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Keluaran 8:8

Konteks

8:8 Then Pharaoh summoned 1  Moses and Aaron and said, “Pray 2  to the Lord that he may take the frogs away 3  from me and my people, and I will release 4  the people that they may sacrifice 5  to the Lord.”

Keluaran 9:27

Konteks

9:27 So Pharaoh sent and summoned Moses and Aaron and said to them, “I have sinned this time! 6  The Lord is righteous, and I and my people are guilty. 7 

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[8:8]  1 tn The verb קָרָא (qara’) followed by the lamed (ל) preposition has the meaning “to summon.

[8:8]  2 tn The verb הַעְתִּירוּ (hatiru) is the Hiphil imperative of the verb עָתַר (’atar). It means “to pray, supplicate,” or “make supplication” – always addressed to God. It is often translated “entreat” to reflect that it is a more urgent praying.

[8:8]  3 tn This form is the jussive with a sequential vav that provides the purpose of the prayer: pray…that he may turn away the frogs.

[8:8]  sn This is the first time in the conflict that Pharaoh even acknowledged that Yahweh existed. Now he is asking for prayer to remove the frogs and is promising to release Israel. This result of the plague must have been an encouragement to Moses.

[8:8]  4 tn The form is the Piel cohortative וַאֲשַׁלְּחָה (vaashallÿkhah) with the vav (ו) continuing the sequence from the request and its purpose. The cohortative here stresses the resolve of the king: “and (then) I will release.”

[8:8]  5 tn Here also the imperfect tense with the vav (ו) shows the purpose of the release: “that they may sacrifice.”

[9:27]  6 sn Pharaoh now is struck by the judgment and acknowledges that he is at fault. But the context shows that this penitence was short-lived. What exactly he meant by this confession is uncertain. On the surface his words seem to represent a recognition that he was in the wrong and Yahweh right.

[9:27]  7 tn The word רָשָׁע (rasha’) can mean “ungodly, wicked, guilty, criminal.” Pharaoh here is saying that Yahweh is right, and the Egyptians are not – so they are at fault, guilty. S. R. Driver says the words are used in their forensic sense (in the right or wrong standing legally) and not in the ethical sense of morally right and wrong (Exodus, 75).



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