Chapter 7:
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Joel Obadiah
Amos 7
Complete Concise
In this chapter we have, I. God contending with Israel, by the
judgments, but are reprieved, and the judgments turned away at the prayer of
Amos (v. 1-6). 2. God's patience is at length worn out by their obstinacy, and
they are rejected, and sentenced to utter ruin (v. 7-9). II. Israel contending
with God, by the opposition given to his prophet. 1. Amaziah informs against
Amos (v. 10, 11) and does what he can to rid the country of him as a public
nuisance (v. 12, 13). 2. Amos justifies himself in what he did as a prophet (v.
14, 15) and denounces the judgments of God against Amaziah his prosecutor (v.
16, 17); for, when the contest is between God and man, it is easy to foresee, it
is very easy to foretel, who will come off with the worst of it.
Verses 1-9
We here see that God bears long, but that he will not bear
always, with a provoking people, both these God here showed the prophet:
Thus
hath the Lord God showed me, v. 1, 4, 7. He showed him what was present,
foreshowed him what was to come, gave him the knowledge both of what he did and
of what he designed; for the
Lord God reveals his secret unto his servants
the prophets, ch. 3:7.
I. We have here two instances of God's sparing mercy,
remembered in the midst of judgment, the narratives of which are so much like
one another that they will be best considered together, and very considerable
they are.
1. God is here coming forth against this sinful nation, first by
one judgment and then by another. (1.) He begins with the judgment of famine.
The prophet saw this in vision. He saw God
forming grasshoppers, or
locusts,
and bringing them up upon the land, to eat up the fruits of it, and so to strip
it of its beauty and starve its inhabitants, v. 1. God formed these
grasshoppers, not only as they were his creatures (and much of the wisdom and
power of God appears in the formation of minute animals, as much in the
structure of an ant as of an elephant), but as they were instruments of his
wrath. God is said to
frame evil against a sinful people, Jer. 18:11.
These grasshoppers were framed on purpose to
eat up the grass of the land;
and vast numbers of them were prepared accordingly. They were sent
in the
beginning of the shooting up of the latter growth, after the king's mowings.
See here how the judgment was mitigated by the mercy that went before it. God
could have sent these insects to eat up the grass at the beginning of the first
growth, in the spring, when the grass was most needed, was most plentiful, and
was the best in its kind; but God suffered that to grow, and suffered them to
gather it in; the king's mowings were safely housed, for
the king himself
is served from the field (Eccl. 5:9), and could as ill be without his
mowings as without any other branch of his revenues. Uzziah, who was now king of
Judah,
loved husbandry, 2 Chr. 26:10. But the grasshoppers were
commissioned to eat up only the
latter growth (the edgrew we call it in
the country), the after-grass, which is of little value in comparison with the
former. The mercies which God give us, and continues to us, are more numerous
and more valuable than those he removes from us, which is a good reason why we
should be thankful and not complain. The remembrance of the mercies of the
former growth should make us submissive to the will of God when we meet with
disappointments in the latter growth. The prophet, in vision, saw this judgment
prevailing far. These grasshoppers
ate up the grass of the land, which
should have been for the cattle, which the owners must of course suffer by. Some
understand this figuratively of a wasting destroying army brought upon them. In
the days of Jeroboam the kingdom of Israel began to recover itself from the
desolations it had been under in the former reigns (2 Ki. 14:25); the latter
growth shot up, after the mowings of the kings of Syria, which we read of 2 Ki.
