Chapter 11:
| 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 Daniel Joel
Hosea 11
Complete Concise
In this chapter we have, I. The great goodness of God towards
his people Israel, and the great things he had done for them (v. 1, 3, 4). II.
Their ungrateful conduct towards him, notwithstanding his favours towards them
(v. 2-4, 7, 12). III. Threatenings of wrath against them for their ingratitude
and treachery (v. 5, 6). IV. Mercy remembered in the midst of wrath (v. 8, 9).
V. Promises of what God would yet do for them (v. 10, 11). VI. An honourable
character given of Judah (v. 12).
Verses 1-7
Here we find,
I. God very gracious to Israel. They were a people for whom he
had done more than for any people under heaven, and to whom he had given more,
which they are here, I will not say upbraided with (for God gives, and upbraids
not), but put in mind of, as an aggravation of their sin and an encouragement to
repentance. 1. He had a kindness for them when they were young (v. 1):
When
Israel was a child then I loved him; when they first began to multiply into
a nation in Egypt God then
set his love upon them, and
chose them
because he loved them, because he would love them, Deu. 7:7, 8. When they
were weak and helpless as children, foolish and froward as children, when they
were outcasts, and children exposed, then God
loved them; he pitied them,
and testified his goodwill to them; he bore them as the nurse does the sucking
child, nourished them, and suffered their manners. Note, Those that have grown
up, nay, those that have grown old, ought often to reflect upon the goodness of
God to them in their childhood. 2. He delivered them out of the house of
bondage:
I called my son out of Egypt, because a son, because a beloved
son. When God demanded Israel's discharge from Pharaoh he called them
his
son, his
first-born. Note, Those whom God loves he calls out of the
bondage of sin and Satan into the glorious liberty of his children. These words
are said to have been fulfilled in Christ, when, upon the death of Herod, he and
his parents were
called out of Egypt (Mt. 2:15), so that the words have a
double aspect, speaking historically of the calling of Israel out of Egypt and
prophetically of the bringing of Christ thence; and the former was a type of the
latter, and a pledge and earnest of the many and great favours God had in
reserve for that people, especially the sending of his Son into the world, and
the bringing him again into the land of Israel when they had unkindly driven him
out, and he might justly never have returned. The calling of Christ out of Egypt
was a figure of the calling of all that are his, through him, out of spiritual
slavery. 3. He gave them a good education, took care of them, took pains with
them, not only as a father or tutor, but, such is the condescension of divine
grace, as a mother or nurse (v. 3):
I taught Ephraim also to go, as a
child in leading-strings is taught. When they were in the wilderness God led
them by the pillar of cloud and fire, showed them the way in which they should
go, and bore them up,
taking them by the arms. He taught them to go in
the way of his commandments, by the institutions of the ceremonial law, which
were as tutors and governors to that people under age. He took them by the arms,
to guide them, that they might not stray, and to hold them up, that they might
not stumble and fall. God's spiritual Israel are thus supported.
Thou has
holden me by my right hand, Ps. 73:23. 4. When any thing was amiss with
them, or they were ever so little out of order, he was their physician:
"I
healed them; I not only took a tender care of them (a friend may do that),
but wrought an effectual cure: it is a God only that can do that.
I am the
Lord that healeth thee (Ex. 15:26), that redresseth all thy grievances."
5. He brought them into his service by mild and gentle methods (v. 4):
I drew
them with cords of a man, with bands of love. Note, It is God's work to
draw poor souls to himself; and none can come to him except he draw them, Jn.
6:44. He draws, (1.)
With the cords of a man, with such cords as men draw
with that have a principle of humanity, or such cords as men are drawn with; he
dealt with them
as men, in an equitable rational way, in an easy gentle
way,
with the cords of Adam. He dealt with them as with Adam in innocency,
bringing them at once into a paradise, and into covenant with himself. (2.)
