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18 What good[a] is an idol? Why would a craftsman make it?[b]
What good is a metal image that gives misleading oracles?[c]
Why would its creator place his trust in it[d]
and make[e] such mute, worthless things?
19 Woe to the one who says to wood, ‘Wake up!’—
he who says[f] to speechless stone, ‘Awake!’
Can it give reliable guidance?[g]
It is overlaid with gold and silver;
it has no life’s breath inside it.
20 But the Lord is in his majestic palace.[h]
The whole earth is speechless in his presence!”[i]

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Footnotes

  1. Habakkuk 2:18 tn Or “of what value.”
  2. Habakkuk 2:18 tn Heb “so that the one who forms it fashions it?” Here כִּי (ki) is taken as resultative after the rhetorical question. For other examples of this use, see R. J. Williams, Hebrew Syntax, 73, §450.
  3. Habakkuk 2:18 tn Heb “or a metal image, a teacher of lies.” The words “What good is” in the translation are supplied from the previous parallel line. “Teacher of lies” refers to the false oracles that the so-called god would deliver through a priest. See J. J. M. Roberts, Nahum, Habakkuk, and Zephaniah (OTL), 126.
  4. Habakkuk 2:18 tn Heb “so that the one who forms his image trusts in it?” As earlier in the verse, כִּי (ki) is resultative.
  5. Habakkuk 2:18 tn Heb “to make.”
  6. Habakkuk 2:19 tn The words “he who says” in the translation are supplied from the previous parallel line.
  7. Habakkuk 2:19 tn Though the Hebrew text has no formal interrogative marker here, the context indicates that the statement should be taken as a rhetorical question anticipating the answer, “Of course not!” (so also NIV, NRSV).
  8. Habakkuk 2:20 tn Or “holy temple.” The Lord’s heavenly palace, rather than the earthly temple, is probably in view here (see Ps 11:4; Mic 1:2-3). The Hebrew word קֹדֶשׁ (qodesh, “holy”) here refers to the sovereign transcendence associated with his palace.
  9. Habakkuk 2:20 tn Or “Be quiet before him, all the earth!”