Ruin.

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Ruin. [1]

The words used in the Hebrew thus rendered in the A.V. are very expressive. The ruin of a city by dilapidation, separating all its stones:  Isaiah 25:2, "Thou hast made of a fenced city a ruin" (or Separation ,

מִפֵּלָה ; so of a country,  Isaiah 23:13; מִפָּלָה ,  Isaiah 17:1; מִפֶּלֶת  Ezekiel 13:13;  Ezekiel 27:27). Ruin of strongholds by breaking them up:  Psalms 89:40, "Thou hast brought his strongholds to ruin" (i.e. to a Breaking , מִחְתָּה ). This word elsewhere means terror, and expresses the alarm attendant on the taking of a fortified place. Demolished structures:  Ezekiel 36:35-36 (the root is הָרִס , to Tear Down , as in  Amos 9:11; like Κατασκάπτω ,  Acts 15:16; but in  Luke 6:49, it is Ῥῆγμα , a Tearing ) .

Figuratively, ruin, a fall, or stumbling, from some cause of, or temptation to, sin:  2 Chronicles 28:23, "They [the gods of Damascus] were the ruin ( מִכַשֵׁלָה , a Stumbling - Block ) of him [Ahaz] and of all Israel;" so מַכַשׁוֹל ,  Ezekiel 18:30;  Ezekiel 21:15. Ruin, destruction:  Proverbs 24:22, "Their calamity shall rise suddenly; who knoweth the ruin ( פַּיד , Destruction ) of them both?" Ruin, a cause for repentance: 26:28, "A flattering mouth worketh ruin" ( מַדְחֶה , Contrition or repentance).

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