Chapter 6:
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| Geneva
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| Jamieson Faussett Brown
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Joel Obadiah
Amos 6
Complete Concise
In this chapter we have, I. A sinful people studying to put a
slight upon God's threatenings and to make them appear trivial, confiding in
their privileges and pre-eminences above other nations (v. 2, 3), and their
power (v. 13), and wholly addicted to their pleasures (v. 4-6). II. A serious
prophet studying to put a weight upon God's threatenings and to make them
appear terrible, by setting forth the severity of those judgments that were
coming upon these sensualists (v. 7), God's abhorring them, and abandoning
them and theirs to death (v. 8-11), and bringing utter desolation upon them,
since they would not be wrought upon by the methods he had taken for their
conviction (v. 12-14).
Verses 1-7
The first words of the chapter are the contents of these verses;
but they sound very strangely, and contrary to the sentiments of a vain world:
Woe
to those that are at ease! We are ready to say,
Happy are those that are
at ease, that neither feel any trouble nor fear any, that lie soft and warm,
and lay nothing to heart; and wise we think are those that do so, that bathe
themselves in the delights of sense and care not how the world goes. Those are
looked upon as doing well for themselves that do well for their bodies and make
much of them; but against them this woe is denounced, and we are here told what
their ease is, and what the woe is.
I. Here is a description of their pride, security, and
sensuality, for which God would reckon with them.
1. They were vainly conceited of their own dignities, and
thought those would secure them from the judgments threatened and be their
defence against the wrath both of God and man. (1.) Those that dwelt in Zion
thought that was honour and protection enough for them, and they might there be
quiet from all fear of evil, because it was a strong city, well fortified both
by nature and art (we read of Zion's
strong-holds and her
bulwarks),
and because it was a royal city, where were set the thrones of the house of
David (it was the head-city of Judah, and therefore truly great), and especially
because it was the holy city, where the temple was, and the testimony of Israel;
those that dwelt there doubted not but that God's sanctuary would be a
sanctuary to them and would shelter them from his judgments. The
temple of
the Lord are these, Jer. 7:4. They are
haughty because of the holy
mountain, Zep. 3:11. Note, Many are puffed up with pride, and rocked asleep
in carnal security, by their church-privileges, and the place they have in Zion.
(2.) Those that dwelt
in the mountain of Samaria, though it was not a
holy hill, like that of Zion, yet they trusted in it, because it was the
metropolis of a potent kingdom, and perhaps, in imitation of Jerusalem, was the
head-quarters of its religion; and by lapse of time the hill of Shemer became
with them in as good repute as the hill of Zion ever was. They hoped for
salvation from these hills and mountains. (3.) Both these two kingdoms valued
themselves upon their relation to Israel, that prince with God, which they
looked upon as masking them the
chief of the nations, more ancient and
honourable than any of them; the
first-fruits of the nations (so the word
is), dedicated to God and sanctifying the whole harvest. The
house of Israel
came to them, that is, was divided into those kingdoms, of which Zion and
Samaria were the mother cities. Those that were at ease were the princes and
rulers, the great men, that were
chief of the nations, chief of those two
kingdoms, and to whom, having their residence in Zion and Samaria, the whole
house of Israel applied for judgment. Note, It is hard to be great and not to be
proud. Great nations and great men are apt to overvalue themselves, and to
overlook their neighbours, because they think they a little overtop them. But,
for a check to their pride and security, the prophet bids them take notice of
those cities that were within the compass of their knowledge, that had been as
illustrious in their time as ever Zion or Samaria was, and yet were destroyed,
v. 2. "Go
to Calneh (which was an ancient city built by Nimrod, Gen.
10:10), and see what has become of that, it is now in ruins; so is
Hamath the
great, one of the chief cities of Syria. Sennacherib boasts of
destroying
the gods of Hamath. Gath was likewise made desolate by Hazael, and not long
ago, 2 Ki. 12:17. Now
were they better than these kingdoms of Judah and
Israel? Yes, they were, and
their border greater than your border, so
that they had more reason than you to be confident of their own safety; yet you
see what has become of them, and dare you be secure?