13:3. And then God commissioned the king of Assyria with an army of caterpillars
to come upon them and lay them waste, that nation spoken of ch. 6:14, which
afflicted them
from the entering of Hamath to the river of the wilderness,
which seems to refer to 2 Ki. 14:25, where Jeroboam is said to have restored
their coast
from the entering of Hamath to the sea of the plain. God can
bring all to ruin when we think all is in some good measure repaired. (2.) He
proceeds to the judgment of fire, to show that he has many arrows in his quiver,
many ways of humbling a sinful nation (v. 4):
The Lord God called to contend
by fire. He contended, for God's judgment upon a people are his
controversies with them; in them he prosecutes his action against them; and his
controversies are neither causeless nor groundless. He
called to contend;
he did by his prophets give them notice of his controversy, and drew up a
declaration, setting forth the meaning of it. Or he called for his angels, or
other ministers of his justice, that were to be employed in it. A fire was
kindled among them, by which perhaps is meant a great drought (the heat of the
sun, which should have warmed the earth, scorched it, and burnt up the roots of
the grass which the locusts had eaten the spires of), or a raging fever, which
was as a fire in their bones, which devoured and ate up multitudes, or
lightning, fire from heaven, which consumed their houses, as Sodom and Gomorrah
were consumed (ch. 4:11), or it was the burning of their cities, either by
accident or by the hand of the enemy, for fire and sword used to go together;
thus were the towns wasted, as the country was by the grasshoppers. This fire,
which God called for, did terrible execution; it
devoured the great deep,
as the fire that fell from heaven on Elijah's altar licked up the water that
was in the trench. Though the water designed for the stopping and quenching of
this fire was as the water of the great deep, yet it devoured it; for who, or
what, can stand before a fire kindled by the wrath of God! It did
eat up a
part, a great part, of the cities where it was sent; or it was as the fire
at Taberah, which
consumed the outermost parts of the camp (Num. 11:1);
when some were overthrown others were
as brands plucked out of the fire.
All deserved to be devoured, but it ate up only a part, for God does not stir up
all his wrath.
2. The prophet goes forth to meet him in the way of his
judgments, and by prayer seeks to turn away his wrath, v. 2. When he saw, in
vision, what dreadful work these caterpillars made, that they had eaten up in a
manner
all the grass of the land (he foresaw they would do so, if
suffered to go on), then he said,
O Lord God! forgive, I beseech thee (v.
2);
cease, I beseech thee, v. 5. He that foretold the judgment in his
preaching to the people, yet deprecated it in his intercessions for them.
He
is a prophet, and he shall pray for thee. It was the business of prophets to
pray for those to whom they prophesied, and so to make it appear that though
they denounced they did not
desire the woeful day. Therefore, God showed
his prophets the evils coming, that they might befriend the people, not only by
warning them, but by praying for them, and
standing in the gap, to turn
away God's wrath, as Moses, that great prophet, often did. Now observe here,
(1.) The prophet's prayer:
O Lord God! [1.]
Forgive,
I beseech thee, and take away the sin, v. 2. He sees sin at the bottom of
the trouble, and therefore concludes that the pardon of sin must be at the
bottom of deliverance, and prays for that in the first place. Note, Whatever
calamity we are under, personal or public, the forgiveness of sin is that which
we should be most earnest with God for. [2.]
Cease, I beseech thee, and
take away the judgment; cease the fire, cease the controversy;
cause they
anger towards us to cease. This follows upon the forgiveness of sin. Take
away the cause and effect will cease. Note, Those whom God contends with will
soon find what need they have to cry for a cessation of arms; and there are
hopes that though God has begun, and proceeded far, in his controversy, yet it
may be obtained.
(2.) The prophet's plea to enforce this prayer:
By whom
shall Jacob arise, for he is small? v. 2. And it is repeated (v. 5) and yet
no vain repetition. Christ,
in his agony, prayed earnestly,
saying the
same words, again and again. [1.] It is Jacob that he is interceding for,
the professing people of God, called by his name, calling on his name, the seed
of Jacob, his chosen, and in covenant with him. It it Jacob's case that is in
this prayer spread before the God of Jacob. [2.]
Jacob is small, very
small already, weakened and brought low by former judgments; and therefore, it
these come, he will be quite ruined and brought to nothing. The people are few;
the
dust of Jacob, which was once innumerable, is now soon counted. Those few
are feeble (it is
the worm Jacob, Isa. 41:14); they are unable to help
themselves or one another. Sin will soon make a great people small, will
diminish the numerous, impoverish the plenteous, and weaken the courageous. [3.]
By whom shall he arise? He has fallen, and cannot help himself up, and he
has no friend to help him, none to raise him, unless the hand of God do it; what
will become of him, then, if the hand that should raise him to stretched out
against him? Note, When the state of God's church is very low and very
helpless it is proper to be recommended by our prayers to God's pity.
3. God graciously lets fall his controversy, in answer to the
prophet's prayer, once and again (v. 3):
The Lord repented for this. He
did not change his mind, for he is one mind and who can turn him? But he changed
is way, took another course, and determined to deal in mercy and not in wrath.
