Chapter 29:
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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 29
Complete Concise
Three chapters we had concerning Tyre and its king; next follow
four chapters concerning Egypt and its king. This is the first of them. Egypt
had formerly been a house of bondage to God's people; of late they had had but
too friendly a correspondence with it, and had depended too much upon it; and
therefore, whether the prediction reached Egypt or no, it would be of use to
Israel, to take them off from their confidence in their alliance with it. The
prophecies against Egypt, which are all laid together in these four chapters,
were of five several dates; the first in the 10th year of the captivity (v. 1),
the second in the 27th (v. 17), the third in the 11th year and the first month
(30:20), the fourth in the 11th year and the third month (31:1), the fifth in
the 12th year (32:1), and another in the same year (v. 17). In this chapter we
have, I. The destruction of Pharaoh foretold, for his dealing deceitfully with
Israel (v. 1-7). II. The desolation of the land of Egypt foretold (v. 8-12).
III. A promise of the restoration thereof, in part, after forty years (v. 13-16).
IV. The possession that should be given to Nebuchadnezzar of the land of Egypt
(v. 17-20). V. A promise of mercy to Israel (v. 21).
Verses 1-7
Here is, I. The date of this prophecy against Egypt. It was in
the
tenth year of the captivity, and yet it is placed after the prophecy
against Tyre, which was delivered in the eleventh year, because, in the
accomplishment of the prophecies, the destruction of Tyre happened before the
destruction of Egypt, and Nebuchadnezzar's gaining Egypt was the reward of his
service against Tyre; and
therefore the prophecy against Tyre is put
first, that we may the better observe that. But particular notice must be taken
of this, that the first prophecy against Egypt was just at the time when the
king of Egypt was coming to relieve Jerusalem and raise the siege (Jer. 37:5),
but did not answer the expectations of the Jews from them. Note, It is good to
foresee the failing of all our creature-confidences, then when we are most in
temptation to depend upon them, that we may
cease from man.
II. The scope of this prophecy. It is directed against
Pharaoh
king of Egypt, and against all Egypt, v. 2. The prophecy against Tyre began
with the people, and then proceeded against the prince. But this begins with the
prince, because it began to have its accomplishment in the insurrections and
rebellions of the people against the prince, not long after this.
III. The prophecy itself. Pharaoh Hophrah (for so was the
reigning Pharaoh surnamed) is here represented by a
great dragon, or
crocodile, that
lies in the midst of his rivers, as Leviathan in the
waters, to
play therein, v. 3. Nilus, the river of Egypt, was famed for
crocodiles. And what is the king of Egypt, in God's account, but a
great
dragon, venomous and mischievous? Therefore says God,
I am against thee.
I am above thee; so it may be read. How high soever the princes and
potentates of the earth are, there is a
higher than they (Eccl. 5:8), a
God above them, that can control them, and, if they be tyrannical and
oppressive, a God against them, that will be free to reckon with them. Observe
here,
1. The pride and security of Pharaoh. He
lies in the midst of
his rivers, rolls himself with a great deal of satisfaction in his wealth
and pleasures; and he says,
My river is my own. He boasts that he is an
absolute prince (his subjects are his vassals; Joseph bought them long ago, Gen.
47:23),that he is a sole prince, and has neither partner in the government
nor competitor for it,that he is out of debt (what he has is his
own,
and none of his neighbours have any demands upon him),that he is independent,
neither tributary nor accountable to any. Note, Worldly carnal minds please
themselves with, and pride themselves in, their property, forgetting that
whatever we have we have only the use of it, the property is in God. We
ourselves are not our own, but his. Our
tongues are not our own, Ps.
12:4. Our river is not
our own, for its springs are in God. The most
potent prince cannot call what he has his own, for, though it be so against all
the world, it is not so against God. But Pharaoh's reason for his pretensions
is yet more absurd:
My river is my own, for
I have made it for myself.
Here he usurps two of the divine prerogatives, to be the author and the end of
his own being and felicity. He only that is the great Creator can say of this
world, and of every thing in it,
I have made it for myself. He calls his
river his own because he
looks not unto the Maker thereof, nor has respect
unto him that fashioned it long ago, Isa. 22:11. What we have we have
received from God and must use for God, so that we cannot say, We made it, much
less, We made it for ourselves; and why then do we boast? Note, Self is the
great idol that all the world worships, in contempt of God and his sovereignty.
