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“When the lioness saw
    that her hopes for him were gone,
she took another of her cubs
    and taught him to be a strong young lion.
He prowled among the other lions
    and stood out among them in his strength.
He learned to hunt and devour prey,
    and he, too, became a man-eater.
He demolished fortresses[a]
    and destroyed their towns and cities.
Their farms were desolated,
    and their crops were destroyed.
The land and its people trembled in fear
    when they heard him roar.
Then the armies of the nations attacked him,
    surrounding him from every direction.
They threw a net over him
    and captured him in their pit.
With hooks, they dragged him into a cage
    and brought him before the king of Babylon.
They held him in captivity,
    so his voice could never again be heard
    on the mountains of Israel.

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Footnotes

  1. 19:7 As in Greek version; Hebrew reads He knew widows.

“When Israel, the mother lion, saw that all her hopes for him were gone, she took another of her cubs, King Jehoiachin,[a] and taught him to be ‘king of the beasts.’ He became a leader among the lions and learned to catch prey, and he too became a man-eater. He demolished the palaces of the surrounding nations and ruined their cities; their farms were desolated, their crops destroyed; everyone in the land shook with terror when they heard him roar. Then the armies of the nations surrounded him, coming from every side, and trapped him in a pit and captured him. They prodded him into a cage and brought him before the king of Babylon. He was held in captivity so that his voice could never again be heard upon the mountains of Israel.

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Footnotes

  1. Ezekiel 19:5 King Jehoiachin, implied.