Chapter 10:
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Daniel Joel
Hosea 10
Complete Concise
In this chapter, I. The people of Israel are charged with gross
corruptions in the worship of God and are threatened with the destruction of
their images and altars (v. 1, 2, 5, 6, 8). II. They are charged with
corruptions in the administration of the civil government and are threatened
with the ruin of that (v. 3, 4, 7). III. They are charged with imitating the
sins of their fathers, and with security in their own sins, and are threatened
with smarting humbling judgments (v. 9-11). IV. They are earnestly invited to
repent and reform, and are threatened with ruin if they did not (v. 12-15).
Verses 1-8
Observe, I. What the sins are which are here laid to Israel's
charge, the national sins which bring down national judgment. The prophet deals
plainly with them; for what good would it do them to be flattered?
1. They were not fruitful in the fruits of righteousness to the
glory of God. Here all their other wickedness began (v. 1):
Israel is an
empty vine. The church of God is fitly compared to a
vine, weak, and
of an unpromising outside, yet spreading and fruitful; believers are branches of
that vine, and partake of its root and fatness. But this was the character of
Israel, they were as
an empty vine, a vine that had no sap or virtue in
it, and therefore none of those good fruits produced by it that were expected
from it, with which God and man should be honoured. Note, There are many who,
though they have not become
degenerate vines, are yet
empty vines,
have no good in them. A vine is of all trees least serviceable if it do not bear
fruit. It is thenceforth good for nothing, Eze. 15:3, 5. And those that bring
forth no grapes will soon come to bring forth wild grapes; those that do no good
will do hurt. He is an
empty vine, for
he brings forth fruit to
himself. What good there is in him is not directed to the glory of God, but
he takes the praise of it to himself, and prides himself in it. Christians live
not to themselves (Rom. 14:6), but hypocrites make self their centre; they
eat
and drink to themselves, Zec. 7:5, 6. Or Israel is by the judgments of God
emptied
and
spoiled of all his wealth, because he made use of it in the service
of his lusts, and not to the honour of God who gave it to him. Note, What we do
not rightly employ we may justly expect to be emptied of.
2. They multiplied their altars and images, and the more
bountiful God's providence was to them the more prodigal they were in serving
their idols:
According to the multitude of his fruit which his land
brought forth
he has increased the altars, and
according to the
goodness of his land they have made goodly images. Note, It is a great
affront to God, and an abuse of his goodness, when the more mercies we receive
from him the more sins we commit against him, and when the more wealth men have
the more mischief they do. Should not we be thus abundant in the service of our
God, as they were in the service of their idols? As we find our estates
increasing, we should proportionably abound the more in works of piety and
charity.
3. Their hearts were divided, v. 2. (1.) They were divided among
themselves. They were at variance about their idols, some for one, some for
another, at variance about their kings, whose separate interests made parties in
the kingdom, and in them their very hearts were divided, and alienated one from
another, and there was no such thing as cordial friendship to be found among
them; it follows therefore,
Now shall they be found faulty. Note, The
divisions and animosities of a people are the causes of much sin and the
presages of ruin. (2.) They were divided between God and their idols. They had a
remaining affection in their hearts for God, but a reigning affection for their
idols. They
halted between God and Baal, that was the dividing of their
heart. But God is the sovereign of the heart and he will by no means endure a
rival; he will either have all or none. Satan, like the pretended mother, says,
Let
it be neither mine nor thine, but divide it; but, if this be yielded to, God
says, Nay,
let him take it all. A heart thus divided will be
found
faulty, and be rejected as treacherous in covenanting with God. Note, A
heart divided between God and mammon, though it may trim the matter so as to
appear plausible, will, in the day of discovery, be
found faulty.
4. They made no conscience of what they said and what they did
in the most solemn manner, v. 4. (1.) Not of what they said in swearing, which
is the most solemn speaking:
They have spoken words, and words only, for
they meant not as they said; they did
verba daregive words. They
swore
falsely in making a covenant; they were deceitful in their covenanting with
God, the covenant of circumcision, the fair promises they made of reformation
when they were in distress; and no marvel if those that were false to their God
were false to all mankind. They contracted such a habit of treachery that they
broke through the most sacred bonds, and made nothing of them; subjects violated
their oaths of allegiance and their kings their coronation-oaths; they broke
their leagues with the nations they were in alliance with, nor was any
conscience made of contracts between private persons. (2.) Nor of what they did
in judgment, which is the most solemn acting. Justice could not take place when
men made nothing of forswearing themselves; for thus
judgment, which
should have been a healing medicinal plant and of a sweet smell,
sprang up as
hemlock, which is both nauseous and noxious,
in the furrows of the field,
in the field that was ploughed and furrowed for good corn. Note, God is greatly
offended with corruptions, not only in his own worship, but in the
administration of justice between man and man, and the dishonesty of a people
shall be the ground of his controversy with them as well as their idolatry and
impiety; for God's laws are intended for man's benefit and the good of the
community, as well as for God's honour, and the profanation of courts of
justice shall be avenged as surely as the profanation of temples.