With
bands of love, or
cartropes of love. This word signifies stronger
cords than the former. He did not drive them by force into his service, whether
they would or no, nor rule them with rigour, nor detain them by violence, but
his attractives were all loving and endearing, all sweet and gentle, that he
might overcome them with kindness. Moses, whom he made their guide, was the
meekest man in the world.
Kindnesses among men we commonly call
obligations,
or
bonds, bonds of love. Thus God
draws with the savour of his good
ointments (Cant. 1:4), draws
with lovingkindness, Jer. 31:3. Thus God
deals with us, and we must deal in like manner with those that are under our
instruction and government, deal rationally and mildly with them. 6. He eased
them of the burdens they had been long groaning under:
I was to them as those
that take off the yoke on their jaws, alluding to the care of the good
husbandman, who is merciful to his beast, and will not tire him with hard and
constant labour. Probably, in those times, the yoke on the neck of the oxen was
fastened with some bridle, or headstall, over the jaws, which
muzzled the
mouth of the ox. Israel in Egypt were thus restrained from the enjoyments of
their comforts and constrained to hard labour; but God eased them,
removed
their shoulder from the burden, Ps. 81:6. Note, Liberty is a great mercy,
especially out of bondage. 7. He supplied them with food convenient. In Egypt
they fared hard, but, when God brought them out, he
laid meat unto them,
as the husbandman, when he has unyoked his cattle, fodders them. God rained
manna about their camp, bread from heaven, angels' food; other creatures
seek
their meat, but God laid meat to his own people, as we do to our children,
was himself their caterer and carver, anticipated
them with the blessings of
goodness.
II. Here is Israel very ungrateful to God.
1. They were deaf and disobedient to his voice. He spoke to them
by his messengers, Moses and his other prophets, called them from their sins,
called them to himself, to their work and duty; but
as they called them so
they went from them; they rebelled in those particular instances wherein
they were admonished; the more pressing and importunate the prophets were with
them, to persuade them to that which was good, the more refractory they were,
and the more resolute in their evil ways, disobeying for disobedience-sake. This
foolishness is bound in the hearts of children, who, as soon as they are taught
to go, will go from those that call them.
2. They were fond of idols, and worshipped them: They
sacrificed
to Baalim, first one Baal and then another, and
burnt incense to graven
images, though they were called to by the prophets of the Lord again and
again not to do this abominable thing which he hated. Idolatry was the sin which
from the beginning, and all along, had most easily beset them.
3. They were regardless of God, and of his favours to them:
They
knew not that I healed them. They looked only at Moses and Aaron, the
instruments of their relief, and, when any thing was amiss, quarrelled with
them, but looked not through them to God who employed them. Or, When God
corrected them, and kept them under a severe discipline, they understood not
that it was for their good, and that God thereby
healed them, and it was
necessary for the perfecting of their cure, else they would have been better
reconciled to the methods God took. Note, Ignorance is at the bottom of
ingratitude, ch. 2:8.
4. They were strongly inclined to apostasy. This is the blackest
article in the charge (v. 7):
My people are bent to backsliding from me.
Every word here is aggravating. (1.) They
backslide. There is no hold of
them, no stedfastness in them; they seem to come forward, towards God, but they
quickly slide back again, and are as a deceitful bow. (2.) They backslide
from
me, from God, the chief good, the fountain of life and living waters, from
their God who never turned from them, nor war as a wilderness to them. (3.) They
are
bent to backslide; they are ready to sin; there is in their natures a
propensity to that which is evil; at the best they hang in suspense between God
and the world, so that a little thing serves to draw them the wrong way; they
are forward to close with every temptation. It also intimates that they are
resolute in sin; their hearts are
fully set in them to do evil the bias
is strong that way; and they persist in their backslidings, whatever is said or
done to stop them; and yet, (4.) "They are, in profession,
my people.
They are
called by my name, and profess relation to me; they are mine,
whom I have done much for and expect much from, whom I have
nourished and
brought up, as children, and yet they backslide
from me."
Note, In our repentance we ought to lament not only our backslidings, but our
bent
to backslide, not only our actual transgressions, but our original
corruption, the sin that dwells in us, the carnal mind.
