Fear, and the Pit, and the Snare
Isaiah 24:17
Fear, and the pit, and the snare, are on you, O inhabitant of the earth.


The expressions here used seem to have formed a proverbial saying, as appears from their being repeated by the prophet Jeremiah (Jeremiah 48:43, 44). They allude to the different methods of taking wild beasts that were anciently in use. The fear, or terror, was a line strung with feathers of different colours, which was so constructed as to flutter in the air and to make a terrifying noise, that frightened the beasts into the pit, or the snare, that was prepared for them. The pit was digged deep in the ground, and covered over with boughs or turf, in order to deceive them, that they might fall into it unawares. The snare was composed of nets, enclosing a large space of ground that the wild beasts were known to haunt, which was drawn gradually narrower, until they were at last entangled and shut up. Our prophet, addressing himself to the inhabitants of the earth, declares, that calamities corresponding to each of these ways of destroying wild beasts, were to seize upon them, and that they should be so ordered, that those who escaped one sort would be arrested by another.

(R. Macculloch.)



Parallel Verses
KJV: Fear, and the pit, and the snare, are upon thee, O inhabitant of the earth.

WEB: Fear, the pit, and the snare, are on you who inhabitant the earth.




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