II. What the judgments are with which Israel should be punished
for these sins; they sinned both in civil and religious matters, and in both
they shall be punished. 1. They shall have no joy of their kings and of their
government. Because justice is turned into oppression, therefore those who are
entrusted with the administration of it, and should be blessings to the state,
shall be complained of as the burdens of it (v. 3), and those that would not
rule their people well shall not be able to protect them:
Now they shall say,
"We have no king, that is, we are as if we had none, we have none to do
us any good nor stand us in any stead, none to keep us from destroying ourselves
or being destroyed by our enemies, none to preserve the public peace nor to
fight our battles; and justly has this come to us.
Because we feared not the
Lord, when we were safe under the protection of our kings, therefore we are
rejected by him, and then
what shall a king do for us? What good can we
expect from a king when we have forfeited the favour of our God?" Note,
Those that cast off the fear of God are not likely to have joy of any of their
creature-comforts; nor will men's loyalty to their prince befriend them
without religion, for, though that may engage him to be for them, what good will
that do them if God be against them? Those that keep themselves in the fear and
favour of God may say, with triumph, "What can the greatest of men do
against us?" But those that throw themselves out of his protection must
say, with despair, "What can the greatest of men do for us?" He was a
king that said,
If the Lord do not help thee, whence should I help thee?
Yet he is a fool that says, If a king cannot help us, we must perish (as these
intimate here), for God can do that for us which kings cannot. Time was when
they doted upon having a king; but now what can a king (who, they thought, could
do any thing) do for them? God can make people sick of those
creature-confidences which they were most fond of. This is their complaint when
their king is disabled to help them, yet this is not the worst; their civil
government shall not only be weakened, but quite destroyed (v. 7):
As for
Samaria, the royal city, which is now almost all that is left,
her king
is cut off as the foam from the water. The foam swims uppermost, and makes a
great show upon the face of the water, yet it is but a heap of bubbles raised by
the troubling of the water. Such were the kings of Israel, after their revolt
from the house of David, a mere scum; their government had no foundation. No
better are the greatest of kings when they set up in opposition to God; when God
comes to contend with them by his judgments he can as easily disperse and
dissolve them, and bring them to nothing, as the froth upon the water. 2. They
shall have no joy of their idols and of their worship of them. And miserable is
the case of that people whose gods fail them when their kings do. (1.) The idols
they had made, and the altars they had set up in honour of them, should be
broken down, and spoiled, and carried away, as common plunder, by the victorious
enemy: He
shall break down their altars. God shall do it by the hand of
the Assyrians: the Assyrians shall do it by order from God.
He shall spoil
their images, v. 2. Note, What men make idols of it is just with God to
break
down and
spoil. But the calf at Bethel was the sovereign idol; it was
this that the inhabitants of Samaria doted most upon; now it is here foretold
that this should be destroyed:
The glory of it has departed from it (v.
