Verse 1-2
Amos 8:1-2. Behold a basket of
summer fruit — This symbolically
denoted that Israel’s sins were
now ripe for judgment, and that
as the fruit, when it is ripe,
is taken from the trees, so,
their iniquity being now ripe,
they should be taken off the
land in which they dwelt. The
two Hebrew words, קוצ, kaits,
summer fruit, and קצ, kets, an
end, have an affinity in their
sound. Such paronomasias occur
in other passages of Scripture:
see Isaiah 24:17; Jeremiah 1:11.
Instead of summer fruit,
Houbigant reads, “autumnal
fruit, or, fruit of the last
season of the year; and so in
the next verse, where, instead
of the end, he reads the last
end, in order to keep up the
allusion, and the play of the
words in the original: whereby
is signified, that as after the
autumnal fruits, no others are
produced from the earth, or
gathered from the tree, so
should it come to pass, that the
kingdom of Israel should no more
produce any fruit, nor
reflourish in the following
years. After Jeroboam II. all
things became worse and worse,
till the kingdom of Israel was
totally destroyed:” see Jeremiah
24.
Verse 3
Amos 8:3. And the songs of the
temple shall be howlings, &c. —
Houbigant renders it, And the
singers of the palace shall
howl, the word היכל, signifying
palace as well as temple; and as
Amos prophesied against Israel,
not against Judah, the temple,
properly so called, could not be
meant here. There shall be many
dead bodies in every place — In
cities, towns, and the country;
in all places shall the bloody
effects produced by the enemies’
sword, and by famine and
pestilence, be seen. They shall
cast them forth with silence —
The enemy will make such
slaughter among the people, and
the dead will be so numerous,
that there will be no
opportunity of using public
mournings, or lamentations, at
funerals, as had been usual in
other cases; but the friends of
the deceased will be glad to
hurry them to their graves with
as much silence and privacy as
possible.
Verses 4-6
Amos 8:4-6. Hear, O ye that
swallow up the needy — That
greedily and cruelly devour such
as would have been objects of
your compassion, had you been
just and merciful as well as
rich and great. He alludes to
the greater fish swallowing up
the lesser. To make the poor of
the land to fail — Either to
root them out or to enslave
them. Saying, When will the new-
moon be gone — This was one of
their solemn feasts, the use of
which they retained with their
idolatrous worship; that we may
sell corn — It seems they were
prohibited during this feast,
and probably in their other
solemn feasts, from every kind
of traffic, even the selling of
corn; and these covetous
wretches thought the time during
which they were so restrained
long and tedious, wishing to be
again at liberty to trade and
get gain. Making the ephah
small, and the shekel great —
The ephah was the measure
whereby they sold corn, &c.,
containing about one of our
bushels. This they made smaller
than the just standard, and so
cheated in the quantity of what
they sold. The shekel was the
money they received for the
price of their goods, and by
weighing this by too heavy a
weight, they diminished its real
value, and so cheated also in
the sum they received. So that
both ways they over-reached
those that dealt with them, who
received less of what they
bought than it was their right
to receive, and paid more than
they ought to pay for it. That
we may buy the poor for silver —
That we may, by these unjust
dealings, soon get the poor so
much into our debt, that they
may not be able to discharge it,
but be obliged to surrender
themselves to us as slaves, and
that for a very trifling
consideration in reality. So
that these avaricious and
merciless men wished the
new-moon and sabbaths to be
over, that they might go to
market, as it were, and buy the
poor; and when these poor owed
but for a very trifling article,
as suppose a pair of shoes, they
would take advantage against
them, and make them sell
themselves to pay the debt. Or,
to buy any thing for a pair of
shoes, was a proverbial
expression to signify getting it
at a very vile, or low price. It
was the custom of those times
when a man could not discharge
his debts, for him to surrender
up himself and family to his
creditor as bond-servants. By
this the rich increased their
power, as well as their wealth;
and such was their inhumanity,
that they practised every art of
fraud and extortion to reduce
the needy to this miserable
condition. Yea, and sell the
refuse of the wheat — Not
content with defrauding in the
measure and price, ye mix the
chaff, or refuse, such as is not
fit to make bread, and sell it
together with the wheat. This
was another kind of oppression;
corrupted wares were sold to
those that were necessitous.
