Chapter 5:
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Daniel Joel
Hosea 5
Complete Concise
The scope of this chapter is the same with that of the foregoing
chapter, to discover the sin both of Israel and Judah, and to denounce the
judgments of God against them. I. They are called to hearken to the charge (v.
1, 8). II. They are accused of many sins, which are here aggravated. 1.
Persecution (v. 1, 2). 2. Spiritual whoredom (v. 3, 4). 3. Pride (v. 5). 4.
Apostasy from God (v. 7). 5. The tyranny of the princes, and the tameness of the
people in submitting to it (v. 10, 11). III. They are threatened with God's
displeasure for their sins; he knows all their wickedness (v. 3) and makes known
his wrath against them for it (v. 9). 1. They shall fall in their iniquity (v.
5). 2. God will forsake them (v. 6). 3. Their portions shall be devoured (v. 7).
4. God will rebuke them, and pour out his wrath upon them (v. 9, 10). 5. They
shall be oppressed (v. 11). 6. God will be as a moth to them in secret judgments
(v. 12) and as a lion in public judgments (v. 14). IV. They are blamed for the
wrong course they took under their afflictions (v. 13). V. It is intimated that
they shall at length take a right course (v. 15). The more generally these
things are expressed of so much the more general use they are for our learning,
and particularly for our admonition.
Verses 1-7
Here, I. All orders and degrees of men are cited to appear and
answer to such things as shall be laid to their charge (v. 1):
Hear you this,
O priests! whether
in holy orders (as those in Judah, and perhaps
many in Israel too, for in the ten tribes there were divers cities of priests
and Levites, who, it is probable, staid in their own lot after the revolt of the
ten tribes and did so much of their office as might be done at a distance from
the temple) or
pretending holy orders, as the priests of the calves, who,
some think, are included here. "Hearken,
you house of Israel, the
common people, and
give ear, O house of the king!" let them all take
notice, for they have all contributed to the national guilt, and they shall all
share in the national judgments. Note, If neither the sanctity of the priesthood
nor the dignity of the royal family will prevail to keep out sin, it cannot be
expected that they should avail to keep out wrath. If the priests, and the house
of the king, though they bear such noble characters, sin like others, their
noble characters will not excuse them, but they must smart like others. Nor
shall it be any plea for
the house of Israel that they were misled by
their priests and princes, but they shall receive their doom with them, and
neither their meanness nor their multitude shall be their exemption.
II. Witness is produced against them, one instead of a thousand;
it is God's omniscience (v. 3):
I know Ephraim, and Israel is not hidden
from me. They have
not known the Lord (v. 4), but the Lord has known
them, knows their true character however disguised, knows their secret
wickedness however concealed. Note, Men's rejecting the knowledge of God will
not secure them from his knowledge of them; and when he contends with them he
will prove their sins upon them by his own knowledge, so that is will be in vain
to plead
Not guilty.
III. Very bad things are laid to their charge. 1. They had been
very ingenious and very industrious to draw people either into sin or into
trouble: You have been
a snare on Mizpah, and a net spread upon Tabor (v.
1), that is, such snares and nets as the huntsmen used to lay upon those
mountains in pursuit of their game. When the worship of the calves was set up in
Israel the patrons of that idolatry, and sticklers for it, contrived by all
possible arts and wiles to draw men into it and reconcile those to it that at
first had a dread of it. Note, Those that allure and entice men to sin, however
they may pretend friendship and good-will, are to be looked upon as
snares
and nets to them, and
their hands as bands, Eccl. 7:26. But to those
whom they could not seduce into sin they were as a net and a snare to bring them
into trouble. Some think it was their practice to set spies in the road, and
particularly upon the mountains of Mizpah and Tabor, at the times of the solemn
feasts at Jerusalem, to watch if any of their people who were piously affected
went thither, and to inform against them, that they might be prosecuted for it,
thus doing the devil's work, who disquiets those whom he cannot debauch. 2.