He said,
It shall not be. And again (v. 6),
This also shall not be.
The caterpillars were countermanded, were remanded; a stop was put to the
progress of the fire, and thus a reprieve was granted. See the power of prayer,
of
effectual fervent prayer, and how much it
avails, what great
things it prevails for. A stop has many a time been put to a judgment by making
supplication
to the Judge. This was not the first time that Israel's life was begged,
and so saved. See what a blessing praying people, praying prophets, are to a
land, and therefore how highly they ought to be valued. Ruin would many a time
have broken in if they had not stood in the breach, and made good the pass. See
how ready, how swift, God is to show mercy, how he
waits to be gracious.
Amos moves for a reprieve, and obtains it, because God inclines to grant it and
looks about to see if there be any that will intercede for it, Isa. 59:16. Nor
are former reprieves objected against further instances of mercy, but are rather
encouragements to pray and hope for them. This also shall not be, any more than
that. It is the glory of God that he
multiplies to pardon, that he
spares, and forgives, to more than seventy times seven times.
II. We have here the rejection of those at last who had been
often reprieved and yet never reclaimed, reduced to straits and yet never
reduced to their God and their duty. This is represented to the prophet by a
vision (v. 7, 8) and an express prediction of utter ruin, v. 9.
1. The vision is of a
plumb-line, a line with a plummet
at the end of it, such as masons and bricklayers use to run up a wall by, that
they may work it straight and true, and by rule. (1.) Israel was a wall, a
strong wall, which God himself had reared, as a bulwark, or wall of defence, to
his sanctuary, which he set up among them. The Jewish church says of herself
(Cant. 8:10),
I am a wall, and my breasts are like towers. This wall was
made
by a plumb-line, very exact and firm. So happy was its constitution, so well
compacted, and every thing so well ordered according to the model; it had long
stood fast as a wall of brass. But, (2.) God now
stands upon this wall,
not to hold it up, but to tread it down, or, rather, to consider what he should
do with it. He
stands upon it with a plumb-line in his hand, to take
measure of it, that it may appear to be a bowing, bulging wall.
Recti est
index sui et obliqueThis plumb-line would discover where it was crooked.
Thus God would bring the people of Israel to the trial, would discover their
wickedness, and show wherein they erred; and he would likewise bring his
judgments upon them according to equity, would set a
plumb-line in the midst
of them, to mark how far their wall must be pulled down, as David measured
the
Moabites with a line (2 Sa. 8:2) to
put them to death. And,
when God is coming to the ruin of a people, he is said to
lay judgment to the
line and righteousness to the plummet; for when he punishes it is with
exactness. It is now determined:
"I will not again pass by them any
more; they shall not be spared and reprieved as they have been; their
punishment shall not be
turned away," ch. 1:3. Note, God's
patience, which has long been sinned against, will at length be sinned away; and
the time will come when those that have been spared often shall be no longer
spared.
My spirit shall not always strive. After frequent reprieves, yet
a day of execution will come.
2. The prediction is of utter ruin, v. 9. (1.) The body of the
people shall be destroyed, with all those things that were their ornament and
defence. They are here called
Isaac as well as
Israel, the house of
Isaac (v. 16), some think in allusion to the signification of Isaac's
name; it is
laughter; they shall become a jest among all their neighbours;
their neighbours shall
laugh at them. The desolation shall fasten upon
their high places and their
sanctuaries, either their
castles or
their
temples, both built on high places. Their castles they thought
safe, and their temples sacred as sanctuaries. These shall be
laid waste,
to punish them for their idolatry and to make them ashamed of their carnal
confidences, which were the two things for which God had a controversy with
them. When these were made desolate they might read their sin and folly in their
punishment. (2.) The royal family shall sink first, as an earnest of the ruin of
the whole kingdom:
I will rise against the house of Jeroboam, Jeroboam
the second, who was now king of the ten tribes; his family was extirpated in his
son Zecharias, who was
slain with the sword before the people, by Shallum
who
conspired against him, 2 Ki. 15:10. How unrighteous soever the
instruments were, God was righteous, and in them God rose up against that
idolatrous family. Even king's houses will be no shelter against the sword of
God's wrath.