Verse 7
Amos 8:7. The Lord hath sworn by
the excellency of Jacob — That
is, by himself; Surely I will
never forget any of their works
— God is said to remember men’s
sins when he punishes them. We
may learn by this passage, and
many others in Scripture, that
however slightly men may think
of it, God takes particular
notice of, and will certainly
punish, all extortions and
over-reachings in trade, and
more particularly when they are
used in regard of the poor. They
shall have judgment without
mercy, who have showed no mercy.
It is to be wished that persons
would always consider themselves
as the fathers of the poor, when
they deal with them; and rather
give them measure pressed down
and running over, than mete to
them with a scanty hand.
Verse 8
Amos 8:8. Shall not the land
tremble — Shall not the state,
or government, and all the
people of the land, be terribly
afraid, and greatly troubled;
for this — This, that you have
done, O house of Israel, in
sinning, and this that God will
do in punishing? And every one
mourn that dwelleth therein —
Shall not all be deeply
concerned and distressed, since
all have sinned and deserved
punishment, and all will suffer
in the approaching calamity?
Certainly they shall. Observe,
reader, those that will not
tremble and mourn as they ought
for national sins, shall be made
to tremble and mourn for
national judgments; those that
look unconcerned upon the sins
of oppressors, which should make
them tremble, and upon the
miseries of the oppressed, which
should make them mourn, God will
find out a way to make them
tremble at the fury of those
that oppress them, and mourn for
their own losses and sufferings
by it. And it shall rise up
wholly as a flood — The LXX.
read, with a very small
alteration in the Hebrew points,
και αναβησεται ως ποταμος
συντελια, Destruction shall rise
up like a flood; that is, the
judgment, the calamity of a
hostile invasion by the
Assyrians, shall be like an
inundation, which in a short
time overflows a whole country.
And it shall be cast out and
drowned — The inhabitants of the
land shall be cast out of their
possessions, or the land itself
shall be overwhelmed as by the
flood, or rather, the river of
Egypt, that is, as Egypt is by
the inundation of the river
Nile. Thus the Chaldee
paraphrase: He shall make a king
come up against it [the land]
with a numerous army like a
flood, and he shall drive out
the inhabitants thereof, and
[the land itself]
shall be drowned as when the
flood of Egypt [overflows.]
Verse 9
Amos 8:9. I will cause the sun
to go down at noon — Calamitous
times are often expressed in the
Scriptures by the failing of the
light of the sun, and the day’s
being overspread with darkness.
So Israel’s sun did begin to go
down, as at noon, under the dark
cloud of conspiracies and civil
wars by Shallum, Menahem, Pekah,
and Hoshea, till it entirely
set, and total darkness came on
through the Assyrian invasions
by Pul, Tiglath-pileser, and
Shalmanezer, and by the entire
desolation and destruction of
the country produced thereby.
And I will darken the earth — By
bringing a thick cloud of
troubles and afflictions over
it; in the clear day — When they
think all is safe, well settled,
and hopeful.
Verse 10
Amos 8:10. I will turn your
feasts into mourning — God
commanded the Jews to celebrate
their festivals with joy and
gladness; but this it would be
impossible for them to do under
such melancholy circumstances
and manifestations of the divine
displeasure. And all your songs
into lamentation — The
particular psalms and hymns
which used to be sung at the
great festivals are here alluded
to. And I will bring up
sackcloth upon all loins — All
sorts of persons shall put on
mourning. And baldness upon
every head — Shaving the head
and beard was a sign of the
greatest sadness. I will make it
as the mourning, rather, as in
the mourning of [or for] an only
son — That is, a most heavy
mourning; for the death of an
only son generally occasions the
severest grief; and the end
thereof as a bitter day — A
sorrowful day, which you shall
wish you had never seen, shall
succeed your dark night. In
other words, the calamities
shall increase more and more; so
that the last part of these
grievous times shall be far more
distressing than any that had
preceded. This undoubtedly was
the case, as the carrying them
into captivity would occasion a
separation of friends from
friends, children from parents,
wives from husbands, than which
it is not easy to conceive any
thing more deplorable.
