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跟随系统浅色深色简体中文香港繁體台灣繁體English
奉献
80:13 MSG
逐节对照
  • 新标点和合本 - 林中出来的野猪把它糟踏; 野地的走兽拿它当食物。
  • 和合本2010(上帝版-简体) - 林中的野猪践踏它, 田里的走兽吞吃它。
  • 和合本2010(神版-简体) - 林中的野猪践踏它, 田里的走兽吞吃它。
  • 当代译本 - 林中的野猪蹂躏它, 田间的野兽吞吃它。
  • 圣经新译本 - 从树林中出来的野猪践踏它, 田野的走兽把它吃了。
  • 中文标准译本 - 来自森林的猪把它糟踏, 田野的动物把它吃掉。
  • 现代标点和合本 - 林中出来的野猪把他糟蹋, 野地的走兽拿他当食物。
  • 和合本(拼音版) - 林中出来的野猪把它糟踏; 野地的走兽拿它当食物。
  • New International Version - Boars from the forest ravage it, and insects from the fields feed on it.
  • New International Reader's Version - Wild pigs from the forest destroy it. Insects from the fields feed on it.
  • English Standard Version - The boar from the forest ravages it, and all that move in the field feed on it.
  • New Living Translation - The wild boar from the forest devours it, and the wild animals feed on it.
  • Christian Standard Bible - Boars from the forest tear at it and creatures of the field feed on it.
  • New American Standard Bible - A boar from the forest eats it away, And whatever moves in the field feeds on it.
  • New King James Version - The boar out of the woods uproots it, And the wild beast of the field devours it.
  • Amplified Bible - A boar from the woods eats it away, And the insects of the field feed on it.
  • American Standard Version - The boar out of the wood doth ravage it, And the wild beasts of the field feed on it.
  • King James Version - The boar out of the wood doth waste it, and the wild beast of the field doth devour it.
  • New English Translation - The wild boars of the forest ruin it; the insects of the field feed on it.
  • World English Bible - The boar out of the wood ravages it. The wild animals of the field feed on it.
  • 新標點和合本 - 林中出來的野豬把它糟踏; 野地的走獸拿它當食物。
  • 和合本2010(上帝版-繁體) - 林中的野豬踐踏它, 田裏的走獸吞吃它。
  • 和合本2010(神版-繁體) - 林中的野豬踐踏它, 田裏的走獸吞吃它。
  • 當代譯本 - 林中的野豬蹂躪它, 田間的野獸吞吃它。
  • 聖經新譯本 - 從樹林中出來的野豬踐踏它, 田野的走獸把它吃了。
  • 呂振中譯本 - 森林中出來的野豬把它蹧蹋, 田野間的走獸隨便喫它。
  • 中文標準譯本 - 來自森林的豬把它糟踏, 田野的動物把它吃掉。
  • 現代標點和合本 - 林中出來的野豬把他糟蹋, 野地的走獸拿他當食物。
  • 文理和合譯本 - 林彘毀之、野獸齧之兮、
  • 文理委辦譯本 - 林豕食之、野獸囓之兮、
  • 施約瑟淺文理新舊約聖經 - 為林中野豬殘壞、為曠野蠢獸所囓、
  • 吳經熊文理聖詠與新經全集 - 今何毀其籬。行人競相折。
  • Nueva Versión Internacional - Los jabalíes del bosque la destruyen, los animales salvajes la devoran.
  • 현대인의 성경 - 산돼지가 그 나무를 해치고 들짐승이 그것을 먹습니다.
  • Новый Русский Перевод - Потому Я и оставил их во власти их упрямых сердец и позволил им ходить своими путями.
  • Восточный перевод - Потому Я и оставил их во власти их упрямых сердец и позволил им следовать помыслам своим.
  • Восточный перевод, версия с «Аллахом» - Потому Я и оставил их во власти их упрямых сердец и позволил им следовать помыслам своим.
  • Восточный перевод, версия для Таджикистана - Потому Я и оставил их во власти их упрямых сердец и позволил им следовать помыслам своим.
  • La Bible du Semeur 2015 - Pourquoi as-tu ╵défoncé ses clôtures ? Tous les passants ╵viennent y grappiller.
  • リビングバイブル - 森のいのししには周囲を鼻で掘られ、 野獣どもには格好のえじきとしてねらわれています。
  • Nova Versão Internacional - Javalis da floresta a devastam e as criaturas do campo dela se alimentam.
  • Hoffnung für alle - Warum nur hast du die schützende Mauer niedergerissen? Jetzt kann jeder, der vorüberkommt, ihn plündern!
  • Kinh Thánh Hiện Đại - Heo rừng phá phách vườn nho và thú đồng mặc sức ăn nuốt.
  • พระคริสตธรรมคัมภีร์ไทย ฉบับอมตธรรมร่วมสมัย - หมูป่ารุมทึ้งเถาองุ่น และสรรพสัตว์แห่งท้องทุ่งก็รุมกิน
  • พระคัมภีร์ ฉบับแปลใหม่ - หมู​ป่า​ขุด​โค่น​ต้น​จน​ถอน​ราก ครั้น​แล้ว​สิ่ง​มี​ชีวิต​ทั้ง​หลาย​ใน​ทุ่ง​ก็​พา​กัน​กิน​เป็น​อาหาร
交叉引用
  • 2 Kings 24:1 - It was during his reign that Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon invaded the country. Jehoiakim became his puppet. But after three years he had had enough and revolted.
