Verse 1-2
Ezekiel 32:1-2. In the twelfth
year — Namely, of Jehoiachin’s
captivity, about which time
Amasis began to set up himself
against the king of Egypt,
concerning whom this prophecy
is. Son of man, take up a
lamentation for Pharaoh — “To
the preceding funeral panegyric
over Assyria, the fate of which
was past, Ezekiel prophetically
subjoins a similar panegyric
over Egypt, though its fate was
still future; making plainly
here a happy variation in the
oratorical figure, by which past
events are brought down and
represented as now present
before our eyes; whereas, on the
contrary, by this prophetic
figure future events are
anticipated, and represented as
already past.” — Obs. on Books,
2:188. Thou art like a young
lion of the nations — Thou art
like a beast of prey, devouring
far and near. Thou art as a
whale in the seas — By the word
tannim we may fitly understand a
crocodile, as has been observed
upon Ezekiel 29:3, and the
description that follows agrees
very well to a crocodile, but
cannot be applied to a whale.
And thou camest forth with thy
rivers, &c. — Or rather, Thou
rushedst forth through thy
streams, and didst trouble the
waters, &c.; that is, thou
wentest beyond the bounds of
thine own kingdom, and didst
trouble and tread down, or
subdue, the neighbouring cities
and nations.
Verses 3-6
Ezekiel 32:3-6. I will spread
out my net over thee, &c. — I
will bring thine enemies upon
thee, who shall encompass thee
on every side, and master thee
as a wild beast or monstrous
fish is taken in a net. Then
will I leave thee upon the land
— That is, leave thee to certain
destruction, or take away from
thee all means of recovery. For
Pharaoh being here spoken of as
a water animal, leaving him upon
the land, signified leaving him
to certain death, without the
means of escaping it; for a fish
left upon the land must needs
die, let it struggle as it will,
water being absolutely necessary
to its life. This was literally
fulfilled when, making war upon
the Cyrenians, he was
vanquished, and his army cut in
pieces, and left a prey to the
fowls and beasts in the deserts
of Libya and Cyrene: see note on
Ezekiel 29:4-5. And I will fill
the beasts of the whole earth
with thee — With the flesh of
thy vast armies. Or rather,
understanding the words
figuratively, I will enrich all
nations with thy spoils. And I
will lay thy flesh upon the
mountains, &c. — Thy people
shall be slain, both upon the
mountains and in the valleys,
and their carcasses lie unburied
there. I will also water with
thy blood the land wherein thou
swimmest — The land of Egypt,
wherein thou bearest rule; even
to the mountains — The mountains
shall be wet with it, as well as
the lower grounds: compare
Isaiah 34:3. And the rivers
shall be full of thee — All
places, both high and low, both
land and water. All the
expressions in these verses are
hyperbolical, signifying the
vast slaughter that should be
made of the Egyptians, and the
immense booty that should be
obtained by their enemies.
Verses 7-10
Ezekiel 32:7-10. And when I
shall put thee out — When I
shall cast thee down from thy
power, and extinguish all thy
glory. I will cover the heaven,
and make the stars thereof dark
— It is well known that the
downfall of states and kingdoms,
kings and princes, is often
expressed in the Scriptures by
these or such like metaphors:
see notes on Isaiah 13:10;
Isaiah 24:23; Isaiah 30:26. But
here the expressions may mean, I
will make every thing look sad
and dismal, or will cause a
universal sorrow; for to men
amidst great calamities and
afflictions every thing appears
dark and gloomy, and even the
light itself seems little
different from darkness; and
therefore it is usual to express
a state of great sorrow by the
heavens being covered, and the
stars darkened. All the bright
lights of heaven will I make
dark over thee — I will involve
thy whole land in trouble and
distress, making every thing in
it look dismal. I will vex the
hearts, &c., when I shall bring
thy destruction among the
nations — When thy exiles shall
be dispersed into foreign
countries, (see Ezekiel 29:12,)
and relate the miserable
circumstances of thy
destruction, it shall cause
grief and consternation in all
that hear it. Yea, I will make
many people amazed at thee, and
their kings, &c. — The kings and
princes of Africa, who lay near
to Egypt, seem here to be spoken
of; for the destruction of Egypt
could not but fill them with
fear for themselves, lest the
victor should make them suffer
the same fate.