Verse 11
Amos 8:11. Behold the days come,
saith the Lord — This is spoken
of events which were yet at some
distance. That I will send a
famine in the land, not of
bread, &c., but of hearing the
words of the Lord — When Amos
prophesied, and for a
considerable time after, there
were several prophets, and
abundant opportunities of
hearing the word of the Lord, in
season and out of season: they
had precept upon precept and
line upon line. Prophecy was
their daily bread; but they
despised it as Israel did the
manna in the wilderness; and
therefore God threatens that he
would hereafter deprive them of
this privilege. It appears that
there were not so many prophets
in the land of Israel, about the
time that their destruction came
upon them, as there were in the
land of Judah; and after the ten
tribes were carried away
captive, they saw not their
signs; there were no more any
prophets among them; none to
show them How long; Psalms 74:9.
The Jewish church also, after
Malachi, had no prophets for
many ages. Now, 1st, This was
the departure of a great part of
their glory: what especially
made their nation great and high
was, that to them were committed
the oracles of God: but when
these were taken from them their
beauty was stained, and their
honour laid in the dust. 2d,
This was a token of God’s
highest displeasure against
them: surely he was angry indeed
with them, when he would no more
speak to them as he had done;
and had abandoned them to ruin,
when he would no more reprove
them for their sins, and call
them to repentance by his
messengers. 3d, This made all
the other calamities that were
upon them truly melancholy; that
they had no prophets to instruct
and comfort them from the word
of God, nor to give them any
hopeful prospect. We should say
at any time, and shall be
compelled to say in a time of
trouble, that a famine of the
word of God is, of all others,
the sorest famine — the heaviest
judgment. It is not improbable
that this threatening was
intended to look further than to
the judgment now referred to,
even to the blindness which has
in part happened to Israel, in
the days of the Messiah, and the
veil that is on the hearts of
the unbelieving Jews. They
reject the gospel, and the
ministers of it, which God sends
to them, and covet to have
prophets of their own, as their
fathers had; but they shall have
none, the kingdom of God being
taken from them and given to
another people.
Verse 12-13
Amos 8:12-13. And they shall
wander from sea to sea — From
the sea of Tiberias to the great
sea, from one border of the
country to another. And from the
north even to the east — The
prophet omits naming the south,
because the idolaters, to whom
he directs his discourse, would
choose to inquire anywhere
rather than of the true prophets
of the Lord, who dwelt in the
tribe of Judah, which was
situated to the south of the ten
tribes. They shall run to and
fro, to seek the word of the
Lord — To inquire if there be
any prophet, any prophecy, any
message from God, any divine
direction what course to take in
their distress — any
encouragement to expect
deliverance from their
calamities, and happier times.
In that day shall the fair
virgins, &c. — They who are in
the bloom of their youth and in
the strength of their age, shall
faint, and be dispirited like
those that want necessary
refreshment.
Verse 14
Amos 8:14. They that swear by
the sin of Samaria — That is, by
the calf which Jeroboam set up
as an object of worship at
Beth-el, not far from Samaria,
committing a great sin in so
doing, and making Israel to sin.
Swearing, according to the sense
in which the word is here taken,
is a solemn invocation of the
name of God, and an appeal to
him; and, as such, is a proper
part of divine worship, (see
Deuteronomy 6:13; Deuteronomy
10:20,) and therefore ought not
to be given to idols. And say,
Thy God — Or, As thy God, O Dan,
liveth — That is, who say in the
way of an oath, As the god who
is worshipped in Dan liveth: at
Dan was placed another of
Jeroboam’s calves. And, The
manner of Beer-sheba liveth —
The LXX. render it, the god of
Beer-sheba liveth; expressing
the sense rather than the words
of the original. The way or
manner signifies the same with
the way of worship; so that the
people swore by the religion of
Beer-sheba, or the manner of
worship used there, which they
looked upon as sacred. Thus the
Papists swear by the mass: but
they who thus give that honour
to idols which is due to God
alone, will find the God whom
they thus affront is made their
enemy. And they shall fall, &c.
— And the gods they serve cannot
raise them up; so that without
better help they shall never
rise again. |