2. The course God will take with this proud man, to humble him.
He is a great dragon in the waters, and God will accordingly deal with him, v.
4, 5. (1.) He will draw him out of his rivers, for he has
a hook and a cord
for this
leviathan, with which he can manage him, though none on earth
can (Job 41:1):
"I will bring thee up out of the midst of thy rivers,
will cast thee out of thy palace, out of thy kingdom, out of all those things in
which thou takest such a complacency and placest such a confidence."
Herodotus related of this Pharaoh, who was now king of Egypt, that he had
reigned in great prosperity for twenty-five years, and was so elevated with his
successes that he said that
God himself would not cast him out of his
kingdom; but he shall soon be convinced of his mistake, and what he depended
on shall be no defence. God can force men out of that in which they are most
secure and easy. (2.)
All his fish shall be drawn out with him, his
servants, his soldiers, and all that had a dependence on him, as he thought, but
really such as he had dependence upon. These shall
stick to his scales,
adhere to their king, resolving to live and die with him. But, (3.) The king and
his army, the dragon and all the fish that stick to his scales, shall perish
together, as fish cast upon dry ground, and shall be
meat to the beasts and
fowls, v. 5. Now this is supposed to have had its accomplishment soon after,
when this Pharaoh, in defence of Aricius king of Libya, who had been expelled
his kingdom by the Cyrenians, levied a great army, and went out against the
Cyrenians, to re-establish his friend, but was defeated in battle, and all his
forces were put to flight, which gave such disgust to his kingdom that they rose
in rebellion against him. Thus was he left
thrown into the wilderness, he and
all the fish of the river with him. Thus issue men's pride, and
presumption, and carnal security. Thus men justly lose what they might call
their own, under God, when they call it their own against him.
3. The ground of the controversy God has with the Egyptians; it
is because they have cheated his people. They encouraged them to expect relief
and assistance from them when they were in distress, but failed them (v. 6, 7):
Because
they have been a staff of reed to the house of Israel. They pretended to be
a staff for them to lean upon, but, when any stress was laid upon them, they
were either weak and could not or treacherous and would not do that for them
which was expected. They
broke under them, to their great disappointment
and amazement, so that they
rent their shoulder and
made all their
loins to be at a stand. The king of Egypt, it is probable, had encouraged
Zedekiah to break his league with the king of Babylon, with a promise that he
would stand by him, which, when he failed to do, to any purpose, it could not
but put them into a great consternation. God had told them, long since, that the
Egyptians were broken reeds, Isa. 30:6, 7. Rabshakeh had told them so, Isa.
36:6. And now they found it so. It was indeed the folly of Israel to trust them,
and they were well enough served when they were deceived in them. God was
righteous in suffering them to be so. But that is no excuse at all for the
Egyptians' falsehood and treachery, nor shall it secure them from the
judgments of that God who is and will be the avenger of all such wrongs. It is a
great sin, and very provoking to God, as well as unjust, ungrateful, and very
dishonourable and unkind, to put a cheat upon those that put a confidence in us.
Verses 8-16
This explains the foregoing prediction, which was figurative,
and looks something further. Here is a prophecy,
I. Of the ruin of Egypt. The threatening of this is very full
and particular; and the sin for which this ruin shall be brought upon them is
their pride, v. 9. They said,
The river is mine and I have made it;
therefore their land shall spue them out. 1. God is against them, both against
the king and against the people,
against thee and against thy rivers.
Waters signify
people and multitudes, Rev. 17:15. 2. Multitudes of them
shall be cut off by the sword of war, a sword which God will bring upon them to
destroy
both man and beast, the sword of civil war. 3. The country shall
be depopulated. The
land of Egypt shall be desolate and waste (v. 9), the
country not cultivated, the cities not inhabited. The wealth of both was their
pride, and that God will take away. It
shall be utterly waste (wastes of
waste, so the margin reads it),
and desolate (v. 10);
neither men
nor beasts shall pass through it, nor shall it be inhabited (v. 11); it
shall be
desolate in the midst of the countries that are so, v. 12. This
was the effect not so much of those wars spoken of before, which were made by
them, but of the war which the king of Babylon made upon them. It shall be
desolate from one end of the land to the other,
from the tower of Syene even
unto the border of Ethiopia. The sin of pride is enough to ruin a whole
nation. 4. The people shall be dispersed and scattered among the nations (v.
12), so that those who thought the balance of power was in their hand should now
become a contemptible people. Such a fall does a haughty spirit go before.
