Verse 1
Amos 9:1. I saw — Namely, in a
vision or ecstasy; the Lord —
That is, the glory and majesty
of the Lord, as Isaiah did,
Isaiah 6:1, or a bright glorious
light, indicating the presence
of God; standing upon the altar
— Resting upon, or over the
altar. The altar of
burnt-offering seems to be meant
here, and the glory of God
resting upon it to have denoted
that his justice demanded the
lives of the sinners here spoken
of to be cut off. “He stands
upon the altar,” says Henry, “to
show that the ground of his
controversy with this people was
their profanation of his holy
things: here he stands to avenge
the quarrel of his altar; as
also to signify, that the sin of
the house of Israel, like that
of the house of Eli, should not
be purged with sacrifice nor
offering for ever.” And he said
— To an angel, as Jerome
explains it; or rather God here
speaks to his people’s enemies,
and gives them a commission to
destroy them and their temple.
Smite the lintel of the door —
This signified that the temple,
which was then represented to
the prophet, should be
destroyed. Whether this was the
temple at Beth-el, or that of
Jerusalem, is not quite certain.
The Chaldee understands the
vision of the kingdom of Judah;
if so, the temple at Jerusalem
is undoubtedly intended. And
even if the vision relates, as
most suppose, to the kingdom of
Israel, yet still the temple of
Jerusalem may be here spoken of,
and the scene be laid there,
because Israel had forsaken this
altar and temple and set up
others in opposition to them;
and here God, in his jealousy,
appears prepared to take
vengeance. Possibly, the vision
might also be designed to
intimate his future departure
from Judah too. There Ezekiel
9:2, saw the slaughter-men
stand. By the lintel of the
door, the chapiter, knop, or
ornament that was upon the
lintel, is intended, namely, of
the door of the gate of the
temple, or possibly of the gate
that led into the priests’
court. That the posts may shake
— The posts were the strength
and beauty of the gate, and by
these the princes, the
door-posts as it were of the
nation, are supposed to be
represented, as the king is by
the lintel of the door. And cut
them, wound them deep in the
head — That is, the people who
were represented in the vision
as standing in the court of the
temple. He says in the head,
more fully to signify the
destroying of the chief or heads
of this sinful people. All of
them — Spare not one of them;
let the destruction be general.
And I will slay the last of them
— That is, their posterity and
their families — them, and all
that remain of them, till it
come to the last man. Observe,
reader, there is no living for
those of whom God hath said, I
will slay them; no standing
before his sword. He that fleeth
of them shall not flee away —
That is, shall not escape. He
that escapeth of them shall not
be delivered — That is, he that
escapeth in battle, or escapes
one or two, or even several
judgments, shall, nevertheless,
not escape finally; but shall
fall in some other way, or be
made captive. The greatest
precaution, and the highest
station in life, will not avail
a man any thing when God is
resolved to punish. This is
intended for a warning to all
that provoke the Lord to
jealousy: let sinners read it
and tremble. As there is no
fighting it out with God, so
there is no fleeing from him.
His judgments, when they come
with commission, as they will
overpower the strongest, who
think to withstand them, so they
will overtake the swiftest, who
think to outrun them.
Verses 2-4
Amos 9:2-4. Though they dig into
hell, &c. — Here the subject is
enlarged upon to impress it more
deeply on the minds of all that
read or hear it. Though they
hide themselves in the deepest
holes or caverns of the earth,
(see Isaiah 2:10,) or take
refuge in the highest
fortresses, they shall not
escape my vengeance, but shall
be brought forth to destruction
or captivity. And though they
hide themselves in the top of
Carmel — There were great caves
formed by nature in the tops of
some mountains, where men used
to secure themselves in the
times of danger. Such was the
cave in a mountain of the
wilderness of Ziph. I will
search and take them out thence
—
Neither the thickest bushes nor
the darkest caves shall serve to
hide them. Though they be hid in
the bottom of the sea — The
Chaldee reads, in the islands of
the sea; but the expression is
rather to be understood
metaphorically, as signifying
that they should not, by any
means whatsoever, be able to
escape the calamities which God
had determined to bring upon
them. The word rendered serpent
in our translation, is in some
versions rendered a whale.
Without doubt it should be
translated here by the name of
some great sea animal. And
though they go into captivity,
thence will I command the sword,
&c. — The same judgment is
denounced against them in the
passages referred to in the
margin.
