Verse 2-3
Ezekiel 23:2-3. There were two
women, daughters of one mother —
Judah and Israel, two kingdoms.
“Countries are commonly
represented as mothers of their
people, and the inhabitants as
their children: so the daughters
of Syria signify the inhabitants
of that country, Ezekiel 16:57.
Thus Samaria and Jerusalem are
described in this chapter as
sisters, the offspring of the
same land, or country.” And they
committed whoredoms in Egypt —
The Israelites first learned
idolatry in Egypt, for Abraham,
Isaac, and Jacob were wholly
free from it. They committed
whoredoms in their youth — The
time when the Israelites were in
Egypt, or were lately departed
out of it, is called their youth
in the prophets, because that
was the time when God first
owned them for his people. There
were their breasts pressed —
“There they served idols, and
there they corrupted their
ways,” as the Chaldee paraphrase
expresses the sense. The reader
must observe, “The style of this
chapter, like that of chap. 16.,
is adapted to persons among
whom, at that time, no
refinement subsisted. Large
allowance must be made for
language addressed to an ancient
eastern people, in the worst
period of their history; all
whose ideas were sensual; and
whose grand inducement to
idolatry seems to have been the
brutal impurities which it
encouraged.” — Bishop Newcome.
The Scripture commonly calls
idolatrous churches and nations
by the name of harlots: and in
like manner honours those, who
preserve their allegiance to God
pure and undefiled, with the
title of chaste wives, or
virgins.
Verse 4
Ezekiel 23:4. The names of them
were Aholah and Aholibah — “The
word Aholah signifies, Her tent,
or tabernacle: Aholibah denotes,
My tent, or tabernacle, is in
her. These two different
appellations imply that Samaria
had indeed a tabernacle, or
place for public worship, but of
her own devising; namely, the
cities of Dan and Bethel, where
the golden calves were set up;
whereas God’s tabernacle first,
and afterward his temple, was
placed in Jerusalem. He placed
his name there, or chose it for
the place of his peculiar
residence,” 1 Kings 8:29. Aholah,
or Samaria, is here called the
elder sister, as having the
greatest dominion, power,
wealth, and number of people
belonging to her, ten tribes out
of twelve being under her
jurisdiction. And they were mine
— By a solemn marriage covenant.
And they bare sons and daughters
— Were fruitful, and brought
forth children to me: they
increased in number of people,
and among these there were some
that were my spiritual children
by adoption and grace, by faith,
love, and obedience.
Verse 5-6
Ezekiel 23:5-6. And Aholah
played the harlot when she was
mine — When she was under my
government and protection.
“After she had lived in covenant
with me, and attended upon my
service and worship all the time
of the judges, and of David and
Solomon, she fell off from my
service, and was the first that
established idolatry by a law,
and consented to Jeroboam’s
wicked device of setting up the
golden calves.” In the Scripture
language, the Jewish people are
said to play the harlot with
those whose religious ceremonies
they imitated. And she doted on
her lovers — That is, her
foreign allies, whose idolatries
she was fond of, and hoped by
that means to procure their
friendship and assistance: see
note on Ezekiel 16:33; Ezekiel
16:37. On the Assyrians her
neighbours — The king of Assyria
was a very potent prince, and
thereupon his alliance was
courted both by the kings of
Israel and Judah: see the
margin. Which were clothed with
blue, captains and rulers — “As
women are apt to fall in love
with comely young men, well
mounted and richly clothed; so
the Israelites were enamoured
with the state and bravery of
the Assyrians, and thought
themselves secure if they could
but procure their alliance and
friendship, and in order to it
embraced their idolatries.
Horsemen riding upon horses —
Horses were scarce in Judea,
which made the Jews apply
themselves to the neighbouring
counties for troops of horse, in
the time of any hostile
invasion.” — Lowth.
Verses 7-10
Ezekiel 23:7-10. Thus she
committed whoredoms with them —
She defiled herself with idols,
as the sense is more plainly
expressed at the end of the
verse. Neither left she her
whoredoms brought from Egypt —
She added new idolatries to
those she had formerly
committed: see Ezekiel 23:3.