Verse 13-14
Ezekiel 32:13-14. I will also
destroy the beasts thereof —
Their horses, in which they
trusted so much, Isaiah 31:3,
and other cattle, feeding in
their rich pastures by the river
sides. Neither shall the foot of
man, nor the hoofs of beasts,
&c. — The country shall be so
deserted that the waters of the
river shall not be fouled by man
or beast. But we may understand
the prophet here as speaking
metaphorically, and by the
beasts of Egypt, intending its
armies, which had frequently
troubled the neighbouring
nations, but which, it is here
said, should trouble them no
more; for when Egypt should be
made desolate, and the number
both of men and beasts should be
diminished by their wars and
confusions, then they should
neither have the will nor the
power to give their neighbours
any further molestation; but the
nations around them should enjoy
quietness, like that of a river
which smoothly glides along, and
never has its streams fouled or
disturbed: see Ezekiel 32:2.
Then will I make their waters
deep, &c. — The nations which
used to be harassed and troubled
by the Egyptians, shall then
enjoy great peace and quietness.
Verse 15
Ezekiel 32:15. When I shall make
the land of Egypt desolate, &c.
— When I shall bring the
fore-mentioned dreadful
calamities upon it. Then shall
they know that I am the Lord —
The awful and destructive
visitation shall be sanctified
to those that survive: it shall
yield them important
instruction, and they shall give
glory to my power and justice,
while a sensible conviction of
the vanity of the world, and of
the fading and perishing nature
of all things in it, shall draw
their affections from it, and
from all that it contains, and
induce them to seek an
acquaintance with me as their
portion and happiness.
Verse 16
Ezekiel 32:16. This is the
lamentation wherewith they shall
lament her — This is the
substance of the lamentation,
which may be properly used to
bewail the calamities which
Egypt shall suffer: see note on
Ezekiel 32:2. The daughters of
the nations shall lament her —
That is, the people of the
neighbouring countries shall use
such like words as these when
they hear of Egypt’s calamities:
thus the daughter of Zion and of
Babylon signifies the
inhabitants of those cities.
This verse alludes to the
mourning women, whose office it
was to lament at funerals.
Verse 17-18
Ezekiel 32:17-18. It came to
pass, in the fifteenth day of
the month — Namely, of the month
before mentioned, which was a
few days after the time of the
preceding revelation. The word
of the Lord came unto me —
Giving me further directions how
to improve the fall of Egypt.
Son of man, wail for the
multitude of Egypt — Prepare the
funeral ceremonies at the burial
of Egypt, and compose an elegy
suitable to the sad occasion.
Bishop Lowth observes, that
“this prophetic ode is a
master-piece in that species of
writing which is appropriated to
the exciting terror.” And cast
them down, even her, &c. —
Houbigant renders this clause,
And thrust them down with the
daughters of the nations; thrust
them down to the lower parts of
the earth, to those who are gone
down to the lake. And he
observes, that “the prophet is
commanded to thrust the
Egyptians down to the shades
below; that is, to exhibit, by
an hypotyposis, familiar with
the prophets, the ruin of the
Egyptians, similar to the ruin
of the people who have been
destroyed and gone down to the
regions of the dead.” The reader
will observe that this figure of
speech is a representation of
things painted in such strong
and bright colours as may cause
the imagination of the hearers
to conceive of them rather as
present to their view than
described in words. Such is the
representation which the prophet
here gives of the calamities of
the Egyptians. The expressions,
Unto the nether parts of the
earth, with them that go down
into the pit, denote utter
destruction, and are parallel to
those elsewhere used, of being
brought down to hell, to the
grave, or into silence. The
Egyptians affected to be buried
in their pyramids, and their
kings, princes, and nobles would
be laid by themselves, but
Ezekiel provides them their
graves among common people, to
lie just where they fell.