Verse 5-6
Amos 9:5-6. And — Or, for, the
Lord toucheth the land, and it
shall melt — The least token of
God’s displeasure is sufficient
to put the whole frame of nature
out of order. See the margin.
And when God’s hand is visibly
stretched out against a people,
they become altogether
dispirited; the stoutest men
lose their courage, their hearts
failing them for fear, and out
of a dreadful expectation of the
miseries which are coming upon
them. See the explanation of the
next clause, Amos 8:8. He that
buildeth his stories in the
heavens — This is an awful
description of God’s power,
discovering itself in the works
of the creation, particularly in
his making several regions of
the air as so many apartments
which lead to the highest
heavens, the seat of his glory.
Archbishop Newcome renders it,
He buildeth his upper chambers
in the heavens; alluding to the
circumstance of the chief and
most ornamented apartments in
the East being upper rooms. And
hath founded his troop in the
earth — Or, as the old English
translation renders the clause,
And hath laid the foundation of
his globe of elements in the
earth; the word rendered troop
being taken to signify the
collection of elements and other
creatures, which furnish the
earth, expressed by the word צבא,
host, Genesis 2:1. Many learned
interpreters, however, render
the word his storehouses,
supposing that there is an
allusion to repositories in the
lower parts of houses, or to
such as were sometimes dug in
the fields. Thus Capellus: The
heaven is, as it were, God’s
place of dwelling, his principal
apartment; the earth is that to
him which the cellars are in a
large house. He that calleth for
the waters, &c. — See on chap.
Amos 5:8. “The power and sure
vengeance of the Deity,” says
Bishop Newcome, “are very
sublimely described in this and
the four preceding verses.”
Verse 7
Amos 9:7. Are ye not as the
children of the Ethiopians, &c.
— The prophet, to take away from
the Israelites their false
confidence, that the Lord was
too much interested in their
preservation to permit their
total ruin, says, that in
consequence of their idolatry
and other sins, they were no
more esteemed by him than the
Ethiopians, a barbarous and
cruel race of people: as if he
had said, You have rendered
yourselves unworthy the name of
my people; you have renounced,
by your idolatry, the privileges
of my covenant; you have given
up me, and I give you up in my
turn. You may think my former
kindness in delivering you out
of the Egyptian bondage, and
giving you the land of Canaan,
obliges me still to continue to
be your protector. But I have
showed the like favour to other
nations, particularly to the
Philistines, who had their
original from Caphtor, and
afterward dispossessed the old
inhabitants of Palestine, and
dwelt in their stead; and to the
Syrians, whom I brought from
Kir; and yet against these very
nations have I denounced my
judgments for their sins.
Verses 8-10
Amos 9:8-10. The eyes of the
Lord are upon the sinful kingdom
— See Amos 9:4. Saving that I
will not utterly destroy the
house of Jacob — God still
promises to preserve a remnant
in the midst of his heaviest
judgments, that he may perform
the promises made to their
fathers. Lo, I will sift the
house of Israel among all
nations — I will mingle, or
scatter, the Israelites among
other nations, just as good and
bad grain are mingled in a
sieve; but will so order it,
that none of the good grain
shall be lost or fall to the
ground. Though the good shall be
involved in the calamities which
are sent to punish the wicked,
yet shall they be preserved from
destruction. All the sinners of
my people shall die by the sword
— Those unbelieving and
obstinately wicked men who have
paid no regard to the warnings
of the prophets, and have given
no credit to their predictions,
shall all perish by the sword,
or by some judgment sent by me.
Which say, The evil shall not
overtake us — Who indulge
themselves in their carnal
security, without any dread or
apprehension of the divine
judgments denounced against
them.
