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(10) ” For violence against your brother Jacob,
Shame shall cover you,
And you shall be cut off forever.
(11) In the day that you stood on the other side—
In the day that strangers carried captive his forces,
When foreigners entered his gates
And cast lots for Jerusalem—
Even you were as one of them.
(12) ” But you should not have gazed on the day of your brother
In the day of his captivity;
Nor should you have rejoiced over the children of Judah
In the day of their destruction;
Nor should you have spoken proudly
In the day of distress.
(13) You should not have entered the gate of My people
In the day of their calamity.
Indeed, you should not have gazed on their affliction
In the day of their calamity,
Nor laid hands on their substance
In the day of their calamity.
(14) You should not have stood at the crossroads
To cut off those among them who escaped;
Nor should you have delivered up those among them who remained
In the day of distress.
New King James Version Change your email Bible version
Obadiah 10 had named the Edomites’ great sin: “violence against your brother Jacob.” The four subsequent verses tick off a number of illustrations of the Edomites’ violence toward Israel, providing an expanded description of their transgression.
The prophet’s first example (in verse 11), the only one requiring explanation, is that they “stood on the other side.” This Hebraism indicates they “stood aloof,” a description of their haughtiness. God is emphasizing their attitude here. Literally, the phrase reads, “stood from in front of them,” a roundabout way of saying that the Edomites considered themselves too good to stand withthem. In other words, because of their pride, they stood off to the side or in front of them, effectively separating themselves from their brother.
Their action reflected their hearts, saying, in effect, “Do not confuse us with them!” It indicates an attitude of great superiority, of haughty pride and separation. Thus, instead of standing with Israel in her defense, they stood aside and let the enemy do what it would. Edom did not behave as a brother nation should have. Even had the Edomites not been directly engaged in the hostilities against Israel, this act alone reveals that their loyalties were solidly with Israel’s enemy.
The New King James Version poorly translates verses 12-14, rendering them in the past tense, when the Hebrew text relates this story in the future tense. The difference in tense transforms a castigating historical narrative into a more appropriate and stern warning against future activity:
But do not gloat over the day of your brother in the day of his misfortune; do not rejoice over the people of Judah in the day of their ruin; do not boast in the day of distress. Do not enter the gate of My people in the day of their calamity; do not gloat over his disaster in the day of his calamity; do not loot his wealth in the day of his calamity. Do not stand at the crossroads to cut off his fugitives; do not hand over his survivors in the day of distress. (English Standard Version)
Specifically, what is the day of Israel’s calamity? Jeremiah 30:5-7 provides the answer:
For thus says the LORD: “We have heard a voice of trembling, of fear, and not of peace. Ask now, and see, whether a man is ever in labor with child? So why do I see every man with his hands on his loins like a woman in labor, and all faces turned pale? Alas! For that day is great, so that none is like it; and it is the time of Jacob’s trouble, but he shall be saved out of it.”
Jesus also spoke about this distressing day in His Olivet Prophecy:
For then there will be great tribulation, such as has not been since the beginning of the world until this time, no, nor ever shall be. And unless those days were shortened, no flesh would be saved; but for the elect’s sake those days will be shortened. (Matthew 24:21-22)
“The time of Jacob’s trouble,” more commonly known as “the Great Tribulation,” is a period of intense hardship and war for the people of Israel. It is generally thought that it will last three and a half years (Daniel 7:25; 12:7; Revelation 11:2; 12:14; 13:5), until Jesus Christ returns in power to defeat the Beast and his armies and to rule all nations (Revelation 19:11-21). According to Jesus’ description, it is a time of global holocaust; if God did not intervene, all life on earth would cease!
The warnings in Obadiah 12-14 are directed toward the Edomites alive when that day arrives, perhaps not very long from now. We may have seen a precursor of the fulfillment of this prophecy, when, on and after September 11, 2001, television news programs broadcast images of Palestinians gloating and dancing in the streets in the West Bank, giving out candy, and shrieking in giddy celebration. Such a scene is likely to happen again when the Great Tribulation fully comes upon the nations of Israel.
At that time, the people of Edom may not have a great deal of power over the nations of Israel, and the prophecies do not indicate that they will. Today, their strength is limited to suicidal terrorist attacks, but they still have the ability to mock, to pillage, and to take advantage of any sign of weakness. God says in Obadiah 6-9 that He will remove their wealth, their wisdom, and their courage, but they will still be able to gloat when they see Israel fall.
