Verse 1-2
Amos 3:1-2. Hear this word
against the whole family, &c. —
All that family of which Jacob,
or Israel, was the head. The
word family is equivalent to
people here and in the following
verse. You only have I known —
Acknowledged, by revealing
myself to you, protecting you,
and conferring on you peculiar
privileges. Therefore will I
punish you — Your sins,
therefore, shall be punished,
and that in an exemplary manner;
because you have sinned against
greater light and higher
obligations than other nations
are or have been favoured with;
and you have manifested an
ungrateful, as well as a
disobedient spirit. For the same
reason the angel is commanded to
begin his execution at the
sanctuary, Ezekiel 9:6; and St.
Peter observes, that judgment
must begin at the house of God,
1 Peter 4:17 : see also the
margin.
Verse 3
Amos 3:3. Can two walk together
— Comfortably as friends; except
they be agreed — Except they be
in peace with each other? So
neither can I conduct myself
toward you as a friend or
benefactor, nor can you have my
presence with you, while you
walk so contrary to me, and act
in such perfect opposition to my
nature and laws.
Verses 4-6
Amos 3:4-6. Will a lion roar,
&c., when he hath no prey? —
“Naturalists assert that when
the lion sees his prey, he roars
before he rushes on it; and that
at this roaring many animals
show great fear. He likewise
roars over his prey. The sense
seems to be, As the lion roareth
on account of his prey, so by my
prophets I cry aloud against
you, because ye are the objects
of my vengeance.” — Newcome. Can
a bird fall in a snare where no
gin is for him — As a bird does
not fall into a snare, unless
one has been laid for him, so
the people of Israel and Judah
would not fall into the
calamities coming upon them, had
not God, for their ingratitude
and other sins, brought these
punishments upon them.
Figuratively speaking, the
Assyrians and Chaldeans were
gins or snares which God had
laid to take the Israelites.
Shall one take up a snare and
have taken nothing — As it is
not usual for the fowler or
hunter to take up the snares he
has laid, till he has taken
something in them; so neither
will the enemies which God will
bring upon Israel and Judah
depart from them without
executing the purpose for which
they were brought, namely,
making a conquest of the
country, and spoiling its
inhabitants. Or, God will not
remove his judgments when they
have begun to take place, till
they have attained their proper
end, the people’s repentance and
reformation. Shall a trumpet be
blown and the people not be
afraid? — Will not the people of
the city, when they first hear
the alarm-trumpet blown, be
affected with the danger, and
run to their arms? and will not
ye be moved by the warnings God
gives you of approaching
judgments? and will ye not be
stirred up to repent and amend
your ways? Shall there be evil —
Such as famine, plague, and war;
in a city — Or country; and the
Lord hath not done it? — Either
immediately by his own hand, or
by the hands of those whom he
employs. Whoever are the
instruments of chastising a
people, God is the principal
agent. The meaning here is, You
may be assured that the
calamities you feel, or have
just cause to fear, are not the
effect of chance, but come upon
you by the special direction of
Providence.
Verse 7-8
Amos 3:7-8. The Lord will do
nothing, but he revealeth, &c. —
As if he had said, You cannot
complain of your not being
forewarned of these calamities
coming upon you, for God hath
not done, nor will do any thing,
without revealing it to his
prophets, and by them to you; so
that you have now warning of all
that he intends to do, unless
you prevent it by an alteration
in your behaviour. It may be
observed further on this verse,
that there was no great
revolution in the affairs,
either of the kingdoms of Judah
and Israel, or in those of the
neighbouring nations, which the
prophets of God did not foretel;
in order that the Jews might
constantly be reminded of their
God, either as a rewarder or
punisher. The lion hath roared,
who will not fear? — As when a
lion roars, no one who hears can
avoid fearing, so now, God
having threatened, all who are
made acquainted with the
threatening ought to be alarmed
and to stand in awe. The Lord
God hath spoken, who can but
prophesy? — When God himself
speaks, or commands, who will
dare to do otherwise than obey?
or, what prophet will have
courage to refuse or forbear
uttering what God reveals to
him, and orders him to utter;
for if the anger of a lion is to
be feared, how much more the
anger of God?
Verses 9-11
Amos 3:9-11. Publish in the
palaces at Ashdod, &c. — God
here orders the prophet to
invite the Philistines and
Egyptians, the inveterate
enemies of God’s Israel, to come
and behold what great wickedness
was among them, and what cause
he had to execute what he had
threatened, and to mark the
calamities coming upon them, as
the punishment of that
wickedness, that these heathen
might hereby take warning. Say,
Assemble yourselves upon the
mountains of Samaria — That is,
in the kingdom of the ten
tribes, whose capital city was
Samaria, built upon a hill of
the same name. Or, the mountains
of Samaria may be equivalent to
the mountains of Israel,
mentioned Ezekiel 36:8; Ezekiel
37:22; Samaria being often taken
for the whole kingdom of Israel.
Behold the great tumults in the
midst thereof — The seditious
councils and rebellious
conspiracies among them. And the
oppressed in the midst thereof —
The multitude of oppressed ones
throughout the whole kingdom;
for the usurpers took it to be
their interest to crush all they
feared or suspected. For they
know not to do right — That is,
they will not know nor learn to
do their duty. Who store up
violence, &c. — Who store up in
their houses riches gotten by
violence and injustice.
Therefore, An adversary shall be
even round about the land —
Shalmaneser the king of Assyria
shall invade the land on every
side, shall dismantle its
fortresses, and plunder its
wealthy palaces.
Verse 12
Amos 3:12. As the shepherd
taketh out of the mouth of the
lion two legs, &c. — When a lion
hath for some time ravaged the
flock, but is at last frighted
away by the noise of the
shepherds and their dogs, or by
darts and other offensive
weapons thrown at him, then all
that, in such a case, the
shepherd can hope to save will
be but some poor remains of the
prey that the lion hath seized.
And thus shall it be at the
taking of Samaria: only a small
remainder of the inhabitants
shall escape the search of their
enemies, though they try to hide
themselves in their most retired
apartments. In the corner of a
bed — In some dark corner behind
a bed; and in Damascus —
Supposing some of them have fled
thither; in a couch — Some few
of the poor may escape when the
enemy finds them sick upon their
couches. But the marginal
reading, on the bed’s feet, is
thought by some to give a better
sense: or, as the word rendered
Damascus also signifies a
corner, the clause may be
properly rendered, In the side
or corner of a couch, an
interpretation approved by Aben
Ezra. See Buxtorf.
Verses 13-15
Amos 3:13-15. Hear ye, and
testify, &c. — These words are
directed to the prophets whom
God sends to declare his will.
In the day that I shall visit,
&c. — In the general destruction
of the ten tribes, my judgments
will be particularly visible
upon the places dedicated to
idolatrous worship, especially
Beth-el, the principal place of
that kind. And the horns of the
altar shall be cut off — These
were squares placed at the four
corners of the altar, and hollow
in the middle, into which some
of the blood of the sacrifices
was poured. And I will smite the
winter-house with the summer-
house — The kings and great men
had different houses and
apartments for spending the
winter and summer in. These were
placed and made suitable to
those different seasons. And the
houses of ivory shall perish —
We read 1 Kings 22:49, that King
Ahab built himself an ivory
house, that is, a house ceiled
or wainscoted with ivory: or at
least inlaid in some parts of it
with ivory; and it is probable
that other great men followed
his example. |