  • 2 Kings 24:2 - God dispatched a succession of raiding bands against him: Babylonian, Aramean, Moabite, and Ammonite. The strategy was to destroy Judah. Through the preaching of his servants and prophets, God had said he would do this, and now he was doing it. None of this was by chance—it was God’s judgment as he turned his back on Judah because of the enormity of the sins of Manasseh—Manasseh, the killer-king, who made the Jerusalem streets flow with the innocent blood of his victims. God wasn’t about to overlook such crimes.
  • 2 Kings 24:5 - The rest of the life and times of Jehoiakim is written in The Chronicles of the Kings of Judah. Jehoiakim died and was buried with his ancestors. His son Jehoiachin became the next king.
  • 2 Kings 24:7 - The threat from Egypt was now over—no more invasions by the king of Egypt—for by this time the king of Babylon had captured all the land between the Brook of Egypt and the Euphrates River, land formerly controlled by the king of Egypt.
  • 2 Kings 24:8 - Jehoiachin was eighteen years old when he became king. His rule in Jerusalem lasted only three months. His mother’s name was Nehushta daughter of Elnathan; she was from Jerusalem. In God’s opinion he also was an evil king, no different from his father.
  • 2 Kings 24:10 - The next thing to happen was that the officers of Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon attacked Jerusalem and put it under siege. While his officers were laying siege to the city, Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon paid a personal visit. And Jehoiachin king of Judah, along with his mother, officers, advisors, and government leaders, surrendered.
  • 2 Kings 24:12 - In the eighth year of his reign Jehoiachin was taken prisoner by the king of Babylon. Nebuchadnezzar emptied the treasuries of both The Temple of God and the royal palace and confiscated all the gold furnishings that Solomon king of Israel had made for The Temple of God. This should have been no surprise—God had said it would happen. And then he emptied Jerusalem of people—all its leaders and soldiers, all its craftsmen and artisans. He took them into exile, something like ten thousand of them! The only ones he left were the very poor.
  • 2 Kings 24:15 - He took Jehoiachin into exile to Babylon. With him he took the king’s mother, his wives, his chief officers, the community leaders, anyone who was anybody—in round numbers, seven thousand soldiers plus another thousand or so craftsmen and artisans, all herded off into exile in Babylon.
  • 2 Kings 24:17 - Then the king of Babylon made Jehoiachin’s uncle, Mattaniah, his puppet king, but changed his name to Zedekiah.
  • 2 Kings 24:18 - Zedekiah was twenty-one years old when he started out as king. He was king in Jerusalem for eleven years. His mother’s name was Hamutal the daughter of Jeremiah. Her hometown was Libnah.
  • 2 Kings 24:19 - As far as God was concerned Zedekiah was just one more evil king, a carbon copy of Jehoiakim.
  • 2 Kings 24:20 - The source of all this doom to Jerusalem and Judah was God’s anger—God turned his back on them as an act of judgment. And then Zedekiah revolted against the king of Babylon.
  • 2 Chronicles 32:1 - And then, after this exemplary track record, this: Sennacherib king of Assyria came and attacked Judah. He put the fortified cities under siege, determined to take them.
  • 2 Chronicles 32:2 - When Hezekiah realized that Sennacherib’s strategy was to take Jerusalem, he talked to his advisors and military leaders about eliminating all the water supplies outside the city; they thought it was a good idea. There was a great turnout of people to plug the springs and tear down the aqueduct. They said, “Why should the kings of Assyria march in and be furnished with running water?”
  • 2 Chronicles 32:5 - Hezekiah also went to work repairing every part of the city wall that was damaged, built defensive towers on it, built another wall of defense further out, and reinforced the defensive rampart (the Millo) of the old City of David. He also built up a large store of armaments—spears and shields. He then appointed military officers to be responsible for the people and got them all together at the public square in front of the city gate.
  • 2 Chronicles 32:6 - Hezekiah rallied the people, saying, “Be strong! Take courage! Don’t be intimidated by the king of Assyria and his troops—there are more on our side than on their side. He only has a bunch of mere men; we have our God to help us and fight for us!” Morale surged. Hezekiah’s words put steel in their spines.
  • 2 Chronicles 32:9 - Later on, Sennacherib, who had set up camp a few miles away at Lachish, sent messengers to Jerusalem, addressing Judah through Hezekiah: “A proclamation of Sennacherib king of Assyria: You poor people—do you think you’re safe in that so-called fortress of Jerusalem? You’re sitting ducks. Do you think Hezekiah will save you? Don’t be stupid—Hezekiah has fed you a pack of lies. When he says, ‘God will save us from the power of the king of Assyria,’ he’s lying—you’re all going to end up dead. Wasn’t it Hezekiah who cleared out all the neighborhood worship shrines and told you, ‘There is only one legitimate place to worship’? Do you have any idea what I and my ancestors have done to all the countries around here? Has there been a single god anywhere strong enough to stand up against me? Can you name one god among all the nations that either I or my ancestors have ravaged that so much as lifted a finger against me? So what makes you think you’ll make out any better with your god? Don’t let Hezekiah fool you; don’t let him get by with his barefaced lies; don’t trust him. No god of any country or kingdom ever has been one bit of help against me or my ancestors—what kind of odds does that give your god?”
  • 2 Chronicles 32:16 - The messengers felt free to throw in their personal comments, putting down both God and God’s servant Hezekiah.
  • 2 Chronicles 32:17 - Sennacherib continued to send letters insulting the God of Israel: “The gods of the nations were powerless to help their people; the god of Hezekiah is no better, probably worse.”
  • 2 Chronicles 32:18 - The messengers would come up to the wall of Jerusalem and shout up to the people standing on the wall, shouting their propaganda in Hebrew, trying to scare them into demoralized submission. They contemptuously lumped the God of Jerusalem in with the handmade gods of other peoples.