They had been both very crafty and very cruel in carrying on their designs (v.
2):
The revolters are profound to make slaughter. Note, Those who have
themselves apostatized from the truths of God are often the most subtle and
barbarous persecutors of those who still adhere to them. Nothing will serve them
but to
make slaughter (it is the blood of the saints that they thirst
after): and with the serpent's sting they have his head; they are
profound
to do it. O the depth of
the depths of Satan, of the wickedness of his
agents, of those that have
deeply revolted! Isa. 31:6. Now that which
aggravated this was the many reproofs and warnings that had been given them:
Though
I have been a rebuker of them all. The prophet had been so, a reprover by
office. He had many a time told them of the evil of their ways and doings, had
dealt plainly
with them all, and had not spared either the priests or the
house of the king. God himself had been
a rebuker of them all by their
own consciences and by his providences. Note, Sins against reproof are doubly
sinful, Prov. 29:1. 3. They had
committed whoredom, had defiled their own
bodies with fleshly lusts, had defiled their own souls with the worship of
idols, v. 3. This God was a witness to, though secretly committed and artfully
palliated. Nay, the piercing eye of God saw
the spirit of whoredom that
was
in the midst of them, their secret inclination and disposition to
those sins, the love they had to their sins, and the dominion their sins had
over them, how much they were under the power of a
spirit of whoredom,
that
root of bitterness which bore all this gall and wormwood, that
corrupt and poisoned fountain. 4. They had no disposition at all to come into
acquaintance and communion with God. The
spirit of whoredoms, having
caused
them to err from him, keeps them wandering endlessly, v. 4. (1.) They
have
not known the Lord, nor desire to know him, but have rather declined, nay
dreaded, the knowledge of him, for that would disturb them in their sinful ways.
(2.) Therefore
they will not frame their doings to turn to their God, by
which it appeared that they did not know him aright. This intimates their
obstinate persistence in their apostasy from God; they would not
turn to God,
though he was
their God, theirs in covenant, by whose name they had been
called, and whom they were bound to
serve. They would not return to the
worship of him, from which they had turned aside. Nay,
they would not frame
their doings to turn to God. They would not
consider their ways, nor
dispose themselves into a serious temper, nor apply their minds to think of
those things that would bring them to God. It is true we cannot by our own
power, without the special grace of God, turn to him; but we may by the due
improvement of our faculties, and the common aids of his Spirit,
frame our
doings to turn to him. Those that will not do this, that
prepare not
their hearts to seek the Lord (2 Chr. 12:14), owe it to themselves that they
are not turned; they die because they will die; and to those that will do this
further grace shall not be wanting. (5.) They were guilty of notorious arrogancy,
and insolence in sin (v. 5):
The pride of Israel doth testify to his face,
doth witness against him that he is a rebel to God and his government. The
spirit
of whoredoms which was
in the midst of them showed itself in the
gaiety and gaudiness of their worship, as a harlot is known by her attire, Prov.
7:10. The wantonness of her dress testifies to her face that she is not a modest
woman. Or their pride in confronting the prophets God sent them and the message
they brought (Jer. 43:2), or a haughty scornful conduct towards their brethren
and those that were under them,
witnessed against them that they were not
God's people and justified God in all the humbling judgments he brought upon
them. His pride testifies
in his face; so some read it, agreeing with Isa.
3:9,
The show of their countenance doth witness against them. They have
that
proud look which
the Lord hates. (6.) They departed from God
to idols, and bred up their children in idolatry (v. 7):
They have dealt
treacherously against the Lord, as a wife, who, in contempt of the marriage
covenant, forsakes her husband, and lives in adultery with another. Thus those
who are guilty of spiritual idolatry, whose god is their money, whose god is
their belly,
deal treacherously against the Lord; they violate their
engagements to him and frustrate his expectations from them. Note, Wilful
sinners are treacherous dealers.