Wherefore I delivered her into
the hand of her lovers — God
made these very Assyrians the
executioners of his judgments
upon the ten tribes, many of
them being carried away captive
by Pul, king of Assyria,
afterward by Tiglath-pileser,
and at length the whole country
was subdued and depopulated by
Shalmaneser: see the margin. The
kings of Babylon were likewise
styled kings of Assyria, 2 Kings
23:29; 2 Chronicles 33:11.
Lovers mean the same with
allies; those whose friendship
and assistance the Jews courted,
by complying with them in their
idolatries, Ezekiel 16:37. These
discovered her nakedness: they
took her sons and her daughters
— These stripped her of every
thing, and carried her and her
children away captive: see the
margin, and Ezekiel 23:29. And
slew her with the sword — Those
that were not led captive were
slain in the field of battle, or
in the siege of Samaria, 2 Kings
17:5. And she became famous
among women — The Hebrew reads,
She became a nation among women:
as she had been formerly
renowned among the heathen for
her beauty, (Ezekiel 16:14,) so
now she was everywhere talked of
as a remarkable instance of
God’s vengeance, and set forth
for an example to other cities
and nations, to deter them from
the like abominations.
Verse 11-12
Ezekiel 23:11-12. When her
sister Aholibah saw this, she
was more corrupt — Jerusalem was
so far from taking warning by
the judgments inflicted on
Samaria, that she advanced to
greater degrees of idolatry. She
doted upon the Assyrians her
neighbours — Ahaz, king of
Judah, entered into a
confederacy with the king of
Assyria, hoping for relief from
his power and the bravery of his
army, and worshipped the idols
which the Assyrians worshipped,
in order to ingratiate himself
with them. See the margin.
Verses 13-16
Ezekiel 23:13-16. Then — When
she neither took warning nor
feared; I saw that she was
defiled — That her heart was
already set on her idols; that
they both — Samaria and
Jerusalem; took one way — That
Judah fell into the same
idolatrous practices as Israel.
And that she increased her
whoredoms — Added to the number
of her idolatries; for when she
saw men portrayed, &c. — These
were probably the pictures of
those deified heroes, whom the
Chaldeans worshipped as gods;
such were Bel, Nebo, and
Merodach, mentioned Isaiah 46:1;
Jeremiah 50:2. Calmet, however,
understands the words in a
different sense, paraphrasing
them thus: “Before she had seen
the Assyrians, upon the bare
relation concerning them, or
upon the painting only which was
made of them, her passion was
inflamed toward them.” Girded
with girdles upon their loins —
A girdle was a mark of dignity,
and worn as such by princes and
men in authority. In died attire
upon their heads — Houbigant
reads, Having their heads bound
with a died tiara, or turban.
The Chaldeans, and afterward the
Persians, wore a sort of turban
upon their heads, died of
different colours, and with
different degrees of ornaments,
according to their different
qualities. As soon as she saw
them, she doted upon them —
These images pleased her so
much, that she sent to Babylon
to learn the manner how their
idols were to be worshipped: see
Ezekiel 23:40-41; Ezekiel 16:17.
This, Lowth thinks, relates to
those times when a
correspondence was maintained
between the cities of Babylon
and Jerusalem, after that
Nebuchadnezzar had conquered
Judea, and made it a tributary
kingdom, in the beginning of the
fourth year of Jehoiakim.
Verses 17-20
Ezekiel 23:17-20. And the
Babylonians came to her, &c. —
The metaphor of representing
idolatry by the inordinate lust
of adultery is still carried on.
And her mind was alienated from
them — She quickly grew weary of
these also, as lewd women are of
their former gallants, and look
out for new ones. She broke her
league and covenant with them,
as St. Jerome very well
expresses the sense; meaning
that covenant which Jehoiakim
made with Nebuchadnezzar to be
his tributary, and which was
afterward renewed by Zedekiah.
So she discovered, or, after she
discovered, her whoredoms — The
sense being still continued with
the foregoing verse. The meaning
is, She was open and notorious
in her lewd practices, and in
the highest degree shameless.