  • 2 Chronicles 32:20 - King Hezekiah, joined by the prophet Isaiah son of Amoz, responded by praying, calling up to heaven. God answered by sending an angel who wiped out everyone in the Assyrian camp, both warriors and officers. Sennacherib was forced to return home in disgrace, tail between his legs. When he went into the temple of his god, his own sons killed him.
  • 2 Chronicles 32:22 - God saved Hezekiah and the citizens of Jerusalem from Sennacherib king of Assyria and everyone else. And he continued to take good care of them. People streamed into Jerusalem bringing offerings for the worship of God and expensive presents to Hezekiah king of Judah. All the surrounding nations were impressed—Hezekiah’s stock soared. * * *
  • 2 Chronicles 32:24 - Some time later Hezekiah became deathly sick. He prayed to God and was given a reassuring sign.
  • 2 Chronicles 32:25 - But the sign, instead of making Hezekiah grateful, made him arrogant. This made God angry, and his anger spilled over on Judah and Jerusalem. But then Hezekiah, and Jerusalem with him, repented of his arrogance, and God withdrew his anger while Hezekiah lived.
  • 2 Chronicles 32:27 - Hezekiah ended up very wealthy and much honored. He built treasuries for all his silver, gold, precious stones, spices, shields, and valuables, barns for the grain, new wine, and olive oil, stalls for his various breeds of cattle, and pens for his flocks. He founded royal cities for himself and built up huge stocks of sheep and cattle. God saw to it that he was extravagantly rich. Hezekiah was also responsible for diverting the upper outlet of the Gihon spring and rerouting the water to the west side of the City of David. Hezekiah succeeded in everything he did. But when the rulers of Babylon sent emissaries to find out about the sign from God that had taken place earlier, God left him on his own to see what he would do; he wanted to test his heart. * * *
  • 2 Chronicles 32:32 - The rest of the history of Hezekiah and his life of loyal service, you can read for yourself—it’s written in the vision of the prophet Isaiah son of Amoz in the Royal Annals of the Kings of Judah and Israel. When Hezekiah died, they buried him in the upper part of the King David cemetery. Everyone in Judah and Jerusalem came to the funeral. He was buried in great honor. Manasseh his son was the next king.
  • Jeremiah 39:1 - In the ninth year and tenth month of Zedekiah king of Judah, Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon came with his entire army and laid siege to Jerusalem. In the eleventh year and fourth month, on the ninth day of Zedekiah’s reign, they broke through into the city.
  • Jeremiah 39:3 - All the officers of the king of Babylon came and set themselves up as a ruling council from the Middle Gate: Nergal-sharezer of Simmagar, Nebushazban the Rabsaris, Nergal-sharezer the Rabmag, along with all the other officials of the king of Babylon.
  • 2 Kings 18:1 - In the third year of Hoshea son of Elah king of Israel, Hezekiah son of Ahaz began his rule over Judah. He was twenty-five years old when he became king and he ruled for twenty-nine years in Jerusalem. His mother’s name was Abijah daughter of Zechariah. In God’s opinion he was a good king; he kept to the standards of his ancestor David. He got rid of the local fertility shrines, smashed the phallic stone monuments, and cut down the sex-and-religion Asherah groves. As a final stroke he pulverized the ancient bronze serpent that Moses had made; at that time the Israelites had taken up the practice of sacrificing to it—they had even dignified it with a name, Nehushtan (The Old Serpent).
  • 2 Kings 18:5 - Hezekiah put his whole trust in the God of Israel. There was no king quite like him, either before or after. He held fast to God—never loosened his grip—and obeyed to the letter everything God had commanded Moses. And God, for his part, held fast to him through all his adventures.
  • 2 Kings 18:7 - He revolted against the king of Assyria; he refused to serve him one more day. And he drove back the Philistines, whether in sentry outposts or fortress cities, all the way to Gaza and its borders.
  • 2 Kings 18:9 - In the fourth year of Hezekiah and the seventh year of Hoshea son of Elah king of Israel, Shalmaneser king of Assyria attacked Samaria. He threw a siege around it and after three years captured it. It was in the sixth year of Hezekiah and the ninth year of Hoshea that Samaria fell to Assyria. The king of Assyria took Israel into exile and relocated them in Halah, in Gozan on the Habor River, and in towns of the Medes.
  • 2 Kings 18:12 - All this happened because they wouldn’t listen to the voice of their God and treated his covenant with careless contempt. They refused either to listen or do a word of what Moses, the servant of God, commanded.
  • 2 Kings 18:13 - In the fourteenth year of King Hezekiah, Sennacherib king of Assyria attacked all the outlying fortress cities of Judah and captured them. King Hezekiah sent a message to the king of Assyria at his headquarters in Lachish: “I’ve done wrong; I admit it. Pull back your army; I’ll pay whatever tribute you set.”
  • 2 Kings 18:14 - The king of Assyria demanded tribute from Hezekiah king of Judah—eleven tons of silver and a ton of gold. Hezekiah turned over all the silver he could find in The Temple of God and in the palace treasuries. Hezekiah even took down the doors of The Temple of God and the doorposts that he had overlaid with gold and gave them to the king of Assyria.
  • 2 Kings 18:17 - So the king of Assyria sent his top three military chiefs (the Tartan, the Rabsaris, and the Rabshakeh) from Lachish with a strong military force to King Hezekiah in Jerusalem. When they arrived at Jerusalem, they stopped at the aqueduct of the Upper Pool on the road to the laundry commons.
  • 2 Kings 18:18 - They called loudly for the king. Eliakim son of Hilkiah who was in charge of the palace, Shebna the royal secretary, and Joah son of Asaph the court historian went out to meet them.
