The vision of the large flying roll, with the angel’s
explanation, 1-4.The vision of the ephah, and of the woman sitting on it, with
the
signification, 5-11 .
Notes on Chapter 5
Verse 1. Behold a flying
roll.— This was twenty cubits long,
and ten
cubits broad; the prophet saw it expanded, and flying. Itself
was the
catalogue of the crimes of the people, and the punishment
threatened by
the Lord. Some think the crimes were those of the Jews; others,
those of
the Chaldeans. The roll is mentioned in allusion to those large
rolls on
which the Jews write the Pentateuch. One now lying before me is
one
hundred and fifty-three feet long, by twenty-one inches wide,
written on
fine brown Basle goat-skin; some time since brought from
Jerusalem,
supposed to be four hundred years old.
Verse 3. Every one that
stealeth-and
every one that sweareth— It seems
that the roll was written both on the front and back: stealing
and swearing
are supposed to be two general heads of crimes; the former,
comprising
sins against men; the latter, sins against God. It is supposed
that the roll
contained the sins and punishments of the Chaldeans.
Verse 4. Into the house
of him— Babylon, the house or city
of
Nebuchadnezzar, who was a public plunderer, and a most glaring
idolater.
Verse 6. This is an ephah
that goeth forth.— This, among the
Jews, was
the ordinary measure of grain. The woman in the ephah is
supposed to
represent Judea, which shall be visited for its sins; the talent
of lead on the
ephah, within which the woman was enclosed, the wrath of God,
bending
down this culprit nation, in the measure of its sins; for the
angel said,
“This is wickedness;” that is, the woman represents the mass of
iniquity
of this nation.
Verse 9. There came out
two women— As the one woman
represented
the impiety of the Jewish nation; so these two women who were to
carry
the ephah, in which the woman INIQUITY
was shut up, under the weight of
a talent of lead, may mean the desperate UNBELIEF
of the Jews in rejecting
the Messiah; and that IMPIETY,
or universal corruption of manners, which
was the consequence of their unbelief, and brought down the
wrath of God
upon them. The strong wings, like those of a stork, may point
out the
power and swiftness with which Judea was carried on to fill up
the
measure of her iniquity, and to meet the punishment which she
deserved.
Between the earth and the heaven.— Sins against G OD
and MAN,
sins
which heaven and earth contemplated with horror.
Or the Babylonians and Romans may be intended by the two women
who
carried the Jewish ephah to its final punishment. The Chaldeans
ruined
Judea before the advent of our Lord; the Romans, shortly after.
Verse 11. To build it a
house in the land of Shinar— The
land of Shinar
means Babylon; and Babylon means Rome, in the Apocalypse. The
building the house for the woman imprisoned in the ephah may
signify,
that there should be a long captivity under the Romans, as there
was under
that of Shinar or Babylon, by which Rome may here be
represented. That
house remains to the present day: the Jewish woman is still in
the ephah;
it is set on its own base-continues still as a distinct nation;
and the talent
of lead-God’s displeasure-is still on the top. O Lord, save thy
people, the
remnant of Israel! |