2 Chronicles 16:10
wroth.25:16; 26:19; 2Sa 12:13; 24:10-14; Ps 141:5; Pr 9:7-9put him.18:26; Jer 20:2; 29:26; Mt 14:3,4; Lu 3:20; Ac 16:23,24oppressed. Heb. crushed.Job 20:19; *marg:Isa 51:23; Jer 51:34; La 3:34the same time.2Sa 11:4; 12:312 Chronicles 18:25-27
and carry him back.8; Jer 37:15-21; 38:6,7; Ac 24:25-27 Put.15; 16:10; 1Ki 22:26-28; Jer 20:2,3; Mt 5:12; Lu 3:19,20; Ac 5:182Co 11:23; Re 11:10this fellow.1Sa 25:21; Mt 12:24; Lu 23:2; Ac 22:22bread of affliction.Ps 80:5; 102:9; Isa 30:20until I return.De 29:19; Ps 10:5; Pr 14:16; 1Th 5:2,3 If.Nu 16:29; Am 9:10; Ac 13:10,11Hearken.Mt 13:9; 15:10; Mr 7:14; Lu 20:45,46Jeremiah 20:2
smote.1:19; 19:14,15; 26:8; 29:26; 36:26; 37:15,16; 38:6; 1Ki 22:272Ch 16:10; 24:21; Am 7:10-13; Mt 5:10-12; 21:35; 23:34-37; Ac 4:3Ac 5:18,40; 7:52; 16:22-24; Heb 11:36,37; Re 2:10; 17:6the stocks.{Hammahpecheth,} from {haphach,} "to overturn, subvert, distort," generally denotes an overthrow, (De 29:22. Isa 1:7; 10:19,) and seems to signify here a sort of stocks, by which the limbs were distorted into uneasy postures. So the Chaldee, {keephtha} and Jerome, {nervus,} which he explains in his comment as "a kind of wooden fetter, into which the feet were thrust, {vinculi lignei genus, cui pedes inseruntur.} Some learned men understand it as merely signifying a place of confinement, or house of correction; but the word is never used for any of the prisons into which the prophet was afterwards cast; and the punishment seems to have been public and ignominious. in the high.37:13; 38:7; Zec 14:10Jeremiah 29:26
officers.20:1,2; 2Ki 11:15,18; Ac 4:1; 5:24for every.2Ki 9:11; Ho 9:7; Mr 3:21; Joh 10:20; Ac 26:11,24; 2Co 5:13-15and maketh.27; De 13:1-5; Zec 13:3-6; Mt 21:23; Joh 8:53; 10:33that thou.20:1,2; 38:6,28; 2Ch 16:10; 18:26; Ac 5:18; 16:24; 2Co 11:33; Re 2:10Jeremiah 37:15
the princes.20:1-3; 26:16; Mt 21:35; 23:34; 26:67,68; Lu 20:10,11; 22:64Joh 18:22; Ac 5:28,40; 16:22-24; 23:2,3; 2Co 11:23-27Heb 11:36-38put.Ge 39:20; 2Ch 16:10; 18:26; Ac 5:18; 12:4-6; Re 2:10in the.20; 38:6,26Jeremiah 38:6
took.37:21; Ps 109:5; Lu 3:19,20into.37:16; La 3:55; Ac 16:24; 2Co 4:8,9; Heb 10:36Hammelech. or, the king.36:26and they.11,12And in.This dungeon, which seems to have belonged to one of Zedekiah's sons, appears to have been a most dreadful place; the horrors of which were probably augmented by the cruelty of the jailor. "The eastern people," observes Sir J. Chardin, "have not different prisons for the different classes of criminals; the judges do not trouble themselves about where the prisoners are confined, or how they are treated, considering it merely as a place of safety; and all that they require of the jailor is, that the prisoner be forthcoming when called for. As to the rest, he is master to do as he pleases; to treat him well or ill; to put him in irons or not; to shut him up close, or hold him in easier restraint; to admit people to him, or to suffer nobody to see him. If the jailor and his servants have large fees, let the person be the greatest rascal in the world, he shall be lodged in the jailor's own apartment, and the best part of it; and on the contrary, if those that have imprisoned a man give the jailor greater presents, or that he has a greater regard for them, he will treat the prisoner with the greatest inhumanity." This adds a double energy to those passages which speak of "the sighing of the prisoner," and to Jeremiah's supplicating that he might not be remanded to the dungeon of Jonathan. (ver. 26; ch. 37:20.) 22; Ge 37:24; Ps 40:2; 69:2,14,15; La 3:52-55; Zec 9:11Lamentations 3:53-55
cut.Jer 37:20; 38:6,9and.Da 6:17; Mt 27:60,66 Waters.Ps 18:4; 69:1,2,15; 124:4,5; Jon 2:3-5I said.18; Job 17:11-16; Ps 31:22; Isa 38:10-13; Eze 37:11; 2Co 1:8-10 2Ch 33:11,12; Ps 18:5,6; 40:1,2; 69:13-18; 116:3,4; 130:1,2Ps 142:3-7; Jer 38:6; Jon 2:2-4; Ac 16:24-28
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