  • 2 Kings 18:19 - The third officer, the Rabshakeh, was spokesman. He said, “Tell Hezekiah: A message from the Great King, the king of Assyria: You’re living in a world of make-believe, of pious fantasy. Do you think that mere words are any substitute for military strategy and troops? Now that you’ve revolted against me, who can you expect to help you? You thought Egypt would, but Egypt’s nothing but a paper tiger—one puff of wind and she collapses; Pharaoh king of Egypt is nothing but bluff and bluster. Or are you going to tell me, ‘We rely on God’? But Hezekiah has just eliminated most of the people’s access to God by getting rid of all the local God-shrines, ordering everyone in Judah and Jerusalem, ‘You must worship at the Jerusalem altar only.’
  • 2 Chronicles 36:1 - Jehoahaz was twenty-three years old when he began to rule. He was king in Jerusalem for a mere three months. The king of Egypt dethroned him and forced the country to pay him nearly four tons of silver and seventy-five pounds of gold.
  • 2 Chronicles 36:4 - Neco king of Egypt then made Eliakim, Jehoahaz’s brother, king of Judah and Jerusalem, but changed his name to Jehoiakim; then he took Jehoahaz back with him to Egypt.
  • 2 Chronicles 36:5 - Jehoiakim was twenty-five years old when he began to rule; he was king for eleven years in Jerusalem. In God’s opinion he was an evil king.
  • 2 Chronicles 36:6 - Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon made war against him, and bound him in bronze chains, intending to take him prisoner to Babylon. Nebuchadnezzar also took things from The Temple of God to Babylon and put them in his royal palace.
  • 2 Chronicles 36:8 - The rest of the history of Jehoiakim, the outrageous sacrilege he committed and what happened to him as a consequence, is all written in the Royal Annals of the Kings of Israel and Judah. Jehoiachin his son became the next king.
  • 2 Chronicles 36:9 - Jehoiachin was eighteen years old when he became king. But he ruled for only three months and ten days in Jerusalem. In God’s opinion he was an evil king. In the spring King Nebuchadnezzar ordered him brought to Babylon along with the valuables remaining in The Temple of God. Then he made his uncle Zedekiah a puppet king over Judah and Jerusalem.
  • 2 Chronicles 36:11 - Zedekiah was twenty-one years old when he started out as king. He was king in Jerusalem for eleven years. As far as God was concerned, he was just one more evil king; there wasn’t a trace of contrition in him when the prophet Jeremiah preached God’s word to him. Then he compounded his troubles by rebelling against King Nebuchadnezzar, who earlier had made him swear in God’s name that he would be loyal. He became set in his own stubborn ways—he never gave God a thought; repentance never entered his mind.
  • 2 Chronicles 36:14 - The evil mindset spread to the leaders and priests and filtered down to the people—it kicked off an epidemic of evil, repeating the abominations of the pagans and polluting The Temple of God so recently consecrated in Jerusalem.
  • 2 Chronicles 36:15 - God, the God of their ancestors, repeatedly sent warning messages to them. Out of compassion for both his people and his Temple he wanted to give them every chance possible. But they wouldn’t listen; they poked fun at God’s messengers, despised the message itself, and in general treated the prophets like idiots. God became more and more angry until there was no turning back—God called in Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon, who came and killed indiscriminately—and right in The Temple itself; it was a ruthless massacre: young men and virgins, the elderly and weak—they were all the same to him.
  • 2 Chronicles 36:18 - And then he plundered The Temple of everything valuable, cleaned it out completely; he emptied the treasuries of The Temple of God, the treasuries of the king and his officials, and hauled it all, people and possessions, off to Babylon. He burned The Temple of God to the ground, knocked down the wall of Jerusalem, and set fire to all the buildings—everything valuable was burned up. Any survivor was taken prisoner into exile in Babylon and made a slave to Nebuchadnezzar and his family. The exile and slavery lasted until the kingdom of Persia took over.
  • 2 Chronicles 36:21 - This is exactly the message of God that Jeremiah had preached: the desolate land put to an extended sabbath rest, a seventy-year Sabbath rest making up for all the unkept Sabbaths.
  • 2 Chronicles 36:22 - In the first year of Cyrus king of Persia—this fulfilled the message of God preached by Jeremiah—God moved Cyrus king of Persia to make an official announcement throughout his kingdom; he wrote it out as follows: “From Cyrus king of Persia a proclamation: God, the God of the heavens, has given me all the kingdoms of the earth. He has also assigned me to build him a Temple of worship at Jerusalem in Judah. All who belong to God’s people are urged to return—and may your God be with you! Move forward!”
  • Jeremiah 52:12 - In the nineteenth year of Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon on the seventh day of the fifth month, Nebuzaradan, the king of Babylon’s chief deputy, arrived in Jerusalem. He burned the Temple of God to the ground, went on to the royal palace, and then finished off the city. He burned the whole place down. He put the Babylonian troops he had with him to work knocking down the city walls. Finally, he rounded up everyone left in the city, including those who had earlier deserted to the king of Babylon, and took them off into exile. He left a few poor dirt farmers behind to tend the vineyards and what was left of the fields.