Verses 10-17
One would have expected, 1. That what we met with in the former
part of the chapter would awaken the people to repentance, when they saw that
they were reprieved in order that they might have
space to repent and
that they could not obtain a pardon unless the did repent. 2. That it would
endear the prophet Amos to them, who had not only shown his good-will to them in
praying against the judgments that invaded them, but had prevailed to turn away
those judgments, which, if they had had any sense of gratitude, would have
gained him an interest in their affections. But it fell out quite contrary; they
continue impenitent, and the next news we hear of Amos is that he is persecuted.
Note, As it is the praise of great saints that they pray for those that are
enemies to them, so it is the shame of many great sinners that they are enemies
to those who pray for them, Ps. 35:13, 15; 109:4. We have here,
I. The malicious information brought to the king against the
prophet Amos, v. 10, 11. The informer was
Amaziah the priest of Bethel,
the chief of the priests that ministered to the golden calf there, the
president
of Bethel (so some read it), that had the principal hand in civil affairs
there. He complained against Amos, not only because he prophesied without
license from him, but because he prophesied against his altars, which would soon
be deserted and demolished if Amos's preaching could but gain credit. Thus the
shrine-makers at Ephesus hated Paul, because his preaching tended to spoil their
trade. Note, Great pretenders to sanctity are commonly the worst enemies to
those who are really sanctified. Priests have been the most bitter persecutors.
Amaziah brings an information to Jeroboam against Amos. Observe, 1. The crime he
is charged with is no less than treason:
"Amos has conspired against
thee, to depose and murder thee; he aims at succeeding thee, and therefore
is taking the most effectual way to weaken thee. He sows the seeds of sedition
in the hearts of the good subjects of the king, and makes them disaffected to
him and his government, that he may draw them by degrees from their allegiance;
upon this account
the land is not able to bear his words." It is
slyly insinuated to the king that the country was exasperated against him, and
it is given in as their sense that his preaching was intolerable, and such as
nobody could be reconciled to, such as the times would by no means bear, that
is, the men of the times would not. Both the impudence of his supposed treason,
and the bad influence it would have upon the country, are intimated in that part
of the charge, that he conspired against the king in the midst of the house of
Israel. Note, It is no new thing for the accusers of the brethren to
misrepresent them as enemies to the king and kingdom, as traitors to their
prince and troublers of the land, when really they are the best friends to both.
And it is common for designing men to assert that as the sense of the country
which is far from being so. And yet here, I doubt, it was too true, that the
people could not bear plain dealing any more than the priests. 2. The words laid
in the indictment for the support of this charge (v. 11):
Amos says (and
they have witnesses ready to prove it)
Jeroboam shall die by the sword, and
Israel shall be led away captive; and hence they infer that he is an enemy
to his king and country, and not to be tolerated. See the malice of Amaziah; he
does not tell the king how Amos had interceded for Israel, and by his
intercession had turned away first one judgment and then another, and did not
let fall his intercession till he saw the decree had gone forth; he does not
tell him that these threatenings were conditional, and that he had often assured
them that if they would repent and reform the ruin should be prevented. Nay, it
was not true that he said,
Jeroboam shall die by the sword, nor did he so
die (2 Ki. 14:28), but that God would
rise against the house of Jeroboam with
the sword, v. 9. God's prophets and ministers have often had occasion to
make David's complaint (Ps. 56:5),
Every day they wrest my words. But
shall it be made the watchman's crime, when he sees the sword coming, to give
warning to the people, that they may get themselves secured? or the physician's
crime to tell his patient of the danger of his disease, that he may use means
for the cure of it? What enemies are foolish men to themselves, to their own
peace, to their best friends! It does not appear that Jeroboam took any notice
of this information; perhaps he reverenced a prophet, and stood more in awe of
the divine authority than Amaziah his priest did.