They have begotten strange children,
that is, their children which they have begotten are estranged from God, and
trained up in a false way of worship; they are a spurious brood, as
children
of fornication (Jn. 8:41), whom God will disown. Note, Those deal
treacherously with God indeed who not only turn from following him themselves
but train up their children in wicked ways.
IV. Very sad things are made to be their doom. In general (v.
1),
"Judgment is towards you. God is coming forth to contend with
you, and to testify his displeasure against you for your sins." It is time
to hearken when judgment is towards us. In particular,
1. They shall
fall in their iniquity. This follows upon
their
pride testifying to their face (v. 5)
Therefore shall Israel and
Ephraim fall in their iniquity. Note, Pride will have a fall; it is the
certain presage and forerunner of it. Those that exalt themselves shall be
abased. The face in which pride testifies shall be filled with confusion. They
shall not only fall, but fall in their iniquity, the saddest fall of any. Their
pride kept them from repenting of their iniquity, and therefore they shall fall
in it. Note, Those that are not humbled for their sins are likely to perish for
ever in their sins. it is added,
Judah also shall fall with them in her
iniquity. As the ten tribes were carried captive into Assyria, for their
idolatry, so the two tribes, in process of time, were carried into Babylon for
following their bad example; but the former fell and were utterly cast down, the
latter fell and were raised up again. Judah had the temple and priesthood, and
yet these shall not secure them, but, if they sin with Israel and Ephraim, with
them they shall fall.
2. They shall fall short of God's favour when they profess to
seek it (v. 6):
They shall go with their flocks and with their herds to seek
the Lord, but in vain;
they shall not find him. This seems to be
spoken principally of Judah, when they fell into their iniquity, and when they
fell in their iniquity. (1.) When they fell into their iniquity they
sought
the Lord; but they did not
seek him only, and therefore he was not
found
of them. When they worshipped strange gods, yet they kept up the show and
shadow of the worship of the true God; they went as usual, at the solemn feasts,
with their flocks and herds to seek the Lord; but their hearts were not
upright
with him, because they were not
entire for him, and therefore he
would not accept them; for
then only shall we find him when we
seek
him with our whole heart, not divided between God and Baal, Eze. 14:3. (2.)
When they fell in their iniquity, or found themselves falling by it, they
sought
the Lord; but they did not seek him
early, and therefore he will not
be found of them. They shall see ruin coming upon them, and shall then, in their
distress, flee to God, and think to make him their friend with burnt-offerings
and sacrifices; but it will be too late then to turn away his wrath when
the
decree has gone forth. Even Josiah's reformation did not prevail to
turn
away the wrath of God, 2 Ki. 23:25, 26. Those that go
with their flocks
and their herds only to seek the Lord, and not with their hearts and souls,
cannot expect to find him, for his favour is not to be purchased with
thousands
of rams. Nor shall those speed who do not seek the Lord
while he may be
found, for there is a time when he will not be found. They shall not find
him, for he has withdrawn himself; he will not be enquired of by them, but will
turn a deaf ear to their sacrifices. See how much it is our concern to seek God
early, now while the accepted time is, and the day of salvation.
3. They and their portions shall all be swallowed up. They have
dealt
treacherously against the Lord, and have thought to strengthen themselves in
it by their alliances with strange children; but
now shall a month devour
them with their portions, that is, their estates and inheritances, all those
things which they have taken, and taken up with, as their portion; or by their
portions
is meant their idols, whom they chose for their portion instead of God. Note,
Those that make an idol of the world, by taking it for their portion, will
themselves perish with it. A
month shall
devour them, or eat them
upa certain time prefixed, and a short time. When God's judgments begin
with them they shall soon make an end; one month will do their business. How
much may a body be weakened by one month's sickness, or a kingdom wasted by
one month's war!
Three shepherds (says God)
I cut off in one month,
Zec. 11:8. Note, The judgments of God sometimes make quick work with a sinful
people. A month devours more, and more portions, than many years can repair.