II. Of the restoration of Egypt after awhile, v. 13. Egypt shall
lie
desolate forty years (v. 12) and then
I will bring again the
captivity of Egypt, v. 14. Some date the forty years from Nebuchadnezzar's
destroying Egypt, others from the desolation of Egypt some time before; however,
they end about the first year of Cyrus, when the seventy years' captivity of
Judah ended, or soon after. Then this prediction was accomplished, 1. That God
will gather the Egyptians out of all the countries into which they were
dispersed, and make them to
return to the land of their habitation, and
give them a settlement there again, v. 14. Note, Though God will find out a way
to humble the proud, yet he will not contend for ever, no, not with them in this
world. 2. That yet they shall not make a figure again as they have done. Egypt
shall be
a kingdom again, but it shall be the
basest of the kingdoms
(v. 15); it shall have but little wealth and power, and shall not extend its
conquests as formerly; it shall be the tail of the nations, and not the head. It
is a mercy that it shall become a kingdom again, but, to humble it, it shall be
a despicable kingdom; it shall be a long time before it recover any thing like
its ancient lustre. For two reasons it shall be thus mortified:(1.) That it
may not domineer over its neighbours, that it may not
exalt itself above the
nations, nor
rule over the nations, as it has done, but that it may
know what it is to be low and despised. Note, Those who abuse their power will
justly be stripped of it; and God, as King of nations, will find out a way to
maintain the injured rights and liberties, not only of his own, but of other
nations. (2.) That it may not deceive the people of God (v. 16):
It shall no
more be the confidence of the house of Israel; they shall no more be in
temptation to trust in it as they have done, which is a sin that
brings their
iniquity to remembrance, that is, provokes God to punish them not for that
only, but for all their other sins. Or it
puts them in mind of their
idolatries to return to them,
when they look to the idolaters, to repose
a confidence in them. Note, The creatures we confide in are often
therefore
ruined, because there is no other way effectually to cure us of our confidence
in them. Rather than Israel shall be ensnared again, the whole land of Egypt
shall be laid waste. He that once
gave Egypt for their ransom (Isa. 43:3)
will now give Egypt for their cure; and it shall be destroyed rather than Israel
shall not in this particular be reformed. God, not only in justice, but in
wisdom and goodness to us, breaks those creature-stays which we lean too much
upon, and makes them to be no more, that they may be no more our confidence.
Verses 17-21
The date of this prophecy is observable; it was in the
twenty-seventh year of Ezekiel's captivity, sixteen years after the prophecy
in the former part of the chapter, and almost as long after those which follow
in the next chapters; but it comes in here for the explication of all that was
said against Egypt. After the destruction of Jerusalem Nebuchadnezzar spent two
or three campaigns in the conquest of the Ammonites and Moabites and making
himself master of their countries. Then he spent thirteen years in the siege of
Tyre. During all that time the Egyptians were embroiled in war with the
Cyrenians and one with another, by which they were very much weakened and
impoverished; and just at the end of the siege of Tyre God delivers this
prophecy to Ezekiel, to signify to him that that utter destruction of Egypt
which he had foretold fifteen or sixteen years before, which had been but in
part accomplished hitherto, should now be completed by Nebuchadnezzar. The
prophecy which begins here, it should seem, is continued to the twentieth verse
of the next chapter. And Dr. Lightfoot observes that it is the last prophecy we
have of this prophet, and should have been last in the book, but is laid here,
that all the prophecies against Egypt might come together. The particular
destruction of Pharaoh-Hophrah, foretold in the former part of this chapter, was
likewise foretold Jer. 44:30. This general devastation of Egypt by
Nebuchadnezzar was foretold Jer. 43:10. Observe,
I. What success God would give to Nebuchadnezzar and his forces
against Egypt. God gave him
that land, that he might
take the spoil
and
prey of it, v. 19, 20. It was a cheap and easy prey. He subdued it
with very little difficulty; the blood and treasure expended upon the conquest
of it were inconsiderable. But it was a rich prey, and he carried off a great
deal from it that was of value. Their having been divided among themselves, no
doubt, gave a common enemy great advantage against them, who, when they had been
so long preying upon one another, soon made a prey of them all.
En! quo
discordia cives perduxit miserosWhat wretchedness does civil discord bring!
Jeremiah foretold that Nebuchadnezzar should
array himself with the land of
Egypt as a shepherd puts on his coat, which intimates what a rich and cheap
prey it should be.
