...And what, you convicts so what will you do for the day of command, is the day designated by God to command your punishment, and not only that but for the Holocaust from a distance will come, because this day has two applause, A. Salvation from her, B. that she will come from a distant place, until you do not feel the essence of the trouble and interest at all on whom you will experience:
...Day of command, a day prepared for the recompense of the season, the year of their command (Jeremiah 11:23), the time of their command (6: 6):
Holocaust, Sudden Darkness (Proverbs 1)
And on whom, as to whom, and also the lifting up on his house (Sha'a B):
...And what will you do? That is to say, if there is no power in the hands of the widows and orphans, but what will you return to the place of God when you are in this season:
And to the Holocaust. When darkness shall come upon you from afar, and this is the king of Assyria:
For help. To help you:
And Anna, leave. When you go to the Diaspora, you will leave the capital that you collected in the loot, neither son nor daughter will remain:
Ha! Assyria, rod of My anger, In whose hand, as a staff, is My fury!
(5) О Ашшур, посох гнева Моего! И посох в руке его – Мое негодование... (12) И будет, когда завершит Г-сподь все дело Свое на горе Цийон и в Йерушалаиме, (то скажет:) накажу Я за плод сердца надменного царя Ашшурского и за тщеславие высоко поднятых очей его, (13) Ибо он говорил: "силою руки моей сделал я (это) и мудростью своею, ибо я умен; и стираю границы народов, и запасы их расхищаю, и сильных низвергаю с их мест,
Isaiah[a] was the 8th-century BC Israelite prophet after whom the Book of Isaiah is named.[7][8]The traditional view is that all 66 chapters of the book of Isaiah were written by one man, Isaiah, possibly in two periods between 740 BC and c. 686 BC
And when Vespasian came to destroy Jerusalem, he said to [the inhabitants]: Fools! Why do you seek to destroy this city and burn the Holy Temple? What do I request of you? Only that you give me one bow or one arrow [as a sign of your surrender], and then I will leave you be. They said to him: Just as we went out [to battle] against the two who came before you, and killed them, so will we go out against you and kill you. When Rabban Yohanan ben Zakkai heard this, he sent for the men of Jerusalem and said to them: My children, why do seek to destroy this city and burn the Holy Temple? For what did he ask of you but one bow or one arrow, and then he would leave you be. They said to him: Just as we went out [to battle] against the two who came before him, and we killed them, so will we go out against him and kill him. Vespasian had men lurking within the walls of Jerusalem, and everything they heard they would would write on an arrow and shoot over the wall. So they reported that Rabban Yohanan ben Zakkai supported the Caesar. [Thus would he remind the men of Jerusalem, i.e., plead with them to acquiesce to Vespasian.] And after Rabban Yohanan ben Zakkai said this [to them] day after day, and saw that they would not accept his advice, he sent for his students, Rabbi Eliezer and Rabbi Yehoshua, and said to them: My sons, take me out of this place! Make me a coffin, and I will sleep in it. So Rabbi Eliezer held [the coffin] on one end, and Rabbi Yehoshua held it (on the other, and they carried him until the sun set, right up to the gates of Jerusalem. The gatekeepers said to them: What is this? They replied: A dead body – and you know that a corpse cannot remain overnight in Jerusalem. They said: If that is a dead body, go ahead and take it out [of the city]). So they took him out (and they were carrying him until sunset) until they came to Vespasian, and they opened the coffin, and [Rabbi Yohanan] got up and stood before him. He said: So you are Rabbi Yohanan ben Zakkai. Ask for whatever you wish, and I will give it to you. He replied: I ask nothing from you except for Yavneh. I will go there and teach my students, and I will establish prayer, and I will do all the mitzvot [mentioned in the Torah]. [Vespasian] replied: Go. All that you wish to do, you may do. [Rabbi Yohanan] said to him: Do you want me to tell you one thing? He said: Go ahead. He said to him: Take note; soon you will ascend to the kingship. How do you know? [Vespasian] said to him. [Rabbi Yohanan answered:] We have a tradition that the Holy Temple will not be taken by an ordinary man, but only by a king. For it says (Isaiah 10:34), “And the Lebanon tree will fall in its majesty.” They say that it was not (one or two or) three days until a letter came from [Vespasian’s] city announcing that the Caesar had died and they were appointing him to ascend to the kingship. They brought him a catapult and positioned it toward the walls of Jerusalem. Then they brought him cedar posts, put them in the catapult, and fired them against the wall until they made a breach. Then they brought him the head of a pig, put it in the catapult, and flung it toward the sacrificial portions that were on the [Temple] altar.