  • Jeremiah 51:34 - “Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon chewed up my people and spit out the bones. He wiped his dish clean, pushed back his chair, and belched—a huge gluttonous belch. Lady Zion says, ‘The brutality done to me be done to Babylon!’ And Jerusalem says, ‘The blood spilled from me be charged to the Chaldeans!’ Then I, God, step in and say, ‘I’m on your side, taking up your cause. I’m your Avenger. You’ll get your revenge. I’ll dry up her rivers, plug up her springs. Babylon will be a pile of rubble, scavenged by stray dogs and cats, A dumping ground for garbage, a godforsaken ghost town.’ * * *
逐节对照交叉引用
  • 新标点和合本 - 林中出来的野猪把它糟踏; 野地的走兽拿它当食物。
  • 和合本2010(上帝版-简体) - 林中的野猪践踏它, 田里的走兽吞吃它。
  • 和合本2010(神版-简体) - 林中的野猪践踏它, 田里的走兽吞吃它。
  • 当代译本 - 林中的野猪蹂躏它, 田间的野兽吞吃它。
  • 圣经新译本 - 从树林中出来的野猪践踏它, 田野的走兽把它吃了。
  • 中文标准译本 - 来自森林的猪把它糟踏, 田野的动物把它吃掉。
  • 现代标点和合本 - 林中出来的野猪把他糟蹋, 野地的走兽拿他当食物。
  • 和合本(拼音版) - 林中出来的野猪把它糟踏; 野地的走兽拿它当食物。
  • New International Version - Boars from the forest ravage it, and insects from the fields feed on it.
  • New International Reader's Version - Wild pigs from the forest destroy it. Insects from the fields feed on it.
  • English Standard Version - The boar from the forest ravages it, and all that move in the field feed on it.
  • New Living Translation - The wild boar from the forest devours it, and the wild animals feed on it.
  • Christian Standard Bible - Boars from the forest tear at it and creatures of the field feed on it.
  • New American Standard Bible - A boar from the forest eats it away, And whatever moves in the field feeds on it.
  • New King James Version - The boar out of the woods uproots it, And the wild beast of the field devours it.
  • Amplified Bible - A boar from the woods eats it away, And the insects of the field feed on it.
  • American Standard Version - The boar out of the wood doth ravage it, And the wild beasts of the field feed on it.
  • King James Version - The boar out of the wood doth waste it, and the wild beast of the field doth devour it.
  • New English Translation - The wild boars of the forest ruin it; the insects of the field feed on it.
  • World English Bible - The boar out of the wood ravages it. The wild animals of the field feed on it.
  • 新標點和合本 - 林中出來的野豬把它糟踏; 野地的走獸拿它當食物。
  • 和合本2010(上帝版-繁體) - 林中的野豬踐踏它, 田裏的走獸吞吃它。
  • 和合本2010(神版-繁體) - 林中的野豬踐踏它, 田裏的走獸吞吃它。
  • 當代譯本 - 林中的野豬蹂躪它, 田間的野獸吞吃它。
  • 聖經新譯本 - 從樹林中出來的野豬踐踏它, 田野的走獸把它吃了。
  • 呂振中譯本 - 森林中出來的野豬把它蹧蹋, 田野間的走獸隨便喫它。
  • 中文標準譯本 - 來自森林的豬把它糟踏, 田野的動物把它吃掉。
  • 現代標點和合本 - 林中出來的野豬把他糟蹋, 野地的走獸拿他當食物。
  • 文理和合譯本 - 林彘毀之、野獸齧之兮、
  • 文理委辦譯本 - 林豕食之、野獸囓之兮、
  • 施約瑟淺文理新舊約聖經 - 為林中野豬殘壞、為曠野蠢獸所囓、
  • 吳經熊文理聖詠與新經全集 - 今何毀其籬。行人競相折。
  • Nueva Versión Internacional - Los jabalíes del bosque la destruyen, los animales salvajes la devoran.
  • 현대인의 성경 - 산돼지가 그 나무를 해치고 들짐승이 그것을 먹습니다.
  • Новый Русский Перевод - Потому Я и оставил их во власти их упрямых сердец и позволил им ходить своими путями.
  • Восточный перевод - Потому Я и оставил их во власти их упрямых сердец и позволил им следовать помыслам своим.
  • Восточный перевод, версия с «Аллахом» - Потому Я и оставил их во власти их упрямых сердец и позволил им следовать помыслам своим.
  • Восточный перевод, версия для Таджикистана - Потому Я и оставил их во власти их упрямых сердец и позволил им следовать помыслам своим.
  • La Bible du Semeur 2015 - Pourquoi as-tu ╵défoncé ses clôtures ? Tous les passants ╵viennent y grappiller.
  • リビングバイブル - 森のいのししには周囲を鼻で掘られ、 野獣どもには格好のえじきとしてねらわれています。
  • Nova Versão Internacional - Javalis da floresta a devastam e as criaturas do campo dela se alimentam.
  • Hoffnung für alle - Warum nur hast du die schützende Mauer niedergerissen? Jetzt kann jeder, der vorüberkommt, ihn plündern!
  • Kinh Thánh Hiện Đại - Heo rừng phá phách vườn nho và thú đồng mặc sức ăn nuốt.
  • พระคริสตธรรมคัมภีร์ไทย ฉบับอมตธรรมร่วมสมัย - หมูป่ารุมทึ้งเถาองุ่น และสรรพสัตว์แห่งท้องทุ่งก็รุมกิน
  • พระคัมภีร์ ฉบับแปลใหม่ - หมู​ป่า​ขุด​โค่น​ต้น​จน​ถอน​ราก ครั้น​แล้ว​สิ่ง​มี​ชีวิต​ทั้ง​หลาย​ใน​ทุ่ง​ก็​พา​กัน​กิน​เป็น​อาหาร
  • 2 Kings 24:1 - It was during his reign that Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon invaded the country. Jehoiakim became his puppet. But after three years he had had enough and revolted.
  • 2 Kings 24:2 - God dispatched a succession of raiding bands against him: Babylonian, Aramean, Moabite, and Ammonite. The strategy was to destroy Judah. Through the preaching of his servants and prophets, God had said he would do this, and now he was doing it. None of this was by chance—it was God’s judgment as he turned his back on Judah because of the enormity of the sins of Manasseh—Manasseh, the killer-king, who made the Jerusalem streets flow with the innocent blood of his victims. God wasn’t about to overlook such crimes.
