Verse 1-2
Hosea 2:1-2. Say to your
brethren — Many interpreters
consider this verse as being
connected with the preceding
chapter, thus: When that general
restoration of the Jewish nation
shall take place, you may change
your language in speaking to
those of your brethren and
sisters whom I had before
disowned, and you may call them
Ammi, my people, and Ruhamah,
she that hath obtained mercy.
The prophet alludes to the 6th
and 9th verses of the preceding
chapter. Other expositors,
however, with more apparent
reason, consider this verse as
connected with the following
words, and translate it thus:
“Ye that are my people, and have
obtained mercy, speak to your
brethren and sisters, and plead
with your mother,” &c. “Although
the Israelites, in the days of
Hosea, were in general corrupt,
and addicted to idolatry; yet
there were among them, in the
worst times, some who had not
bowed the knee to Baal. These
were always Ammi and Ruhamah;
God’s own people, and a darling
daughter. God commissions these
faithful few to admonish the
inhabitants of the land in
general, of the dreadful
judgments that would be brought
upon them by the gross idolatry
of the Jewish Church and
nation;” and to reprove, and use
their best endeavours to reform
that general corruption which
the nation had contracted by its
idolatry; whereby the people had
broken the covenant God had made
with them, and had caused a
separation, or divorce, between
him and them. Let her therefore
put away her whoredoms, &c. —
Let her leave off her
idolatries. These are often
expressed in the Scriptures by
the fondness and caresses which
pass between unchaste lovers.
Verse 3
Hosea 2:3. Lest I strip her
naked, &c. — The punishment
frequently inflicted upon
harlots was, to strip them naked
and expose them to the world.
The punishment of adulteresses
among the Germans is thus
described by Tacitus, “Accisis
crinibus nudatam coram
propinguis expellit domo maritus.”
Or the allusion may be to the
ignominy which brutal conquerors
sometimes inflicted on the
captives they took in war, by
stripping them of their clothing
and causing them to travel in
that condition, exposed to the
inclemency of the weather, and,
which was yet worse, to the
intolerable heat of the sun: see
note on Isaiah 3:17. Thus God
threatens to deal with the
Israelites: to deliver them into
the hands of their enemies, and
carry them away naked into
captivity, (see Hosea 2:9,) in
as forlorn and desolate a
condition as they were in during
their bondage in Egypt. And make
her as a wilderness — A state of
captivity is fitly compared to
being placed in a wilderness, in
want of common necessaries:
compare Ezekiel 19:13. “It may
seem harsh,” says Bishop
Horsley, “to say of a woman that
she shall be laid waste like a
wilderness, and reduced to the
condition of a parched land. But
it is to be observed that the
allegorical style makes an
intercommunity of attributes
between the type and the thing
typified. So that when a woman
is the image of a country or of
a church, that may be said of a
woman, which, in unfigured
language, might be said of the
country, or the church, which
she represents. The country
might literally be made a waste
wilderness, by unfruitful
seasons, by the devastations of
war, or of noxious vermin: a
church is made a wilderness and
a parched land, when the living
waters of the Spirit are
withheld.”
Verse 4-5
Hosea 2:4-5. And I will not have
mercy on her children, &c. — As
an injured husband has no regard
for the children which his wife
has had by another man; so
neither will I have pity on thy
children which are trained up to
practise thy idolatries. For
they be the children of
whoredoms — Spurious children,
not knowing their father: so
those might fitly be called who
worshipped a plurality of gods;
for by worshipping a
multiplicity of them, they
declared plainly, that they did
not know to whom their worship
was due, or who was their
Creator or original Father. For
their mother hath played the
harlot — This proves the truth
of the above charge, and
justifies the severity of the
punishment. She that conceived
them hath done shamefully — Hath
acted like an impudent and
shameless harlot, sinning openly
and avowedly. She said, I will
go after my lovers — By lovers
here, are meant, first, The
idols, with whom the Israelites
committed spiritual adultery:
see Jeremiah 3:1; and then the
idolatrous nations, whose
alliance the Israelites courted,
and, in order thereto, practised
their idolatries: the word may
be understood here in both
senses; for they ascribed all
the plenty they enjoyed chiefly
to the favour of the idol-gods
which they worshipped, Jeremiah
44:17; and then they placed
their trust and confidence in
the confederacies they had made
with their neighbouring
idolaters; and thought the peace
and plenty they possessed were
very much owing to their
alliance and protection.