Then my mind was alienated from
her — As she, by her idolatries,
had broken all the bonds of duty
and allegiance whereby she was
engaged to me, a sin often
compared to a wife’s disloyalty
toward her husband, so I
withdrew my love and affection
from her, and resolved to give
her a bill of divorce, as the
Prophet Jeremiah expresses it,
and not own her any more as
mine, as I had cast off her
sister Samaria. Yet she
multiplied, &c. — Though she was
fond of new idolatries, she did
not forget her old ones, even
those which she had learned in
Egypt. For she doted upon their
paramours — Upon the idols of
Egypt, and the impure rites
which accompanied their
idolatrous worship. This may
relate to the time when Zedekiah
entered into a new confederacy
with Egypt, which made the
people fond of admitting the
Egyptian idolatries. Whose
flesh, &c. — These expressions
seem to be made use of, to
signify the excess of the
Egyptian idolatry. They may
likewise metaphorically express
the great power and riches of
the Egyptians, which made the
Jewish people fond of courting
their friendship and alliance.
Verses 22-24
Ezekiel 23:22-24. I will raise
up thy lovers against thee, &c.
— I will execute my judgments
upon thee, by those very
Babylonians whose alliance and
idolatries thou hast been so
fond of, but since hast broken
the league thou madest with
them, contracting a new one with
Egypt, and thereby hast provoked
them to revenge thy
perfidiousness. Pekod, and Koa,
and Shoa, and all the Assyrians
with them — The inhabitants of
the several provinces of the
Babylonish monarchy; for most of
the ancients understand these
words as names of places. Pekod
is mentioned as a province of
Babylon, Jeremiah 50:21. St.
Jerome, however, upon the place,
understands these three words,
Pekod, Shoa, and Koa, in an
appellative sense, to denote so
many titles, or degrees of
honour; as much as to say,
governors, princes, and great
men. In which sense the two
former words, Pekod (or Pakud)
and Shoa, are confessedly taken
in Scripture. All of them
desirable young men, &c. — As
their riches and bravery made
them appear amiable in your eyes
when you first courted their
alliance, so they shall appear
in the same splendid equipage
when they come to invade your
country and to besiege your
city; but then their gallant
appearance shall strike a terror
and a consternation into you.
And they shall come against thee
with chariots, &c. — Chariots
are mentioned, both by sacred
and profane writers, as of
principal use in the ancient way
of fighting. And I will set
judgment before them, &c. — I
will deliver thee into their
power, as the ministers of my
justice, who shall make thy
punishments bear a
correspondence with thy guilt.
Verses 25-27
Ezekiel 23:25-27. I will set my
jealousy against thee, &c. — I
will be against thee, as a
jealous man is against his wife;
and they shall deal furiously —
And they, as the executioners of
my wrath, shall act toward thee
as persons provoked to great
fury. And they shall take away
thy nose, &c. — A punishment of
adultery which rage sometimes
dictated. As husbands in that
case render those women deformed
whose beauty hath been too
pleasing to strangers, so shall
the Chaldeans deface all the
glories and ornaments of
Jerusalem, and after they have
slain and carried captive its
inhabitants, shall set the city
on fire, and reduce it to a heap
of ashes. The mutilations
mentioned in this verse were
common among the Chaldeans. St.
Jerome assures us, that they
frequently cut off the nose and
the ears of adulterers. And this
was practised toward
adulteresses in Egypt. They
shall also strip thee, &c. — As
lewd, disgraced harlots and
captives were used chap. Ezekiel
16:39. And take away thy fair
jewels — All thy rich, beautiful
ornaments, which shall be a prey
to the enemy. Thus will I make
thy lewdness to cease — “These
severe judgments shall
effectually deter thee from
idolatry, and make thee abhor
the least approaches toward it.
Accordingly we find that after
the captivity the Jews never
returned to their former
idolatrous practices.” — Lowth.
And thy whoredom brought from
the land of Egypt — Thy
idolatries which thou broughtest
with thee from Egypt, where thou
didst first learn idolatry, and
ever hast had an inclination to
it.
