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Introduction 1 2 3 Nahum Zephaniah
Habakkuk 1
Complete Concise
In this chapter, I. The prophet complains to God of the violence
done by the abuse of the sword of justice among his own people and the hardships
thereby put upon many good people (v. 1-4). II. God by him foretels the
punishment of that abuse of power by the sword of war, and the desolations which
the army of the Chaldeans should make upon them (v. 5-11). III. Then the
prophet complains of that too, and is grieved that the Chaldeans prevail so far
(v. 12-17), so that he scarcely knows which is more to be lamented, the sin or
the punishment of it, for in both many harmless good people are very great
sufferers. It is well that there is a day of judgment, and a future state,
before us, in which it shall be eternally well with all the righteous, and with
them only, and ill with all the wicked, and them only; so the present seeming
disorders of Providence shall be set to rights, and there will remain no matter
of complaint whatsoever.
Verses 1-4
We are told no more in the title of this book (which we have, v.
1) than that the penman was
a prophet, a man divinely inspired and
commissioned, which is enough (if that be so, we need not ask concerning his
tribe or family, or the place of his birth), and that the book itself is
the
burden which he
saw; he was as sure of the truth of it as if he had
seen it with his bodily eyes already accomplished. Here, in these verses, the
prophet sadly laments the iniquity of the times, as one sensibly touched with
grief for the lamentable decay of religion and righteousness. It is a very
melancholy complaint which he here makes to God, 1. That no man could call what
he had his own; but, in defiance of the most sacred laws of property and equity,
he that had power on his side had what he had a mind to, though he had no right
on his side: The land was
full of violence, as the old world was, Gen.
6:11. The prophet
cries out of violence (v. 2),
iniquity and
grievance,
spoil and
violence. In families and among relations, in neighbour-hoods
and among friends, in commerce and in courts of law, every thing was carried
with a high hand, and no man made any scruple of doing wrong to his neighbour,
so that he could but make a good hand of it for himself. It does not appear that
the prophet himself had any great wrong done him (in losing times it fared best
with those that had nothing to lose), but it grieved him to see other people
wronged, and he could not but mingle his tears with those of the oppressed.
Note, Doing wrong to harmless people, as it is an iniquity in itself, so it is a
great grievance to all that are concerned for God's Jerusalem, who
sigh and
cry for abominations of this kind. He complains (v. 4) that
the wicked
doth compass about the righteous. One honest man, one honest cause, shall
have enemies besetting it on every side; many wicked men, in confederacy against
it, run it down; nay, one wicked man (for it is singular) with so many various
arts of mischief sets upon a righteous man, that he perfectly besets him. 2.
That the kingdom was broken into parties and factions that were continually
biting and devouring one another. This is a lamentation to all the sons of
peace:
There are that raise up strife and contention (v. 3), that foment
divisions, widen breaches, incense men against one another, and sow discord
among brethren, by doing the work of him that is the accuser of the brethren.
Strifes and contentions that have been laid asleep, and begun to be forgotten,
they awake, and industriously raise up again, and blow up the sparks that were
hidden under the embers. And, if
blessed are the peace-makers, cursed are
such peace-breakers, that make parties, and so make mischief that spreads
further, and lasts longer, than they can imagine. It is sad to see bad men
warming their hands at those flames which are devouring all that is good in a
nation, and stirring up the fire too. 3. That the torrent of violence and strife
ran so strongly as to bid defiance to the restraints and regulations of laws and
the administration of justice, v. 4. Because God did not appear against them,
nobody else would;
therefore the law is slacked, is silent; it breathes
not;
its pulse beats not (so, it is said, the word signifies); it
intermits,
and judgment does not go forth as it should; no cognizance is
taken of those crimes, no justice done upon the criminals; nay,
wrong
judgment proceeds; if appeals be made to the courts of equity, the righteous
shall be condemned and the wicked justified, so that the remedy proves the worst
disease. The legislative power takes no care to supply the deficiencies of the
law for the obviating of those growing threatening mischiefs; the executive
power takes no care to answer the good intentions of the laws that are made; the
stream of justice is dried up by violence, and has not its free course. 4. That
all this was open and public, and impudently avowed; it was barefaced. The
prophet complains that this iniquity was shown him; he
beheld it which
way soever he turned his eyes, nor could he look off it:
Spoiling and
violence are before me. Note, The abounding of wickedness in a nation is a
very great eye-sore to good people, and, if they did not see it, they could not
believe it to be so bad as it is. Solomon often complains of the vexation of
this kind which he
saw under the sun; and the prophet would therefore
gladly turn hermit, that he might not see it, Jer. 9:2. But
then we must
needs go out of the world, which
there-fore we should long to do,
that we may remove to that world where holiness and love reign eternally, and no
spoiling and violence shall be before us. 5. That he complained of this to God,
but could not obtain a redress of those grievances:
"Lord,"
says he,
"why dost thou show me iniquity? Why hast thou cast my lot
in a time and place when and where it is to be seen, and why do I continue to
sojourn
in Mesech and
Kedar? I cry to thee of this violence; I cry aloud; I
have cried long; but
thou wilt not hear, thou wilt not save; thou dost
not take vengeance on the oppressors, nor do justice to the oppressed, as if thy
arm were shortened or thy ear heavy." When God seems to connive at the
wickedness of the wicked, nay, and to countenance it, by suffering them to
prosper in their wickedness, it shocks the faith of good men, and proves a sore
temptation to them to say,
We have cleansed our hearts in vain (Ps.
