{Under a curse} (hupo kataran). Picture of the curse
hanging over them like a Damocles' blade. Cf. Ro 3:9 "under
sin" (huph' hamartian). The word for "curse" (katara) is an
old one (kata, down, ara, imprecation), often in LXX, in N.T.
only here and 13 Jas 3:10 2Pe 2:14 . Paul quotes De 27:26 ,
the close of the curses on Mt. Ebal. He makes a slight
explanatory modification of the LXX changing logois to
gegrammenois en t(9369) bibli(9369). The idea is made clearer by the
participle (gegrammenois) and ibli(9369) (book). The curse
becomes effective only when the law is violated. {Cursed}
(epikataratos). Verbal adjective from epikataraomai, to
imprecate curses, late word, common in LXX. In N.T. only here and
verse 13 , but in inscriptions also (Deissmann, _Light from the
Ancient East_, p. 96). The emphasis is on "continueth"
(emmenei) and "all" (p(8373)in).
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