逐節對照
- New Living Translation - For my people’s wound is too deep to heal. It has reached into Judah, even to the gates of Jerusalem.
- 新标点和合本 - 因为撒玛利亚的伤痕无法医治, 延及犹大和耶路撒冷我民的城门。
- 和合本2010(上帝版-简体) - 因为撒玛利亚的创伤无法医治, 蔓延到犹大, 到了我百姓的城门, 直达耶路撒冷。
- 和合本2010(神版-简体) - 因为撒玛利亚的创伤无法医治, 蔓延到犹大, 到了我百姓的城门, 直达耶路撒冷。
- 当代译本 - 因为撒玛利亚的创伤无法救治, 已经祸及犹大, 直逼我百姓的城门,直逼耶路撒冷。
- 圣经新译本 - 因为撒玛利亚的创伤无法医治, 并且殃及犹大, 直逼我子民的城门, 就是耶路撒冷。
- 现代标点和合本 - 因为撒马利亚的伤痕无法医治, 延及犹大和耶路撒冷我民的城门。
- 和合本(拼音版) - 因为撒玛利亚的伤痕无法医治, 延及犹大和耶路撒冷我民的城门。
- New International Version - For Samaria’s plague is incurable; it has spread to Judah. It has reached the very gate of my people, even to Jerusalem itself.
- New International Reader's Version - Samaria’s plague can’t be healed. The plague has spread to Judah. It has spread right up to the gate of my people. It has spread to Jerusalem itself.
- English Standard Version - For her wound is incurable, and it has come to Judah; it has reached to the gate of my people, to Jerusalem.
- Christian Standard Bible - For her wound is incurable and has reached even Judah; it has approached my people’s city gate, as far as Jerusalem.
- New American Standard Bible - For her wound is incurable, For it has come to Judah; It has reached the gate of my people, Even to Jerusalem.
- New King James Version - For her wounds are incurable. For it has come to Judah; It has come to the gate of My people— To Jerusalem.
- Amplified Bible - For Samaria’s wound is incurable, For it has come to Judah; The enemy has reached the gate of my people, Even to Jerusalem.
- American Standard Version - For her wounds are incurable; for it is come even unto Judah; it reacheth unto the gate of my people, even to Jerusalem.
- King James Version - For her wound is incurable; for it is come unto Judah; he is come unto the gate of my people, even to Jerusalem.
- New English Translation - For Samaria’s disease is incurable. It has infected Judah; it has spread to the leadership of my people and has even contaminated Jerusalem!
- World English Bible - For her wounds are incurable; for it has come even to Judah. It reaches to the gate of my people, even to Jerusalem.
- 新標點和合本 - 因為撒馬利亞的傷痕無法醫治, 延及猶大和耶路撒冷我民的城門。
- 和合本2010(上帝版-繁體) - 因為撒瑪利亞的創傷無法醫治, 蔓延到猶大, 到了我百姓的城門, 直達耶路撒冷。
- 和合本2010(神版-繁體) - 因為撒瑪利亞的創傷無法醫治, 蔓延到猶大, 到了我百姓的城門, 直達耶路撒冷。
- 當代譯本 - 因為撒瑪利亞的創傷無法救治, 已經禍及猶大, 直逼我百姓的城門,直逼耶路撒冷。
- 聖經新譯本 - 因為撒瑪利亞的創傷無法醫治, 並且殃及猶大, 直逼我子民的城門, 就是耶路撒冷。
- 呂振中譯本 - 因為 撒瑪利亞 的創傷無法醫治, 乃是延及 猶大 , 直逼我人民的城門, 至於 耶路撒冷 。
- 現代標點和合本 - 因為撒馬利亞的傷痕無法醫治, 延及猶大和耶路撒冷我民的城門。
- 文理和合譯本 - 因其創不能醫、延及猶大、至於耶路撒冷、我民之門、
- 文理委辦譯本 - 敵至猶大 耶路撒冷門、其禍遍於我民、其傷不得醫痊、
- 施約瑟淺文理新舊約聖經 - 蓋 撒瑪利亞 之傷甚重、延及 猶大 、延及我民之邑門、延及 耶路撒冷 、
- Nueva Versión Internacional - Porque la herida de Samaria es incurable: ha llegado hasta Judá. Se ha extendido hasta mi pueblo, ¡hasta la entrada misma de Jerusalén!
