Verse 1
Hosea 5:1. Hear this, O ye
priests — Or rather, princes, as
Dr. Waterland renders כהנים, a
reading which agrees better with
the house of the king that
follows, and the word admitting
of both significations. For
judgment is toward you — Or,
denounced against you, as
Archbishop Newcome renders it, a
translation favoured by the LXX.,
προς υμας εστι το κριμα; by
Houbigant, who reads, adest
vobis judicium, judgment is at
hand to you, or hangs over you.
Because ye have been a snare on
Mizpah, and upon Tabor — Mizpah
(a name derived from צפה, to
watch, namely, from an eminence)
was a mountain, and probably a
city too, of Gilead. Tabor was a
beautiful and fruitful mountain
in the tribe of Zebulun. These
places being much frequented by
hunters and fowlers, many snares
and nets were laid in them to
catch birds and beasts: and with
an allusion to this the
Israelites are here described as
insnaring men on these places
into idolatry, because many of
the tribe of Judah had been
seduced, or drawn into idolatry,
by their bad example.
Verse 2
Hosea 5:2. And the revolters —
Hebrew, שׂשׂים, declinantes, the
persons declining, turning
aside, and departing out of the
way appointed them to walk in,
are profound to make slaughter —
Or, have gone deep in slaughter,
as שׁחשׂה העמיקוmay be properly
rendered. The words may be
intended either of the slaughter
of idolatrous sacrifices, or of
men. It seems most likely,
however, that the latter is
meant, and that these wicked
priests and princes laid plots
to cut off such as adhered to
the worship of the true God, and
opposed their idolatry. The LXX.
suppose the allusion to hunting
is still carried on, and render
the clause, οι αγρευοντες την
θηραν κατεπηξαν, the hunters
have pierced the prey. Though I
have been a rebuker of them all
— Though I have reproved,
exhorted, and instructed them by
the prophets whom I raised up
among them, even after they
turned to idolatry. They had, in
particular, two very
extraordinary prophets, Elijah
and Elisha, who were endued with
a greater power to work
miracles, whereby to prove their
divine commission, and to
convince the people of the
certain truth and deep
importance of their messages,
than any one who had been raised
up either among the Jews or
Israelites since the days of
Moses. Dr. Waterland and Calmet,
however, translate this clause,
I will call them all to
discipline; and Newcome and
Horsley, I will bring a
chastisement on them all; which
the latter interprets, “I will
be a chastisement to them, as
they have been a net and a snare
to others.”
Verses 3-5
Hosea 5:3-5. I know Ephraim — I
am perfectly well acquainted
with the actions of Ephraim, the
head of the ten tribes; and
Israel is not hid from me — And
the actions of the other nine
tribes are no less known to me.
Now, O Ephraim, thou committest
whoredom — Even now, at this
time, thou goest on in thy
idolatry, notwithstanding all my
rebukes and exhortations. They
will not frame their doings to
turn unto their God — They are
so wholly inclined to idolatry,
and it has got so fixed a root
in their affections, that they
cannot think of turning to the
pure worship of the true God.
And it even extinguishes all
true knowledge and sense of him
among them. Bishop Horsley
renders the verse, Their
perverse habits will not permit
them to return unto their God;
for a spirit of wantonness is
within them, and the Jehovah
they have not known. The pride
of Israel doth testify to his
face — The insolent behaviour of
Israel toward God, whose worship
they despise, both discovers
itself in all their conduct, and
testifies that their guilt is
great, and deserves severe
punishment. Archbishop Newcome
renders this clause, The pride
of Israel shall be humbled to
his face; and Waterland, Shall
be brought down in his sight.
Therefore shall Israel and
Ephraim fall, &c. — Be brought
to utter ruin; Judah also shall
fall with them — And the other
two tribes of Judah and
Benjamin, having followed their
bad example, shall also be
severely punished as well as
they.
Verse 6
Hosea 5:6. They shall go with
their flocks and herds to seek
the Lord — They shall seek to
make their peace with God, and
to induce him to be favourable
to them by a multitude of
sacrifices; but they shall not
find their expectations
answered. This is spoken of the
people of Judah, mentioned in
the latter part of the foregoing
verse; who, though they attended
the temple worship, yet did it
without any true sense of
religion, for which the Prophets
Isaiah and Jeremiah particularly
reprove them. The prophecy seems
to look forward to the times of
Hezekiah and Josiah, declaring
that the attempts of those pious
kings to reclaim the people from
idolatry, and to restore the
true worship of God, would fail
of any durable effect, and would
not avail to reverse the doom
pronounced upon the guilty
people. He hath withdrawn
himself from them — God is said
to hide and withdraw himself,
when he will not answer men’s
prayers, nor afford them
seasonable relief in time of
need. Hebrew, חלצ מהם, he hath
disengaged, or loosened himself
from them, or hath taken himself
away.