  • 2 Kings 24:5 - The rest of the life and times of Jehoiakim is written in The Chronicles of the Kings of Judah. Jehoiakim died and was buried with his ancestors. His son Jehoiachin became the next king.
  • 2 Kings 24:7 - The threat from Egypt was now over—no more invasions by the king of Egypt—for by this time the king of Babylon had captured all the land between the Brook of Egypt and the Euphrates River, land formerly controlled by the king of Egypt.
  • 2 Kings 24:8 - Jehoiachin was eighteen years old when he became king. His rule in Jerusalem lasted only three months. His mother’s name was Nehushta daughter of Elnathan; she was from Jerusalem. In God’s opinion he also was an evil king, no different from his father.
  • 2 Kings 24:10 - The next thing to happen was that the officers of Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon attacked Jerusalem and put it under siege. While his officers were laying siege to the city, Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon paid a personal visit. And Jehoiachin king of Judah, along with his mother, officers, advisors, and government leaders, surrendered.
  • 2 Kings 24:12 - In the eighth year of his reign Jehoiachin was taken prisoner by the king of Babylon. Nebuchadnezzar emptied the treasuries of both The Temple of God and the royal palace and confiscated all the gold furnishings that Solomon king of Israel had made for The Temple of God. This should have been no surprise—God had said it would happen. And then he emptied Jerusalem of people—all its leaders and soldiers, all its craftsmen and artisans. He took them into exile, something like ten thousand of them! The only ones he left were the very poor.
  • 2 Kings 24:15 - He took Jehoiachin into exile to Babylon. With him he took the king’s mother, his wives, his chief officers, the community leaders, anyone who was anybody—in round numbers, seven thousand soldiers plus another thousand or so craftsmen and artisans, all herded off into exile in Babylon.
  • 2 Kings 24:17 - Then the king of Babylon made Jehoiachin’s uncle, Mattaniah, his puppet king, but changed his name to Zedekiah.
  • 2 Kings 24:18 - Zedekiah was twenty-one years old when he started out as king. He was king in Jerusalem for eleven years. His mother’s name was Hamutal the daughter of Jeremiah. Her hometown was Libnah.
  • 2 Kings 24:19 - As far as God was concerned Zedekiah was just one more evil king, a carbon copy of Jehoiakim.
  • 2 Kings 24:20 - The source of all this doom to Jerusalem and Judah was God’s anger—God turned his back on them as an act of judgment. And then Zedekiah revolted against the king of Babylon.
  • 2 Chronicles 32:1 - And then, after this exemplary track record, this: Sennacherib king of Assyria came and attacked Judah. He put the fortified cities under siege, determined to take them.
  • 2 Chronicles 32:2 - When Hezekiah realized that Sennacherib’s strategy was to take Jerusalem, he talked to his advisors and military leaders about eliminating all the water supplies outside the city; they thought it was a good idea. There was a great turnout of people to plug the springs and tear down the aqueduct. They said, “Why should the kings of Assyria march in and be furnished with running water?”
  • 2 Chronicles 32:5 - Hezekiah also went to work repairing every part of the city wall that was damaged, built defensive towers on it, built another wall of defense further out, and reinforced the defensive rampart (the Millo) of the old City of David. He also built up a large store of armaments—spears and shields. He then appointed military officers to be responsible for the people and got them all together at the public square in front of the city gate.
  • 2 Chronicles 32:6 - Hezekiah rallied the people, saying, “Be strong! Take courage! Don’t be intimidated by the king of Assyria and his troops—there are more on our side than on their side. He only has a bunch of mere men; we have our God to help us and fight for us!” Morale surged. Hezekiah’s words put steel in their spines.
  • 2 Chronicles 32:9 - Later on, Sennacherib, who had set up camp a few miles away at Lachish, sent messengers to Jerusalem, addressing Judah through Hezekiah: “A proclamation of Sennacherib king of Assyria: You poor people—do you think you’re safe in that so-called fortress of Jerusalem? You’re sitting ducks. Do you think Hezekiah will save you? Don’t be stupid—Hezekiah has fed you a pack of lies. When he says, ‘God will save us from the power of the king of Assyria,’ he’s lying—you’re all going to end up dead. Wasn’t it Hezekiah who cleared out all the neighborhood worship shrines and told you, ‘There is only one legitimate place to worship’? Do you have any idea what I and my ancestors have done to all the countries around here? Has there been a single god anywhere strong enough to stand up against me? Can you name one god among all the nations that either I or my ancestors have ravaged that so much as lifted a finger against me? So what makes you think you’ll make out any better with your god? Don’t let Hezekiah fool you; don’t let him get by with his barefaced lies; don’t trust him. No god of any country or kingdom ever has been one bit of help against me or my ancestors—what kind of odds does that give your god?”
  • 2 Chronicles 32:16 - The messengers felt free to throw in their personal comments, putting down both God and God’s servant Hezekiah.
  • 2 Chronicles 32:17 - Sennacherib continued to send letters insulting the God of Israel: “The gods of the nations were powerless to help their people; the god of Hezekiah is no better, probably worse.”
  • 2 Chronicles 32:18 - The messengers would come up to the wall of Jerusalem and shout up to the people standing on the wall, shouting their propaganda in Hebrew, trying to scare them into demoralized submission. They contemptuously lumped the God of Jerusalem in with the handmade gods of other peoples.