- 현대인의 성경 - 사마리아의 상처가 치료될 수 없고 유다도 그런 상처로 고통을 당하며 내 백성이 사는 예루살렘 성문에 파멸이 이르렀다.
- Новый Русский Перевод - потому, что рана Самарии неисцелима; она дошла до Иудеи, до ворот моего народа – до самого Иерусалима.
- Восточный перевод - потому что рана Самарии неисцелима; она дошла до Иудеи, до ворот моего народа – до самого Иерусалима.
- Восточный перевод, версия с «Аллахом» - потому что рана Самарии неисцелима; она дошла до Иудеи, до ворот моего народа – до самого Иерусалима.
- Восточный перевод, версия для Таджикистана - потому что рана Сомарии неисцелима; она дошла до Иудеи, до ворот моего народа – до самого Иерусалима.
- La Bible du Semeur 2015 - La plaie de Samarie ╵est incurable et elle atteint même Juda. La voilà qui s’avance ╵jusqu’à la porte de mon peuple : jusqu’à Jérusalem.
- リビングバイブル - わたしの民の傷が治せないほど深いからだ。 主はエルサレムを罰しようと、 すでにその門に立っている。
- Nova Versão Internacional - Pois a ferida de Samaria é incurável e chegou a Judá. O flagelo alcançou até mesmo a porta do meu povo, até a própria Jerusalém!
- Hoffnung für alle - Denn Samarias Wunden sind unheilbar, und auch Juda wird nicht verschont. Ja, selbst Jerusalem, die Hauptstadt meines Volkes, ist dem Untergang nah!
- Kinh Thánh Hiện Đại - Vì vết thương của dân không thể chữa lành. Nó còn lan tràn qua Giu-đa, đến tận cổng thành Giê-ru-sa-lem.
- พระคริสตธรรมคัมภีร์ไทย ฉบับอมตธรรมร่วมสมัย - เพราะบาดแผลของสะมาเรียเยียวยาไม่ได้ และลามมาถึงยูดาห์แล้ว มาถึงประตูเมืองของพี่น้องร่วมชาติของข้าพเจ้า มาถึงเยรูซาเล็มเลยทีเดียว
- พระคัมภีร์ ฉบับแปลใหม่ - เพราะบาดแผลของเมืองนั้นรักษาไม่หาย และได้เกิดขึ้นกับยูดาห์ มันถึงประตูเมืองของชนชาติของข้าพเจ้าแล้ว มาจนถึงเยรูซาเล็ม
交叉引用
- Isaiah 37:22 - the Lord has spoken this word against him: “The virgin daughter of Zion despises you and laughs at you. The daughter of Jerusalem shakes her head in derision as you flee.
- Isaiah 37:23 - “Whom have you been defying and ridiculing? Against whom did you raise your voice? At whom did you look with such haughty eyes? It was the Holy One of Israel!
- Isaiah 37:24 - By your messengers you have defied the Lord. You have said, ‘With my many chariots I have conquered the highest mountains— yes, the remotest peaks of Lebanon. I have cut down its tallest cedars and its finest cypress trees. I have reached its farthest heights and explored its deepest forests.
- Isaiah 37:25 - I have dug wells in many foreign lands and refreshed myself with their water. With the sole of my foot, I stopped up all the rivers of Egypt!’
- Isaiah 37:26 - “But have you not heard? I decided this long ago. Long ago I planned it, and now I am making it happen. I planned for you to crush fortified cities into heaps of rubble.
- Isaiah 37:27 - That is why their people have so little power and are so frightened and confused. They are as weak as grass, as easily trampled as tender green shoots. They are like grass sprouting on a housetop, scorched before it can grow lush and tall.
- Isaiah 37:28 - “But I know you well— where you stay and when you come and go. I know the way you have raged against me.
- Isaiah 37:29 - And because of your raging against me and your arrogance, which I have heard for myself, I will put my hook in your nose and my bit in your mouth. I will make you return by the same road on which you came.”
- Isaiah 37:30 - Then Isaiah said to Hezekiah, “Here is the proof that what I say is true: “This year you will eat only what grows up by itself, and next year you will eat what springs up from that. But in the third year you will plant crops and harvest them; you will tend vineyards and eat their fruit.