5. They were strangely averse to repentance and reformation.
Here are two expressions of their obstinacy:(1.)
They refused to return,
v. 5. So much were they bent to backslide that, though they could not but find,
upon trial, the folly of their backslidings, and that when they forsook God they
changed for the worse, yet they went on frowardly.
I have loved strangers,
and after them I will go. They were commanded to return, were courted and
entreated to return, were promised that if they would they should be kindly
received, but they refused. (2.) Though
they called them to the Most High.
God's prophets and ministers called them to return to the God from whom they
had revolted, to the most high God, from whom they had sunk into this wretched
degeneracy; they called them from the worship of the idols, which were so much
below them, and the worship of which was therefore their disparagement, to the
true God, who was so much above them, and the worship of whom was therefore
their preferment; they called them from this earth to high and heavenly things;
but they called in vain.
None at all would exalt him. Though he is the
most high God they would not acknowledge him to be so, would do nothing to
honour him nor give him the glory due to his name. Or, They would not
exalt
themselves, would not rise out of that state of apostasy and misery into
which they had precipitated themselves; but there they contentedly lay still,
would not lift up their heads nor lift up their souls. Note, God's faithful
ministers have taken a great deal of pains, to no purpose, with backsliding
children, have called them to the Most High; but none would stir,
none at all
would exalt him.
III. Here is God very angry, and justly so, with Israel; see
what are the tokens of God's displeasure with which they are here threatened.
1. God, who brought them out of Egypt, to take them for a people to himself,
since they would not be faithful to him, shall bring them into a worse condition
than he at first found them in (v. 5):
"He shall not return into the
land of Egypt, though that was a house of bondage grievous enough; but he
shall go into a harder service, for
the Assyrian shall be his king, who
will use him worse than ever Pharaoh did." They shall not return into
Egypt, which lies near, where they may hear often from their own country, and
whence they may hope shortly to return to it again; but they shall be carried
into Assyria, which lies much more remote, and where they shall be cut off from
all correspondence with their own land and from all hopes of returning to it,
and justly, because
they refused to return. Note, Those that will not
return to the duties they have left cannot expect to return to the comforts they
have lost. 2. God, who gave them Canaan, that good land, and a very safe and
comfortable settlement in it, shall bring his judgments upon them there, which
shall make their habitation unsafe and uncomfortable (v. 6):
The sword
shall come upon them, the sword of war, the sword of a foreign enemy, prevailing
against them and triumphing over them. (1.) This judgment shall spread far. The
sword shall fasten upon their
cities, those nests of people and
store-houses of wealth; it shall likewise reach to their
branches, the
country villages (so some), the citizens themselves (so others), or the
bars
(so the word signifies) and gates of their city, or all the branches of their
revenue and wealth, or their children, the branches of their families. (2.) It
shall last long: It shall
abide on their cities. David thought
three
months flying before his enemies was the only judgment of the three that was
to be excepted against; but this
sword shall abide much longer than three
months on the cities of Israel. They continued their rebellions against God, and
therefore God continued his judgments on them. (3.) It shall
make a full end:
It shall
consume their branches, and devour them, and lay all waste, and
this
because of their own counsels, that is, because they would have
their own projects, which God therefore, in a way of righteous judgment, gave
them up to. Note, The confusion of sinners is owing to their contrivance. God's
counsels would have saved them, but their own counsels ruined them.