5) when it is thrown down and defaced, no more to be worshipped; but this is not
all:
It shall also be carried to Assyria (as some think that the calf at
Dan was some time before)
for a present to king Jareb. It was carried to
him as a rich booty (for it was a golden calf, and probably adorned with the
gifts and offerings of its worshippers) and as a trophy of victory over their
enemies: and what more glorious trophy could they bring than this, or more
incontestable proof of an absolute conquest? Thus it is said,
The sin of
Israel shall be destroyed (v. 8), that is, the idols which they made the
matter of their sin; it is said of them,
They became a sin to all Israel,
1 Ki. 12:30. Note, If the grace of God prevail not to destroy the love of sin in
us, it is just that the providence of God should destroy the food and fuel of
sin about us. With the idols,
the high places shall be destroyed, the
high
places of Aven, that is, of
Bethaven (v. 5) or
Bethel; it was
called
the house of God (so Bethel signifies), but now it is called
the
house of iniquity, nay,
iniquity itself. The kings did not, as they
ought to have done,
take away the high places by the sword of justice,
and therefore God will take them away by the sword of war; so that
the thorn
and the thistle shall
come up on their altars, that is, they shall
lie in ruins. Their altars, while they stood, were as thorns and thistles,
offensive to God and good men, and fruits of sin and the curse; justly therefore
are they buried in thorns and thistles. (2.) The destruction of their idols,
their altars, and their high places, shall be the occasion of sorrow, and shame,
and terror to them. [1.] It shall be an occasion of sorrow to them. When the
calf at Bethel is broken
the people thereof shall mourn over it. They
looked upon the calf to be the protector of their nation, and, when that was
gone, thought they must all be undone, which made the poor ignorant people that
were deluded into the love of it lament bitterly, as Micah did (Jdg. 18:24),
You
have taken away my gods, and what have I more? The priests that had rejoiced
in it shall now mourn for it with the people. Note, Whatever men make a god of
they will mourn for the loss of; and an inordinate sorrow for the loss of any
worldly good is a sign we made an idol of it. They used to be very merry in the
worship of their idols, but now they shall mourn over them; for sinful mirth
shall, sooner or later, be turned into mourning. [2.] It shall be an occasion of
shame to them (v. 6):
Ephraim shall receive shame when he sees the gods
he trusted to carried into captivity, and
Israel shall be ashamed of his own
counsel, in putting such confidence in them and paying such adoration to
them. God's ark and altars were never thrown down till the people rejected
them; but the idolatrous altars were thrown down when the people were doting on
them, which shows that the contempt of the former, and the veneration for the
latter, were the sins for which God visited them. [3.] It shall be an occasion
of fear to them (v. 5):
The inhabitants of Samaria shall fear; they shall
be in pain for their gods and afraid of losing them; or, rather, they shall be
in pain for themselves and their children and families, when they see the
judgments of God breaking in upon them and beginning with their idols, as he
executed
judgment against the gods of Egypt, Ex. 12:12. Thus idolaters are brought in
trembling when God arises to
shake terribly the earth, Isa. 2:21. And
here (v. 8),
They shall say to the mountains, Cover us; and to the hills,
Fall on us. The supporters of idolatry (Rev. 6:15, 16) are brought in
calling thus in vain to rocks and mountains to shelter them from God's wrath.
Verses 9-15
Here, I. They are put in mind of the sins of their fathers and
predecessors, for which God would now reckon with them. It was told them (ch.
9:9) that they had
corrupted themselves, as in the days of Gibeah, and
here (v. 9),
O Israel! thou hast sinned from the days of Gibeah. Not only
the wickedness that was committed in that age is revived in this, and reacted, a
copy from that original, but the wickedness that was committed in that age has
been continued in a constant series and succession through all the intervening
ages down to this; so that the measure of iniquity had been long in filling; and
still there had been made additions to it. Or,
"Thou has sinned more
than in the days of Gibeah" (so it may be read); "the sins of this
age exceed those of the worst of former ages. The case was bad then, for
there
they stood; the criminals stood in their own defence, and the tribes of
Israel, who undertook to chastise them for their wickedness, were
at a stand,
when both in the first and in the second battle the malefactors were the
victors; and
the battle in Gibeah against the children of iniquity did not
overtake them till the third engagement, and then did not overtake them all,
for 600 made their escape. But thy sin is worse than theirs, and therefore thou
canst not expect but that the battle against the children of iniquity should
overtake thee, and overcome thee."
II. They have warning given them, fair warning, of the judgments
of God that were coming upon them, v. 10. God had hitherto pitied and spared
them. Though they had been very provoking, he had a mind to try whether they
would be wrought upon by patience and forbearance; but now,
"It is in my
desire that I should chastise them; it is what I have a purpose of and will
take pleasure in." He will
rejoice over them to do them hurt, Deu.
28:63. Note, Because God does not desire the death and ruin of sinners,
therefore he does desire their chastisement. And see what the chastisement it:
The
people shall be gathered against them, as all the other tribes were against
Benjamin in the battle of Gibeah. One of the rabbin thus descants upon it:
"Because they receive not chastisement from me by my prophets, who in my
name rebuke them, I will chastise them by the hands of the people who shall be
gathered
against them, when they shall bind themselves in their two furrows,"
that is, when they shall think to fortify themselves, as it were, within a
double entrenchment. or,
When I shall bind them for their two transgressions
(so the margin reads it), meaning their corporal and spiritual whoredom, which
they are so often charged with, or the
two calves at Dan and Bethel, or
those two great evils mentioned Jer. 2:13. Or,
When I shall bind them to
their two furrows, that is, bring them into servitude to the Assyrians, who
shall keep them under the yoke as oxen in the plough, who are bound to the two
furrows up the field and down it, and dare not, for fear of the goad, stir a
step out of them. The Chaldee says, Those that are
gathered against them
shall exercise dominion over them, in like manner as a pair of heifers are tied
to their two furrows. Thus those that would not be God's freemen shall be
their enemies' slaves, and shall be made to know the difference between
God's
service and
the service of the kingdoms of the countries, 2 Chr.