73:13), and hardens those in their impiety who say,
God has forsaken the
earth. We must not think it strange if wickedness be suffered to prevail far
and prosper long. God has reasons, and we are sure they are good reasons, both
for the reprieves of bad men and the rebukes of good men; and therefore, though
we plead with him, and humbly expostulate concerning his judgments, yet we must
say, "He is wise, and righteous, and good, in all," and must believe
the day will come, though it may be long deferred, when the cry of sin will be
heard against those that do wrong and the cry of prayer for those that suffer
it.
Verses 5-11
We have here an answer to the prophet's complaint, giving him
assurance that, though God bore long, he would not bear always with this
provoking people; for the day of vengeance was in his heart, and he must tell
them so, that they might by repentance and reformation turn away the judgment
they were threatened with.
I. The preamble to the sentence is very awful (v. 5):
Behold,
you among the heathen, and regard. Since they will not be brought to
repentance by the long-suffering of God, he will take another course with them.
No resentments are so keen, so deep, as those of abused patience. The Lord will
inflict upon them, 1. A public punishment, which shall be beheld and regarded
among the heathen, which the neighbouring nations shall take notice of and stand
amazed at; see Deu. 29:24, 25. This will aggravate the desolations of Israel,
that they will thereby be made a spectacle to the world. 2. An amazing
punishment, so strange and surprising, and so much out of the common road of
Providence, that it shall not be paralleled among the heathen, shall be sorer
and heavier than what God has usually inflicted upon the nations that know him
not; nay, it shall not be credited even by those that had the prediction of it
from God before it comes, or the report of it from those that were eye-witnesses
of it when it comes:
You will not believe it, though it be told you; it
will be thought incredible that so many judgments should combine in one, and
every circumstance so strangely concur to enforce and aggravate it, that so
great and potent a nation should be so reduced and broken, and that God should
deal so severely with a people that had been taken into the bond of the covenant
and that he had done so much for. The punishment of God's professing people
cannot but be the astonishment of all about them. 3. A speedy punishment:
"I
will work a work in your days, now quickly; this generation shall not pass
till the judgment threatened be accomplished. The sins of former days shall be
reckoned for in your days; for now the measure of the iniquity is full,"
Mt. 23:36. 4. It shall be a punishment in which much of the hand of God shall
appear; it shall be a work of his own working, so that all who see it shall say,
This is the Lord's doing; and it will be found a fearful thing to fall
into his hands; woe to those whom he takes to task! 5. It shall be such a
punishment as will typify the destruction to be brought upon the despisers of
Christ and his gospel, for to that these words are applied Acts 13:41,
Behold,
you despisers, and wonder, and perish. The ruin of Jerusalem by the
Chaldeans for their idolatry was a figure of their ruin by the Romans for
rejecting Christ and his gospel, and it is a very marvellous thing, and almost
incredible.
Is there not a strange punishment to the workers of iniquity?
II. The sentence itself is very dreadful and particular (v. 6):
Lo,
I raise up the Chaldeans. There were those that raised up a great deal of
strife and contention among them, which was their sin; and now God will raise up
the Chaldeans against them, who shall strive and contend with them, which shall
be their punishment. Note, When God's professing people quarrel among
themselves, snarl at, and devour one another, it is just with God to bring the
common enemy upon them, that shall make peace by making a universal devastation.