Art thou better than
populous No?" Nah. 3:8. Note, The examples of others' ruin forbid us
to be secure.
2. They persisted in their wicked courses upon a presumption
that they should never be called to an account for them (v. 3):
"You put
far away the evil day, the day of reckoning, as a thing that shall never
come, or you look upon it as at such a distance that it makes no impression at
all upon you; you
put it far away, and think you can still put it yet
further, and adjourn it
de die in diemfrom day to day, and therefore
you
cause the seat of violence to draw near; you venture upon all acts of
injustice and oppression, and have
fellowship with the throne of iniquity,
which frames mischief by a law, Ps. 94:20. You cause that to come near, as
if that would be your protection from these judgments which really ripens you
for them." Note,
Therefore men take sin to be near them, because
they take judgment to be far off from them; but those deceive themselves who
thus mock God.
3. They indulged themselves in all manner of sensual pleasures
and delights, v. 4-6. These Israelites were perfect epicures and slaves to their
appetites. Their dignities (in consideration of which they ought to have been
examples of self-denial and mortification), they thought, would justify them in
their sensuality; the gains of their oppression and violence, they thought,
would bear the charge of it; and they put the evil day at a distance, that they
might give them no disturbance in it. That which they are here charged with is
not in itself sinful (these things might be soberly and moderately used), but
they placed their happiness in the gratification of their carnal appetites; and
though they were men in office, that had business to mind, they gave themselves
up to their pleasures, spent their time in them, and threw away their thoughts,
and cares, and estates upon them. They were in these enjoyments as in their
element. Their hearts were upon them; they exceeded all bounds in them, and this
at a time when God in his providence was calling them to
weeping and
mourning, Isa. 22:12, 13. When they were under guilt and wrath, and the
judgments of God were ready to break in upon them, they called for
wine and
strong drink, presuming that
to-morrow shall be as this day, and much
more abundant (Isa. 56:12), thus walking contrary to God and setting his
justice at defiance. (1.) They were extravagant in their furniture. Nothing
would serve them but
beds of ivory to sleep upon, or to sit on at their
meat, when sackcloth and ashes would have become them better. (2.) They were
lazy, and humoured themselves in the love of ease. They did not only lie down,
but
stretched themselves upon their couches, when they should have
stirred up themselves to their business; they were willingly slothful, and took
a pride in doing nothing; they
abound in superfluities (so the margin
reads it), when many of their poor brethren wanted necessaries. (3.) They were
nice and curious in their diet, must have every thing of the best and abundance
of it: They ate
the lambs out of the flock (lambs by wholesale) and the
calves
out of the midst of the stall, the fattest they could lay their hand on; and
these perhaps not out of their own flock and their own stall, but taken by
oppression from the poor. (4.) They were merry and jovial, and diverted
themselves at their feasts with music and singing: They
chant to the sound of
the viol, sing and play in concert, and they invent new-fashioned
instruments
of music, striving herein, more than in any thing else, to excel their
ancestors; they set their wits on work to contrive how to please their fancy.
Some men never show their ingenuity but in their luxury; on that they bestow all
their faculty of invention and contrivance. They invent
instruments of music,
like David, entertain themselves with that which formerly used to be the
entertainment of kings only. Or it intimates their profaneness in their mirth;
they mimicked the temple-music, and made a jest of that, because, it may be, it
was old-fashioned, and they took a pride in bantering it as the Babylonians did
when they urged the captives to sing to them the
songs of Zion; such was
Belshazzar's profaneness when he drank wine in temple-bowls, and such is
theirs that sing vain and loose songs in psalm-tunes, on purpose to ridicule a
divine institution. (5.) They drank to excess, and never thought they could pour
down enough: They
drank wink in bowls, not in glasses, or cups (as Jer.