Verses 8-15
Here is, I. A loud alarm sounded, giving notice of judgments
coming (v. 8):
Blow you the cornet in Gibeah and
in Ramah, two
cities near together in the confines of the two kingdoms of Judah and Israel,
Gibeah a frontier-town of the kingdom of Judah, Ramah of Israel; so that the
warning is hereby sent into both kingdoms.
"Cry aloud at Beth-aven,
or Bethel, which place seems to be already seized upon by the enemy, and
therefore the trumpet is not sounded there, but you hear the outcries of those
that shout for mastery, mixed with theirs that are overcome." Let them
cry
aloud, "After thee, O Benjamin! comes the enemy. The tribe of Ephraim
is already vanquished, and the enemy will be upon thy back, O Benjamin! in a
little time; thy turn comes next. The cup of trembling shall go round." The
prophet had described God's controversy with them as a trial at law (ch. 4:1);
here he describes it as a trial by battle; and here also
when he judges he
will overcome. Let all therefore prepare to meet their God. He had before
spoken of the judgments as certain; here he speaks of them as near; and, when
they are apprehended as just at the door, they are very startling and awakening.
The blowing of this cornet is explained, v. 9.
Among the tribes of Israel
have I made known that which shall surely be, that which is
true or
certain,
so the word is. Note, The destruction of impenitent sinners is a thing which
shall surely be; it is not mere talk, to frighten them, but it is an irrevocable
sentence. And it is a mercy to us that it is
made known to us, that we
have timely warning given us of it, that we may
flee from the wrath to come.
It is the privilege of the tribes of Israel that, as they are told their duty,
so they are told their danger, by the oracles of God committed to them.
II. The ground of God's controversy with them. 1. He has a
quarrel with
the princes of Judah, because they were daring leaders in
sin, v. 10. They are
like those that remove the bound, or the ancient
land-marks. God has given them his law, to be a fence about his own property;
but they have sacrilegiously broken through it, and set it aside; they have
encroached even upon God's rights, have trampled upon the distinctions between
good and evil, and the most sacred obligations of reason and equity, thinking,
because they were princes, that they might do any thing, Quicquid libet, licetTheir
will was a law. Or it may be understood of their invading the liberty and
property of the subject for the advancing of the prerogative, which was like
removing the ancient land-marks. Some have observed that the princes of Judah
were more absolute, and assumed a more arbitrary power, than the princes of
Israel did; now, for this, God has a controversy with them:
I will pour out
my wrath upon them like water, in great abundance, like the waters of the
flood, which were poured upon the
giants of the
old world, for the
violence which the earth was filled with through them, Gen. 6:13. Note, There
are
bounds which even princes themselves must not remove, bounds both of
religion and justice, which they are limited by, and, if they break through
them, they must know that there is a God above them that will call them to
account for it. 2. He has a quarrel with the
people of Ephraim, because
they were sneaking followers in sin (v. 11):
He willingly walked after the
commandment, that is, the commandment of Jeroboam and the succeeding kings
of Israel, who obliged all their subjects by a law to worship the calves at Dan
and Bethel, and never to go up to Jerusalem to worship. This was
the
commandment; it was the law of the land, and backed with reasons of state;
and the people not only walked after it in a blind implicit obedience to
authority, but they willingly walked after it, from a secret antipathy they had
to the worship of idols. Note, An easy compliance with the commandments of men
that thwart the commandments of God ripens a people for ruin as much as any
thing. And the punishment of the sequacious disobedience (if I may so call it)
answers to the sin; for it is for this that
Ephraim is oppressed and broken
in judgment, has all his civil rights and liberties broken in upon and
trodden down; and, (1.) It is just with God that it should be so, that those who
betray God's property should lose their own, that those who subject their
consciences to an infallible judge, and an arbitrary power, should have enough
of both. (2.) There is a natural tendency in the thing itself towards it.