Verse 7
Hosea 5:7. They have dealt
treacherously against the Lord —
The word בגד, rendered, to deal
treacherously, signifies
properly, a wife’s being false
to her husband; see Jeremiah
3:20; from whence it is applied
to the sin of idolatry, which
was being false to the true God,
or giving to creatures, or mere
imaginary beings, the affection
and regard due to him, and
therefore it is often in
Scripture styled spiritual
whoredom. For they have begotten
strange children — A race of
aliens, as Bishop Horsley
renders it: that is, children
trained from their earliest
infancy in the habits and
principles of idolatry, and
growing up aliens with respect
to God, (for all are not Israel
that are of Israel,) alienated
from him in their affections,
and in their sentiments and
practice mere heathen. The
expression alludes to children
not lawfully begotten, or not
born in wedlock. Now shall a
month devour them — A very short
time shall complete their
destruction. It shall be sudden
and unexpected. With their
portions — That is, their
allotments. “They shall be now
totally dispossessed of their
country, and the boundaries of
the separate allotments of the
several tribes shall be
confounded and obliterated, and
new partitions of the land into
districts shall be made, from
time to time, at the pleasure of
its successive masters. The
captivity of the ten tribes was
completed soon after Hezekiah’s
attempted reformation, and the
kingdom of Judah not long
survived Josiah’s.” It is
probable the month alludes to
these events.
Verse 8-9
Hosea 5:8-9. Blow ye the cornet
in Gibeah, &c. — The prophet
here calls upon the watchmen of
Judah and Israel to sound an
alarm, and give notice of the
approach of the enemy: compare
Joel 2:1. It was usual in those
days, when a country was
invaded, or was on the point of
being so, to give notice of it
by sounding cornets and trumpets
from the towers and high places,
on which the watchmen or
sentinels were placed. Gibeah
and Ramah were towns in the
tribe of Benjamin; and
Beth-aven, or Beth-el, was in
the territory of the ten tribes,
so that ordering the sounding of
an alarm in those places,
signified that both kingdoms
should be hostilely invaded.
After thee, O Benjamin — Or,
Look behind thee, O Benjamin:
see Pococke. The words present
the image of an enemy in close
pursuit, ready to fall upon the
rear of Benjamin. Ephraim shall
be desolate — God’s judgments
shall likewise overtake Israel,
or the ten tribes, as well as
Judah. In the day of rebuke — At
the time when God shall punish
them for the provocations which
he has received. This seems to
be intended of the invasion of
the kingdom of Israel by
Shalmaneser king of Assyria.
Among the tribes of Israel I
have made known, &c. — I have
denounced my judgments against
the whole kingdom of Israel, as
well as that of Judah, and given
them warning, that they may
escape them by a timely
repentance.
Verse 10
Hosea 5:10. The princes of
Judah, &c. — The prophet in this
chapter passes frequently from
the one kingdom to the other,
that he might set forth the
crimes, and foretel the
punishments of both, unless they
averted them by their
repentance. Instead of the
princes, Bishop Horsley reads,
the rulers of Judah, observing,
“I prefer the word rulers to
princes, because, in the modern
acceptation of the word princes,
royalty, or at least, royal
blood, is included in the notion
of it. But these שׂרי, saree,
[princes,] of the Old Testament,
were not persons of royal
extraction, or connected by
blood or marriage with the royal
family; but the chief priests
and elders, who composed the
secular as well as the
ecclesiastical magistracy of the
country.” Like them that remove
the bound — They have violated
the most sacred laws of God:
upon which, not only the
ordinances of his worship, but
likewise the rights and
properties of men depend, and
are become guilty of the same
injustice and confusion with
those that remove the ancient
bounds and landmarks, Ezekiel
46:18. Therefore I will pour out
my wrath upon them like water —
That is, with great violence,
like an impetuous torrent, or
the hasty unexpected overflowing
of a river, which overwhelms
every thing near. Great
calamities are often compared to
the overflowing of water.
