Isaias

Septuaginta

Septuaginta. The Book of Isaiah According to the Septuagint (Codex Alexandrinus). Ottley, Richard, Rusden, editor. Cambridge: C.J. Clay and Sons, 1904.

12 For there is a day of the Lord of Hosts against every worker of pride, and overweening one, and against every one that is high and lofty, and they shall be humbled:

13 And against every cedar of Lebanon, of them that are high and lofty, and against every oak-tree of Bashan,

14 And against every mountain, and against every high hill,

15 And against every high tower, and against every high wall,

16 And against every ship of the sea, and against every sight of the beauty of ships:

17 And every man shall be humbled. and the uplifting of men shall fall, and the Lord alone shall be uplifted in that day.

18. And all the works of men's hands shall they hide away,

19 Carrying them into the caves, and into the rents of the rocks, and into the holes of the earth, from before the fear of the Lord, and from the glory of his strength, when he ariseth to shatter the earth.

20 In that day shall a man cast out his abominations, the silver and the golden, which he made to worship, to the vain ones and to the bats;

21 To go into the holes of the solid rock, and into the rents of the rocks, from before the face of the Lord, and from the glory of his strength, when he ariseth to shatter the earth. * * * *

[*](10. ‘from before’ lit. ‘from the face of So the Heb. idiom.)[*](17. ‘uplifting’: ‘insolence,’ B.)[*](20. ‘For in that ’ ℵB: ‘which they ’ ℵBQ c. ver. 22 not found in LXX, supplied in some MSS. (Lucianic c.) from Aquila.)
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III. 1 Now behold, the ruler, the Lord of Hosts, will take away from Judah and from Jerusalem him that is strong and her that is strong, the strength of bread and the strength of water,