Verse 6-7
Hosea 2:6-7. Therefore I will
hedge up thy way with thorns,
&c. — That is, with difficulties
and distresses; and make a wall
— Hebrew, גדרה, a stone fence. I
will effectually block up her
way, and surround her with great
calamities. That she shall not
find her paths — That she shall
not know which way to turn to
extricate herself from them. And
she shall follow after her
lovers — She shall seek for help
of her idols, and her idolatrous
allies, but shall receive none.
Or, as Archbishop Newcome
paraphrases the words, “For some
time she shall remain addicted
to her Egyptian and Syrian
idols, and to all her former
idolatrous and immoral
practices: but without carrying
her evil wishes into execution.”
She shall seek them, but not
find them — A proverbial
expression denoting lost labour.
She shall seek for favour and
succour at her lovers’ hands,
but all in vain, they shall all
forsake her, and change their
ancient love into mortal hatred.
“It is the usual practice of the
devil and his instruments,” says
an old writer, “to bring men
into the briers and thorns, and
there to leave them to shift as
they can. Thus the Pharisees
dealt by Judas; What is that to
us, say they, see thou to that:
they left him when they had led
him to his ruin.” God deals very
differently with his people. As
in very faithfulness he afflicts
them, that he may be true to
their best interests: so when
they follow hard after him, and
seek him as David did, they are
sure to find him; if they search
for him with all their heart,
Jeremiah 29:13. When they meet
with disappointments it is in
mercy, and they are chastened of
the Lord, that they may not be
condemned with the world. Then
shall she say, I will return to
my first husband, &c. — Her
afflictions will bring her to a
sense of her duty, and of the
happiness she enjoyed as long as
she cleaved steadfastly unto
Jehovah the true God.
Verse 8-9
Hosea 2:8-9. For she did not
know — Or, as Bishop Horsley
renders it, But she would not
know, that I gave her corn, &c.
— She did not, or would not
consider that all the
necessaries she enjoyed, as well
as her riches and ornaments,
were my gifts, which yet she
ungratefully employed in the
service of her idols, and in
making images of false gods to
worship instead of me. Therefore
— Or, for the punishment of her
ingratitude; will I take away my
corn in the time thereof — I
will change my manner of acting
toward her, and deprive her of
the good things she hopes
infallibly to enjoy. At the time
when she expects to reap the
fruits of the earth, her enemies
shall invade her and destroy
them, or unfavourable seasons
shall entirely blast them, or
other causes prevent her
enjoying them; and will recover
my wool and my flax — Will take
back again the proper materials
I gave for clothing her. This
verse, according to Bishop
Horsley, speaks “of calamities
already begun, and the next
describes the progress and
increase of them. It appears
from all the prophets, and
particularly from Amos and Joel,
that the beginning of judgment
upon this refractory, rebellious
people, was in unfruitful
seasons, and noxious vermin,
producing a failure of the
crops, dearth, murrain of the
cattle, famine, and pestilential
diseases.”
Verse 10-11
Hosea 2:10-11. And now will I
discover her lewdness, &c. — The
folly and wickedness of her
idolatries shall appear by the
punishments which I will inflict
upon her, which shall be so
remarkable that they shall be
taken notice of by the
idolatrous nations round about
her, which have pretended a
friendship for her, and promised
her great assistance and
prosperity if she would worship
the same gods that they
worshipped; but neither they nor
any of their false gods shall
save her from the calamities I
will bring upon her. And I will
cause all her mirth to cease —
The mirth and jollity of Israel
were greatly damped when
Tiglath-pileser took Ijon and
other cities, and subdued Gilead
and Galilee, and all the land of
Naphtali, and carried the people
away captive to Assyria, which
he did but a few years after
this prophecy was uttered. And
surely all their joy must have
ceased about ten or twelve years
after, when Samaria was taken,
and Hosea and all Israel made
captives. Her feast-days, her
new-moons, &c. — Though apostate
Israel was fallen to idolatry,
and had renounced the true
worship of God, yet by this
verse it appears they retained
many of the rites and ceremonies
that were used in Judah, or else
they set up others like them.
But God here threatens, that in
their captivity they should have
no opportunity to celebrate
them.