Verse 11-12
Hosea 5:11-12. Ephraim is
oppressed and broken in judgment
— He is delivered over to
oppressors by God’s just
judgment. Such were Pul and
Tiglath-pileser, kings of
Assyria. Archbishop Newcome
distinguishes between these
phrases thus: He is oppressed
with a heavy weight of calamity;
he is crushed, or broken in his
judicial contest with God;
because he willingly walked
after the commandment — Because
he willingly submitted to, or
complied with Jeroboam’s
command, requiring his subjects
to worship the calves which he
had placed at Dan and Beth-el,
and to conform to all his
idolatrous institutions, in
opposition to the law of God. Of
this kind were the statutes of
Omri, mentioned Micah 6:16. The
reading of the LXX. here is
different, namely, κατεπατησε το
κριμα, οτι ηρξατο πορευεσθαι
οπισω των ματαιων, He trode
judgment under foot, because he
began to walk after vain things;
that is, after idols. They seem
either to have read שׁוא, shave,
(vanity,) for צו, tzave,
(commandment,) or else to have
supposed the latter word to be
put for the former, there being
frequent instances in the Hebrew
text of letters being changed,
one for another, which have
nearly the same sound: see the
Arabic, Syriac, Chaldaic,
Houbigant and others, in Poole’s
Synopsis, who read שׁוא, vanity.
Therefore will I be unto Ephraim
as a moth — My judgment shall
consume both Israel and Judah as
a moth fretteth a garment, or as
rottenness consumes the flesh,
from small and unperceived
beginnings, working slow, but
certain and complete
destruction.
Verse 13-14
Hosea 5:13-14. When Ephraim, saw
his sickness — When the king of
Israel, namely, Menahem, saw
himself too weak to contend with
Pul, king of Assyria, he sent an
embassy to him to make him his
ally, and, in order to do it,
became his tributary, that his
hand might be with him to
confirm his kingdom to him, 2
Kings 15:15. And Judah his wound
— Hebrew, his ulcer, or
corrupted sore. So in like
manner shall Ahaz, king of
Judah, implore the assistance of
Tiglath-pileser against his
enemies. For, after the words,
then went Ephraim to the
Assyrian, the word Judah should
be supplied, and the clause
should be read, And Judah sent,
(or, shall send,)
to King Jareb. Thus Secker and
Pocock understand the passage.
The word Jareb means one that
will plead for a person, and
defend his cause against any
that may oppose him, or an
avenger, or helper. And it does
not appear to be here a proper
name. Bishop Horsley renders it,
The king who takes up all
quarrels, and observes, “This
describes some powerful monarch
who took upon him to interfere
in all quarrels between inferior
powers, to arbitrate between
them, and compel them to make up
their differences upon such
terms as he thought proper to
dictate: whose alliance was, of
course, anxiously courted by
weaker states. Such was the
Assyrian monarch in the times to
which the prophecy relates. His
friendship was purchased by
Menahem king of Israel,” (as
observed above,) “and in a later
period solicited by Ahaz, 2
Kings 16:5-9.” Yet could he not
heal you, nor cure you of your
wound — Those foreign alliances
proved to be of no benefit
either to Israel or Judah. It is
expressly said of
Tiglath-pileser, 2 Chronicles
28:20, that when he came to
Ahaz, under colour of helping
him according to the terms of
their agreement, at a time when
Judah was brought low, he
distressed him, but strengthened
him not. And though Ahaz gave
him presents out of the house of
the Lord, out of the house of
the king, and of the princes,
still he helped him not. And as
to the ten tribes, the Assyrian
kings were so far from helping
them really, that they destroyed
numbers of them from time to
time, and at last carried them
all away into captivity. So weak
often is human policy! I will be
unto Ephraim as a lion — The
Vulgate reads, leœna, a lioness,
and the LXX. a panther. The
sense of the verse is, that it
was in vain for either Israel or
Judah to expect help from men,
since God had determined to
destroy or take them away, as
with the impetuosity of a
panther flying upon his prey, or
the fury of a lion, tearing it
in pieces.
Verse 15
Hosea 5:15. I will go and return
to my place — I will withdraw
myself from them, and give them
up to exile and punishment, till
they acknowledge their offence
and seek my face: that is, till
they confess their sins, and, by
a sincere humiliation, and in
fervent prayer, implore my
favour. The Chaldee paraphrase
expresses the sense thus: “I
will take away my majestic
presence, or shechinah, from
among them, and will return into
heaven.” Thus Ezekiel describes
the destruction of the temple
and kingdom, by God’s removing
his glory from the sanctuary and
city: see Ezekiel 10:4; Ezekiel
11:23. In their affliction they
will seek me early — That is,
without delay, and earnestly;
or, with great diligence and
assiduity. Observe, reader, when
we are under the corrections of
the divine rod, our business is
to seek God’s face, that is, an
acquaintance with him, a token
of his being at peace with us,
and a manifestation of his
favour. And it may reasonably be
expected that affliction will
bring those to God who had gone
astray, and kept at a distance
from him. For this reason God
turns away from us, that he may
turn us to himself, and then may
return to us. Is any among you
afflicted? Let him pray. The
first three verses of the next
chapter should have been joined
to this. So the LXX. thought,
connecting the last verse of
this with the first of the next,
by the participle λεγοντες,
saying. |