12:8.
III. They are made to know that their unacquaintedness with
sufferings and hardships should not excuse them from a very miserable captivity,
v. 11. See how nice, and tender, and delicate, Ephraim is; he is
as a heifer
that is taught to tread out the corn, and loves that work, because, being
not allowed to be muzzled, she has liberty to eat at pleasure, and the work
itself was dry and easy, and both its own diversion and its own wages.
"But," says God, "I have a yoke to put upon
her fair neck,
fair as it is.
I will make Ephraim to ride, that is, I will tame them, or
cause them to be ridden by the Assyrians and other conquerors that shall rule
them with rigour, as men do the beasts they ride upon (Ps. 66:12); and
Judah
too shall be made to
plough, and
Jacob to break the clods,"
that is, they shall be used hardly, but not so hardly as Ephraim. Note, It is
just with God to make those know what hardships mean that indulge themselves too
much in their own ease and pleasure. The learned Dr. Pocock inclines to another
sense of these words, as intimating the tender gentle methods God took with this
people, to bring them into obedience to his law, as a reason why they should
return to that obedience; he had managed them as the husbandman does his cattle
that he trains up for service. Ephraim being as a docile heifer, fit to be
employed, God took hold of
her fair neck, to accustom her to the hand,
harnessed
her, or put the yoke of his commandments upon her, gave his people Israel a
law, that, being trained up in his institutions, they might not be tempted by
the usages of the heathen; he had used all fair and likely means with them to
keep them in their obedience, had set
Judah to plough and
Jacob to
break the clods, had employed them in the observance of precepts proper for
them; and yet they would not be retained in their obedience, but started aside.
IV. They are invited and encouraged to return to God by prayer,
repentance, and reformation, v. 12, 13. See here,
1. The duties they are called to. They are
God's husbandry
(1 Co. 3:9), and the duties are expressed in language borrowed from the
husbandman's calling. If they would not be brought into bondage by their
oppressors, let them return to God's service. (1.) Let them
break up the
fallow ground; let them cleanse their hearts from all corrupt affections and
lusts, which are as weeds and thorns, and let them be humbled for their sins,
and be of a broken and contrite spirit in the sense of them; let them be full of
sorrow and shame at the remembrance of them, and prepare to receive the divine
precepts, as the ground that is ploughed is to receive the seed, that it may
take root. See Jer. 4:3. (2.) Let them
sow to themselves in righteousness;
let them return to the practice of good works, according to the law of God,
which is the rule of righteousness; let them abound in works of piety towards
God, and of justice and charity towards one another, and herein let them
sow
to the Spirit, as the apostle speaks, Gal. 6:7, 8. Every action is seed
sown. Let them
sow in righteousness; let them sow what they should sow,
do what they should do, and they themselves shall have the benefit of it. (3.)
Let them
seek the Lord; let them look up to him for his grace, and beg of
him to bless the
seed sown. The husbandman must plough and sow with an
eye to God, asking of him rain in the season thereof.
2. The arguments used for the pressing of these duties.
Consider, (1.) It is time to do it; it is
high time. The husbandman sows
in seed-time, and, if that time be far spent, he applies to the work with the
more diligence. Note, Seeking the Lord is to be every day's work, but there
are some special occasions given by the providence and grace of God when it is,
in a particular manner, time to seek him. (2.) If we do our part, God will do
his. If we
sow to ourselves in righteousnessif we be careful and
diligent to do our duty, in a dependence upon his gracehe will shower down
his grace upon us, will
rain righteousness, the very thing that those
need most who are to sow
in righteousness; for
by the grace of God we
are what we are. Some apply it to Christ, who should come in the fulness of
time, and for whose coming they must prepare themselves; he shall come as
the
Lord our righteousness, and shall
rain righteousness upon us, that
everlasting righteousness which he has brought in; he will grant us of it
abundantly. It is foretold (Ps. 72:6) that
he shall come down like rain.
