Verse 1
Hosea 10:1. Israel is an empty
vine — The Hebrew, גפן בוקק, may
either signify, an empty, or
emptying vine. If we take it in
the former sense, the meaning
is, Israel is a vine which has
no fruit on it; that is, that
they brought forth no fruit to
God, had no true worshippers of
him among them, none that truly
served and glorified him; for it
is said in the following words
that he brought forth fruit unto
himself. If the expression be
understood in the other sense,
and be rendered an emptying
vine, the sense of the clause
is, Israel is a vine which
casteth its grapes, that is,
does not bring them forth to
perfection. And by the next
words, he bringeth forth fruit
unto himself, may be understood,
not only that they used the
blessings which God had given
them according to their
pleasure, and to the
gratification of their lusts,
but that their apparent good
works proceeded from selfish
motives, and not from a regard
to the glory and will of God.
The LXX. give the expression yet
another sense, αμπελος
ευκληματουσα, a vine well
furnished with branches: with
which accords the Vulgate, vitis
frondosa. Thus interpreted, the
words may be considered as
indicative of their national
prosperity, increasing
population, and military
strength. According to the
multitude of his fruit — By the
fruit here spoken of we are not
to understand good works, but
their abundant crops, numerous
flocks and herds, and public
opulence; he hath increased the
altars — When their land yielded
a most plentiful harvest, and
their flocks, and herds, and
wealth increased, this plenty
was employed on multiplying
their idols. Their idolatrous
altars were as numerous as their
national prosperity was great,
and were increased in proportion
thereto. And according to the
goodness, &c., they have made
goodly images — Imagining that
the goodness of their land was a
blessing from their idols.
Bishop Horsley reads here, Like
the beauty of his land he made
the beauty of his images,
interpreting the meaning to be,
“That the exquisite workmanship
of his images was as remarkable
as the natural beauty of his
country.”
Verse 2-3
Hosea 10:2-3. Their heart is
divided — Between God and their
idols, or between God and the
world. Now shall they be found
faulty — As this was their sin,
so it is here threatened, that
the effects thereof should
prove, and be an open
manifestation of their guilt.
The Hebrew עתה יאשׁמו, may be
rendered, now shall they be
punished, or, treated as guilty.
So the Vulgate, nunc interibunt,
now, that is, forthwith, shall
they perish. He shall break down
their altars, &c. — That is, God
shall cause their idolatrous
altars to be broken down,
namely, by the Assyrians. For
now they shall say — They shall
see and feel, and be compelled
to own; We have no king —
Absolutely none, or no such king
as we need and expected. This is
thought by some commentators to
relate to the time of anarchy,
or the interregnum which
continued for eight or nine
years between the murder of
Pekah and the settlement of
Hoshea on the throne; because we
feared not the Lord — They shall
be sensible that their forsaking
the Lord for idols, and their
casting off his fear, is the
true cause of all their
calamities; and particularly of
their being deprived of the
blessing of a wise, just, and
good civil government. What then
— Or rather, But what should a
king do for us? A king could not
save us without the help of God.
The verse, however, seems rather
to refer to the time of their
captivity, and the sense
probably is, “After Israel shall
be carried captive into the
country of their enemies, and
shall have no king over their
nation, they shall then
acknowledge that this misfortune
has happened to them through
their own fault, and because
they have not feared the Lord.
And they shall acknowledge that
it would profit them nothing to
have kings, without having also
the protection of God.” — Calmet.
Verse 4
Hosea 10:4. They have spoken
words — Mere empty words;
swearing falsely in making a
covenant — This may be spoken
either of their breaking their
solemn covenant with God, (see
Hosea 5:7,) or of their
treachery toward their kings,
against whom they had formed
several conspiracies: see 2
Kings 15:10; 2 Kings 15:14; 2
Kings 15:25; 2 Kings 15:30. Thus
judgment — Divine vengeance;
springeth up as hemlock, &c. —
Destructive calamities,
inflicted by the righteous
judgment of God, will
necessarily abound, as hemlock
does in the furrows of a field.