Verses 8-12
In these verses we have,
I. God's wonderful backwardness to destroy Israel (v. 8, 9):
How
shall I give thee up? Here observe,
1. God's gracious debate within himself concerning Israel's
case, a debate between justice and mercy, in which victory plainly inclines to
mercy's side. Be astonished, O heavens! at this, and wonder, O earth! at the
glory of God's goodness. Not that there are any such struggles in God as there
are in us, or that he is ever fluctuating or unresolved; no, he is in one mind,
and knows it; but they are expressions after the manner of men, designed to show
what severity the sin of Israel had deserved, and yet how divine grace would be
glorified in sparing them notwithstanding. The connexion of this with what goes
before is very surprising; it was said of Israel (v. 7) that they were
bent
to backslide from God, that though they were called to him they
would not
exalt him, upon which, one would think, it should have followed, "Now I
am determined to destroy them, and never show them mercy any more." No,
such is the sovereignty of mercy, such the freeness, the fulness, of divine
grace, that it follows immediately,
How shall I give thee up? See here,
(1.) The proposals that justice makes concerning Israel, the suggestion of which
is here implied. Let Ephraim be given up, as an incorrigible son is given up to
be disinherited, as an incurable patient is given over by his physician. Let him
be given up to ruin. Let Israel be delivered into the enemy's hand, as a lamb
to the lion to be torn in pieces; let them be made as Admah and set as Zeboim,
the two cities that with Sodom and Gomorrah were destroyed by fire and brimstone
rained from heaven upon them; let them be utterly and irreparably ruined, and be
made as like these cities in desolation as they have been in sin. Let that curse
which is written in the law be executed upon them, that the
whole land
shall be
brimstone and salt, like the overthrow of Sodom and Gomorrah, Admah
and Zeboim, Deu. 29:23. Ephraim and Israel deserve to be thus abandoned, and
God will do them no wrong if he deal thus with them. (2.) The opposition that
mercy makes to these proposals:
How shall I do it? As the tender father
reasons with himself, "How can I cast off my untoward son? for he is my
son, though he be untoward; how can I find in my heart to do it?" Thus,
"Ephraim has been a dear son, a pleasant child:
How can I do it? He
is ripe for ruin; judgments stand ready to seize him; there wants nothing but
giving
him up, but I cannot do it. They have been a people near unto me; there are
yet some good among them; theirs are the children of the covenant; if they be
ruined, the enemy will triumph; it may be they will yet repent and reform; and
therefore how can I do it?" Note, The God of heaven is slow to anger, and
is especially loth to abandon a people to utter ruin that have been in special
relation to him. See how mercy works upon the mention of those severe
proceedings:
My heart is turned within me, as we say, Our heart fails us,
when we come to do a thing that is against the grain with us. God speaks as if
he were conscious to himself of a strange striving of affections in compassion
to Israel: as Lam. 1:20,
My bowels are troubled; my heart is turned within
me. As it follows here,
My repentings are kindled together. His
bowels yearned towards them, and
his soul was grieved for their sin and
misery,
Jdg. 10:16. Compare Jer. 31:20.
Since I spoke against him my bowels are
troubled for him. When God was to give up his Son to be a sacrifice for sin,
and a Saviour for sinners, he did not say, How shall I give him up? No, he
spared
not his own Son; it
pleased the Lord to bruise him; and
therefore
God spared not him, that he might spare us. But this is only the language of the
day of his patience; when men have sinned that away, and the great day of his
wrath comes, then no difficulty is made of it; nay,
I will laugh at their
calamity.
2. His gracious determination of this debate. After a long
contest mercy in the issue rejoices against judgment, has the last word, and
carries the day, v. 9. It is decreed that the reprieve shall be lengthened out
yet longer, and
I will not now
execute the fierceness of my anger,
though I am angry; though they shall not go altogether unpunished, yet he will
mitigate the sentence and abate the rigour of it. He will show himself to be
justly angry, but not implacably so; they shall be corrected, but not consumed.
I
will not return to destroy Ephraim; the judgments that have been inflicted
shall not be repeated, shall not go so deep as they have deserved. He will not
return
to destroy, as soldiers, when they have pillaged a town once, return a
second time, to take more, as when
what the palmer-worm has left the locust
has eaten. It is added, in the close of the verse,
"I will not enter
into the city, into Samaria, or any other of their cities; I will not enter
into them as an enemy, utterly to destroy them, and lay them waste, as I did the
cities of Admah and Zeboim."