The contending parties in Jerusalem were inveterate one against another, when
the Romans came and
took away their place and nation. The Chaldeans shall
be the instruments of the destruction threatened, and, though themselves acting
unrighteously, they shall
execute the righteousness of the Lord and
punish the unrighteousness of Israel. Now, here we have,
1. A description of the people that shall be raised up against
Israel, to be a scourge to them. (1.) They are
a bitter and hasty nation,
cruel and fierce, and what they do is done with violence and fury; they are
precipitate in their counsels, vehement in their passions, and push on with
resolution in their enterprises; they show no mercy and they spare no pains.
Miserable is the case of those that are given up into the hand of these cruel
ones. (2.) They are strong, and therefore formidable, and such as there is no
standing before, and yet no fleeing from (v. 7):
They are terrible and
dreadful, famed for the gallant troops they bring into the field (v. 8);
their
horses are swifter than leopards to charge and pursue, and
more fierce
than the
evening wolves; and wolves are observed to be the most ravenous
towards the evening, after they have been kept hungry all day, waiting for that
darkness under the protection of which
all the beasts of the forest creep
forth, Ps. 104:20. Their squadrons of horse shall be very numerous:
"Their
horse-men shall spread themselves a great way, for they shall
come from
far, from all parts of their own country, and shall be dispersed into all
parts of the country they invade, to plunder it, and enrich themselves with the
spoil of it. And,
in making speed to spoil, they shall hasten to the prey
(as those, Isa. 8:1,
margin), for they shall
fly as the eagle
towards the earth when she
hastens to eat and strikes at the prey she has
an eye upon." (3.) Their own will is a law to them, and, in the fierceness
of their pursuits, they will not be governed by any laws of humanity, equity, or
honour:
Their judgment and their dignity shall proceed of themselves, v.
7. Appetite and passion rule them, and not reason nor conscience. Their
principle is,
Quicquid libet, licet
My will is my law. And,
Sic
volo, sic jubeo; stat pro ratione voluntasThis is my wish, this is my
command; it shall be done because I choose it. What favour can be hoped for
from such an enemy? Note, Those who have been unjust and unmerciful, among whom
the
law is slacked, and judgment doth not go forth, will justly be paid in their
own coin and fall into the hands of those who will deal unjustly and
unmercifully with them.
2. A prophecy of the terrible execution that shall be made by
this terrible nation:
They shall march through the breadth of the earth
(so it may be read); for in a little time the Chaldean forces subdued all the
nations in those parts, so that they seemed to have conquered the world; they
overran Asia and part of Africa. Or, through the breadth of
the land of
Israel, which was wholly laid waste by them. It is here foretold, (1.) That they
shall seize all as their own that they can lay their hands on. They shall come
to
possess the dwelling-places that are not theirs, which they have no
right to, but that which their sword gives them. (2.) That they shall push on
the war with all possible vigour:
They shall all come for violence (v.
9), not to determine any disputed right by the sword, but, right or wrong, to
enrich themselves with the spoil.
Their faces shall sup up as the east wind;
their very countenances shall be so fierce and frightful that a look will serve
to make them masters of all they have a mind to; so that they shall
swallow
up all, as the east wind nips and blasts the buds and flowers.
Their
faces shall look towards the east (so some read it); they shall still have
an eye to their own country, which lay eastward from Judea, and all the spoil
they seize they shall remit thither. (3.) That they shall take a vast number of
prisoners, and send them into Babylon:
They shall gather the captivity as the
sand for multitude, and shall never know when they have enough, as long as
there are any more to be had. (4.) That they shall make nothing of the
opposition that is given to them, v. 10. Do the distressed Jews depend upon
their great men to make a stand, and with their wisdom and courage to give check
to the victorious arms of the Chaldeans? Alas! they will make nothing of them.
They
shall scoff (he shall, so it is in the original, meaning Nebuchadnezzar, who
being puffed up with his successes, shall scoff)
at the kings and
commanders of the forces that think to make head against him; and
the princes
shall be a scorn to them, so unequal a match shall they appear to be. Do
they depend upon their garrisons and fortified towns?
