Chapter 28:
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 Lamentations Daniel
Ezekiel 28
Complete Concise
In this chapter we have, I. A prediction of the fall and ruin of
the king of Tyre, who, in the destruction of that city, is particularly set up
as a mark for God's arrows (v. 1-10). II. A lamentation for the king of Tyre,
when he has thus fallen, though he falls by his own iniquity (v. 11-19). III.
A prophecy of the destruction of Zidon, which as in the neighbourhood of Tyre
and had a dependence upon it (v. 20-23). IV. A promise of the restoration of
the Israel of God, though in the day of their calamity they were insulted over
by their neighbours (v. 24-26).
Verses 1-10
We had done with Tyrus in the foregoing chapter, but now the
prince of Tyrus is to be singled out from the rest. Here is something to be said
to him by himself, a
message to him from God, which the prophet must send
him, whether he will hear or whether he will forbear.
I. He must tell him of his pride. His people are proud (ch.
27:3) and so is he; and they shall both be made to know that
God resists the
proud. Let us see, 1. What were the expressions of his pride:
His heart
was lifted up, v. 2. He had a great conceit of himself, was puffed up with
an opinion of his own sufficiency, and looked with disdain upon all about him.
Out of the abundance of the pride of his heart he said,
I am a god; he
did not only say it in his heart, but had the impudence to speak it out. God has
said of princes,
They are gods (Ps. 82:6); but it does not become them to
say so of themselves; it is a high affront to him who is
God alone, and
will not give his glory to another. He thought that the city of Tyre had as
necessary a dependence upon him as the world has upon the God that made it, and
that he was himself independent as God and unaccountable to any. He thought
himself to have as much wisdom and strength as God himself, and as incontestable
an authority, and that his prerogatives were as absolute and his word as much a
law as the word of God. He challenged divine honours, and expected to be praised
and admired as a god, and doubted not to be deified, among other heroes, after
his death as a great benefactor to the world. Thus the king of Babylon said,
I
will be like the Most High (Isa. 14:14), not like the
Most Holy. "I
am the strong God, and therefore will not be contradicted, because I cannot
be controlled.
I sit in the seat of God; I sit
as high as God, my
throne equal with his.
Divisum imperium cum Jove Caesar habetCaesar
divides dominion with Jove. I sit as safely as God, as safely
in the
heart of the seas, and as far out of the reach of danger, as he in the
height
of heaven." He thinks his guards of men of war about his throne as
pompous and potent as the hosts of angels that are about the throne of God. He
is put in mind of his meanness and mortality, and, since he needs to be told, he
shall be told, that self-evident truth,
Thou art a man, and not God, a
depending creature; thou art
flesh, and not spirit, Isa. 31:3. Note, Men
must be made to know that they are
but men, Ps. 9:20. The greatest wits,
the greatest potentates, the greatest saints, are
men, and not gods.
Jesus Christ was both God and man. The king of Tyre, though he has such a mighty
influence upon all about him, and with the help of his riches bears a mighty
sway, though he has tribute and presents brought to his court with as much
devotion as if they were sacrifices to his altar, though he is flattered by his
courtiers and made a god of by his poets, yet, after all, he is
but a man;
he knows it; he fears it. But
he sets his heart as the heart of God;
"Thou hast conceited thyself to be a god, hast compared thyself with God,
thinking thyself as wise and strong, and as fit to govern the world, as he."
It was the ruin of our first parents, and ours in them, that they would be
as
gods, Gen. 3:5. And still that corrupt nature which inclines men to set up
themselves as their own masters, to do what they will, and their own carvers, to
have what they will, their own end, to live to themselves, and their own
felicity, to enjoy themselves,
sets their hearts as the heart of God,
invades his prerogatives, and catches at the flowers of his crowna
presumption that cannot go unpunished.
2. We are here told what it was that he was proud of. (1.) His
wisdom. It is probable that this prince of Tyre was a man of very good natural
parts, a philosopher, and well read in all the parts of learning that were then
in vogue, at least a politician, and one that had great dexterity in managing
the affairs of state. And then he thought himself
wiser than Daniel, v.