II. The method he used to persuade Amos to withdraw and quit the
country (v. 12, 13); when he could not gain his point with the king to have Amos
imprisoned, banished, or put to death, or at least to have him frightened into
silence or flight, he tried what he could do by fair means to get rid of him; he
insinuated himself into his acquaintance, and with all the arts of wheedling
endeavored to persuade him to go and prophesy in the
land of Judah, and
not at Bethel. He owns him to be a seer, and does not pretend to enjoin him
silence, but suggests to him,
1. That Bethel was not a proper place for him to exercise his
ministry in, for it was
the king's chapel, or
sanctuary, where
he had his idols and their altars and priests; and it was
the king's court,
or
the house of the kingdom, where the royal family resided and where
were set the thrones of judgment; and therefore
prophesy not any more
here. And why not? (1.) Because Amos is too plain and blunt a preacher for the
court and the king's chapel. Those that
wear silk and fine clothing,
and speak silken soft words, are fit for king's palaces. (2.) Because the
worship that is in the king's chapel will be a continual vexation and trouble
to Amos; let him therefore get far enough from it, and what the eye sees not the
heart grieves not for. (3.) Because it was not fit that the king and his house
should be affronted in their own court and chapel by the reproofs and
threatenings which Amos was continually teazing them with in the name of the
Lord; as if it were the prerogative of the prince, and the privilege of the
peers, when they are running headlong upon a precipice, not to be told of their
danger. (4.) Because he could not expect any countenance or encouragement there,
but, on the contrary, to be bantered and ridiculed by some and to be threatened
and brow-beaten by others; however, he could not think to make any converts
there, or to persuade any from that idolatry which was supported by the
authority and example of the king. To preach his doctrine there was but (as we
say) to run his head against a post; and therefore
prophesy no more
there. But,
2. He persuades him that the land of Judah was the fittest place
for him to set up in:
Flee thee away thither with all speed, and
there
eat bread, and
prophesy there. There thou wilt be safe; there thou
wilt be welcome; the king's court and chapel there are on thy side; the
prophets there will second thee; the priests and princes there will take notice
of thee, and allow thee an honourable maintenance. See here, (1.) How willing
wicked men are to get clear of their faithful reprovers, and how ready to
say
to the seers, See not, or See not for us; the two witnesses were a torment
to those that dwelt on the earth (Rev. 11:10), and it were indeed a pity that
men should be
tormented before the time, but that it is in order to the
preventing of eternal torment. (2.) How apt worldly men are to measure others by
themselves. Amaziah, as a priest, aimed at nothing but the profits of his place,
and he thought Amos, as a prophet, had the same views, and therefore advised him
to prophesy were he might
eat bread, where he might be sure to have as
much as he chose; whereas Amos was to prophesy where God appointed him, and
where there was most need of him, not where he would get most money. Note, Those
that make gain their godliness, and are governed by the hopes of wealth and
preferment themselves, are ready to think these the most powerful inducements
with others also.
III. The reply which Amos made to these suggestions of Amaziah's.
He did not
consult with flesh and blood, nor was it his care to enrich
himself, but to
make full proof of his ministry, and to be found faithful
in the discharge of it, not to sleep in a whole skin, but to keep a good
conscience; and therefore he resolved to abide by his post, and, in answer to
Amaziah,
1. He justified himself in his constant adherence to his work
and to his place (v. 14, 15); and that which he was sure would not only bear him
out, but bind him to it, was that he had a divine warrant and commission for it:
"I was no prophet, nor prophet's son, neither born nor bred to the
office, not originally designed for a prophet, as Samuel and Jeremiah, not
educated in the schools of the prophets, as many others were; but
I was a
herdsman, a keeper of cattle, and
a gatherer of sycamore-fruit."