Verses 28-30
Ezekiel 23:28-30. Behold, I will
deliver thee, &c. — I will give
thee up into the power of the
Chaldeans, whom thou wast
formerly fond of, Ezekiel 23:22;
but since thou hast broken thy
league and friendship with them,
thy love is turned into hatred:
see Ezekiel 23:17. They shall
deal with thee hatefully, &c. —
As thou hast changed thy
friendship for them into enmity,
so shall they deal with thee;
their hatred against thee shall
be greater than their former
love toward thee. This shall
prompt them to take a full
revenge upon thy perfidiousness,
to consume all the fruits of thy
labours, and to take away all
the wealth thou hast gathered by
thine industry. Thy whoredoms
shall be discovered — All thy
foul and shameful deeds shall be
brought to light. I will do
these things, because thou hast
gone a whoring, &c. — I will
cause all these things to be
done unto thee by the
Babylonians, who are the
executioners of my anger.
Verses 31-35
Ezekiel 23:31-35. Therefore will
I give her cup, &c. — I will
make thee drink the same bitter
draught, or experience the same
calamity that has fallen upon
her. God’s judgments are often
compared to a cup of
intoxicating liquors, because
they astonish men, and bereave
them of common judgment and
discretion, and likewise expose
them to the scorn and contempt
of their enemies. Thou shalt
even drink it and suck it out —
There shall be no punishment
which thou shalt not partake of.
Thou shalt drink of the cup of
calamity even to the dregs; that
which is the very worst and most
bitter: see notes on Psalms
75:8. and Isaiah 51:17. Thou
shalt break the sherds thereof —
People who are quite
intoxicated, often in their
drunken madness break the cups
out of which they had drunk;
therefore by this expression
here is meant, that the Jewish
people should be, as it were,
driven to madness by the
grievous judgments that should
fall upon them. And pluck off
thine own breasts — “Thou shalt
tear away thy breasts with the
sharp pieces of the broken cup,
through grief and madness.” —
Bishop Newcome. Or, Thou shalt
be in a fury with thyself for
having by thine own sins brought
such grievous calamities upon
thyself. Her breasts are
mentioned as the parts which had
a principal share in her guilt,
according to the allegorical
description here given of her
idolatries. Because thou hast
forgotten me — Because thou hast
not only forsaken my worship,
but hast showed the utmost
contempt of and aversion from
me. Therefore bear thou also thy
lewdness — Therefore thou shalt
suffer the punishment of thy
wickedness and idolatry.
Verses 36-39
Ezekiel 23:36-39. Wilt thou
judge Aholah and Aholibah — That
is, Samaria and Jerusalem? The
meaning is, Wilt thou not judge,
or, Wilt thou not condemn them?
That they have committed
adultery, and blood is, &c. —
That they have been guilty of
the heinous sins of murder and
adultery; and have also caused
their sons, &c. — Have caused
their children, who of right
belonged to me, and who ought to
have been bred up to be my
worshippers, to be burned in the
fire, by way of sacrifice in
honour to false gods. They have
defiled my sanctuary in the same
day — They have also come
directly from these idolatrous
and abominable rites and
sacrifices into my temple, as
though they could worship me
acceptably when they were thus
horribly polluted. And have
profaned my sabbaths — Have
spent the sabbaths, which I
appointed to be observed to my
honour alone, in the service and
to the honour of idols. Or, they
profaned them by coming into
God’s courts to observe them,
immediately after they had
defiled themselves by their
idolatrous and horrid
ceremonies. For when they had
slain their children to their
idols — To my great dishonour,
and the reproach of the human
nature; then they came into my
sanctuary — With their hands
imbrued, and their clothes
stained with their children’s
blood, to present themselves
before me; expecting acceptance
with me notwithstanding their
villanies, as if I either did
not know their wickedness, or
did not hate it. And lo, thus
have they done in the midst of
my house — In the inward part of
my temple. Some expound the
words, of their setting up idols
in the very temple, and
worshipping them there.
Verses 40-42
Ezekiel 23:40-42. And
furthermore, ye have sent for
men to come from far, &c. — Here
the same thing which was spoken
of in the former part of the
chapter, is mentioned again in
other words, namely, their
courting the alliances of
foreign nations, by complying
with their idolatries: and this
is set forth under the
representation of the several
arts which harlots used to
recommend themselves to new
lovers: compare Isaiah 57:7;
Isaiah 57:9. For whom thou didst
wash thyself — A custom
generally practised by women in
those countries, before they
entertained their lovers.