3. We found, before, that Daniel, though now but a young man, was celebrated for
his prevalency in prayer, ch. 14:14. Here we find he was famous for his prudence
in the management of the affairs of this world, a great scholar and statesman,
and withal a great saint, and yet not a prince, but a poor captive. It was
strange that under such external disadvantages his lustre should shine forth, so
that he had become
wise to a proverb. When the king of Tyre dreams
himself to be a god he says, I am
wiser than Daniel. There is no secret that
they can hide from thee. Probably he challenged all about him to
prove
him with questions, as Solomon was proved, and he had unriddled all their
enigmas, had solved all their problems, and none of them all could puzzle him.
He had perhaps been successful in discovering plots, and diving into the
counsels of the neighbouring princes, and therefore thought himself omniscient,
and that no thought could be withholden from him; therefore he said,
I am a
god. Note,
Knowledge puffeth up; it is hard to know much and not to
know it too well and to be elevated with it. He that was
wiser than Daniel
was prouder than Lucifer. Those therefore that are knowing must study to be
humble and to evidence that they are so. (2.) His wealth. That way his wisdom
led him; it is not said that by his wisdom he searched into the arcana either of
nature or government, modelled the state better than it was, or made better
laws, or advanced the interests of the commonwealth of learning; but his
wisdom
and understanding were of use to him in
traffic. As some of the kings
of Judah
loved husbandry (2 Chr. 26:10), so the king of Tyre loved
merchandise, and by it he
got riches, increased his riches, and filled his
treasures with gold and silver, v. 4, 5. See what the wisdom of this world
is; those are cried up as the wisest men that know how to get money and by right
or wrong to raise estates; and yet really
this their way is their folly,
Ps. 49:13. It was the folly of the king of Tyre, [1.] That he attributed the
increase of his wealth to himself and not to the providence of God, forgetting
him who
gave him power to get wealth, Deu. 8:17, 18. [2.] That he thought
himself a wise man because he was a rich man; whereas a fool may have an estate
(Eccl. 2:19), yea, and a fool may get an estate, for the world has been often
observed to favour such,
when bread is not to the wise, Eccl. 9:11. [3.]
That
his heart was lifted up because of his riches, because of the
increase of his wealth, which made him so haughty and secure, so insolent and
imperious, and which
set his heart as the heart of God. The
man of
sin, when he had a great deal of worldly pomp and power,
showed himself
as a god, 2 Th. 2:4. Those who are rich in this world have therefore need to
charge that upon themselves which the word of God charges upon them,
that
they be not high-minded, 1 Tim. 6:17.
II. Since
pride goes before destruction, and a haughty spirit
before a fall, he must bell him of that destruction, of that fall, which was
now hastening on as the just punishment of his presumption in setting up himself
a rival with God. "Because thou hast pretended to be a god (v. 6),
therefore thou shalt not be long a man," v. 7. Observe here,
1. The instruments of his destruction:
I will bring strangers
upon theethe Chaldeans, whom we do not find mentioned among the many
nations and countries that traded with Tyre, ch. 27. If any of those nations had
been brought against it, they would have had some compassion upon it, for old
acquaintance-sake; but these strangers will have none. They are people of a
strange
language, which the king of Tyre himself, wise as he is, perhaps understands
not. They are the
terrible of the nations; it was an army made up of many
nations, and it was at this time the most formidable both for strength and fury.
These God has at command, and these he will bring upon the king of Tyre.