While Jerusalem was being taken, Rabban Yohanan ben Zakkai was sitting and waiting, and he trembled (before God), just as Eli sat and watched, as it says (I Samuel 4:13), “There was Eli, sitting on a seat on the side of the road, waiting, and his heart trembled because of the Ark of God.” When Rabban Yohanan ben Zakkai heard that Jerusalem was destroyed and the Holy Temple was burning in flames, he tore his clothes, and his students tore their clothes, and they cried and screamed and lamented.
It says (Zechariah 11:1), “Open your doors, Lebanon [i.e., the Holy Temple], and let fire consume your cedars” – these are the (high) priests who were in the Sanctuary, who [took] their keys in their hands and threw them toward the heavens, and said before the Holy Blessed One: Master of the World! Here are Your keys, which You entrusted to us. For we were not faithful custodians doing the King’s work and eating from the King’s table.
Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and the twelve tribes, were also crying and screaming and lamenting, and they said (Zechariah 11:2), “Howl, cypresses, for cedars have fallen! How the mighty are ravaged!” [“Howl, cypresses, for cedars have fallen!” – these are Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and the twelve tribes.] “Howl, you oaks of Bashan” – these are Moses, Aaron, and Miriam. “For the stately forest is laid low” – that is the Holy of Holies. “The voice of wailing shepherds, for their fields [have been ravaged]” (Zechariah 11:3) – these are David and his son Solomon. “The sound of the lions roaring, for the jungle of the Jordan has been ravaged” – these are Elijah and Elisha.
The Rabbis say : As for the King Messiah, whether he be among the living or the dead. He shall be called David (meaning whether he exist or no, he will be of a royal stock). According to R. Tunhooma, the reason would be this (Ps. xviii. 60) : " Great deliverance giveth lie to His king, to David His anointed '." R. Joshua ben Levi says : His name shall be Tsemah; and according to R. Judan, son of R. Aibo: It shall be Menahem (comforter). ' R. Hanina, son of Abahoo, says : You must not conclude that these two opinions contradict each other, for m fact these two names are the same ^ The following tale which we have from R. Judan, son of R. Aibo, proves it : One day, an Israelite, whilst cultivating his held, heard his cow cry out; an Arab, who was passing, also heard her : Son of Juda, cried he, son of Juda ! quit thy cow, quit thy plough, for the Temple is destroyed (and thou shalt either mourn or flee, instead of till the earth). The cow bellowed a second time. Son of Juda, said the Arab, son of Juda ! take back thy cow and thy plough, for the King, the Messiah, has just been born. What is his name? Menahem. And what is his father's name? Ezeckiel. And from whence does he come? From the royal town of Eethlem in Judea^ The Hebrew sold his cow and his plough and bought some baby's clothes. He went from town to town; when he arrived at the town mentioned, he saw that all the women were buying clothes, excepting Menahera^s mother. And he heard the women say : Mother of Menahem, come and buy clothes for thy child. Oh, said she, I should like to see the enemies of Israel strangled ^, for on the day of he infantas birth, the Temple of Jerusalem is destroyed. We are certain, answered the traveller, that if, because of his advent, the Temple is destroyed, it will also be rebuilt b\^ him (therefore, be comforted, and make thy purchases). But, said she, I have not a groat. Never mind, said he, come, buy what thou needest ; if to-day thou hast not the necessary money before thee, I will come to be paid another day. Two days afterwards, he came back into the town. "What hast thou done with thy child? he asked of the woman. I know not, answered she; since thou wast hero there has been storm and tempest, and my child has been taken from me". Aboon says : Why all that from a tale concerning the Arab ? A verse of the Bible sanctions it (Isa. x. 33) : " Behold the Lord, the Lord of Hosts, shall lop the bough with terror ; and the following : ''And there shall come forth a rod out of the stem of Jesse" (meaning, that the birth of a Messiah of the line of David shall make up for the destruction of the Temple).
Radak
Chomat Anakh
Rashi
Jerusalem Talmud Berakhot
Gittin
Avot D'Rabbi Natan
And a nod. From the emphatic building and it is a matter of cutting like holidays will be encircled and translated and decapitated and attacked:
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And tangles. A parable about the great ministers who came in one council with Sennacherib and became entangled with one another in one council and with one heart like the branches of the trees tangled with each other:
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In iron. Like the tree whose branches are cut with iron, so they will be cut down stronger than they:
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And Lebanon. Included all the trees of the forest, and Lebanon said that it was a forest in the land of Israel, and a thing written on the present