Paintedst thy eyes — It seems to
have been their fashion in those
days to draw strokes about their
eyes, or to colour their
eye-brows with black lead. And
sattest upon a stately bed —
Here the custom of sitting or
lying upon beds, at the feasts
made in honour of idols, or
false gods, seems to be
particularly spoken of, as may
be inferred from the following
words: whereupon thou hast set
mine incense and mine oil — That
is, whereupon thou hast offered
up to idols that incense and oil
which ought to have been offered
up to me. It was usual, after a
sacrifice to idols, for a table
well spread to be placed before
a couch, and a feast to be
partaken of. The lectisternia of
the Romans were borrowed from
this eastern idolatrous rite,
Livy, 5. 13. Houbigant thinks,
that by the table here spoken of
is meant the altar which Ahaz
erected, after the similitude of
that which he had seen at
Damascus. And a voice of a
multitude, &c. — The noise of
festivity, and of people
assembled together in jollity,
was heard all around. It seems
their loose mirth, at their
meetings in honour of some of
their idols, is here
particularly meant. And with the
men of the common sort were
brought Sabeans, &c. — The
prophet proceeds in comparing
the idolatries of the Jews to
the practices of lewd women, who
prostitute themselves to all
comers, even those of the
meanest condition. Such were the
Sabeans that came from the
wilderness, that is, from
Arabia, called the desert, where
dwelt the posterity of Seba,
mentioned Genesis 10:7. Which
put bracelets upon their hands,
&c. — That is, upon the hands
and heads of these two lewd
women, Aholah and Aholibah.
Bracelets and crowns were
ornaments proper for brides, and
were likewise presented by
lovers to their mistresses: and
therefore this may signify the
compliance of the Jewish people
with the grossest idolatries. Or
the meaning may be, that Aholah
and Aholibah, the inhabitants of
Samaria and Jerusalem, put
bracelets upon the hands, and
beautiful crowns upon the heads,
of such worthless idolaters as
the Sabeans of the wilderness
were; that is, courted their
friendship and alliance with
gifts.
Verse 43-44
Ezekiel 23:43-44. Then I said
unto her that was grown old in
adulteries — Aholibah, who had
been long idolatrous. The words
import that experience might,
before this time, have
sufficiently convinced her of
the folly of her ways. Will they
now commit whoredoms with her? —
God is here represented as
waiting to see whether that
mutability, which is natural to
the human race, would not
occasion a difference between
the Jewish people and their
idolatrous allies, and make them
grow weary of one another. Yet
they went in unto her, &c. —
Both Samaria and Jerusalem
continued to defile themselves
with the idolatries of all the
heathen round about them:
compare Ezekiel 23:7; Ezekiel
23:17.
Verses 45-49
Ezekiel 23:45-49. And the
righteous men, they shall judge
them — All just judges, yea, all
men that have any sense of
common honesty, will condemn
their conduct, and pronounce
them deserving of the punishment
of adulteresses and murderers.
Or, as others interpret the
words, “As upright magistrates
used to condemn and execute
judgment upon adulterers and
murderers, so did the prophets,
in the name of God, denounce
sentence against Jerusalem and
Samaria; and even the heathen
princes, who executed the
sentence, were more righteous
than the apostate sufferers.” —
Scott. I will bring a company
upon them, &c. — This is spoken
of the Babylonians, who were to
plunder and carry away a great
part of the inhabitants of
Jerusalem. And the company shall
stone them with stones, and
despatch them with swords —
Stoning was the punishment of
adulterers, and putting to death
with the sword that of
murderers. The Babylonian army
might be properly said to be the
executioners of both these
punishments upon the inhabitants
of Jerusalem, as, without doubt,
they killed many of them during
the siege by the stones they
cast from their engines, and
slew many by the sword when they
took the city by assault. Thus
will I cause lewdness to cease,
&c. — Thus will I put an end to
idolatry in the Jewish nation.
That all women may be taught not
to do after your lewdness — That
is, that all nations may dread
defiling themselves with the
guilt of your idolatries. For as
the kingdoms of Israel and Judah
are here described as two women,
therefore, by all women here
must be meant all nations. And
ye shall bear the sins of your
idols — Ye shall bear the
punishment due to your sins of
idolatry. To bear sin, or
iniquity, is an expression often
used in the Scriptures to
signify undergoing the
punishment due to it. |