Those
that
willingly walk after the commandment, even when it walks contrary to
the command of God, will find the commandment an encroaching thing, and that the
more power is given it the more it will claim. Note, Nothing gives greater
advantage to a mastiff-like tyranny, that is fierce and furious, than a
spaniel-like submission, that is fawning and flattering. Thus is
Ephraim
oppressed and broken in judgment, that is, he is wronged under a face and
colour of right. Note, It is a sad and sore judgment upon any people to be
oppressed under pretence of having justice done them. This explains the
threatening v. 9,
Ephraim shall be desolate in the day of rebuke. Note,
Daring sinners must expect that a day of rebuke will come, and such a day of
rebuke as will make them desolate, will deprive them of the comfort of all they
have and all they hope for.
III. The different methods that God would take both with Judah
and Ephraim, sometimes one method and sometimes the other, and sometimes both
together, or rather by which, first the one and then the other, he would advance
towards their complete ruin.
1. He would begin with less judgments, which should sometimes
work silently and insensibly (v. 12):
I will be (that is, my providences
shall be)
unto Ephraim as a moth; nay (as it might better be supplied),
they
are unto Ephraim as a moth, for it is such
a sickness as
Ephraim now sees, v. 13. Note, The judgments of God are sometimes to a sinful
people
as a moth, and
as rottenness, or as
a worm. The
former signifies the little animals that breed in clothes, the latter those that
breed in wood; as these consume the clothes and the wood, so shall the judgments
of God consume them. (1.) Silently, so as not to make any noise in the world,
nay, so as they themselves shall not be sensible of it; they shall think
themselves safe and thriving, but, when they come to look more narrowly into
their state, shall find themselves wasting and decaying. (2.) Slowly, and with
long delays and intervals, that he may give them
space to repent. Many a
nation, as well as many a person, in the prime of its time, dies of a
consumption. (3.) Gradually. God comes upon sinners with less judgments, so to
prevent greater, if they will be wise and take warning; he comes upon them step
by step, to show he is not willing that they should perish. (4.) The moth breeds
in the clothes, and the worm or rottenness in the wood; thus sinners are
consumed by a fire of their own kindling.
2. When it appeared that those had not done their work he would
come upon them with greater (v. 14):
I will be unto Ephraim as a lion, and to
the house of Judah as a young lion, though Judah is himself, in Jacob's
blessing, a
lion's whelp. Lest any should think his power weakened,
because he was said to be
as a moth to them, he says that he will now be
as
a lion to them, not only to frighten them with his roaring, but to
pull them to pieces. Note, If less judgments prevail not to do their work, it
may be expected that God will send greater.
Christ is sometimes a lion of
the tribe of Judah, here he is a lion against that tribe. See what God will do
to a people that are secure in sin:
Even I will tear. He seems to glory
in it, as his prerogative, to be able to
destroy, as the
alone
lawgiver, Jam. 4:12.
"I, even I, will take the work into my own
hands; I
say it that will
do it." There is a more immediate
work of God in some judgments than in others.
I will tear, and go away.
He will go away, (1.) As not fearing them; he will go away in state, and with a
majestic face, as the lion from his prey. (2.) As not helping them. If God tear
by afflicting providences, and yet by his graces and comforts stays with us, it
is well enough; but our condition is sad indeed if he
tear and
go
away, if, when he deprives us of our creature comforts, he does himself
depart from us. When he goes away he will take away all that is valuable and
dear, for, when God goes, all good goes along with him. He will take away,
and
none shall rescue him, as the prey cannot be rescued from the lion, Mic.
5:8. Note, None can be delivered out of the hands of God's justice but those
that are delivered into the hands of his grace. It is in vain for a man to
strive with his Maker.