II. Upon what considerations God would give Nebuchadnezzar this
success against Egypt; it was to be a recompence to him for the hard service
with which he had caused his army to serve against Tyre, v. 18, 20. 1. The
taking of Tyre was a tedious piece of work; it cost Nebuchadnezzar abundance of
blood and treasure. It held out thirteen years; all that time the Chaldean army
was hard at it, to make themselves masters of it. A large current of the sea,
between Tyre and the continent, was filled up with earth, and many other
difficulties which were thought insuperable they had to struggle with; but so
great a prince, having begun such an undertaking, thought himself bound in
honour to push it on, whatever it cost him. How many thousand lives have been
sacrificed to such points of honour as this as! In prosecuting this siege
every
head was made bald, and every shoulder peeled, with carrying burdens and
labouring in the water when they had a strong tide and a strong town to contend
with. Egypt, a large kingdom, being divided within itself, is easily conquered;
Tyre, a single city, being unanimous, is with difficulty subdued. Those that
have much to do in the world find some affairs go on a great deal more readily
and easily than others. But, 2. In this service God own that they
wrought for
him, v. 20. He set them at work, for the humbling of a proud city and its
king, though
they meant not so, neither did their heart think so, who
were employed in it. Note, Even great men and bad men are tools that God makes
use of, and are
working for him even when they are pursuing their own
covetous and ambitious designs; so wonderfully does God overrule all to his own
glory. Yet, 3. For this service he had
no wages nor
his army. He
was at a vast expense to take Tyre; and when he had it, though it was a very
rich city, and he promised himself good plunder for his army from it, he was
disappointed; the Tyrians sent away by ship their best effects, and threw the
rest into the sea, so that they had nothing but bare walls. Thus are the
children of this world ordinarily frustrated in their highest expectations from
it. Therefore, 4. He shall have the spoil of Egypt to recompense him for his
service against Tyre. Note, God will be behind-hand with none for any service
they do for him, but, one way or other, will recompense them for it; none shall
kindle a fire on his altar for nought. The service done for him by worldly men,
with worldly designs, shall be recompensed with a mere worldly reward, which his
faithful servants, that have a sincere regard to his will and glory, would not
be put off with. This accounts for the prosperity of wicked men in this world;
God is in it paying them for some service or other, in which he has made use of
them.
Verily they have their reward. Let none envy it them. The conquest
of Egypt is spoken of as Nebuchadnezzar's
full reward, for that
completed his dominion over the then known world in a manner; that was the last
of the kingdoms he subdued; when he was master of that he became the
head of
gold.
III. The mercy God had in store for the house of Israel soon
after. When the tide is at the highest it will turn, and so it will when it is
at the lowest. Nebuchadnezzar was in the zenith of his glory when he had
conquered Egypt, but within a year after he ran mad (Can. 4), was so seven
years, and within a year or two after he had recovered his senses he resigned
his life. When he was at the highest Israel was at the lowest; then were they in
the depth of their captivity, their bones dead and dry; but
in that day the
horn of the house of Israel shall bud forth, v. 21. The day of their
deliverance shall begin to dawn, and they shall have some little reviving in
their bondage, in the honour that shall be done, 1. To their princes; they are
the
horns of the house of Israel, the seat of their glory and power.
These began to bud forth when Daniel and his fellows were highly preferred in
Babylon; Daniel
sat in the gate of the city; Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego,
were set over the affairs of the province (Dan. 2:49); these were all
of
the king's seed, and of the princes, Dan. 1:3. And it was within a year
after the conquest of Egypt that they were thus preferred; and, soon after,
three of them were made famous by the honour God put upon them in bringing them
alive out of the burning fiery furnace. This might very well be called the
budding
forth of the horn of the house of Israel. And, some years after, this
promise had a further accomplishment in the enlargement and elevation of
Jehoiachin king of Judah, Jer. 52:31, 32. They were both tokens of God's
favour to Israel, and happy omens. 2. To their prophets. And
I will give thee
the opening of the mouth. Though none of Ezekiel's prophecies, after this,
are recorded, yet we have reason to think he went on prophesying, and with more
liberty and boldness, when Daniel and his fellows were in power, and would be
ready to protect him not only from the Babylonians, but from the wicked ones of
his own people. Note, It bodes well to a people when God enlarges the liberties
of his ministers and they are countenanced and encouraged in their work.
Chapter 29:
| 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 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
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