— Richard T. Ritenbaugh
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An exclusive inside look with your free CNN account ⏰ how CNN stays up and running no matter what Each week, we end this newsletter asking you to tell us who you’d like us to feature. We’ve gotten a few requests to meet the people behind the scenes who keep the network operating.
So as many celebrate the end-of-year holidays, we turn the spotlight on three CNN employees who work on teams that operate around the clock and whose jobs are essential to this 24-hour-a-day, seven-day-a-week news operation. ![]() Taka Yokoyama spends nearly half the year on the road. Photo credit: Andy Buck Taka Yokoyama, photojournalist
What he does: “I am a news cameraman. I am not in the studio (running cameras) for a show, I am in the field where the news happens,” Yokoyama explained. Like all of CNN’s photojournalists, he is responsible for capturing video imagery for news stories and documentaries that air on television and across the network’s digital platforms. In 2021, Yokoyama has been away from his home in Atlanta nearly half of the year covering news events. Right before we spoke with him, he had just returned from Kenosha, Wisconsin, where he was covering the trial of Kyle Rittenhouse.
Biggest news story he’s covered: Yokoyama was a block away from the Boston marathon bombing in April 2013, when he was working as a cameraman for a local news station. He and his team were covering the marathon when he heard a boom. “I thought it was fireworks,” he said. After hearing the second explosion, they realized it was a bomb. A short time later, he was covering the horrific aftermath of the terrorist attack that killed three people and injured at least 264 others. How does he handle the stress of working in a dangerous environment? “I always think, ‘What I’m seeing on the camera’s viewfinder is for the viewers.’ It’s not about me or my career or for my supervisor, but it’s for the people who are watching TV.’ And that makes me feel more calm.” Yokoyama said he also feels protected by the large camera equipment he carries when he’s on a dangerous assignment. “This is my armor,” he said. “Unlike with a small camera, people see what I am doing (that I’m a journalist).”
Most interesting celebrity encounter: Yokoyama was assigned to cover a movie premiere and, he explained, “I was told, ‘Hey, there will be many actors so just grab them and get a sound bite.’ I am not good at remembering (celebrities’) faces and names,” he confessed, but his boss assured him there would be other reporters there, so just follow their cues. When he arrived, he was the only member of the press. He interviewed one man who looked vaguely familiar. Since he didn’t know him, he just asked him some general questions. He later learned the man was the star of the film, Bradley Cooper. “He was very nice and laid-back,” Yokoyama recalled.
What’s the biggest misconception people have about your job? “What my family, my friends, other people see on TV is probably only one percent of what I do. There are so many preparations — it takes so much time, people don’t get it. If you watch a 10-second interview on TV, we usually spend two hours setting up the lighting, the background, and another two hours to bring the gear.” ![]() Christie Corologos-Medina inside the technical production bridge, where she books studios and answers calls from guests and producers. Christie Corologos-Medina, technical production manager What she does: Corologos-Medina is a technical production manager for CNN TV. Based at the CNN Center in Atlanta, she is responsible for ensuring that CNN’s television audience can clearly see and hear all of the people who appear on a live show — from hosts to guests.
It takes her about two hours to prepare the live shows that she works on. She described setting up a Washington-based show hosted by Wolf Blitzer: “I had four cameras coming from DC, and all the audio coming off those cameras, and then all of their IFBs (the earpieces that guests and hosts wear to stay in communication with the control room producer). I have a guest in a vendor studio in St. Louis so I’m talking to them, asking them to frame the shot up, make sure (microphone) and audio are good. And then I might have a guest coming in from a Skype or Cisco product (web-based videoconferencing tools that guests can use from their laptops).
“All of that has to be set up like a normal studio. You don’t want anything that’s not in sync. My job is to work with the studio operators in DC and then my crew in Atlanta to make sure everything works. Then once the show starts, I hand everything over to the director.” Because the technical nature of her job makes it impossible to work remotely, Corologos-Medina and the other technical production managers and control room staff have been working full time on site throughout the pandemic. Biggest news story she’s worked: There are many, but the one that stands out for Corologos-Medina was the night she was working during the pandemic when violent protests erupted in downtown Atlanta on May 29, 2020, and protesters entered and damaged the CNN Center.
“I was doing the Anderson Cooper show … and just as we’re finishing, my phone starts ringing and I’m thinking, why is my boss calling me in the middle of my show? And she was calling to say, ‘You can’t leave the building.’ ” Not only was it unsafe to leave, but because other staffers couldn’t get in the building, Corologos-Medina had to help prepare other shows.
“We had just finished our show and we went down to see what was going on,” Corologos-Medina said. They were turned back by a security guard. “We started looking at the local (TV) networks and we see (video of protesters) just breaking down the windows in front of the big red CNN letters. It was scary.”
