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New Living Translation

English Standard Version

  • Prediction of Babylon’s Fall

    “Come down, virgin daughter of Babylon, and sit in the dust.
    For your days of sitting on a throne have ended.
    O daughter of Babylonia,a never again will you be
    the lovely princess, tender and delicate.
  • The Humiliation of Babylon

    Come down and sit in the dust,
    O virgin daughter of Babylon;
    sit on the ground without a throne,
    O daughter of the Chaldeans!
    For you shall no more be called
    tender and delicate.
  • Take heavy millstones and grind flour.
    Remove your veil, and strip off your robe.
    Expose yourself to public view.b
  • Take the millstones and grind flour,
    put off your veil,
    strip off your robe, uncover your legs,
    pass through the rivers.
  • You will be naked and burdened with shame.
    I will take vengeance against you without pity.”
  • Your nakedness shall be uncovered,
    and your disgrace shall be seen.
    I will take vengeance,
    and I will spare no one.
  • Our Redeemer, whose name is the LORD of Heaven’s Armies,
    is the Holy One of Israel.
  • Our Redeemer — the Lord of hosts is his name —
    is the Holy One of Israel.
  • “O beautiful Babylon, sit now in darkness and silence.
    Never again will you be known as the queen of kingdoms.
  • Sit in silence, and go into darkness,
    O daughter of the Chaldeans;
    for you shall no more be called
    the mistress of kingdoms.
  • For I was angry with my chosen people
    and punished them by letting them fall into your hands.
    But you, Babylon, showed them no mercy.
    You oppressed even the elderly.
  • I was angry with my people;
    I profaned my heritage;
    I gave them into your hand;
    you showed them no mercy;
    on the aged you made your yoke exceedingly heavy.
  • You said, ‘I will reign forever as queen of the world!’
    You did not reflect on your actions
    or think about their consequences.
  • You said, “I shall be mistress forever,”
    so that you did not lay these things to heart
    or remember their end.
  • “Listen to this, you pleasure-loving kingdom,
    living at ease and feeling secure.
    You say, ‘I am the only one, and there is no other.
    I will never be a widow or lose my children.’
  • Now therefore hear this, you lover of pleasures,
    who sit securely,
    who say in your heart,
    “I am, and there is no one besides me;
    I shall not sit as a widow
    or know the loss of children”:
  • Well, both these things will come upon you in a moment:
    widowhood and the loss of your children.
    Yes, these calamities will come upon you,
    despite all your witchcraft and magic.
  • These two things shall come to you
    in a moment, in one day;
    the loss of children and widowhood
    shall come upon you in full measure,
    in spite of your many sorceries
    and the great power of your enchantments.
  • “You felt secure in your wickedness.
    ‘No one sees me,’ you said.
    But your ‘wisdom’ and ‘knowledge’ have led you astray,
    and you said, ‘I am the only one, and there is no other.’
  • You felt secure in your wickedness;
    you said, “No one sees me”;
    your wisdom and your knowledge led you astray,
    and you said in your heart,
    “I am, and there is no one besides me.”
  • So disaster will overtake you,
    and you won’t be able to charm it away.
    Calamity will fall upon you,
    and you won’t be able to buy your way out.
    A catastrophe will strike you suddenly,
    one for which you are not prepared.
  • But evil shall come upon you,
    which you will not know how to charm away;
    disaster shall fall upon you,
    for which you will not be able to atone;
    and ruin shall come upon you suddenly,
    of which you know nothing.
  • “Now use your magical charms!
    Use the spells you have worked at all these years!
    Maybe they will do you some good.
    Maybe they can make someone afraid of you.
  • Stand fast in your enchantments
    and your many sorceries,
    with which you have labored from your youth;
    perhaps you may be able to succeed;
    perhaps you may inspire terror.
  • All the advice you receive has made you tired.
    Where are all your astrologers,
    those stargazers who make predictions each month?
    Let them stand up and save you from what the future holds.
  • You are wearied with your many counsels;
    let them stand forth and save you,
    those who divide the heavens,
    who gaze at the stars,
    who at the new moons make known
    what shall come upon you.
  • But they are like straw burning in a fire;
    they cannot save themselves from the flame.
    You will get no help from them at all;
    their hearth is no place to sit for warmth.
  • Behold, they are like stubble;
    the fire consumes them;
    they cannot deliver themselves
    from the power of the flame.
    No coal for warming oneself is this,
    no fire to sit before!
  • And all your friends,
    those with whom you’ve done business since childhood,
    will go their own ways,
    turning a deaf ear to your cries.
  • Such to you are those with whom you have labored,
    who have done business with you from your youth;
    they wander about, each in his own direction;
    there is no one to save you.

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