Add parallel Print Page Options

10 Can you hitch a wild ox to a plow?
    Will it plow a field for you?

Read full chapter

10 Can you hold it to the furrow with a harness?(A)
    Will it till the valleys behind you?

Read full chapter

13 Harness your chariot horses and flee,
    you people of Lachish.[a]
You were the first city in Judah
    to follow Israel in her rebellion,
    and you led Jerusalem[b] into sin.

Read full chapter

Footnotes

  1. 1:13a Lachish sounds like the Hebrew term for “team of horses.”
  2. 1:13b Hebrew the daughter of Zion.

13 You who live in Lachish,(A)
    harness fast horses to the chariot.
You are where the sin of Daughter Zion(B) began,
    for the transgressions of Israel were found in you.

Read full chapter

10 Now whenever it fits my plan,
    I will attack you, too.
I will call out the armies of the nations
    to punish you for your multiplied sins.

11 “Israel[a] is like a trained heifer treading out the grain—
    an easy job she loves.
    But I will put a heavy yoke on her tender neck.
I will force Judah to pull the plow
    and Israel[b] to break up the hard ground.

Read full chapter

Footnotes

  1. 10:11a Hebrew Ephraim, referring to the northern kingdom of Israel.
  2. 10:11b Hebrew Jacob. The names “Jacob” and “Israel” are often interchanged throughout the Old Testament, referring sometimes to the individual patriarch and sometimes to the nation.

10 When I please, I will punish(A) them;
    nations will be gathered against them
    to put them in bonds for their double sin.
11 Ephraim is a trained heifer
    that loves to thresh;
so I will put a yoke(B)
    on her fair neck.
I will drive Ephraim,
    Judah must plow,
    and Jacob must break up the ground.

Read full chapter

My back is covered with cuts,
    as if a farmer had plowed long furrows.

Read full chapter

Plowmen have plowed my back
    and made their furrows long.

Read full chapter

Can you make it a pet like a bird,
    or give it to your little girls to play with?

Read full chapter

Can you make a pet of it like a bird
    or put it on a leash for the young women in your house?

Read full chapter

It hates the noise of the city
    and has no driver to shout at it.

Read full chapter

It laughs(A) at the commotion in the town;
    it does not hear a driver’s shout.(B)

Read full chapter

“Who gives the wild donkey its freedom?
    Who untied its ropes?

Read full chapter

“Who let the wild donkey(A) go free?
    Who untied its ropes?

Read full chapter

14 a messenger arrived at Job’s home with this news: “Your oxen were plowing, with the donkeys feeding beside them,

Read full chapter

14 a messenger came to Job and said, “The oxen were plowing and the donkeys were grazing(A) nearby,

Read full chapter