Bishop Horsley renders the
verse, Negotiate, (or, talk
words,) swear false oaths,
ratify a treaty; nevertheless
judgment shall sprout up, like
hemlock over the ridges of the
field. Which version he
paraphrases thus: “Negotiate
alliances with one power after
another; make a treaty with the
Assyrians; bind yourselves to it
with an oath; break your oath,
and make a new alliance with the
Egyptian. In spite of all
measures of crooked policy, all
acquisitions of foreign aid and
support, judgment is springing
up.”
Verse 5
Hosea 10:5. The inhabitants of
Samaria — That is, the kingdom
of Israel; shall fear — “Be in a
consternation.” — Horsley.
Because of the calves of Beth-aven
— The Jewish writers have a
tradition, that the golden calf
at Dan was taken away by
Tiglath-pileser, when he subdued
Galilee, 2 Kings 15:29; and the
other at Beth-el, (here called
Beth-aven: see note on chap.
Hosea 4:15,) by order of
Shalmaneser, of which probably
this is a prophecy. For the
people thereof shall mourn over
it — Hebrew, אבל עליו, shall
grieve for him; and the priests
thereof that rejoiced in it —
Being fed, clothed, and enriched
by it, shall now sorrow over it;
for the glory thereof — The
riches of its temple; because it
is departed — The Assyrians
either broke it, or carried it
away into Assyria. Both priests
and people shall mourn and be
distressed when they see it
disgraced.
Verses 6-8
Hosea 10:6-8. It — The golden
calf; shall be carried into
Assyria — It was the custom of
the eastern people, and also of
the Romans, to carry away the
gods of the conquered countries.
For a present to King Jareb —
See note on Hosea 5:13. The king
of Assyria is meant, whose
dependant and tributary the king
of Israel now was. Ephraim shall
receive shame — They shall be
ashamed to find that the idol in
which they trusted could not
defend them or itself from being
disgraced and taken away. Bishop
Horsley’s version here is,
Ephraim shall be overtaken in
sound sleep, namely, in a dream
of security, when nothing will
be less in his thoughts than
danger; and Israel shall be
disgraced by his own politics;
that is, the politics of the
treaties of alliance, mentioned
Hosea 10:4. An impolitic
alliance with the king of Egypt
was the immediate occasion of
Shalmaneser’s rupture with
Hoshea, which ended in the
captivity of the ten tribes. As
for Samaria, her king is cut off
— Or, more literally, according
to the Hebrew, Samaria is cut
off, (or destroyed,) with her
king; or, by a small alteration
of the pointing, Her king is as
the foam upon the water —
Namely, as a bubble, which no
sooner swells than it bursts: as
if he had said, Many of her
kings have rapidly passed away
by assassination: and Hoshea
shall soon be cut off by the
king of Assyria. The high places
also — The temples and altars
dedicated to idolatrous worship,
and usually placed on hills and
mountains; of Aven — Or, Beth-aven;
the sin of Israel — That is, the
temples and altars, in and by
which Israel has so greatly
sinned, shall be destroyed,
shall be entirely demolished; so
that the thorn and the thistle
shall come upon their altars —
That is, their altar shall
become such heaps of ruins, and
the places around them be made
so desolate, that thorns and
thistles shall overrun and cover
them. And they shall say to the
mountains, Cover us — These
words express the confusion and
despair to which the Israelites
should be reduced by the
destruction of their country.
Our Lord has made use of the
same words, to denote the
extremity of the Jews in the
last siege of Jerusalem; and St.
John, in the Revelation, to set
forth the terror of the wicked
in the day of judgment. They
express also the great
consternation of the wicked when
any of God’s singular judgments
overtake them, whose guilt
prompts them to endeavour to
hide themselves, and they even
run into the darkest caves and
holes of rocks to secure
themselves.
Verse 9
Hosea 10:9. O Israel, thou hast
sinned from the days of Gibeah —
This is not the first of thy
sinning, O Israel, for long ago
there was the greatest
corruption of manners, and the
most flagrant wickedness in
Gibeah; and thou hast continued
to be wicked ever since that
time: see Judges 19. Some render
the words, Thou hast sinned more
than in the days of Gibeah. Thou
hast been guilty of more
atrocious crimes than that
committed in that place. There —
That is, upon that occasion,
namely, the quarrel with the
tribe of Benjamin, on account of
the outrage of the men of Gibeah.