Verse 11
Amos 9:11. In that day — In this
and the following verses, to the
end of the chapter, we have a
most consolatory conclusion of
this prophecy in sundry
evangelical promises, after so
many very severe and sharp
menaces. The phrase, in that
day, signifies here the same as
afterward, or, after this, for
so St. James interprets it when
quoting this very verse, Acts
15:16. And there are other
places of Scripture where then,
or in that day, signifies
afterward. Will I raise up the
tabernacle of David — This
promise seems, at least in the
first place, to be intended of
the return of the Jews from the
land of their captivity, their
resettlement in Judea,
rebuilding Jerusalem, and
attaining to that height of
power and glory which they
enjoyed in the days of the
Maccabees. This restoration was
an event so extraordinary, and
the hope of it so necessary to
be maintained in the minds of
the Jewish people, in order to
their support under the calamity
of their seventy years’
captivity, that God was pleased
to foretel it by the mouth of
all his prophets. And though we
suppose the prophecy before us
to appertain chiefly to the
kingdom of Israel, yet a promise
of a future restoration was no
less proper and necessary, in
order to their encouragement, to
be annexed to God’s threatenings
against them: because it was his
purpose to restore Israel in
general, that is, the whole
twelve tribes, and to make them
one nation, as they were before
their unhappy division. The
edict of Cyrus was general,
giving liberty to all the
posterity of Jacob, wheresoever
dispersed, to return to Judea.
And many of the ten tribes
certainly did return, though the
main body of those who returned
consisted of the two tribes of
Judah and Benjamin. This
prophecy, however, must also be
extended to the days of the
Messiah, and to the calling of
the Gentiles to the knowledge of
the true God: and so St. James
expounds it, Acts 15:16; for
this was, emphatically speaking,
raising up the tabernacle of
David, both in the person of
Christ, who is frequently styled
David, and the seed of David in
the prophets, and also in
respect to what peculiarly
distinguished David and Israel
in God’s sight, namely, their
having the knowledge of the true
God, and worshipping of him
alone.
Verse 12
Amos 9:12. That they may possess
the remnant of Edom — This the
restored Jews did in the time of
Hyrcanus, when they made an
entire conquest of Edom, as
Josephus relates. And of all the
heathen (or nations) which are
called by my name — Or rather,
which have been called by my
name; for so it is rendered in
other versions. The Ishmaelites,
Ammonites, Moabites, and other
neighbouring nations, were in
the beginning worshippers of the
true God, as being descendants
from Abraham, Lot, &c., with
whom the knowledge of the true
God was preserved. And the Jews
subdued a considerable part of
these nations in the times of
the Maccabees. But this is also
a prophecy of setting up the
kingdom of the Messiah, and
bringing in the Gentiles.
Verse 13
Amos 9:13. Behold the days come
— Here we have another promise,
literally to be understood of
the abundant plenty which God
would bestow on the returned
captives, and mystically of the
abundant grace given and
blessings conferred in gospel
days. That the ploughman shall
overtake the reaper — He who
breaks up the ground, and
prepares it for the seed, shall
be ready to tread on the heels
of the reaper; who shall have a
harvest so large, that before he
can gather it all in, it shall
be time to plough the ground
again. And the treader of grapes
him that soweth seed — This is
to be understood in the same
sense as the foregoing clause:
so great shall their vintage be,
that before the treaders of
grapes can have finished their
work, the seedsman shall be
sowing his seed against the next
season. And the mountains shall
drop sweet wine — The vineyards
shall be so fruitful, and shall
produce such abundance of
grapes, that wine shall appear
to be as plentiful as if it ran
down from the mountains. And all
the hills shall melt — Hebrew,
shall flow. The meaning is, that
they should afford such plenty
of rich feeding to the cattle,
that they should in consequence
thereof give a large quantity of
milk. The parallel expression to
this, in the prophecy of Joel,
is, The hills shall flow with
milk. As these predictions were
not fulfilled in their literal
sense between the time of the
return of the Jews from Babylon
and the coming of Christ, it is
evident they are either to be
figuratively understood of
gospel blessings, or, if taken
in their literal sense, they
respect the happy state of
things during the millennium,
which may be supposed to begin
after the future restoration of
the Jews to their own country.
See notes on Joel 3:18. The
prophets, it may be observed,
frequently describe the days of
the Messiah in terms similar to
those which the poets used in
describing the golden age.
Verse 14-15
Amos 9:14-15. I will bring again
the captivity of my people — I
will restore them to their own
country, and settle them in it.
See the following verse, and
notes on Isaiah 11:12; and
Ezekiel 28:25. They shall build
the waste cities, &c. — Compare
the texts referred to in the
margin. This and the following
part of the verse contains a
promise that they should enjoy
the fruit of their labours, in
opposition to that curse
denounced against them, chap.
Amos 5:11; Deuteronomy 28:30,
that they should build houses
and not dwell in them. I will
plant them, &c., they shall no
more be pulled up — This part of
the prophecy will receive its
completion on the future
restoration of the Jews to their
own land. |