- Isaiah 37:31 - And you who are left in Judah, who have escaped the ravages of the siege, will put roots down in your own soil and grow up and flourish.
- Isaiah 37:32 - For a remnant of my people will spread out from Jerusalem, a group of survivors from Mount Zion. The passionate commitment of the Lord of Heaven’s Armies will make this happen!
- Isaiah 37:33 - “And this is what the Lord says about the king of Assyria: “‘His armies will not enter Jerusalem. They will not even shoot an arrow at it. They will not march outside its gates with their shields nor build banks of earth against its walls.
- Isaiah 37:34 - The king will return to his own country by the same road on which he came. He will not enter this city,’ says the Lord.
- Isaiah 37:35 - ‘For my own honor and for the sake of my servant David, I will defend this city and protect it.’”
- Isaiah 37:36 - That night the angel of the Lord went out to the Assyrian camp and killed 185,000 Assyrian soldiers. When the surviving Assyrians woke up the next morning, they found corpses everywhere.
- Isaiah 3:26 - The gates of Zion will weep and mourn. The city will be like a ravaged woman, huddled on the ground.
- Jeremiah 15:18 - Why then does my suffering continue? Why is my wound so incurable? Your help seems as uncertain as a seasonal brook, like a spring that has gone dry.”
- 2 Kings 18:9 - During the fourth year of Hezekiah’s reign, which was the seventh year of King Hoshea’s reign in Israel, King Shalmaneser of Assyria attacked the city of Samaria and began a siege against it.
- 2 Kings 18:10 - Three years later, during the sixth year of King Hezekiah’s reign and the ninth year of King Hoshea’s reign in Israel, Samaria fell.
- 2 Kings 18:11 - At that time the king of Assyria exiled the Israelites to Assyria and placed them in colonies in Halah, along the banks of the Habor River in Gozan, and in the cities of the Medes.
- 2 Kings 18:12 - For they refused to listen to the Lord their God and obey him. Instead, they violated his covenant—all the laws that Moses the Lord’s servant had commanded them to obey.
- 2 Kings 18:13 - In the fourteenth year of King Hezekiah’s reign, King Sennacherib of Assyria came to attack the fortified towns of Judah and conquered them.
- Isaiah 10:28 - Look, the Assyrians are now at Aiath. They are passing through Migron and are storing their equipment at Micmash.
- Isaiah 10:29 - They are crossing the pass and are camping at Geba. Fear strikes the town of Ramah. All the people of Gibeah, the hometown of Saul, are running for their lives.
- Isaiah 10:30 - Scream in terror, you people of Gallim! Shout out a warning to Laishah. Oh, poor Anathoth!
- Isaiah 10:31 - There go the people of Madmenah, all fleeing. The citizens of Gebim are trying to hide.
- Isaiah 10:32 - The enemy stops at Nob for the rest of that day. He shakes his fist at beautiful Mount Zion, the mountain of Jerusalem.
- Isaiah 1:5 - Why do you continue to invite punishment? Must you rebel forever? Your head is injured, and your heart is sick.
- Isaiah 1:6 - You are battered from head to foot— covered with bruises, welts, and infected wounds— without any soothing ointments or bandages.
- Jeremiah 30:11 - For I am with you and will save you,” says the Lord. “I will completely destroy the nations where I have scattered you, but I will not completely destroy you. I will discipline you, but with justice; I cannot let you go unpunished.”
- Jeremiah 30:12 - This is what the Lord says: “Your injury is incurable— a terrible wound.
- Jeremiah 30:13 - There is no one to help you or to bind up your injury. No medicine can heal you.
- Jeremiah 30:14 - All your lovers—your allies—have left you and do not care about you anymore. I have wounded you cruelly, as though I were your enemy. For your sins are many, and your guilt is great.
- Jeremiah 30:15 - Why do you protest your punishment— this wound that has no cure? I have had to punish you because your sins are many and your guilt is great.
- 2 Chronicles 32:1 - After Hezekiah had faithfully carried out this work, King Sennacherib of Assyria invaded Judah. He laid siege to the fortified towns, giving orders for his army to break through their walls.
- 2 Chronicles 32:2 - When Hezekiah realized that Sennacherib also intended to attack Jerusalem,
- 2 Chronicles 32:3 - he consulted with his officials and military advisers, and they decided to stop the flow of the springs outside the city.