IV. The different effects of those different methods. 1. When
God contended with them by less judgments they neglected him, and sought to
creatures for relief, but sought in vain, v. 13. When God was to them
as a
moth, and
as rottenness, they perceived
their sickness and
their
wound; after a while they found themselves going down the hill, and that
they were behindhand in their affairs, their estate was sensibly decaying,
and then they sent
to the Assyrian, to come in to their assistance, made
their court to king Jareb, which some think, was one of the names of Pul, or
Tiglathpileser, kings of Assyria, to whom both Israel and Judah applied for
relief in their distress, hoping by an alliance with them to repair and
re-establish their declining interests. Note, Carnal hearts, in time of trouble,
see their sickness and see their wound, but do not see the sin that is the cause
of it, nor will be brought to acknowledge that, no, nor to acknowledge the hand
of God, his
mighty hand, much less his righteous hand, in their trouble;
and therefore, instead of going the next way to the Creator, who could relieve
them, they take a great deal of pains to go about to creatures, who can do them
no service. Those who repent not that they have offended God by their sins are
loth to be beholden to him in their afflictions, but would rather seek relief
any where than with him. And what is the consequence?
Yet could he not heal
you, nor cure you of your wound. Note, Those who neglect God, and seek to
creatures for help, will certainly be disappointed; those who depend upon them
for support will find them, not
foundations, but
broken reeds;
those who depend upon them for supply will find them, not
fountains, but
broken
cisterns; those who depend upon them for comfort and a cure will find them
miserable
comforters, and
physicians of no value. The kings of Assyria, whom
Judah and Israel sought unto,
distressed them and
helped them not,
2 Chr. 28:16, 28. Some make king
Jareb to signify the
great, potent,
or
magnificent king, for they built much upon his power; others
the
king that will plead, or
should plead, for they built much upon his
wisdom and eloquence, and in his interesting himself in their affairs. They had
sent him
a present (ch. 10:6), a good fee, and, having so retained him of
counsel for them, they doubted not of his fidelity to them; but he deceived
them, as an arm of flesh does those that trust in it, Jer. 17:5, 6. 2. When, to
convince them of their folly, God brought greater judgments upon them, then they
would at length be forced to apply to him, v. 15. When he has
torn as a
lion,
(1.) He will leave them:
I will go and return to my place, to heaven, or
to the mercy-seat, the throne of grace, which is his glory. When God punishes
sinners he
comes out of his place (Isa. 26:21); but, when he designs them
favour, he
returns to his place, where he
waits to be gracious,
upon their submission. Or he will
return to his place when he has
corrected them, as not regarding them, hiding his face from them, and not taking
notice of their troubles or prayers; and this for their further humiliation,
till they are qualified in some measure for the returns of his favour. (2.) He
will at length work upon them, and bring them home to himself, by their
afflictions, which is the thing he waits for; and then he will no longer
withdraw from them. Two things are here mentioned as instances of their return:[1.]
Their penitent confession of sin:
Till they acknowledge their offence;
marg.
Till they be guilty, that is, till they be sensible of their guilt,
and be brought to own it, and humble themselves before God for it. Note, When
men begin to complain more of their sins than of their afflictions then there
begins to be some hope of them; and this is that which God requires of us, when
we are under his correcting hand, that we own ourselves in a fault and justly
corrected. [2.] Their humble petition for the favour of God: Till they
seek
my face, which, it may be expected, they will do when they are brought to
the last extremity, and they have tried other helpers in vain.
In their
affliction they will seek me early, that is, diligently and earnestly, and
with great importunity; and if they seek him thus, and be sincere in it, though
it might be called seeking him late, because it was long ere they were brought
to it, yet it is not too late, nay, he is pleased to call it seeking him early,
so willing is he to make the best of true penitents in their return to him.
Note, When we are under the convictions of sin, and the corrections of the rod,
our business is to seek God's face; we must desire the knowledge of him, and
an acquaintance with him, that he may manifest himself to us, and for us, in
token of his being at peace with us. And it may reasonably be expected that
affliction will bring those to God that had long gone astray from him, and kept
at a distance.
Therefore God for a time turns away from us, that he may
turn us to himself, and then return to us.
Is any among you afflicted? Let
him pray.
Chapter 5:
| 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
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