35:5); they hate to be stinted, and must have large draughts, and therefore make
use of vessels that they can steal a draught out of. (6.) They affected the
strongest perfumes: They
anoint themselves with the chief ointments, to
please the smell, and to make them more in love with their own bodies, and to
guard against those presages of putrefaction which they carry about with them
while they live. No ordinary ointments would serve their turn; they must have
the chief, such as were far-fetched and dear-bought, when cheaper would have
served as well.
4. They had no concern at all for the interests of the church of
God, and of the nation, that were sinking and going to decay:
They are not
grieved for the affliction of Joseph; the church of God, including both the
kingdoms of Judah and Israel (which are called
Joseph, Ps. 80:1), was in
distress, invaded, insulted, and broken in upon. As to their own kingdom which
they were entrusted with the government of, the affairs of which they were
directors of, the peace of which they were the conservators of, great breaches
were made upon it, upon its peace and welfare; and they were so besotted that
they were not aware of them, so indulgent of their pleasures that they never
laid them to heart, and had such an aversion to the thing called business that
they were in no care or concern to get them repaired. It is all one to them
whether the nation sink or swim, so that they can but lie at ease and live in
pleasure. Particular persons that belonged to Joseph were in affliction, and
they took no cognizance of their case of the wrongs and hardships they sustained
and the troubles they were in, nor took any care to relieve them, and right
them, contrary to the temper of holy Job, who, when he was in prosperity,
wept
with him that
was in misery and his
soul was grieved for the poor,
Job 30:25. Some think that, in calling the afflicted church
Joseph, there
is an allusion to the story of Pharaoh's butler, who, when he preferred to
give the cup again into his master's hand,
remembered not Joseph, but
forgot him, Gen. 40:21, 23. Thus they
drank wine in bowls, but
were
not grieved for the affliction of Joseph. Note, Those are commonly careless
of the troubles of others who are set upon their own pleasures; and it is a
great offence to God when his church is in affliction and we are not grieved for
it, nor lay it to heart.
II. Here is the doom passed upon them (v. 7):
Therefore now
shall they go captive with the first that go captive, and shall fall into
all the miseries that attend captives; and the
banquet of those that
stretched
themselves upon their couches
shall be removed. Their plenty shall be
taken from them, and they from it, because they made it the food and fuel of
their lusts. 1. Those who lived in luxury shall lose even their liberty; and by
being brought into servitude shall be justly punished for the abuse of their
dignity and dominion. 2. Those who trusted in the delights and pleasures of
their own land shall be carried away into a strange land, and so made ashamed of
their pride and confidence; they shall
go captive. 3. Those who placed
their happiness in the pleasures of sense, and set their hearts upon them, shall
be deprived of those pleasures; their banquet shall be removed, and they shall
know what it is to fare hard. 4. Those who
stretched themselves shall be
made to contract themselves, and to come into a less compass. 5. Those who
put
the evil day far from them shall find it nearer to them than it is to
others;
those shall go captive with the first who flattered themselves
with hopes that if trouble did come they should be the last who should be seized
by it. Those are ripening apace for trouble themselves who lay not to heart the
trouble of others and of the church of God. Those who give themselves to mirth,
when God calls them to mourning, will find it a sin that shall not go
unpunished, Isa. 22:14.
Verses 8-14
In the former part of the chapter we had these secure Israelites
loading themselves with pleasures, as if they could never be made merry enough;
here we have God loading them with punishments, as if they could never be made
miserable enough. And observe,
I. How strongly this burden is bound on, not to be shaken off by
their presumption and security; for it is bound by
the Lord the God of hosts,
by his mighty, his almighty, hand, which none can resist; it is bound with an
oath, which puts the sentence past revocation:
The Lord God has sworn, and he
will not repent, and, since he could swear by no greater, he has sworn by
himself. How dreadful, how miserable, is the case of those whose ruin, whose
eternal ruin, God himself has sworn, who can execute his purpose and cannot
alter it!
