Isaias

Septuaginta

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

21 Your judgment draweth near, saith the Lord God; your counsels have drawn near, saith the King of Jacob.

22 Let them draw near, and declare unto you what shall come to pass; or tell ye (of) the former things, what they were, and we will apply our thoughts; and perceive what the last things be: and tell us the things that are coming.

23 Declare the things that are coming at the last, and we shall perceive that ye are gods: do good, and do evil, and we will wonder.

24 For whence are ye, and whence is your working? from the earth. As an abomination have they chosen you.

25 I have raised up him from the north, and him from the rising of the sun; they shall be called by my name; let rulers. come, and like clay of a potter, and like a potter treading clay, so shall ye be trodden down. ’

26 For who shall proclaim the things from, the beginning, that we may learn them? or the former things, and we shall say that they are true? there is none that foretelleth, nor any that heareth your words.

[*](18. ‘pools of ’ ℵ*B,)[*](19. Omit ‘and’ before ‘myrtle,’ ℵ*B.)[*](20. Omit ‘all.’ ℵ*B.)[*](23 init. ‘Declare to ’ ℵ*B. ‘wonder, and see (it) ’ ℵBQ c.)[*](25 init. ‘But I ’ ℵBQ. ‘be ’ syllable omitted in A,)
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27 I will give rule to Zion, and will comfort Jerusalem in the way.

28 For from the nations, behold, no man; and from among their idols there was none that declared (aught), and if I ask of them, Whence are ye? they will not answer me.

29 For they are those that make you, and vain are they that lead you astray.