Book of Ezekiel 30:13–18 in an English manuscript from the early 13th century, MS. Bodl. Or. 62, fol. 59a. A Latin translation appears in the margins with further interlineations above the Hebrew.
"Son of man, set your face against Mount Seir and prophesy against it" (NKJV)[9]
"Son of man" (Hebrew: בן־אדם ḇen-’ā-ḏām): this phrase is used 93 times to address Ezekiel.[10]
Galambush suggests that "the choice of Mount Seir as the counterpart to the mountains of Israel is puzzling", noting that Ezekiel's oracle against Edom in Ezekiel 25:12–14 is "a brief, virtually pro forma condemnation of Israel's neighbour for taking advantage of Israel's broken condition. The motivation for locating a second, more vehement condemnation here is obscure.[2]
Verse 10
Because you have said, ‘These two nations and these two countries shall be mine, and we will possess them’, although the Lord was there.[11]
This verse suggests that the Edomites planned to take possession of the promised land, Israel and Judah,[12] following the Israelites' deportation to Babylon.[2]
Verse 15
As you rejoiced because the inheritance of the house of Israel was desolate, so I will do to you;
you shall be desolate, O Mount Seir, as well as all of Edom—all of it!
Then they shall know that I am the Lord.”’ (NKJV)[13]
Brown, Francis; Briggs, Charles A.; Driver, S. R. (1994). The Brown-Driver-Briggs Hebrew and English Lexicon (reprint ed.). Hendrickson Publishers. ISBN978-1565632066.
Gesenius, H. W. F. (1979). Gesenius' Hebrew and Chaldee Lexicon to the Old Testament Scriptures: Numerically Coded to Strong's Exhaustive Concordance, with an English Index. Translated by Tregelles, Samuel Prideaux (7th ed.). Baker Book House.