  • 2 Chronicles 32:20 - King Hezekiah, joined by the prophet Isaiah son of Amoz, responded by praying, calling up to heaven. God answered by sending an angel who wiped out everyone in the Assyrian camp, both warriors and officers. Sennacherib was forced to return home in disgrace, tail between his legs. When he went into the temple of his god, his own sons killed him.
  • 2 Chronicles 32:22 - God saved Hezekiah and the citizens of Jerusalem from Sennacherib king of Assyria and everyone else. And he continued to take good care of them. People streamed into Jerusalem bringing offerings for the worship of God and expensive presents to Hezekiah king of Judah. All the surrounding nations were impressed—Hezekiah’s stock soared. * * *
  • 2 Chronicles 32:24 - Some time later Hezekiah became deathly sick. He prayed to God and was given a reassuring sign.
  • 2 Chronicles 32:25 - But the sign, instead of making Hezekiah grateful, made him arrogant. This made God angry, and his anger spilled over on Judah and Jerusalem. But then Hezekiah, and Jerusalem with him, repented of his arrogance, and God withdrew his anger while Hezekiah lived.
  • 2 Chronicles 32:27 - Hezekiah ended up very wealthy and much honored. He built treasuries for all his silver, gold, precious stones, spices, shields, and valuables, barns for the grain, new wine, and olive oil, stalls for his various breeds of cattle, and pens for his flocks. He founded royal cities for himself and built up huge stocks of sheep and cattle. God saw to it that he was extravagantly rich. Hezekiah was also responsible for diverting the upper outlet of the Gihon spring and rerouting the water to the west side of the City of David. Hezekiah succeeded in everything he did. But when the rulers of Babylon sent emissaries to find out about the sign from God that had taken place earlier, God left him on his own to see what he would do; he wanted to test his heart. * * *
  • 2 Chronicles 32:32 - The rest of the history of Hezekiah and his life of loyal service, you can read for yourself—it’s written in the vision of the prophet Isaiah son of Amoz in the Royal Annals of the Kings of Judah and Israel. When Hezekiah died, they buried him in the upper part of the King David cemetery. Everyone in Judah and Jerusalem came to the funeral. He was buried in great honor. Manasseh his son was the next king.
  • Jeremiah 39:1 - In the ninth year and tenth month of Zedekiah king of Judah, Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon came with his entire army and laid siege to Jerusalem. In the eleventh year and fourth month, on the ninth day of Zedekiah’s reign, they broke through into the city.
  • Jeremiah 39:3 - All the officers of the king of Babylon came and set themselves up as a ruling council from the Middle Gate: Nergal-sharezer of Simmagar, Nebushazban the Rabsaris, Nergal-sharezer the Rabmag, along with all the other officials of the king of Babylon.
  • 2 Kings 18:1 - In the third year of Hoshea son of Elah king of Israel, Hezekiah son of Ahaz began his rule over Judah. He was twenty-five years old when he became king and he ruled for twenty-nine years in Jerusalem. His mother’s name was Abijah daughter of Zechariah. In God’s opinion he was a good king; he kept to the standards of his ancestor David. He got rid of the local fertility shrines, smashed the phallic stone monuments, and cut down the sex-and-religion Asherah groves. As a final stroke he pulverized the ancient bronze serpent that Moses had made; at that time the Israelites had taken up the practice of sacrificing to it—they had even dignified it with a name, Nehushtan (The Old Serpent).
  • 2 Kings 18:5 - Hezekiah put his whole trust in the God of Israel. There was no king quite like him, either before or after. He held fast to God—never loosened his grip—and obeyed to the letter everything God had commanded Moses. And God, for his part, held fast to him through all his adventures.
  • 2 Kings 18:7 - He revolted against the king of Assyria; he refused to serve him one more day. And he drove back the Philistines, whether in sentry outposts or fortress cities, all the way to Gaza and its borders.
  • 2 Kings 18:9 - In the fourth year of Hezekiah and the seventh year of Hoshea son of Elah king of Israel, Shalmaneser king of Assyria attacked Samaria. He threw a siege around it and after three years captured it. It was in the sixth year of Hezekiah and the ninth year of Hoshea that Samaria fell to Assyria. The king of Assyria took Israel into exile and relocated them in Halah, in Gozan on the Habor River, and in towns of the Medes.
  • 2 Kings 18:12 - All this happened because they wouldn’t listen to the voice of their God and treated his covenant with careless contempt. They refused either to listen or do a word of what Moses, the servant of God, commanded.
  • 2 Kings 18:13 - In the fourteenth year of King Hezekiah, Sennacherib king of Assyria attacked all the outlying fortress cities of Judah and captured them. King Hezekiah sent a message to the king of Assyria at his headquarters in Lachish: “I’ve done wrong; I admit it. Pull back your army; I’ll pay whatever tribute you set.”
  • 2 Kings 18:14 - The king of Assyria demanded tribute from Hezekiah king of Judah—eleven tons of silver and a ton of gold. Hezekiah turned over all the silver he could find in The Temple of God and in the palace treasuries. Hezekiah even took down the doors of The Temple of God and the doorposts that he had overlaid with gold and gave them to the king of Assyria.
  • 2 Kings 18:17 - So the king of Assyria sent his top three military chiefs (the Tartan, the Rabsaris, and the Rabshakeh) from Lachish with a strong military force to King Hezekiah in Jerusalem. When they arrived at Jerusalem, they stopped at the aqueduct of the Upper Pool on the road to the laundry commons.
  • 2 Kings 18:18 - They called loudly for the king. Eliakim son of Hilkiah who was in charge of the palace, Shebna the royal secretary, and Joah son of Asaph the court historian went out to meet them.