Verse 12-13
Hosea 2:12-13. And I will
destroy her vines — Those
blessings, or fruits of the
earth, which she has attributed
to her false gods, I will give
to the beasts of the field to
eat, making the whole land only
a wilderness for beasts. Among
other objects of their false
worship, the Israelites
worshipped the celestial
luminaries, and, it is likely,
attributed the fruits of the
earth to them, as
self-sufficient, or producing
them by their own power, and not
as mere instruments in the hands
of Jehovah. And I will visit
upon her the days of Baalim — I
will punish her for all the
idolatries she has committed
from the days of Jeroboam, who
first set up the worship of
false gods: see chap. Hosea
13:1. The chief god of every
country was called by the name
of Baal, which means lord: so
Baal-peor was the god of the
Moabites, Baal-zebub was the god
of Ekron, (2 Kings 1:2,)
Baal-berith the god of the
Phenicians, 8:33. These several
deities are in the plural number
called Baalim, lords; for they
had lords many, 1 Corinthians
8:5. And she decked herself with
her ear-rings — She put on the
richest ornaments on their
idolatrous festivals.
Verse 14-15
Hosea 2:14-15. Therefore,
behold, I will allure her — As
there is a plain alteration of
the style here from threatenings
to promises, so the first word
of this verse should be
translated nevertheless, or
notwithstanding. And bring her
into the wilderness — Or, after
I have brought her into the
wilderness. The state of the
Jews in captivity is elsewhere
expressed by a wilderness state:
see note on Ezekiel 20:35. It
probably means here the
dispersion of the ten tribes,
after their first captivity by
Shalmaneser, 2 Kings 17:6. And
speak comfortably to her — In
these words, and the preceding,
I will allure her, there is an
allusion to the practice of fond
husbands, who, forgetting past
offences, use all the arts of
endearment to persuade their
wives, who have parted from
them, to return to them again.
So God will use the most
powerful persuasions to bring
the Israelites to the
acknowledgment of the truth,
notwithstanding all their former
abuses of the means of grace.
The Hebrew here, דברתי על לבה,
is literally, I will speak to
her heart, that is, speak what
shall touch her heart, in her
outcast state in the wilderness
of the Gentile world, by the
proffers of mercy in the gospel.
“For the doctrine of the
gospels,” says Luther on this
place, “is the true soothing
speech, with which the minds of
men are taken. For it terrifies
not the soul, like the law, with
severe denunciations of
punishment; but although it
reproves sin, it declares that
God is ready to pardon sinners
for the sake of his Son; and
holds forth the sacrifice of the
Son of God that the souls of
sinners may be assured that
satisfaction has been made by
that to God.” And I will give
her her vineyards from thence —
Or, from that time, as the word
משׂםmay be rendered: then I will
restore her vineyards and
fruitful fields which I had
taken from her, Hosea 2:12 : or,
from that place; or, in
consequence of these things; in
which senses also the original
word is used. God declares that
from and through the wilderness
lies the road to a rich,
fruitful country; that is, that
the calamities of the
dispersion, together with the
soothing intimations of the
gospel, by bringing the Jewish
race to a right mind, will be
the means of reinstating them in
that wealth and prosperity which
God hath ordained for them in
their own land. And the valley
of Achor — Or, of trouble, or
tribulation, as the Hebrew word
Achor signifies; for a door of
hope — The passage alludes to
“the vale near Jericho, where
the Israelites, first setting
foot within the holy land, were
thrown into trouble and
consternation by the daring
theft of Achan. In memory of
which, and of the tragical scene
exhibited in that spot, in the
execution of the sacrilegious
peculator and his whole family,
the place was called the vale of
Achor, Joshua 7. And this vale
of Achor, though a scene of
trouble and distress, was a door
of hope to the Israelites under
Joshua; for there, immediately
after the execution of Achan,
God said to Joshua, Fear not,
neither be thou dismayed,
(Joshua 8:1,) and promised to
support him against Ai, her
king, and her people. And from
this time Joshua drove on his
conquests with uninterrupted
success. In like manner the
tribulations of the Jews, in
their present dispersion, shall
open to them the door of hope.”
And there — That is, in the
wilderness, and in the vale of
tribulation, under those
circumstances of present
difficulty, mixed with cheering
hope; she shall sing as in the
days of her youth — She shall
express her joy in God, as her
forefathers did after their
deliverance at the Red sea; when
God espoused them for his
peculiar people, and entered
into a covenant with them at
mount Sinai, where they solemnly
promised an entire obedience to
him. And, or rather, even, as in
the day when she came up out of
the land of Egypt — “This
perpetual allusion to the
exodus,” or coming out of Egypt,
“to the circumstances of the
march through the wilderness,
and the first entrance into the
holy land, plainly points the
prophecy to a similar
deliverance, by the immediate
power of God, under that leader,
of whom Moses was a type.” —
Horsley.