2. The extremity of the destruction:
They shall draw their
swords against the beauty of thy wisdom (v. 7), against all those things
which thou gloriest in as thy beauty and the production of thy wisdom. Note, It
is just with God that our enemies should make that their prey which we have made
our pride. The king of Tyre's palace, his treasury, his city, his navy, his
army, these he glories in as his brightness, these, he thinks, made him
illustrious and glorious as a god on earth. But all these the victorious enemy
shall defile, shall deface, shall deform. He thought them sacred, things that
none durst touch; but the conquerors shall seize them as common things, and
spoil the brightness of them. But, whatever becomes of what he has, surely his
person is sacred. No (v. 8):
They shall bring thee down to the pit, to
the grave; thou shalt
die the death. And, (1.) It shall not be an
honourable death, but an ignominious one. He shall be so vilified in his death
that he may despair of being deified after his death. He shall die
the deaths
of those that are slain in the midst of the seas, that have no honour done
them at their death, but their dead bodies are immediately thrown overboard,
without any ceremony or mark of distinction, to be a feast for the fish. Tyre is
likely to be destroyed in the midst of the sea (ch. 27:32) and the prince
of Tyre shall fare no better than the people. (2.) It shall not be a happy
death, but a miserable one. He shall
die the deaths of the uncircumcised
(v. 10), of those that are strangers to God and not in covenant with him, and
therefore die under his wrath and curse. It is
deaths, a double death,
temporal and eternal, the death both of body and soul. He shall die the
second
death; that is dying miserably indeed. The sentence of death here passed
upon the king of Tyre is ratified by a divine authority:
I have spoken it,
saith the Lord God. And what he has said he will do. None can gainsay it,
nor will he unsay it.
3. The effectual disproof that this will be of all his
pretensions to deity (v. 9): "When the conqueror sets his sword to thy
breast, and thou seest no way of escape,
wilt thou then say, I am God?
Wilt thou then have such a conceit of thyself as thou now hast? No; thy being
overpowered by death, and by the fear of it, will force thee to own that thou
art not a god, but a weak, timorous, trembling, dying man.
In the hand of him
that slays thee (in the hand of God, and of the instruments that he
employed)
thou shalt be a man, and not God, utterly unable to resist, and
help thyself."
I have said, You are gods; but you shall die like men,
Ps. 82:6, 7. Note, Those who pretend to be rivals with God shall be forced one
way or other to let fall their claims. Death at furthest, when we come into his
hand, will make us know that we are men.
Verses 11-19
As after the prediction of the ruin of Tyre (ch. 26) followed a
pathetic lamentation for it (ch. 27), so after the ruin of the king of Tyre is
foretold it is bewailed.
I. This is commonly understood of the prince who then reigned
over Tyre, spoken to, v. 2. His name was
Ethbaal, or
Ithobalus, as
Diodorus Siculus calls him that was king of Tyre when Nebuchadnezzar destroyed
it. He was, it seems, upon all external accounts an accomplished man, very great
and famous; but his iniquity was his ruin. Many expositors have suggested that
besides the literal sense of this lamentation there is an allegory in it, and
that it is an allusion to the fall of the angels that sinned, who undid
themselves by their pride. And (as is usual in texts that have a mystical
meaning) some passages here refer primarily to the king of Tyre, as that of his
merchandises, others to the angels, as that of being
in the holy mountain of
God. But, if there be any thing mystical in it (as perhaps there may), I
shall rather refer it to the fall of Adam, which seems to be glanced at, v. 13.
Thou
hast been in Eden the garden of God, and that in the day thou wast created.
II. Some think that by
the king of Tyre is meant the
whole royal family, this including also the foregoing kings, and looking as far
back as Hiram, king of Tyre. The then governor is called
prince (v. 2);
but he that is here lamented is called
king. The court of Tyre with its
kings had for many ages been famous; but sin ruins it. Now we may observe two
things here:
1. What was the renown of the king of Tyre. He is here spoken of
as having lived in great splendour, v. 12-15. He as a man, but it is here
owned that he was a very considerable man and one that made a mighty figure in
his day. (1.) He far exceeded other men. Hiram and other kings of Tyre had done
so in their time; and the reigning king perhaps had not come short of any of
them:
Thou sealest up the sum full of wisdom and perfect in beauty. But
the powers of human nature and the prosperity of human life seemed in him to be
at the highest pitch. He was looked upon to be as wise as the reason of men
could make him, and as happy as the wealth of this world and the enjoyment of it
could make him; in him you might see the utmost that both could do; and
therefore
seal up the sum, for nothing can be added; he is a complete
man, perfect
in suo generein his kind. (2.) He seemed to be as wise
and happy as Adam in innocency (v. 13):
"Thou hast been in Eden,
even
in the garden of God; thou hast lived as it were in paradise all thy
days, hast had a full enjoyment of every thing that is
good for food or
pleasant
to the eyes, and an uncontroverted dominion over all about thee, as Adam
had." One instance of the magnificence of the king of Tyre is, that he
outdid all others princes in jewels, which those have the greatest plenty of
that trade most abroad, as he did:
Every precious stone was
his
covering. There is a great variety of precious stones; but he had of every
sort and in such plenty that besides what were treasured up in his cabinet, and
were the ornaments of his crown, he had his clothes trimmed with them; they were
his
covering. Nay (v. 14), he
walked up and down in the midst of the
stones of fire, that is, these precious stones, which glittered and sparkled
like fire. His rooms were in a manner set round with jewels, so that he walked
in the midst of them, and then fancied himself as glorious as if, like God, he
had been surrounded by so many angels, who are compared to a
flame of fire.