When she was finally allowed to leave the building around midnight, so many downtown streets were closed that she and other CNN staffers had to drive behind a security guard who helped them navigate out of the city.
Most interesting celebrity encounter: As part of her job, Corologos-Medina speaks to newsmakers and celebrities when they appear as guests on CNN, including Presidents Joe Biden and Donald Trump, Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg, Alicia Keys, Will Ferrell and Sean Penn. She talks to them remotely, through their earpieces, to get them to test their audio levels and adjust their camera angles. “A lot of the famous people are quiet and shy,” she said. “But the politicians? No, they will chat your ear off.” She met Dolly Parton on a guest setup that she wasn’t even supposed to be working on. “The camera guy was nervous about mic’ing her (clipping the microphone onto her shirt) and so he asked me if I would,” Corologos-Medina said. “She was super sweet.” What’s the biggest misconception people have about your job? “People’s minds are blown when I tell them that my anchors are in New York. We’re in Atlanta and they’re in New York. They’re just like, how does that happen? And it’s just technology.” ![]() Whether at home or in the office, Don Buckindail’s job involves monitoring multiple screens. Photo credit: Karen Buckindail Don Buckindail, senior manager, software engineering What he does: “We bridge that gap between editorial — the people … creating the content — and the people that build what editorial uses,” he explained. When there’s a major news story that brings a massive audience to CNN’s digital platforms or a problem like a server outage, his team springs into action to make sure the audience can still access content across all of CNN’s websites and apps.
Biggest news story he’s worked: The US Capitol attack on January 6, 2021. “I was watching the rally and said, ‘This doesn’t look good’ and immediately got on our team and said, ‘We need to be on standby.’ And as I was doing that, all holy Hades broke loose. We immediately go into what we call breaking news coverage: We immediately freeze all deployments, so (there are) no code changes because we want everything to remain stable (knowing that a larger audience will be accessing the website during major breaking news).
“We have a list of monitoring tools that we immediately pull up and start watching: Is the website performing? Is the CMS (content management system) performing? Are we seeing spikes? Are we seeing a bunch of errors, whether internal or external? So we go into immediate monitoring mode.”
What’s the biggest misconception people have about your job? “For a news outlet that reaches as many people as CNN, it’s not as simple as, ‘Here’s the website, and what you see is what you get,’” Buckindail explained. “There is a backup on a backup on a backup to make sure that we’re delivering (the news) whenever anybody wants it.”
Everything may be operating normally for the everyday CNN.com user while Buckindail and his team are dealing with critical issues such as a recent Amazon Web Services outage. “CNN is a global brand 24-7-365, so when people come to us, we want to make sure that the content is there, that any problems we have, they don’t know,” Buckindail said. His team and its partners across CNN Digital have built “resiliencies” based on lessons learned from previous technical issues. “There are multiple layers of CNN.com that would have to go down for users to know that there’s a problem.” 💳 CNN insider rec of the week Brought to you by CNN Underscored Throughout the year, CNN Underscored is constantly testing products — from coffee makers to computers to showerheads — to help our readers find the absolute best things. Over the past year we’ve tested hundreds of products, but these are the ones actually worth your money. 🗓️ mark your calendars 💻 Watch: CNN’s Anderson Cooper and Bravo TV’s Andy Cohen co-host “CNN’s New Year’s Eve Live” from New York’s Times Square on Friday starting at 8 p.m. ET. Share your New Year’s greetings on social media using the hashtag #CNNNYE, and CNN may feature your post on the bottom ticker throughout the evening. 🔮 Explore: In our annual Crystal Ball feature, we asked CNN’s contributors to predict what will happen in 2022: Who will win the Super Bowl? What about the midterm elections? What film will get the Oscar for best picture? Here’s what they told us. 🗣️ Get involved: Join a virtual discussion with CNN journalists next Wednesday on “Lessons from the Insurrection: Where are we now?” More details and a sign-up link here. 💐 in memoriam: Manuel Perez CNN Digital’s former editorial director Manuel Perez, known as Manny to his colleagues and friends, is remembered for his quiet, thoughtful leadership. He will be missed. ✍️ talk to us Who would you like to see spotlighted next? Send your thoughts to insidecnn@cnn.com. We look forward to hearing from you. – Written and edited by Beryl Adcock, Tricia Escobedo, Melissa Mahtani and Jessica Sooknanan INSIDE CNN An exclusive inside look with your free CNN account You’re receiving this newsletter because you created a free account with CNN.
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