II. How heavily this burden lies! Let us see the particulars. 1.
God will abhor and abandon them, and that implies misery enough, all misery:
I
abhor the excellency of Jacob, all that which they are proud of, and value
themselves upon, and for which they call and count themselves the
chief of
nations. Their visible church-membership, and the privileges of that, their
temple, altar, and priesthood, these were, more than any thing, the excellencies
of Jacob; but, when these were profaned and polluted by sin, God abhorred them;
he hated and despised them, ch. 5:21. Note, God abhors that form of godliness
which hypocrites keep up, while they abhor the power of it. And if he abhors
their temple, for the iniquity of that, no marvel that he hates their palaces,
for the injustices and oppression he finds there. Note, that creature which we
take such a complacency and put such a confidence in as to make it a rival with
God is thereby made abominable to him. He
hates the palaces of sinners,
for the sake of wickedness of those that dwell therein. Prov. 3:33,
The curse
of the Lord is in the house of the wicked. And, if God abhor them,
immediately it follows, He will
deliver up the city with all that is therein,
deliver it up into the hands of the enemy, that will lay it waste, and make a
prey of all its wealth. Note, Those that are abhorred and abandoned of God are
undone to all intents and purposes. 2. There shall be a great and general
mortality among them (v. 9):
If there remain ten men in one house, that
have escaped the sword of the enemy, yet they shall be met with another way;
they
shall all
die by famine or pestilence. In the most sickly times, if
there be ten in a house, one may hope that at least the one-half of them will
escape, according to the proportion of two in a bed,
one taken and the other
left; but here not one of ten shall live to bury the rest. Another instance
of the greatness of the mortality is (v. 10) that the nearest relations of the
dead shall be forced with their own hands to wind up their bodies, and bury
them, for want of other hands to be employed in it; that is all that the
next
of kin, to whom the right of redemption belongs, can do for them, and with
great reluctance will they do that. It intimates that the young people shall be
cut off soonest; for the uncle that survives is, ordinarily, the senior
relation. "When the uncle comes with the sexton (or
him that burns),
to bring out the bones out of the house, he
shall say to him that
he sees next about the house, '
Is there any yet with thee? Are there
any left alive?' And he shall say, 'No, this is the last; now the whole
family is cut off by death, and neither root nor branch remains."' But
that which makes the judgment the more grievous is that their hearts seem to be
hardened under it. "When he that is found by the sides of the house begin
to enter into discourse with those that are carrying off the dead, they shall
say, '
Hold thy tongue; do not stand preaching to us about the hand of
Providence in this calamity, for
we may not make mention of the name of the
Lord; God is so angry with us that there is no speaking to him; he is so
extreme to mark what we do amiss that we dare not so much as make mention of his
name."' Thus
the foolishness of men perverts their way, and brings
them into distress, and then
their heart frets against the Lord. Even
then they will not take notice of his hand, nor suffer those about them to do
it. Perhaps it was forbidden by some of the idolatrous kings to make mention of
the name of
Jehovah, as by the law of Moses it was forbidden to make
mention of the names of the heathen-gods: "We may not do it without
incurring the penalty." Note, Those hearts are wretchedly hardened indeed
that will not be brought to make mention of God's name, and to worship him,
when the hand of God has gone out against them, and when, as here, sickness and
death are in their families. Thus those
heap up wrath who
cry not when
God binds them. 3. Their houses shall be destroyed, v. 11. God
will smite
the great house with breaches, and the little house with clefts; they shall
both be cracked so as to lose their beauty and strength, and to be hastening
towards a fall. The princes' palaces are not above the rebuke of divine
justice, nor the poor men's cottages beneath it; neither shall escape. When
sin has marked them for ruin God will find ways to bring it about. It is by
order from him that breaches are made.