He shall deride every
stronghold, for to him it shall be weak, and
he shall heap dust, and take
it; a little soil, thrown up for ramparts, shall serve to give him all the
advantage against them that he can desire; he shall make but a jest of them, and
a sport of taking them. (5.) By all this he shall be puffed up with an
intolerable pride, which shall be his destruction (v. 11):
Then shall his
mind change for the worse. The spirit both of the people and of the king
shall grow more haughty and insolent. Those that will not be content with their
own rights will not be content when they have made themselves masters of other
people's rights too; but as the condition rises the mind rises too. This
victorious king shall
pass over all the bounds of reason, equity, and
modesty, and break through all their bonds, and thereby
he shall offend,
shall make God his enemy, and so prepare ruin for himself by
imputing this
his power to his god, whereas he had it from the God of Israel.
Bel
and
Nebo were the gods of the Chaldeans, and to them they gave the glory
of their successes; they were hardened in their idolatry, and blasphemously
argued that because they had conquered Israel their gods were too strong for the
God of Israel. Note, It is a great offence (and the common offence of proud
people) to take that glory to ourselves, or to give it to gods of our own
making, which is due to the living and true God only. These closing words of the
sentence give a glimpse of comfort to the afflicted people of God; it is to be
hoped that they will change their minds, and grow better, and ripen for
deliverance; and they did so. However, their enemies will change their minds,
and grow worse, and ripen for destruction, which will inevitably come in God's
due time; for a haughty spirit, lifted up against God,
goes before a fall.
Verses 12-17
The prophet, having received of the Lord that which he was to
deliver to the people, now turns to God, and again addresses himself to him for
the ease of his own mind under the burden which he saw. And still he is full of
complaints. If he look about him, he sees nothing but violence done by Israel;
if he look before him, he sees nothing but violence done against Israel; and it
is hard to say which is the more melancholy sight. His thoughts of both he pours
out before the Lord. It is our duty to be affected both with the iniquities and
with the calamities of the church of God and of the times and places wherein we
live; but we must take heed lest we grow peevish in our resentments, and carry
them too far, so as to entertain any hard thoughts of God, or lose the comfort
of our communion with him. The world is bad, and always was so, and will be so;
it is out of our power to mend it; but we are sure that God governs the world,
and will bring glory to himself out of all, and therefore we must resolve to
make the best of it, must be ourselves better, and long for the better world.
The prospect of the prevalence of the Chaldeans drives the prophet to his knees,
and he takes the liberty to plead with God concerning it. In his plea we may
observe,
I. The truths which he lays down, which he resolves to abide by,
and with which he endeavours to comfort himself and his friends, under the
growing threatening power of the Chaldeans; and they will furnish us with
pleasing considerations for our support in the like case.
1. However it be, yet God is
the Lord our God, and
our
Holy One. The victorious Chaldeans impute their power to their idols, but we
are taught to tell them that the
God of Israel is the true God, the living
God, Jer. 10:10, 11. (1.) He is
Jehovah, the fountain of all being,
power, and perfection.
Our rock is not
as theirs. (2.) "He is
my God." He speaks in the people's name; every Israelite may say,
"He is
mine. Though we are thus sore broken, and
all this has
come upon us, yet have we not forgotten the name of our God, nor quitted our
relation to him, yet have we not disowned him, nor hath he disowned us, Ps.
44:17. We are an offending people; he is an offended God; yet he is ours, and we
will not entertain any hard thoughts of him, nor of his service, for all this."
(3.) "He is
my Holy One." This intimates that the prophet loved
God as a holy God, loved him for the sake of his holiness. "He is
mine
because he is a
Holy One; and
therefore he will be my sanctifier
and my Saviour, because he is
my Holy One. Men are unholy, but
my God
is holy."
2. Our God is from everlasting. This he pleads with him:
Art
thou not from everlasting, O Lord my God? It is matter of great and
continual comfort to God's people, under the troubles of this present life,
that their God is from everlasting. This intimates, (1.) The eternity of his
nature; if he is from everlasting, he will be to everlasting, and we must have
recourse to this first principle, when things seen, which are temporal, are
discouraging, that we have hope and help sufficient in a god that is not seen,
that is eternal. "Art thou not from everlasting, and then wilt thou not
make bare thy everlasting arm, in pursuance of thy everlasting counsels, to make
unto thyself an everlasting name?" (2.) The antiquity of his covenant:
"Art thou not
from of old, a God in covenant with thy people"
(so some understand it), "and hast thou not done great things for them
in
the days of old, which we have heard with our ears, and which our fathers
have told us of; and art thou not the same God still that thou ever wast? Thou
art
God, and changest not."