Verse 19-20
Ezekiel 32:19-20. Whom dost thou
pass in beauty? — What reason
hast thou to prefer thyself
before others? Art thou better
than they, that thou shouldest
not die and be laid in the dust
as well as they? Go down —
Namely, to the regions of the
dead; and be laid with the
uncircumcised — Among profane
and loathed carcasses, such as
the bodies of the uncircumcised
were in the opinion of the
circumcised: see notes on
Ezekiel 28:8-10; Ezekiel 31:18.
The circumcised, in Scripture,
being put for those for whom God
had a peculiar regard, and this
being one of the distinguishing
characteristics of his peculiar
people, therefore the term
uncircumcised seems to be used
for those whom God had rejected,
that is, for the wicked and
profane. They shall fall in the
midst of them that are slain by
the sword — Thy people shall not
die the common death of all men,
but shall be cut off by an
extraordinary judgment from the
hand of God himself: they shall
be slain by the sword. Draw her
and all her multitude — Carry
her and her people away to the
grave, like so many carcasses,
which are buried without any
solemnity. The words seem to be
spoken to the Babylonians, the
executioners of God’s judgments
upon Egypt.
Verse 21
Ezekiel 32:21. The strong among
the mighty shall speak to him —
Namely, to the king of Egypt;
out of the midst of hell — Or,
the pit, as Bishop Newcome
renders the word: see Ezekiel
32:23. The passage is “a
poetical description of the
regions of the dead; where the
ghosts of deceased tyrants, with
their subjects, are represented
as coming to meet the king of
Egypt and his auxiliaries, upon
their arrival at the same place.
Hell signifies here the state of
the dead.” — Lowth. See note on
Isaiah 14:9. They are gone down
— The warriors, famous in their
time for their exploits, have
undergone the same fate with
other men of blood, and are gone
down to the grave by violent
deaths.
Verse 22-23
Ezekiel 32:22-23. Asshur is
there and all her company — The
Assyrians, both king and people,
whose destruction is represented
in the foregoing chapter: though
famous, warlike, and victorious,
that mighty monarch fell. His
graves are about him — The
graves of his soldiers slain in
the war. This expression, and
that in the next verse, her
company is round about her
grave, seem to signify no more
than a universal destruction of
high and low, and that death had
made them all equal. The
masculine and feminine genders
are promiscuously used in the
following verses. The masculine
referring to the prince, whose
subjects the deceased were; the
feminine to the nation or
country to which they belonged.
Whose graves are set in the
sides of the pit — Here is
supposed a spacious vault, in
the midst whereof the king of
Asshur lies, and round the
vault, in receptacles hewn about
its sides, his famous captains
and commanders. And her company
is round about her grave — Like
lesser graves placed round the
monument of some person of great
quality. All of them slain,
which caused terror, &c. —
Who were a terror while they
were alive to their neighbours.
Verse 24-25
Ezekiel 32:24-25. There is Elam
and all her multitude — Which
was conquered by Nebuchadnezzar:
see note on Jeremiah 49:36. The
nations mentioned in this and
the following verse were
probably confederates with the
Assyrians, and fell when they
did. Which caused terror — yet
have they borne their shame —
They have been shamefully
subdued, and have lost their
lives and glory together, as
Asshur did before them. They
have set her a bed in the midst
of the slain, &c. — Elam and her
people have gone down to the
state of the dead, among those
who have fallen by the sword.
The word bed is used for the
grave, Isaiah 57:2, and may, in
both places, allude to the
costly monuments, or sepulchres,
which used to be erected for
persons of great quality. Her
graves are round about him — The
king and people are involved in
the same common destruction.