3. The ground and reason of this determination:
For I am God
and not man, the Holy One of Israel. To encourage them, to hope that they
shall find mercy, consider, (1.) What he is in himself:
He is God, and not
man, as in other things, so in pardoning sin and sparing sinners. If they
had offended a man like themselves, he would not, he could not have borne it;
his passion would have overpowered his compassion, and he would have executed
the fierceness of his anger; but
I am God, and not man. He is
Lord of
his anger, whereas men's anger commonly lords it over them. If an earthly
prince were in such a strait between justice and mercy, he would be at a loss
how to compromise the matter between them; but he who is God, and not man, knows
how to find out an expedient to secure the honour of his justice and yet advance
the honour of his mercy. Man's compassions are nothing in comparison with the
tender mercies of our God, whose thoughts and ways, in receiving returning
sinners, are as much above ours as heaven is above the earth, Isa. 55:9. Note,
It is a great encouragement to our hope in God's mercies to remember that he
is
God, and not man. He is
the Holy One. One would think this were
a reason why he should reject such a provoking people. No; God knows how to
spare and pardon poor sinners, not only without any reproach to his holiness,
but very much to the honour of it, as he is
faithful and just to forgive us
our sins, and therein
declares his righteousness, now Christ has
purchased the pardon and he has promised it. (2.) What he is to them; he is the
Holy
One in the midst of thee; his holiness is engaged for the good of his
church, and even in this corrupt and degenerate land and age there were some
that gave thanks at the remembrance of his holiness, and he required of them all
to be
holy as he is, Lev. 19:2. As long as we have the
Holy One in the
midst of us we are safe and well; but woe to us when he leaves us! Note,
Those who submit to the influence may take the comfort of God's holiness.
II. Here is his wonderful forwardness to do good for Israel,
which appears in this, that he will qualify them to receive the good he designs
for them (v. 10, 11):
They shall walk after the Lord. This respects the
same favour with that (ch. 3:5),
They shall return, and seek the Lord their
God; it is spoken of the ten tribes, and had its accomplishment, in part, in
the return of some of them with those of the two tribes in Ezra's time; but it
had its more full accomplishment in God's spiritual Israel, the gospel-church,
brought together and incorporated by the gospel of Christ. The ancient Jews
referred it to the time of the Messiah; the learned Dr. Pocock looks upon it as
a prophecy of Christ's coming to preach the gospel to the dispersed children
of Israel, the children of God that were scattered abroad. And then observe, 1.
How they were to be called and brought together:
The Lord shall roar like a
lion. The
word of the Lord (so says the Chaldee)
shall be as a
lion that roars. Christ is called
the lion of the tribe of Judah, and
his gospel, in the beginning of it, was
the voice of one crying in the
wilderness. When Christ cried with a loud voice it was as
when a lion
roared, Rev. 10:3. The voice of the gospel was heard afar, as the
roaring
of a lion, and it was a
mighty voice. See Joel 3:16. 2. What
impression this call should make upon them, such an impression as the roaring of
a lion makes upon all the beasts of the forest:
When he shall roar then the
children shall tremble. See Amos 3:8,
The lion has roared; the Lord
God
has spoken; and then
who will not fear? When those whose
hearts the gospel reached trembled, and were astonished, and cried out,
What
shall we do?when they were by it put upon working out their salvation,
and worshipping God with fear and trembling, then this promise was fulfilled.
The
children shall tremble from the west. The dispersed Jews were carried
eastward, to Assyria and Babylon, and those that returned came from the east;
therefore this seems to have reference to the calling of the Gentiles that lay
westward from Canaan, for that way especially the gospel spread. They shall
tremble;
they shall move and come with trembling, with care and haste,
from the west,
from the nations that lay that way, to the mountain of the Lord (Isa. 2:3), to
the gospel-Jerusalem, upon hearing the alarm of the gospel. The apostle speaks
of
mighty signs and wonders that were wrought by the preaching of the
gospel from
Jerusalem round about to Illyricum, Rom. 15:19. Then the
children trembled from the west. And, whereas Israel after the flesh was
dispersed in Egypt and Assyria, it is promised that they shall be effectually
summoned thence (v. 11):
They shall tremble; they shall come trembling,
and with all haste,
as a bird upon the wing,
out of Egypt, and
as
a dove out of the land of Assyria; a dove is noted for swift and constant
flight, especially when she flies
to her windows, which the flocking of
Jews and Gentiles to the church is here compared to, as it is Isa. 60:8.