And, if he be such an admirer of precious stones as to think them as bright as
angels, no wonder that he is such an admirer of himself as to think himself as
great as God. Nine several sorts of previous stones are here named, which were
all in the high priest's ephod. Perhaps they are particularly named because
he, in his pride, used to speak particularly of them, and tell those about him,
with a great deal of foolish pleasure, "This is such a precious stone, of
such a value, and so and so are its virtues." Thus is he upbraided with his
vanity.
Gold is mentioned last, as far inferior in value to those
precious stones; and he used to speak of it accordingly. Another thing that made
him think his palace a paradise was the curious music he had, the
tabrets and
pipes, hand-instruments and wind-instruments. The
workmanship of
these was extraordinary, and they were prepared for him on purpose; prepared
in
thee, the pronoun is feminine
in thee, O Tyre! or it denotes that
the king was effeminate in doting on such things. They were prepared
in the
day he was created, that is, either born, or created king; they were made on
purpose to celebrate the joys either of his birth-day or of his coronation-day.
These he prided himself much in, and would have all that came to see his palace
take notice of them. (3.) He looked like an incarnate angel (v. 14):
Thou art
the anointed cherub that covers or
protects; that is, he looked upon
himself as a guardian angel to his people, so bright, so strong, so faithful,
appointed to this office and qualified for it. Anointed kings should be to their
subjects as anointed cherubim, that cover them with the wings of their power;
and, when they are such, God will own them. Their advancement was from him:
I
have set thee so. Some think, because mention was made of Eden, that it
refers to the cherub set on the east of Eden to cover it, Gen. 3:24. He thought
himself as able to guard his city from all invaders as that angel was for his
charge. Or it may refer to the cherubim in the most holy place, whose wings
covered the ark; he thought himself as bright as one of them. (4.) He appeared
in as much splendour as the high priest when he was clothed with his garments
for glory and beauty:
"Thou wast upon the holy mountain of God, as
president of the temple built on that holy mountain; thou didst look as great,
and with as much majesty and authority, as ever the high priest did when he
walked in the temple, which was
garnished with precious stones (2 Chr.
3:6), and had his habit on, which had precious stones both in the breast and on
the shoulders; in that he seemed to
walk in the midst of the stones of fire."
Thus glorious is the king of Tyre; at least he thinks himself so.
2. Let us now see what was the ruin of the king of Tyre, what it
was that stained his glory and laid all this honour in the dust (v. 15):
"Thou
wast perfect in thy ways; thou didst prosper in all thy affairs and every
thing went well with thee; thou hadst not only a clear, but a bright reputation,
from the day thou wast created, the day of thy accession to the throne,
till
iniquity was found in thee; and that spoiled all." This may perhaps
allude to the deplorable case of the angels that fell, and of our first parents,
both of whom
were perfect in their ways till iniquity was found in them.
And when iniquity was once
found in him it increased; he grew worse and
worse, as appears (v. 18):
"Thou hast defiled thy sanctuaries; thou
hast lost the benefit of all that which thou thoughtest sacred, and in which, as
in a sanctuary, thou thoughtest to take refuge; these thou hast
defiled,
and so exposed thyself
by the multitude of thy iniquities." Now
observe,
(1.) What the iniquity was that was the ruin of the king of Tyre.