Verses 26-28
Ezekiel 32:26-28. There is
Meshech, Tubal, &c. — These are
some other of the Assyrian
allies; some think the
Cappadocians, and other nations
neighbouring to them, are here
meant. The Scythians also, who
anciently governed Asia, may be
comprehended, and their
expulsion from Media by Cyaxares
may here be referred to: see
Obs. on Books, 1:192. And they
shall not lie with the mighty,
&c. — They shall not lie among
those heathen heroes, men of
courage and fortitude, who were
laid in distinct graves, with
pomp and magnificence, but shall
all be tumbled together into one
common pit, as their actions
have not made them worthy of any
distinction. Which are gone down
to hell — Or, the state of the
dead, as the word which we
translate hell ought often to be
rendered. With their weapons of
war — Brave men, who had gained
signal victories, used, by way
of honour, to have their arms
buried with them, or hung upon
their sepulchres. Thus was the
grave of Misenus honoured by
Æneas.
“ — — — Ingenti mole sepulchrum
Imponit, suaque arma viro.” ÆN.
6:232.
“It was usual,” says Kirchman,
De Funer. Roman., 50. 3. c. 18,
“in former times, in some
places, to put swords, shields,
and other armour in the graves
of military men, as they did in
the grave of Theseus, and on the
bier of Alexander the Great.”
But the meaning of the prophet
here is, that those, of whom he
speaks, should be without these
usual martial solemnities, with
which people formerly often
honoured their dead. Instead of
which he says their iniquities
shall be upon their bones —
Their death shall carry in it
plain tokens of their sins, and
of God’s vengeance pursuing them
on account of them. Yea, thou
shalt be broken in the midst of
the uncircumcised — Thou, O king
of Egypt, shalt have no honorary
distinctions paid thee at thy
death, or be laid in a
magnificent tomb, as those great
conquerors have been, but shalt
lie in a common pit, or grave,
promiscuously with those who are
overcome and slain in battle.
Verses 29-32
Ezekiel 32:29-32. There is Edom,
her kings, &c. — Of whose
destruction Ezekiel prophesied,
Ezekiel 25:12; laid by them that
were slain by the sword — Laid
among the conquered. With them
that go down to the pit — Among
those of no renown, who are
thrown into one common grave
without any honour or
distinction paid to them. There
be the princes of the north — By
these, it seems, are meant the
Tyrians, who lay north of Judea,
and were overcome in many
battles by the Chaldeans.
Pharaoh shall see them, and
shall be comforted, &c. — Here,
by a poetical figure, sense is
given to Pharaoh among the dead,
and he feels a consolation in
that state to see so many other
kings and nations brought into
the same condition as himself
and his people were in. Even
Pharaoh and all his army slain
by the sword — Herodotus
affirms, that Apries, or
Pharaoh-hophra, was strangled:
οι δε μιν απεπνιξαν, 50. 2. p.
154. But the enemies of Apries
may have used the sword against
him before he expired. For I
have caused my terror in the
land of the living — In the
Hebrew text it is, חתיתו, his
terror, that is, I have
permitted the king of Egypt to
be a vexation and terror to many
while he was alive in the world.
And he shall be laid in the
midst of the uncircumcised —
That is, with the basest sort,
or those of no distinction. Or,
if we read with the Masorites,
whom our translators follow, my
terror, the meaning of the verse
may be, As these kings and
nations have been a terror to
the world while they were in it,
Ezekiel 32:24, &c, so will I be
now a terror to them, and
especially to Pharaoh and his
people, in making them a
remarkable example of my
vengeance. Observe, reader, the
calamitous state of human life!
See what a dying world this is!
The strong die, the mighty die;
Asshur, Elam, Meshech, Tubal,
Edom, the princes of the north,
the Zidonians, Pharaoh, and all
his multitude! But here is
likewise an allusion to the
final and everlasting death of
impenitent sinners. Those that
are uncircumcised in heart are
slain by the sword of divine
justice. Their iniquity is upon
them, and they bear their shame
for ever! |