To: Quix
This is also the chapter about Sept 11 2001, see verse 25,
"In the day of great Slaughter, when the Two Towers fall..."
Plurals in Hebrew mean TWO, unless some other number or a word such as Many, is given.
124 posted on
02/15/2004 7:25:16 PM PST by
Chris Talk
(What Earth now is, Mars once was. What Mars now is, Earth will become.)
To: Chris Talk
Thanks.
THE MESSAGE version of 27-28 Isaiah 30:
Look, God's on his way, and from a long way off!
Smoking with anger, immense as he comes into view,
Words steaming from his mouth, searing, indicting words!
A torrent of words, a flash flood of words sweeping everyone into the vortex of his words.
He'll shake down the nations in a sieve of destruction, herd them into a dead end.
Dake's annotation: "The name of the lord" is sometimes put for the Lord, Himself. Here it speaks of the coming of Jehovah from heaven to destroy AntiChrist and the kings of the earth for their tribulation upon His people, Jews and saints (v27; 63:1-5; Ezek. 38-39; Joel 2-3; Zech. 14: Mat 25:31-46; Jude 14-15; Rev 19
Thompson Chain 25:14 Of the Lord, Mighty.
Chris, could you offer a ref elaborating on your translation of NAME?
That's the best I can do from my sources at hand.
135 posted on
02/15/2004 7:45:11 PM PST by
Quix
(Choose this day whom U will serve: Shrillery & demonic goons or The King of Kings and Lord of Lords)
To: Chris Talk
Plurals in Hebrew mean TWO, unless some other number or a word such as Many, is given. Not really. Nouns in Hebrew can be singular, dual, or plural. Singular = one. Dual = two. Plural = more than one (can be two or three or many). You have to check the context.
221 posted on
02/17/2004 3:40:45 PM PST by
SWake
("Estrada was savaged by liars and abandoned by cowards." Mark Davis, WBAP, 09/09/2003)
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