[1.] The
iniquity of his traffic (so it is called, v. 18), both his and
his people's, for their sin is charged upon him, because he connived at it and
set them a bad example (v. 16):
By the multitude of thy merchandise they have
filled the midst of thee with violence, and thus
thou hast sinned.
The king had so much to do with his merchandise, and was so wholly intent upon
the gains of that, that he took no care to do justice, to give redress to those
that suffered wrong and to protect them from violence; nay, in the multiplicity
of business, wrong was done to many by oversight; and in his dealings he made
use of his power to invade the rights of those he dealt with. Note, Those that
have much to do in the world are in great danger of doing much amiss; and it is
hard to deal with many without violence to some. Trades are called mysteries;
but too many make them mysteries of iniquity. [2.] His pride and vain-glory (v.
17):
"Thy heart was lifted up because of thy beauty; thou wast in
love with thyself, and thy own shadow. And thus
thou hast corrupted thy
wisdom by reason of the brightness, the pomp and splendour, wherein thou
livedst." He gazed so much upon this that it dazzled his eyes and prevented
him from seeing his way. He appeared so puffed up with his greatness that it
bereaved him both of his wisdom and of the reputation of it. He really became a
fool
in glorying. Those make a bad bargain for themselves that part with their
wisdom for the gratifying of their gaiety, and, to please a vain humour, lose a
real excellency.
(2.) What the ruin was that this iniquity brought him to. [1.]
He was thrown out of his dignity and dislodged from his palace, which he took to
be his paradise and temple (v. 16):
I will cast thee as profane out of the
mountain of God. His kingly power was high as a
mountain, setting him
above others; it was a
mountain of God, for the powers that be are
ordained of God, and have something in them that is sacred; but, having abused
his power, he is reckoned profane, and is therefore deposed and expelled. He
disgraces the crown he wears, and so has forfeited it, and shall be destroyed
from
the midst of the stones of fire, the precious stones with which his palace
was garnished, as the temple was; and they shall be no protection to him. [2.]
He was exposed to contempt and disgrace, and trampled upon by his neighbours:
"I
will cast thee to the ground (v. 17), will cast thee among the
pavement-stones,
from the midst of the
precious stones, and will
lay thee a rueful
spectacle
before kings, that they may behold thee and take warning by
thee not to be proud and oppressive." [3.] He was quite consumed, his city
and he in it:
I will bring forth a fire from the midst of thee. The
conquerors, when they have plundered the city, will kindle a fire in the heart
of it, which shall lay it, and the palace particularly, in ashes. Or it may be
taken more generally for the fire of God's judgments, which shall devour both
prince and people, and bring all the glory of both
to ashes upon the earth;
and this fire shall be
brought forth from the midst of thee. All God's
judgments upon sinners take rise from themselves; they are devoured by a fire of
their own kindling. [4.] He was hereby made a terrible example of divine
vengeance. Thus he is reduced
in the sight of all those that behold him
(v. 18):
Those that know him shall be astonished at him, and shall wonder
how one that stood so high could be brought so low. The king of Tyre's palace,
like the temple at Jerusalem, when it is destroyed shall be
an astonishment
and a hissing, 2 Chr. 7:20, 21. So fell the king of Tyre.
Verses 20-26
God's glory is his great end, both in all the good and in all
the evil which
proceed out of the mouth of the Most High; so we find in
these verses. 1. God will be glorified in the destruction of Zidon, a city that
lay near to Tyre, was more ancient, but not so considerable, had a dependence
upon it and stood and fell with it. God says here,
I am against thee, O Zidon!
and I will be glorified in the midst of thee, v. 22. And again, "Those
that would not know be gentler methods shall be made to
know that I am the
Lord, and I alone, and that I am a just and jealous God,
when I shall
have executed judgments in her, destroying judgments, when I shall have done
execution according to justice and according to the sentence passed, and so
shall be
sanctified in her." The Zidonians, it should seem, were
more addicted to idolatry than the Tyrians were, who, being men of business and
large conversation, were less under the power of bigotry and superstition. The
Zidonians were noted for the worship of Ashtaroth; Solomon introduced it, 1 Ki.
