CHAPTER 19
1But merciless wrath assailed the wicked until the end,
for God knew beforehand what they were yet to do:a
2That though they themselves had agreed to the departure
and had anxiously sent them on their way,
they would regret it and pursue them.b
3For while they were still engaged in funeral rites
and mourning at the burials of the dead,
They adopted another senseless plan:
those whom they had driven out with entreaties
they now pursued as fugitives.c
4For a compulsion appropriate to this ending drew them on,
and made them forget what had befallen them,
That they might complete the torments of their punishment,
5and your people might experience a glorious* journey
while those others met an extraordinary death.
6* For all creation, in its several kinds, was being made over anew,
serving your commands, that your children might be preserved unharmed.d
7The cloud overshadowed their camp;
and out of what had been water, dry land was seen emerging:
Out of the Red Sea an unimpeded road,
and a grassy plain out of the mighty flood.e
8Over this crossed the whole nation sheltered by your hand,
and they beheld stupendous wonders.
9For they ranged about like horses,
and leapt like lambs,
praising you, LORD, their deliverer.f
10For they were still mindful of what had happened in their sojourn:
how instead of the young of animals the land brought forth gnats,
and instead of fishes the river swarmed with countless frogs.g
11And later they saw also a new kind of birdh
when, prompted by desire, they asked for pleasant foods;
12For to appease them quail came to them from the sea.
13And the punishments came upon the sinners
not without forewarnings from the violence of the thunderbolts.
For they justly suffered for their own misdeeds,
since they treated their guests with the more grievous* hatred.i
14For those others* did not receive unfamiliar visitors,j
but these were enslaving beneficent guests.
15And not that only; but what punishment was to be theirs*
since they received strangers unwillingly!
16Yet these,* after welcoming them with festivities,
oppressed with awful toils
those who had shared with them the same rights.k
17And they were struck with blindness,*
as those others had been at the doors of the righteous man—
When, surrounded by yawning darkness,
each sought the entrance of his own door.l
18For the elements, in ever-changing harmony,
like strings of the harp, produce new melody,
while the flow of music steadily persists.
And this can be perceived exactly from a review of what took place.
19For land creatures were changed into water creatures,
and those that swam went over on land.
20Fire in water maintained its own strength,m
and water forgot its quenching nature;
21Flames, by contrast, neither consumed the flesh
of the perishable animals that went about in them,
nor melted the icelike, quick-melting kind of ambrosial food.
22For every way, LORD! you magnified and glorified your people;
unfailing, you stood by them in every time and circumstance.n
* [19:5] Glorious: more precisely, “wondrous,” but the word reflects “glorified” in 18:8 and 19:22.
* [19:6] The cooperation of creation in Israel’s deliverance (vv. 7–12) under the direction of the Lord is a favorite theme; cf. 16:24–25.
* [19:13] More grievous: than that of the people of Sodom (Gn 19) with whom the Egyptians are compared.
* [19:14] Others: the people of Sodom refused to receive strangers. Beneficent: because of the services rendered by Joseph.
* [19:15] Theirs: the people of Sodom.
* [19:16] These: the Egyptians.
* [19:17] Blindness: the plague of darkness. Righteous man: Lot (Gn 19:11).
c. [19:3] Wis 18:10, 12; Ex 12:30–36.
f. [19:9] Wis 10:20; 16:8; Ex 15:1–18; Ps 114:4–6.
g. [19:10] Ex 7:27–8:3; 8:12–15; Ps 105:30–31.
h. [19:11–12] Wis 16:2; Ps 78:18.
j. [19:14–15] Gn 15:13; Ex 2:22.
k. [19:16] Gn 45:17–20; 47:4–6; Ex 1:11.
l. [19:17] Wis 17:2; Gn 19:11.
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