- 2 Chronicles 32:4 - They organized a huge work crew to stop the flow of the springs, cutting off the brook that ran through the fields. For they said, “Why should the kings of Assyria come here and find plenty of water?”
- 2 Chronicles 32:5 - Then Hezekiah worked hard at repairing all the broken sections of the wall, erecting towers, and constructing a second wall outside the first. He also reinforced the supporting terraces in the City of David and manufactured large numbers of weapons and shields.
- 2 Chronicles 32:6 - He appointed military officers over the people and assembled them before him in the square at the city gate. Then Hezekiah encouraged them by saying:
- 2 Chronicles 32:7 - “Be strong and courageous! Don’t be afraid or discouraged because of the king of Assyria or his mighty army, for there is a power far greater on our side!
- 2 Chronicles 32:8 - He may have a great army, but they are merely men. We have the Lord our God to help us and to fight our battles for us!” Hezekiah’s words greatly encouraged the people.
- 2 Chronicles 32:9 - While King Sennacherib of Assyria was still besieging the town of Lachish, he sent his officers to Jerusalem with this message for Hezekiah and all the people in the city:
- 2 Chronicles 32:10 - “This is what King Sennacherib of Assyria says: What are you trusting in that makes you think you can survive my siege of Jerusalem?
- 2 Chronicles 32:11 - Hezekiah has said, ‘The Lord our God will rescue us from the king of Assyria.’ Surely Hezekiah is misleading you, sentencing you to death by famine and thirst!
- 2 Chronicles 32:12 - Don’t you realize that Hezekiah is the very person who destroyed all the Lord’s shrines and altars? He commanded Judah and Jerusalem to worship only at the altar at the Temple and to offer sacrifices on it alone.
- 2 Chronicles 32:13 - “Surely you must realize what I and the other kings of Assyria before me have done to all the people of the earth! Were any of the gods of those nations able to rescue their people from my power?
- 2 Chronicles 32:14 - Which of their gods was able to rescue its people from the destructive power of my predecessors? What makes you think your God can rescue you from me?
- 2 Chronicles 32:15 - Don’t let Hezekiah deceive you! Don’t let him fool you like this! I say it again—no god of any nation or kingdom has ever yet been able to rescue his people from me or my ancestors. How much less will your God rescue you from my power!”
- 2 Chronicles 32:16 - And Sennacherib’s officers further mocked the Lord God and his servant Hezekiah, heaping insult upon insult.
- 2 Chronicles 32:17 - The king also sent letters scorning the Lord, the God of Israel. He wrote, “Just as the gods of all the other nations failed to rescue their people from my power, so the God of Hezekiah will also fail.”
- 2 Chronicles 32:18 - The Assyrian officials who brought the letters shouted this in Hebrew to the people gathered on the walls of the city, trying to terrify them so it would be easier to capture the city.
- 2 Chronicles 32:19 - These officers talked about the God of Jerusalem as though he were one of the pagan gods, made by human hands.
- 2 Chronicles 32:20 - Then King Hezekiah and the prophet Isaiah son of Amoz cried out in prayer to God in heaven.
- 2 Chronicles 32:21 - And the Lord sent an angel who destroyed the Assyrian army with all its commanders and officers. So Sennacherib was forced to return home in disgrace to his own land. And when he entered the temple of his god, some of his own sons killed him there with a sword.
- 2 Chronicles 32:22 - That is how the Lord rescued Hezekiah and the people of Jerusalem from King Sennacherib of Assyria and from all the others who threatened them. So there was peace throughout the land.
- 2 Chronicles 32:23 - From then on King Hezekiah became highly respected among all the surrounding nations, and many gifts for the Lord arrived at Jerusalem, with valuable presents for King Hezekiah, too.
- Isaiah 8:7 - Therefore, the Lord will overwhelm them with a mighty flood from the Euphrates River —the king of Assyria and all his glory. This flood will overflow all its channels
- Isaiah 8:8 - and sweep into Judah until it is chin deep. It will spread its wings, submerging your land from one end to the other, O Immanuel.
- Micah 1:12 - The people of Maroth anxiously wait for relief, but only bitterness awaits them as the Lord’s judgment reaches even to the gates of Jerusalem.