III. How justly they are thus burdened. If we understand the
matter aright, we shall say,
The Lord is righteous. 1. The methods used
for their reformation had been all fruitless and ineffectual (v. 12):
Shall
horses run upon the rock, to hurl or harrow the ground there? Or will
one
plough there with oxen? No, for there will be no profit to countervail the
pains. God has sent them his prophets, to
break up their fallow-ground;
but they found them as hard and inflexible as the rock, rough and rugged, and
they could do no good with them, nor work upon them, and therefore they shall
not attempt it any more. They will not be reclaimed, and therefore shall not be
reproved, but quite abandoned. Note, Those who will not be cultivated as fields
and vineyards shall be rejected as barren rocks and deserts, Heb. 6:7, 8. 2.
They had abused their power to the wrong and oppression of many, whose injured
cause the sovereign Judge would not only right, but revenge:
You have turned
judgment into gall, which is nauseous, and
the fruit of righteousness
into hemlock, which is noxious; it would make one sick to see how those that
were entrusted with the administration of public justice bore down equity with
that power which they out to have defended and supported it, and so turned its
own artillery against itself. Note, When our services of God are soured with sin
his providences will justly be embittered to us. 3. They had set the judgments
of God at defiance, and, confiding in their own strength, thought themselves a
match for Omnipotence, v. 13. They
rejoiced in a thing of nought, pleased
themselves with a fancy that no evil should befal them, though they had no
ground at all for that confidence, nothing to trust to that would bear any
weight. They said,
"Have we not taken to us horns; have we not
arrived to great dignity and dominion, have we not pushed down our enemies and
pushed on our victories, and this
by our own strength, our own skill and
courage, our own wealth and military force? Who then need we be afraid of? Who
then need we make court to? Not God himself." Note, Prosperity and success
commonly make men secure and haughty; and those that have done much think they
can do any thing, any thing without God, nay, any thing against him. But those
who trust in their own strength rejoice in
a thing of nought, and so they
will find. Probably they did not say this with their lips,
totidem verbisin
so many words, but it was the language of their hearts and of their actions,
both which God understands.
IV. How easily and effectually this burden shall be brought upon
them, v. 14. He that brings it upon them is
the Lord the God of hosts,
who both may do and can do what he pleases, who has all creatures at his
command, and who, when he has work to do, will not be at a loss for instruments
to do it with; though they are the house of Israel, yet he will
raise up
against them a nation which they feared not, but had many a time hoped in,
even the Assyrians, and this nation shall
afflict them, bring them into
straits, and put them to pain, from the
entering in of Hamath, in the
north, to
the river of the wilderness, the river of Egypt, Sihor or Nile,
in the south. The whole nation has shared in the iniquity, and therefore must
expect to share in the calamity. Note, When men are in any way instruments of
affliction to us we must see God raising them up against us, for they are in his
handthe rod, the sword, in his hand. The Lord has bidden Shimei curse David.
Chapter 6:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Joel Obadiah
Genesis
Exodus
Leviticus
Numbers
Deuteronomy
Joshua
Judges
Ruth
1 Samuel
2 Samuel
1 Kings
2 Kings
1 Chronicles
2 Chronicles
Ezra
Nehemiah
Esther
Job
Psalm
Proverbs
Ecclesiastes
Song of Solomon
Isaiah
Jeremiah
Lamentations
Ezekiel
Daniel
Hosea
Joel
Amos
Obadiah
Jonah
Micah
Nahum
Habakkuk
Zephaniah
Haggai
Zechariah
Malachi
Matthew
Mark
Luke
John
Acts
Romans
1 Corinthians
2 Corinthians
Galatians
Ephesians
Philippians
Colossians
1 Thessalonians
2 Thessalonians
1 Timothy
2 Timothy
Titus
Philemon
Hebrews
James
1 Peter
2 Peter
1 John
2 John
3 John
Jude
Revelation
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