But, as I come to the last book that I have to start, I picked a chapter in the middle of things that I may have only read once, and then forgot. It's the comical nature of religion. I can see this Micah getting into trouble. But it's the chapter with the famous - everyone did what was right in his own eyes. And a click or two showed me a similar verse in Proverbs 21 (nice to have the programming do this.) These are the only two places where I see אישׁ and ישׁר so juxtaposed in this sequence. (Mind you I have been known to be blind). One can see that perhaps these two verses were aware of each other one way or another.
אישׁ everyone |
░
| JUD 17:6 | אישׁ | |||
הישׁר what was upright |
░
| JUD 17:6 | ישׁר | |||
בעיניו in its own eyes |
░
| JUD 17:6 | עין | |||
אישׁ anyone |
░
| PRO 21:2 | אישׁ | |||
ישׁר is upright |
░
| PRO 21:2 | ישׁר | |||
בעיניו in its eyes |
░
| PRO 21:2 | עין |
Anyway - I scanned the chapter and wonder about someone who thinks they have religion in their pocket, purchased by silver. Maybe that's the lesson to come... I'm not sure it's an argument in favour of a king. And the Danites are definitely not ancestors to be proud of. They were the terrorists of their day. And they too created refugees from defenseless people.
I don't care what they were promised or who by.
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