11:5. Jezebel was daughter to the king of Zidon, who brought the worship of Baal
into Israel (1 Ki. 16:31); so that God had been much dishonoured by the
Zidonians. Now, says he,
I will be glorified, I will be sanctified. The
Zidonians were borderers upon the land of Israel, where God was known, and where
they might have got the knowledge of him and have learned to glorify him; but,
instead of that, they seduced Israel to the worship of their idols. Note, When
God is sanctified he is glorified, for his holiness is his glory; and those whom
he is not sanctified and glorified by he will be sanctified and glorified upon,
by executing judgments upon them, which declare him a just avenger of his own
and his people's injured honour. The judgments that shall be executed upon
Zidon are war and pestilence, two wasting depopulating judgments, v. 23. They
are God's messengers, which he sends on his errands, and they shall accomplish
that for which he sends them.
Pestilence and
blood shall be sent
into
her streets; there the dead bodies of those shall lie who perished, some by
the plague, occasioned perhaps through ill diet when the city was besieged, and
some by the sword of the enemy, most likely the Chaldean armies, when the city
was taken, and all were put to the sword. Thus the wounded shall be judged; when
they are dying of their wounds they shall judge themselves, and others shall
say, They justly fall. Or, as some read it,
They shall be punished by the
sword, that sword which has commission to destroy
on every side. It
is God that judges, and he will overcome. Nor is it Tyre and Zidon only on which
God would execute judgments, but on all those that despised his people Israel,
and triumphed in their calamities; for this was now God's controversy with the
nations that were
round about them, v. 26. Note, When God's people are
under his correcting hand for their faults he takes care, as he did concerning
malefactors that were scourged,
that they shall not seem vile to those
that are about them, and therefore takes it ill of those who despise them and so
help forward the affliction when he is but
a little displeased,
Zec. 1:15. God regards them even in their low estate; and therefore let not men
despise them. 2. God will be glorified in the restoration of his people to their
former safety and prosperity. God had been dishonoured by the sins of his
people, and their sufferings too had given occasion to the enemy to blaspheme (Isa.
52:5); but God will now both cure them of their sins and ease them of their
troubles, and so
will be sanctified in them in the sight of the heathen,
will recover the honour of his holiness, to the satisfaction of all the world,
v. 25. For, (1.) They shall return to the possession of their own land again:
I
will gather the house of Israel out of their dispersions, in answer to that
prayer (Ps. 106:27),
Save us, O Lord our God! and gather us from among the
heathen; and in pursuance of that promise (Deu. 30:4), Thence will
the
Lord thy God gather thee. Being gathered, they shall be brought in a body,
to
dwell in the land that I have given to my servant Jacob. God had an
eye to the ancient grant, in bringing them back, for that remained in force, and
the discontinuance of the possession was not a defeasance of the right. He that
gave it will again give it. (2.) They shall enjoy great tranquillity there. When
those that have been vexatious to them are taken off they shall live in
quietness; there shall be no more
a pricking brier nor a grieving thorn,
v. 24. They shall have a happy settlement, for they shall
build houses,
and
plant vineyards; and they shall enjoy a happy security and serenity
there; they shall
dwell safely, shall
dwell with confidence, and
there shall be none to disquiet them or make them afraid, v. 26. This never had
full accomplishment in the body of that people, for after their return out of
captivity they were ever and anon molested by some bad neighbour or other. Nor
has the gospel-church been ever quite free from pricking briers and grieving
thorns; yet sometimes
the church has rest, and believers always dwell
safely under the divine protection and may be
quiet from the fear of evil.
But the full accomplishment of this promise is reserved for the heavenly Canaan,
when all the saints shall be gathered together, and every thing that offends
shall be removed, and all griefs and fears for ever banished.
Chapter 28:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
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| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 Lamentations Daniel
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
Classic Bible CommentariesCourtesy of E-Word Today
Copyright 2000-2009 BibleClassics.com