They stood — Israel stood there
in array, prepared for the
attack. This relates to the war
which the rest of the Israelites
made against the Benjamites,
because they would not deliver
up the men of Gibeah, who had so
shamefully and cruelly abused
the Levite’s concubine: see
Judges 20. The battle in Gibeah,
&c., did not overtake them — By
them here is meant not the
children of iniquity, but the
Israelites who warred against
the Benjamites, because they
would not deliver up these
sinners; and the sense of the
expression, the battle did not
overtake them, is, that they
were not overcome in this their
attempt to inflict a just
punishment on the perpetrators
of a flagrant iniquity; for,
though they were overcome in two
battles, yet at last they gained
an entire victory, and cut off
all the Benjamites but six
hundred: see notes on Judges 20.
Verse 10
Hosea 10:10. It is my desire
that I should chastise them —
Then I protected and gave them
success, but now it is my desire
that they should suffer due
punishment; and I will bring
punishment upon them. And the
people shall be gathered against
them — Either the Assyrians,
whose alliance they formerly
sought after; or those people
whose idolatry they had complied
with. When they shall bind
themselves in their two furrows
— The LXX. give a much plainer
and easier sense of the words,
who follow the marginal reading
of the Hebrew, and render it,
When I shall chastise them for
their two iniquities; namely,
the calves of Dan and Beth-el.
Bishop Horsley, however,
understands the passage in a
sense somewhat similar to that
given in our translation. His
version of it is, When they are
tethered down to their two
furrows, which he explains as
follows: “When they are tied to
their two faults; that is, when
they are reduced to a situation
of such difficulty and danger,
as to have no hope of
deliverance by any measures of
human policy, in which alone
they place their confidence, but
by choosing one or other of two
alliances, the Egyptian or the
Assyrian; in the forming of
either of which they are
criminal, having been repeatedly
warned against all foreign
alliances.”
Verse 11
Hosea 10:11. Ephraim is a heifer
that is taught — Or, that is
teachable; and loveth to tread
out the corn — In opposition to
ploughing; that is, loves the
booty not gained by its own
labour; or to tread out, and
freely eat of the corn which is
not its own. The mouth of the ox
which trod out the corn was not
muzzled. But I passed over — Or
caused a yoke to pass over; her
fair neck — Laid a light yoke
upon her. Ephraim being here
compared to a heifer, every
thing that is said about him is
therefore expressed in the same
way as if a heifer were really
spoken of. The meaning, laying
aside the figurative expression,
is, that God imposed a law upon
Ephraim, or the Israelites, to
direct and govern them. Will
make Ephraim to ride — It seems
this should rather be rendered,
I will ride upon Ephraim, that
is, I will be his ruler or
director: those who had the
management of oxen or heifers in
those countries, used often to
ride upon them. Thus Bishop
Horsley: “This and the following
clause give the image of a
husbandman mounting his bullock
to direct it over the corn.”
Judah shall plough, and Jacob
shall break his clods — By Jacob
here is meant Israel, or the ten
tribes, as separated from the
two tribes of Judah and
Benjamin; and the clause seems
to signify that the kingdom of
Judah should be superior to that
of Israel. Or, the general sense
of the verse may be, that the
descendants of Jacob should be
employed in servile offices by
their enemies. Bishop Horsley
interprets this difficult
passage differently, thus: “The
first three clauses of this
verse express what had been done
for the instruction of Ephraim
by the Mosaic institution. The
last two predict the final
conversion of the Ephraimites,
with the rest of the people, and
their restoration to a condition
of national splendour and
prosperity. As if he had said,
Notwithstanding the judgments
that are to fall upon Ephraim,
he was long under the training
of my holy law; and the effect
of that early discipline shall
not be ultimately lost. I will,
in the end, bring Ephraim to
obedience. Judah shall be
diligent in the works I prepare
for him; and the whole race of
Jacob shall take part in the
same labours of the spiritual
field, with profit and advantage
to themselves.”