3. While the world stands God will have a church in it. Thou art
from everlasting, and then
we shall not die. The Israel of God shall not
be extirpated, nor the name of Israel blotted out, though it may sometimes seem
to be very near it; like the apostles (2 Co. 6:9),
chastened, and not killed;
chastened sorely, but not delivered over to death, Ps. 118:18. See how the
prophet infers the perpetuity of the church from the eternity of God; for Christ
has said,
Because I live, and therefore as long as I live,
you shall
live also, Jn. 14:19. He is the rock on which the church is so firmly built
that the
gates of hell shall not, cannot, prevail against it. We shall not
die.
4. Whatever the enemies of the church may do against her, it is
according to the counsel of God, and is designed and directed for wise and holy
ends:
Thou hast ordained them; thou hast established them. It was God
that gave the Chaldeans their power, made them a formidable people, and in his
counsel determined what they should do, nor had they any power against his
Israel but what was
given them from above. He gave them their commission
to
take the spoil and to take the prey, Isa. 10:6. Herein God appears a mighty
God, that the power of mighty men is derived from him, depends upon him, and is
under his check; he says concerning it,
Hitherto shall it come, and no
further. Those whom God ordains shall do no more than what God has ordained,
which is a great comfort to God's suffering people. Men are God's hand, the
rod in his hand, Ps. 17:14. And he has
ordained them for judgment, and
for
correction. God's people need correction, and deserve it; they must expect
it; they shall have it; when wicked men are let loose against them, it is not
for their destruction, that they may be ruined, but for their correction, that
they may be reformed; they are not intended for a sword, to cut them off, but
for a rod, to drive out the foolishness that is found in their hearts, though
they
mean not so, neither does their heart think so, Isa. 10:7. Note, It
is matter of great comfort to us, in reference to the troubles and afflictions
of the church, that, whatever mischief men design to them, God designs to bring
good out of them, and we are sure that
his counsel shall stand.
5. Though the wickedness of the wicked may prosper for a while,
yet God is a holy God, and does not approve of that wickedness (v. 13):
Thou
art of purer eyes than to behold evil. The prophet, observing how very
vicious and impious the Chaldeans were, and yet what great success they had
against God's Israel, found a temptation arising from it to say that it was
vain to serve God, and that it was indifferent to him what men were. But he soon
suppresses the thought, by having recourse to his first principle, That God is
not, that he cannot be, the author or patron of sin; as he cannot do iniquity
himself, so he is
of purer eyes than to behold it with any allowance or
approbation; no, it is that
abominable thing which the Lord hates. He
sees all the sin that is committed in the world, and it is an offence to him, it
is odious in his eyes, and those that commit it are thereby made obnoxious to
his justice. There is in the nature of God an antipathy to those dispositions
and practices that are contrary to his holy law; and, though an expedient is
happily found out for his being reconciled to sinners, yet he never will, nor
can, be reconciled to sin. And this principle we must resolve to abide by,
though the dispensations of his providence may for a time, and in some
instances, seem to be inconsistent with it. Note, God's connivance at sin must
never be interpreted into a giving countenance to it; for
he is not a God
that has pleasure in wickedness, Ps. 5:4, 5. The iniquity which, it is here
said, God does not look upon, may be meant especially of the mischief done to
God's people by their persecutors; though God sees cause to permit it, yet he
does not approve of it; so it agrees with that of Balaam (Num. 23:21),
He has
not beheld iniquity against Jacob, nor
seen, with allowance,
perverseness
against Israel, which is very comfortable to the people of God, in their
afflictions by the rage of men, that they cannot infer God's anger from it;
though the instruments of their trouble hate them, it does not therefore follow
that God does; nay, he loves them, and it is in love that he corrects them.
II. The grievances he complains of, and finds hard to reconcile
with these truths: "Since we are sure that thou art a holy God, why have
atheists temptation given them to question whether thou art so or no?
Wherefore
lookest thou upon the Chaldeans that
deal treacherously with thy
people, and givest them success in their attempts upon us? Why dost thou suffer
thy sworn enemies, who blaspheme thy name, to deal thus cruelly, thus
perfidiously, with thy sworn subjects, who desire to fear thy name? What shall
we say to this?" This was a temptation to Job (ch. 21:7; 24:1), to David
(Ps. 73:2, 3), to Jeremiah, ch. 12:1, 2. 1. That God permitted sin, and was
patient with the sinners. He
looked upon them; he saw all their wicked
doings and designs, and did not restrain nor punish them, but suffered them to
speed in their purposes, to go on and prosper, and to carry all before them.