  • 2 Kings 18:19 - The third officer, the Rabshakeh, was spokesman. He said, “Tell Hezekiah: A message from the Great King, the king of Assyria: You’re living in a world of make-believe, of pious fantasy. Do you think that mere words are any substitute for military strategy and troops? Now that you’ve revolted against me, who can you expect to help you? You thought Egypt would, but Egypt’s nothing but a paper tiger—one puff of wind and she collapses; Pharaoh king of Egypt is nothing but bluff and bluster. Or are you going to tell me, ‘We rely on God’? But Hezekiah has just eliminated most of the people’s access to God by getting rid of all the local God-shrines, ordering everyone in Judah and Jerusalem, ‘You must worship at the Jerusalem altar only.’
  • 2 Chronicles 36:1 - Jehoahaz was twenty-three years old when he began to rule. He was king in Jerusalem for a mere three months. The king of Egypt dethroned him and forced the country to pay him nearly four tons of silver and seventy-five pounds of gold.
  • 2 Chronicles 36:4 - Neco king of Egypt then made Eliakim, Jehoahaz’s brother, king of Judah and Jerusalem, but changed his name to Jehoiakim; then he took Jehoahaz back with him to Egypt.
  • 2 Chronicles 36:5 - Jehoiakim was twenty-five years old when he began to rule; he was king for eleven years in Jerusalem. In God’s opinion he was an evil king.
  • 2 Chronicles 36:6 - Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon made war against him, and bound him in bronze chains, intending to take him prisoner to Babylon. Nebuchadnezzar also took things from The Temple of God to Babylon and put them in his royal palace.
  • 2 Chronicles 36:8 - The rest of the history of Jehoiakim, the outrageous sacrilege he committed and what happened to him as a consequence, is all written in the Royal Annals of the Kings of Israel and Judah. Jehoiachin his son became the next king.
  • 2 Chronicles 36:9 - Jehoiachin was eighteen years old when he became king. But he ruled for only three months and ten days in Jerusalem. In God’s opinion he was an evil king. In the spring King Nebuchadnezzar ordered him brought to Babylon along with the valuables remaining in The Temple of God. Then he made his uncle Zedekiah a puppet king over Judah and Jerusalem.
  • 2 Chronicles 36:11 - Zedekiah was twenty-one years old when he started out as king. He was king in Jerusalem for eleven years. As far as God was concerned, he was just one more evil king; there wasn’t a trace of contrition in him when the prophet Jeremiah preached God’s word to him. Then he compounded his troubles by rebelling against King Nebuchadnezzar, who earlier had made him swear in God’s name that he would be loyal. He became set in his own stubborn ways—he never gave God a thought; repentance never entered his mind.
  • 2 Chronicles 36:14 - The evil mindset spread to the leaders and priests and filtered down to the people—it kicked off an epidemic of evil, repeating the abominations of the pagans and polluting The Temple of God so recently consecrated in Jerusalem.
  • 2 Chronicles 36:15 - God, the God of their ancestors, repeatedly sent warning messages to them. Out of compassion for both his people and his Temple he wanted to give them every chance possible. But they wouldn’t listen; they poked fun at God’s messengers, despised the message itself, and in general treated the prophets like idiots. God became more and more angry until there was no turning back—God called in Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon, who came and killed indiscriminately—and right in The Temple itself; it was a ruthless massacre: young men and virgins, the elderly and weak—they were all the same to him.
  • 2 Chronicles 36:18 - And then he plundered The Temple of everything valuable, cleaned it out completely; he emptied the treasuries of The Temple of God, the treasuries of the king and his officials, and hauled it all, people and possessions, off to Babylon. He burned The Temple of God to the ground, knocked down the wall of Jerusalem, and set fire to all the buildings—everything valuable was burned up. Any survivor was taken prisoner into exile in Babylon and made a slave to Nebuchadnezzar and his family. The exile and slavery lasted until the kingdom of Persia took over.
  • 2 Chronicles 36:21 - This is exactly the message of God that Jeremiah had preached: the desolate land put to an extended sabbath rest, a seventy-year Sabbath rest making up for all the unkept Sabbaths.
  • 2 Chronicles 36:22 - In the first year of Cyrus king of Persia—this fulfilled the message of God preached by Jeremiah—God moved Cyrus king of Persia to make an official announcement throughout his kingdom; he wrote it out as follows: “From Cyrus king of Persia a proclamation: God, the God of the heavens, has given me all the kingdoms of the earth. He has also assigned me to build him a Temple of worship at Jerusalem in Judah. All who belong to God’s people are urged to return—and may your God be with you! Move forward!”
  • Jeremiah 52:12 - In the nineteenth year of Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon on the seventh day of the fifth month, Nebuzaradan, the king of Babylon’s chief deputy, arrived in Jerusalem. He burned the Temple of God to the ground, went on to the royal palace, and then finished off the city. He burned the whole place down. He put the Babylonian troops he had with him to work knocking down the city walls. Finally, he rounded up everyone left in the city, including those who had earlier deserted to the king of Babylon, and took them off into exile. He left a few poor dirt farmers behind to tend the vineyards and what was left of the fields.
  • Jeremiah 51:34 - “Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon chewed up my people and spit out the bones. He wiped his dish clean, pushed back his chair, and belched—a huge gluttonous belch. Lady Zion says, ‘The brutality done to me be done to Babylon!’ And Jerusalem says, ‘The blood spilled from me be charged to the Chaldeans!’ Then I, God, step in and say, ‘I’m on your side, taking up your cause. I’m your Avenger. You’ll get your revenge. I’ll dry up her rivers, plug up her springs. Babylon will be a pile of rubble, scavenged by stray dogs and cats, A dumping ground for garbage, a godforsaken ghost town.’ * * *
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