Verse 16-17
Hosea 2:16-17. And at that day
thou shalt call me Ishi, &c. —
Ishi, my husband, is an
appellation of love; Baali, my
lord, of subjection and fear.
God hath not given his people,
whom he justifies, accepts, and
betroths to himself in
righteousness, the spirit of
fear, but of power, and of love,
and of a sound mind, 2 Timothy
1:7. As the words אישׁי, ishi,
and בעלי, baali, in this verse,
(both applicable to a husband,
although in different views, the
former signifying a husband
simply, the latter a husband
under the idea of a lord, or
master,) are manifestly
appellatives, and not proper
names, they certainly ought to
have been translated as
appellatives; that is, the
clause should have been
rendered, Thou shalt call me my
husband, thou shalt no more call
me my lord, or master. Thus
Houbigant, who adds, by way of
explication, “because thou shalt
love me, and serve me through
affection, and not through
fear.” For I will take away the
names of Baalim — That is,
Baals; out of her mouth — The
Jews were forbidden to mention
the names of the heathen idols,
Exodus 23:13; Joshua 23:7; and
therefore the name Baal, though
capable of a good sense, as it
signifies husband, or lord, must
be avoided by them, because it
was also the name of false gods,
lest by using it they should be
led into idolatry. And they
shall be no more remembered — Or
mentioned, as the Hebrew may be
translated; by their name — “It
is in vain,” says Bishop
Horsley, “to look for a purity
of religious worship, answerable
to this prophecy, among the Jews
returned from the Babylonian
captivity. This part of the
prophecy, with all the rest,
will receive its accomplishment
in the converted race in the
latter days. It is said, indeed,
that, after the return from
Babylon, the Jews scrupulously
avoided idolatry, and have
continued untainted with it to
this day. But, generally, as
this is asserted by all
commentators, one after another,
it is not true. Among the
restored Jews there was, indeed,
no public idolatry, patronized
by the government, as there had
been in times before the
captivity, particularly in the
reign of Ahaz. But from the time
of Antiochus Epiphanes to the
last moments of the Jewish
polity, there was a numerous and
powerful faction, which in every
thing affected the Greek
manners; and this Hellenizing
party were idolaters to a man.
The Jews of the present times,
as far as we are acquainted with
them, seem indeed to be free
from the charge of idolatry,
properly so called. But of the
present state of the ten tribes
we have no certain knowledge;
without which we cannot take
upon us either to accuse or to
acquit them.”
Verse 18
Hosea 2:18. And in that day will
I make a covenant for them with
the beasts of the field, &c. —
That is, a covenant of security
from the evils which, in the
days of my vengeance, arose from
beasts, and birds of prey, and
venomous creatures. Or the words
may be understood figuratively,
of the final conversion of the
most ignorant and vicious of the
heathen to the true faith; the
effect of which will be, that
they shall live in peace and
friendship with the
re-established nation of the
Jews. In this sense the passage
is understood by Bishop Horsley.
And I will break the bow, &c. —
I will cause that there shall be
no more wars, either foreign or
domestic. A universal peace, and
freedom from all enemies, is
mentioned by the prophets, as a
concomitant of that flourishing
state of the church which shall
commence at the restoration of
the Jews, and the coming in of
the Gentiles: see Isaiah 11:6-7.
And will make them to lie down
safely — Being gathered under
the wings of my protection, they
shall repose themselves upon my
power and providence, committing
themselves to my care in well
doing. Observe, reader, all true
and solid security, all real
peace, whether inward or
outward, flows from God’s
favour.