(3.) If we
sow in righteousness, we shall
reap in mercy, which
agrees with that promise, If we
sow to the Spirit, we shall
of the
Spirit reap life everlasting. We shall reap
according to the measure of
mercy (so the word is); it shall be a great reward, according to the
riches
of mercy, such a reward, not as becomes such mean creatures as we are to
receive, but as becomes a God of infinite mercy to give, a reward,
not of
debt, but
of grace. We reap not in merit, but in mercy. It is what is
sown; God gives a body as it has pleased him. (4.) We have
ploughed
wickedness and reaped iniquity; and the time
past of our life may suffice
that we have done so, v. 13. "You have taken a great deal of pains in the
service of sin, have laboured at it in the very fire; and will you grudge to
bear the burden and heat of the day in God's service and in doing that which
will be for your own advantage? You have done much to damn your souls; will you
not undo it again, and do something to save them?" (5.) We never got any
thing in the service of sin. They have
ploughed wickedness (that is, they
have done the drudgery of sin), and they have
reaped iniquity, that is,
they have got all that is to be got by it; they have carried it on to the
harvest,
and what the better? It is all a cheat.
They have eaten the fruit of lies,
fruit that is but a lie, which looks fair, but is rotten within; the
works of
darkness are
unfruitful works, Eph. 5:11; Rom. 6:21. Even the gains
of sin yield the sinner no satisfaction. (6.) As our comforts, so our
confidences, in the service of sin will certainly fail us:
"Thou didst
trust in thy ways, in the multitude of thy mighty men; thou has stayed
thyself upon creatures, thy own power and policy, and therefore hast ventured to
plough wickedness, and thy hopes have deceived thee; come therefore, and seek
the Lord, and thy hope in him shall not deceive thee."
V. They are threatened with utter destruction, both for their
carnal practices and for their carnal confidences, v. 14, 15.
Therefore,
because thou has sown wickedness, and trusted in thy own way,
a tumult shall
arise among thy people, either by insurrections at home or invasions from
abroad, either of which will put a kingdom into confusion and make a noise, much
more both together. 1. Their cities and strongholds shall be a prey to the
enemy: The
fortresses which they confided in, and in which they had laid
up their effects, shall be seized and rifled, as
Shalman spoiled Beth-arbel
in the day of battle. This refers to some event that had lately happened,
not elsewhere recorded; and probably Shalman is the same with Shalmaneser king
of Assyria, who had lately put some town, or castle, or house
(Beth-arbel is
the house of Arbel), under
military execution, which perhaps he used
with severity in the beginning of his conquests, to terrify other garrisons into
a speedy surrender at the first summons. God tells them that thus Samaria should
be
spoiled. 2. The inhabitants shall be put to the
sword, as it
was at
Beth-arbel; when it was taken
the mother was dashed in pieces
upon her children, that is, they were both dashed in pieces together by the
fury of the soldiers. See what cruel work war makes.
Jusque datum sceleriWickedness
has free course. It is strange that any of the human race could be so
inhuman; but see what comes of sin.
Homo homini lupusMan is a wolf to man,
and then,
Homo homini agnusMan is a lamb to man. 3. Even royal blood
shall be mingled with common gore:
In a morning shall the king of Israel
utterly be cut off, v. 15. Hoshea was the last king of Israel; in him the
whole kingdom was
cut off and came to a period; it may refer either to
him or to some of his predecessors that were cut off by treachery. It shall be
done
in a morning, in a very little time, as suddenly as the dawning of
the morning, or at the time appointed, for so the morning comes, punctually at
its time. Or
in the morning, when they think the night of calamity is
over, and expect a returning day, then shall all their hopes be dashed by the
sudden cutting off of their king, v. 7. Kings, though gods to us, are men to
God, and shall die like men. And
(lastly) what does all this desolation
owe its rise to? What is the spring of this bloodshed? He tells us (v. 15):
So
shall Bethel do unto you. Bethel was the place where one of the calves was;
Gilgal, where
all their wickedness is said to have been, was hard by;
there was their
great wickedness, the
evil of their evil (so the
word is), the sum and quintessence of their sin; and that was it that
did
this to them, that made all this havoc, for that was it that provoked God to
bring it upon them. He does not say, "So shall the
king of Assyria
do to you;" but, "So shall
Bethel do to you." Note,
Whatever mischief is done to us it is sin that does it. Are the fortresses
spoiled? Are the women and children murdered? Is the king cut off? It is sin
that does all this. It is sin that ruins soul, body, estate, all.
So shall
Bethel do unto you. It is
thy own wickedness that
corrects thee
and
thy backslidings that
reprove thee.
Chapter 10:
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