Wherever those are that belong to the election of graceeast, west, north, or
souththey shall
hear the joyful sound, and be wrought upon by it;
those of Egypt and Assyria shall come together; those that lay most remote from
each other shall meet in Christ, and be incorporated in the church. Of the
uniting of Egypt and Assyria, it was prophesied, Isa. 19:23. 3. What effect
these impressions should have upon them. Being
moved with fear, they
shall flee to the ark:
They shall walk after the Lord, after
the
service of the Lord (so the Chaldee); they shall take the Lord Christ for
their
leader and commander; they shall enlist themselves under him as the
captain of their salvation, and give up themselves to the direction of the
Spirit as their guide by the word; they shall
leave all to
follow
Christ, as becomes
disciples. Note, Our holy trembling at the word of
Christ will draw us to him, not drive us from him. When he
roars like a lion
the slaves tremble and flee from him, the children tremble and flee to him. 4.
What entertainment they shall meet with at their return (v. 11):
I will place
them in their houses (all those that come at the gospel-call shall have a
place and a name in the gospel-church, in the particular churches which are
their houses, to which they pertain; they shall dwell in God, and be at home in
him, both easy and safe, as a man in his own house; they shall have mansions,
for there are many in
our Father's house), in his tabernacle on earth
and his temple in heaven, in
everlasting habitations, which may be called
their houses, for they are
the lot they shall stand in
at the
end of the days.
III. Here is a sad complaint of the treachery of Ephraim and
Israel, which may be an intimation that it is not Israel after the flesh, but
the spiritual Israel, to whom the foregoing promises belong, for as for this
Ephraim, this Israel, they
compass God about with lies and deceit; all
their services of him, when they pretended to compass his altar, were feigned
and hypocritical; when they surrounded him with their prayers and praises, every
one having a petition to present to him, they
lied to him with their mouth
and flattered him with their tongue; their pretensions were so fair, and yet
their intentions so foul, that they would, if possible, have imposed upon God
himself. Their professions and promises were all a cheat, and yet with these
they thought to compass God about, to enclose him as it were, to keep him among
them, and prevent his leaving them.
IV. Here is a pleasant commendation of the integrity of the two
tribes, which they held fast, and this comes in as an aggravation of the
perfidiousness of the ten tribes, and a reason why God had that mercy in store
for Judah which he had not for Israel (ch. 1:6, 7), for
Judah yet rules with
God and is faithful with the saints, or
with the Most Holy. 1.
Judah
rules with God, that is, he serves God, and the service of God is not only
true liberty and freedom, but it is dignity and dominion.
Judah rules,
that is, the princes and governors of Judah
rule with God; they use their
power for him, for his honour, and the support of his interest. Those
rule
with God that
rule in the fear of God (2 Sa. 23:3), and it is their
honour to do so, and their praise shall be
of God, as Judah's here is.
Judah is
Israela prince with God. 2. He is
faithful with the holy
God, keeps close to his worship and
to his saints, with Abraham,
Isaac, and Jacob, whose steps they faithfully tread in. They
walk in the way
of good men; and those that do so
rule with God, they have a mighty
interest in Heaven. Judah
yet does thus, which intimates that the time
would come when Judah also would revolt and degenerate. Note, When we see how
many there are that compass God about
with lies and deceit it may be a
comfort to us to think that God has his remnant that cleave to him with purpose
of heart, and are faithful to his saints; and for those who are thus faithful
unto death is reserved a crown of life, when hypocrites and all liars shall have
their portion without.
Chapter 11:
| 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 Daniel Joel
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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