Nay, his looking upon them intimates that he not only gave them no check or
rebuke, but that he gave them encouragement and assistance, as if he smiled upon
them and favoured them. He
held his tongue when they went on in their
wicked courses, said nothing against them, gave no orders to stop them.
These
things thou hast done, and I kept silence. 2. That his patience was abused,
and,
because sentence against these evil works and workers
was not
executed speedily, therefore
their hearts were the more
fully set
in them to do evil. (1.) They were false and deceitful, and there was no
credit to be given them, nor any confidence to be put in them. They deal
treacherously;
under colour of peace and friendship, they prosecute and execute the most
mischievous designs, and make no conscience of their word in any thing. (2.)
They hated and persecuted men because they were better than themselves, as Cain
hated Abel because
his own works were evil and his brother's righteous. The
wicked devours the man that is more righteous than he, for that very reason,
because he shames him; they have an ill will to the image of God, and
therefore
devour good men, because they bear that image. Though many of the Jews were as
bad as the Chaldeans themselves, and worse, yet there were those among them that
were much more righteous, and yet were devoured by them. (3.) They made no more
of killing men that of catching fish. The prophet complains that, Providence
having delivered up the weaker to be prey to the stronger, they were, in effect,
made as
the fishes of the sea, v. 14. So they had been among themselves,
preying upon one another as the greater fishes do upon the less (v. 3), and they
were made so to the common enemy. They were
as the creeping things, or
swimming
things (for the word is used for
fish, Gen. 1:20),
that have no ruler
over them, either to restrain them from devouring one another or to protect them
from being devoured by their enemies. They are given up to the Chaldeans as fish
to the fishermen. Those proud oppressors make no conscience of killing them, any
more than men do of pulling fish out of the water, so small account do they make
of human lives. They make no difficulty of killing them, but do it with as much
ease as men catch fish, that make no resistance, but are unguarded and unarmed,
and it is rather a pastime than any pains to take them. They make no distinction
among them, but all is fish that comes to their net; and they reckon every thing
their own that they can lay their hands on. They have various ways of spoiling
and destroying, as men have of taking fish. Some they
take up with the angle
(v. 15), one by one; others
they catch in shoals, and by wholesale,
in
their net, and
gather them in their drag, their enclosing net. Such
variety of methods have they to destroy those by whom they hope to enrich
themselves. (4.) They gloried in what they got, and pleased themselves with it,
though it was got dishonestly:
Their portion is fat, and their meat
plenteous; they prosper in their oppression and fraud; they have a great
deal, and it is of the best; their land is good, and they have abundance of it.
And therefore, [1.] They have great complacency in themselves, and are very
pleasant; they live merrily (v. 15):
Therefore they rejoice and are glad,
because their wealth is great, and their projects succeed for the increase of
it, Job 31:25.
Soul, take thy ease, Lu. 12:19. [2.] They have a great
conceit of themselves, and are great admirers of their own ingenuity and
management: They
sacrifice to their own net, and burn incense to their own
drag; they applaud themselves for having got so much money, though ever so
dishonestly. Note, There is a proneness in us to take the glory of our outward
prosperity to ourselves, and to say,
My might, and the power of my hands,
have gotten me this wealth, Deu. 8:17. This is idolizing ourselves,
sacrificing to the dragnet, because it is our own, which is as absurd a piece of
idolatry as sacrificing to Neptune or Dagon. That which makes them adore their
net thus is because by it
their portion is fat. Those that make a god of
their money will make a god of their drag-net, if they can but get money by it.
III. The prophet, in the close, humbly expresses his hope that
God will not suffer these destroyers of mankind always to go on and prosper
thus, and expostulates with God concerning it (v. 17):
"Shall they
therefore empty their net? Shall they enrich themselves, and fill their own
vessels, with that which they have by violence and oppression taken away from
their neighbours? Shall they empty their net of what they have caught, that they
may cast it into the sea again, to catch more? And wilt thou suffer them to
proceed in this wicked course? Shall they not
spare continually to slay the
nations? Must the numbers and wealth of nations be sacrificed to their net?
As if it were a small thing to rob men of their estates, shall they rob God of
his glory? Is not God the king of nations, and will he not assert their injured
rights? Is he not jealous for his own honour, and will he not maintain that?"
The prophet lodges the matter in God's hand, and leaves it with him, as the
psalmist does. Ps. 74:22,
Arise, O God! Plead thy own cause.
Chapter 1:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 Nahum Zephaniah
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
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