Verse 12
Hosea 10:12. Sow to yourselves
in righteousness. — Exercise
yourselves in the works of
righteousness and holiness, in
the performance of all duties
due both to God and man. Reap in
mercy — And then God, of his
grace and mercy, will, in due
time, bestow an abundant reward
upon you. Break up your fallow
ground — Your hearts are as
ground overrun with weeds, which
have need to be ploughed and
broken up by conviction,
humiliation, and godly sorrow
for sin, that good seed may be
sown in them. For it is time —
High time, if you mean to do it
at all, and a fit season for it,
2 Corinthians 6:2, now that
troubles are near; to seek the
Lord — To seek reconciliation
and peace with him, to seek his
favour, and a conformity to his
will. Seek him, with earnest
desire and persevering
diligence, in the use of all the
means which he hath appointed.
Till he come and rain
righteousness upon you — That
is, pour down his grace and
blessings upon you, according to
what he has promised.
Verses 13-15
Hosea 10:13-15. Ye have ploughed
wickedness — Instead of working
righteousness, (Hosea 10:12,)
you have taken a great deal of
pains in the service of sin, to
compass your wicked designs. Ye
have reaped iniquity — Ye have,
in return, received the fruit of
iniquity, namely, punishment, or
calamity. Ye have eaten the
fruit of lies — Fed yourselves
with vain hopes, which have
deceived and will deceive you.
Or, you have trusted to that
which has been only specious,
not really satisfying or
profitable. Because thou didst
trust in thy way — Thy own
carnal projects and sinful
contrivances, particularly the
idolatry at Dan and Beth-el. In
the multitude of thy mighty men
— The next lie, or false ground
of their confidence, was the
wisdom and valour of their great
men. Therefore shall a tumult
arise — A terrible outcry, as of
men affrighted at the news of
the enemies’ approach. And all
thy fortresses shall be spoiled,
&c. — This seems to be a
prophecy of the taking of
Samaria by Shalmaneser, which
put a final period to the
kingdom of Israel, 2 Kings 17:6.
It held out a siege of three
years, which probably provoked
Shalmaneser to treat it with the
severity which he used, when he
made himself master of it. The
only difficulty in this verse
is, what place or person is
alluded to by the words, as
Shalman spoiled Beth-arbel in
the day of battle. It is
supposed that by Shalman is
meant Shalmaneser; and that
Beth-arbel was a place in
Armenia which he took and
spoiled, putting the inhabitants
to the sword without any
distinction either of age or
sex. But it cannot be said with
certainty, that this supposition
is founded on fact. Some other
conquest, by some other person,
might possibly be meant. But it
is not material to know this. It
was some place which had been
treated with great severity by
the conqueror, and such
treatment the prophet denounces
Samaria should meet with. It is
worthy of remark, however, that
the Vulgate, St. Jerome, and the
LXX. (see the Alexandrine MS.)
suppose that the history alluded
to is Gideon’s destruction of
Zalmunna. So shall Beth-el do
unto you — “This is the fruit of
your worshipping the golden
calves at Beth-el and Dan. As it
happened to the city above
mentioned, so shall it happen to
you, because of your
iniquities.” In a morning — That
is, suddenly, quickly, and
unexpectedly; or after a night
of adversity, when they thought
the morning of prosperity was
come; shall the king of Israel
be cut off — And the whole state
and government of Israel be put
an end to along with him. This
seems to be spoken of Hoshea,
the last king of Israel, who, in
the sixth year of his reign, was
shut up in prison by the king of
Assyria, who, in three years
more, made himself master of the
whole kingdom of Israel, and
carried the inhabitants of it
into captivity. The Vulgate,
(which, with the LXX. and the
Syriac, carries this clause to
the next chapter,) instead of
בשׁחר, in the morning, seems to
have read כשׁחר, as the morning,
rendering the clause, sicut mane
transit, pertransit rex Israel:
“As the morning passes away, so
passes away the king of Israel.”
This reading Bishop Horsley
adopts, and translates to nearly
the same sense, thus: As the
morning is brought to nothing,
to nothing shall the king of
Israel be brought: observing,
“The sudden and total
destruction of the monarchy of
the ten tribes is compared to
the sudden and total extinction
of the beauties of the dawn in
the sky, by the instantaneous
diffusion of the solar light: by
which the ruddy streaks in the
east, the glow of
orange-coloured light upon the
horizon, are at once
obliterated, absorbed, and lost
in the colourless light of day.
The change is sudden even in
these climates; it must be more
sudden in the tropical; and in
all it is one of the most
complete that nature presents.” |