Our sycamores bear no fruit, but, it seems, theirs did, which Amos gathered
either for his cattle or for himself and his family, or to sell. He was a plain
country-man, bred up and employed in country work and used to country fare. He
followed
the flocks as well as the herds, and thence God
took him, and bade
him
go and
prophesy to his people Israel, deliver to them such
messages as he should from time to time
receive from the Lord. God made
him a prophet, and a prophet to them, appointed him his work and appointed him
his post. Therefore he ought not to be silenced, for, (1.) He could produce a
divine commission for what he did. He did not run before he was sent, but
pleads, as Paul, that he was
called to be an apostle; and men will find
it is at their peril if they contradict and oppose any that come in God's
name, if they say to his
seers, See not, or silence those whom he has
bidden to speak; such
fight against God. An affront done to an ambassador
is an affront to the prince that sends him. Those that have a warrant from God
ought not to
fear the face of man. (2.) The mean character he wore before
he received that commission strengthened his warrant, so far was it from
weakening it. [1.] He had no thoughts at all of ever being a prophet, and
therefore his prophesying could not be imputed to a raised expectation or a
heated imagination, but purely to a divine impulse. [2.] He was not educated nor
instructed in the art or mystery of prophesying, and therefore he must have his
abilities for it immediately from God, which is an undeniable proof that he had
his mission from him. The apostles, being originally unlearned and ignorant men,
evidenced that they owed their knowledge to their having
been with Jesus,
Acts 4:13. When the treasure is put into such earthen vessels, it is thereby
made to appear that the
excellency of the power is of God, and not of man,
2 Co. 4:7. [3.] He had an honest calling, by which he could comfortably maintain
himself and his family; and therefore did not need to prophesy for bread, as
Amaziah suggested (v. 12), did not take it up as a trade to live by, but as a
trust to honour God and do good with. [4.] He had all his days been accustomed
to a plain homely way of living among poor husbandmen, and never affected either
gaieties or dainties, and therefore would not have thrust himself so near the
king's court and chapel if the business God had called him to had not called
him thither. [5.] Having been so meanly bred, he could not have the courage to
speak to kings and great men, especially to speak such bold and provoking things
to them, if he had not been animated by a greater spirit than his own. If God,
that sent him, had not strengthened him, he could not thus have
set his face
as a flint, Isa. 50:7. Note, God often chooses the
weak and foolish
things of the world to confound the wise and mighty; and a herdman of Tekoa
puts to shame a priest of Bethel, when he receives from God authority and
ability to act for him.
2. He condemns Amaziah for the opposition he gave them, and
denounces the judgments of God against him, not from any private resentment or
revenge, but in the name of the Lord and by authority from him, v. 16, 17.
Amaziah would not suffer Amos to preach at all, and therefore he is particularly
ordered to preach against him:
Now therefore hear thou the word of the Lord,
hear it and tremble. Those that cannot bear general woes may expect woes of
their own. The sin he is charged with is forbidding Amos to prophesy; we do not
find that he beat him, or put him in the stocks, only he enjoined him silence:
Prophesy
not against Israel, and drop not thy word against the house of Isaac; he
must not only thunder against them, but he must not so much as drop a word
against them; he cannot bear, no, not the most gentle distilling of that rain,
that small rain. Let him therefore hear his doom.
(1.) For the opposition he gave to Amos God will bring ruin upon
himself and his family. This was the sin that filled the measure of his
iniquity. [1.] He shall have no comfort in any of his relations, but be
afflicted in those that were nearest to him:
His wife shall be a harlot;
either she shall be forcibly abused by the soldiers, as the Levite's concubine
by the men of Gibeah (they
ravish the women of Zion, Lam. 5:11), or she
shall herself wickedly play the harlot, which, though her sin, her great sin,
would be his affliction, his great affliction and reproach, and a just
punishment upon him for promoting spiritual whoredom. Sometimes the sins of our
relations are to be looked upon as judgments of God upon us. His children,
though they keep honest, yet shall not keep alive:
His sons and his daughters
shall fall by the sword of war, and he himself shall live to see it. He has
trained them up in iniquity, and therefore God will cut them off in it. [2.] He
shall be stripped of all his estate; it shall fall into the hand of the enemy,
and be
divided by line, by lot, among the soldiers. What is ill begotten
will not be long kept. [3.] He shall himself perish in a strange country, not in
the
land of Israel, which had been holiness to the Lord, but in a
polluted
land, in a heathen country, the fittest place for such a heathen to end his
days in, that hated and silenced God's prophets and contributed so much to the
polluting of his own land with idolatry.
(2.) Notwithstanding the opposition he gave to Amos, God will
bring ruin upon the land and nation. He was accused for saying,
Israel shall
be led away captive (v. 11), but he stands to it, and repeats it; for the
unbelief of man shall not make the word of God of no effect. The
burden of
the word of the Lord may be striven with, but it cannot be shaken off. Let
Amaziah rage, and fret, and say what he will to the contrary,
Israel shall
surely go into captivity forth of his land. Note, it is to no purpose to
contend with the judgments of God; for when God judges he will overcome.
Stopping the mouths of God's ministers will not stop the progress of God's
word, for it shall not return void.
Chapter 7:
| 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
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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
Classic Bible CommentariesCourtesy of E-Word Today
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