:24, that this is said to express the meanness and poverty of the place, that there was not so much as a girdle left in it; rather that it was stripped of its power and authority, of which the girdle was a sign; see Isaiah 22:21.
e אין מזח עוד "nulla est zona amplius", Junius Tremellius, Piscator "non est cingulum amplius", Cocceius.
Barnes' Notes on the Bible
Pass through thy land as a river - This verse has been very variously understood. Vitringa supposes that it means that all that held the city together - its fortifications, walls, etc., would be laid waste, and that as a river flows on without obstruction, so the inhabitants would be scattered far and near. Everything, says he, would be leveled, and the field would not be distinguishable from the city. Grotius thus renders it: ‘Pass to some one of thy colonies; as a river flows from the fountain to the sea, so do you go to the ocean.’ Lowth understands it also as relating to the time of the destruction of Tyre, and to the escape which the inhabitants would then make.
‘Overflow thy land like a river,
O daughter of Tarshish; the mound (that kept in thy waters)
Is no more.’
The Septuagint renders it, ‘Cultivate (Ἐργάζον Ergazon) thy land, for the ships shall no more come from Carthage’ (Καρχηδόνος Karchēdonos) Probably the true meaning is that which refers it to the time of the siege, and to the fact that the inhabitants would seek other places when their defense was destroyed. That is, ‘Pass through thy territories, thy dependent cities, states, colonies, and seek a refuge there; or wander there like a flowing stream.’
As a river - Perhaps the allusion is to the Nile, as the word יאר ye'or is usually given to the Nile; or it may be to any river that flows on with a mighty current when all obstructions are removed. The idea is, that as waters flow on when the barriers are removed, so the inhabitants of Tyre would pour forth from their city. The idea is not so much that of rapidity, as it is they should go like a stream that has no dikes, barriers, or obstacles now to confine its flowing waters.
O daughter of Tarshish - Tyre; so called either because it was in some degree sustained and supplied by the commerce of Tarshish; or because its inhabitants would become the inhabitants of Tarshish, and it is so called by anticipation. The Vulgate renders this, “Filia marias” - ‘Daughter of the sea. Juntos supposes that the prophet addresses those who were then in the city who were natives of Tarshish, and exhorts them to flee for safety to their own city.
There is no more strength - Margin, ‘Girdle.’ The word מזח mēzach means properly a girdle Job 12:31. It is applied to that which binds or secures the body; and may be applied here perhaps to that which secured or bound the city of Tyre; that is, its fortifications, its walls, its defenses. They would all be leveled; and nothing would secure the inhabitants, as they would flow forth as waters that are pent up do, when every barrier is removed.
Clarke's Notes on the Bible
Verse Isaiah 23:10. O daughter of Tarshish — Tyre is called the daughter of Tarshish; perhaps because, Tyre being ruined, Tarshish was become the superior city, and might be considered as the metropolis of the Tyrian people; or rather because of the close connexion and perpetual intercourse between them, according to that latitude of signification in which the Hebrews use the words son and daughter to express any sort of conjunction and dependence whatever. מזח mezach, a girdle, which collects, binds, and keeps together the loose raiment, when applied to a river, may mean a mound, mole, or artificial dam, which contains the waters and prevents them from spreading abroad. A city taken by siege and destroyed, whose walls are demolished, whose policy is dissolved, whose wealth is dissipated, whose people is scattered over the wide country, is compared to a river whose banks are broken down, and whose waters, let loose and overflowing all the neighbouring plains, are wasted and lost. This may possibly be the meaning of this very obscure verse, of which I can find no other interpretation that is at all satisfactory. - L.