Verse 19-20
Hosea 2:19-20. I will betroth
thee unto me for ever — I will
treat thee, who hast been a
harlot, like a wife, if
hereafter thou become faithful
to me. Yea, I will betroth thee
unto me in righteousness, &c. —
Bishop Horsley translates these
verses thus: To myself I say, I
will betroth thee with justice,
and with righteousness, and with
exuberant kindness and with
tender love. With faithfulness
to myself, I say, I will betroth
thee, and thou shalt know the
Jehovah. The passage, it seems,
maybe paraphrased as follows: I
will betroth, or take, thee unto
me in a way that shall display,
or make manifest, my
righteousness, or the regard I
have to justice and holiness, my
beneficence, or inclination to
make my creatures happy, my
mercy in forgiving offences
committed against me, and my
faithfulness in fulfilling my
promises, and verifying my
declarations. And thou shalt
know the Lord — Experience the
exuberant goodness of Jehovah;
shalt find that he is and wilt
be a gracious Lord to thee. One
especial part of the new
covenant consists in imparting
to the faithful a more perfect
knowledge of God as a
sin-pardoning God, and of his
will and their own duty: see
Jeremiah 31:31-34.
Verse 21-22
Hosea 2:21-22. I will hear the
heavens — When they ask, as it
were, to send their rain on the
earth. And they shall hear the
earth — When it supplicates, as
it were, for rain. The earth
shall hear the corn and the
wine, &c. — When they wish, as
it were, to supply the wants of
man. And they shall hear Jezreel
— All nature shall hear, and
minister to, the people whom God
shall restore to their own land.
The Hebrew word, however, here
rendered to hear, Dr. Waterland
more properly renders to answer,
thus: I will answer the heavens,
and they shall answer the earth,
&c. In other words, all
creatures shall answer the
desires and wants of my people:
the heavens shall answer the
wants of the earth, in sending
down seasonable showers: and the
earth shall answer the wants of
mankind, in bringing forth corn,
and wine, and other necessaries
of life: and the fruits of the
earth shall answer the wishes of
my restored people, by giving
them due nourishment: see the
same sense more plainly
expressed, Zechariah 8:12.
Bishop Horsley reads, I will
perform my part, saith Jehovah,
upon the heavens; and they shall
perform their part upon the
earth; and the earth shall
perform her part upon the corn,
&c.; and they shall perform
their parts for the Jezreel [the
seed of God.] “The primary and
most proper meaning,” says he,
“of the verb ענה, [rendered to
hear,] I take to be to react.
But more largely it predicates
reciprocal, correspondent, or
correlate action. Thus it
signifies the proper action of
one thing upon another,
according to established
physical sympathies in the
material world; or, among
intelligent beings, according to
the rule of moral order. And in
this passage it is applied first
to the action of God upon the
powers of nature; and then to
the subordinate action of the
parts of nature upon one
another; and, last of all, to
the subservience of the
elements, and their physical
productions, to the benefit of
man; and ultimately, by the
direction of God’s overruling
providence, to the exclusive
benefit of the godly.” The
gradation of the prophet in the
passage is very elegant, and
admirably denotes the concert,
the harmony, the intelligence,
which shall be between all parts
of the universe, co-operating
for the good of God’s people,
who shall then no more see the
heaven of iron and of brass
withholding its dew and its
rain; nor the earth burned up by
the sun, unable to nourish the
plants, nor the fruits denied
the succour of the earth, nor
men deprived of their necessary
ailments. The words probably
allude also to the spiritual
blessings of the Christian
Church.
Verse 23
Hosea 2:23. And I will sow — Or
plant, her unto me in the earth,
&c. — The original word,
rendered sow, or plant, alludes
to and explains the word
Jezreel, or seed of God, as used
Hosea 1:4; Hosea 1:11, and here
in the foregoing verse. The
prophet foretels a plentiful
increase of true believers, like
to that of corn sown in the
earth; and represents the
converted Jews as being the seed
from which an abundant harvest
of Gentile converts should
arise. “The myriads of the
natural Israel,” says Bishop
Horsley, “converted by the
preaching of the apostles, were
the first seed of the universal
church. And there is reason to
believe, that the restoration of
the converted Jews will be the
occasion and means of a
prodigious influx of new
converts from the Gentiles in
the latter ages, Romans 11:12;
Romans 11:15. Thus the Jezreel
of the natural Israel, from the
first have been, and to the last
will prove, a seed sown of God
for himself in the earth.” I
will have mercy upon her that
had not obtained mercy — I will
have mercy both on the Jews and
Gentiles, who shall obey the
gospel call, and become true
converts to the Christian faith.
This was in part fulfilled at
the first preaching of the
gospel, whether in Judea or in
other countries: see Romans
9:24-26. But it shall receive a
more perfect completion at the
restoration of the Jews, and the
coming in of the fulness of the
Gentiles: compare Hosea 1:10-11. |