Isaiah 11:11

set his hand.

60:1-66:24; Le 26:40-42; De 4:27-31; 30:3-6; Ps 68:22; Jer 23:7,8

Jer 30:8-11; 31:36-40; 33:24-26; Eze 11:16-20; 34:23-28; 36:24-28

Eze 37:1-48:35; Ho 1:11; 3:4,5; Joe 3:1-21; Am 9:14,15

Mic 7:14,15; Zec 10:8-12; 12:1-14:21; Ro 11:15,26; 2Co 3:16

from Assyria.

16; 27:12,13; Mic 7:12

Egypt.

19:23; Jer 44:1

Pathros.

Eze 30:14

Cush.

45:14; Ge 10:6,7

Elam.

Ge 10:22; Jer 25:25; Da 8:2

Shinar.

Ge 10:10; 11:2; Zec 5:11

Hamath.

10:9; Jer 49:23; Zec 9:2

the islands.

24:15; 42:4; 66:19; Ge 10:5; Jer 31:10; Eze 27:6; Da 11:18; Zep 2:11

Jeremiah 44:1

1 Jeremiah expresses the desolation of Judah for their idolatry.

11 He prophesies their destruction, who commit idolatry in Egypt.

15 The obstinacy of the Jews;

20 for which Jeremiah threatens them;

29 and for a sign prophesies the destruction of Egypt.

Cir. A.M. 3433. B.C. 571. The word.Dahler supposes this discourse to have been delivered in the seventeenth or eighteenth year after the taking of Jerusalem.

concerning.

42:15-18; 43:5-7

Migdol.

46:14; Ex 14:2; Eze 29:10; *Heb:

Tahpanhes.{Tahpanhes,} rendered [Taphne] and [Taphnai] by the LXX., is no doubt the [Daphnai] of Herodotus, a royal city of Lower Egypt, situated, according to the Itinerary of Antoninus, sixteen miles south from Pelusium, from which it was called Daphnæ Pelusicæ. Forster says that there is now a place situated in the vicinity of Pelusium called Safnas, which may be a vestige of the ancient name. It appears to have been the very first town in Egypt, in the road from Palestine, that afforded tolerable accommodation for the fugitives. It was at this place that, according to Jerome and several of the ancients, tradition says the faithful Jeremiah was stoned to death by these rebellious wretches, for whose welfare he had watched, prayed, and suffered every kind of indignity and hardship.

43:7; Eze 30:18

Tehaphnehes. Noph.

2:16; 46:14,19; Isa 19:13; Eze 30:16

Pathros.

Ge 10:14

Pathrusim.

Isa 11:11; Eze 29:14; 30:14
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