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Commentaries:
Adam Clarke
Of the oppressor, as if he, etc. - "The caph in keasher seems clearly to have changed its situation from the end of the preceding word to the beginning of this; or rather, to have been omitted by mistake there, because it was here. That it was there the Septuagint show by rendering hammetsikech , of him, that oppressed thee. And so they render this word in both its places in this verse. The Vulgate also has the pronoun in the first instance; furoris ejus qui te tribulabat ." Dr. Jubb. The correction seems well founded; I have not conformed the translation to it, because it makes little difference in the sense.
Other Adam Clarke entries containing Isaiah 51:13:
Isaiah 51:16
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