ARGUMENT.
THE Twelve Prophets, whose
prophecies must now come under
our consideration, are called
the Minor, or Lesser Prophets:
not because their writings are
of less authority or usefulness
than those of the four
preceding, but only because they
are shorter. Their prophecies,
Josephus tells us, were put into
one volume, by “the men of the
great synagogue,” in Ezra’s
time: of which learned and pious
body of men, the last three of
these twelve are supposed to
have been themselves members.
St. Stephen is thought to have
referred to this volume, when,
quoting a passage from Amos,
Acts 7:42, he says, “As it is
written in the book of the
prophets.” And it is certain
that, in the early ages of the
Christian Church, both Jews and
Christians, in enumerating the
canonical books of the Old
Testament, reckoned the twelve
minor prophets to be one book.
They are not arranged, either in
the Hebrew or Greek copies,
exactly in the order of time in
which they lived; for Jonah, who
was the oldest of them, is
placed the sixth in order in
these copies. Archbishop
Newcome’s arrangement of them,
according to the time in which
they prophesied, is as follows:
Jonah, Amos, Hosea, Micah,
Nahum, Joel, Zephaniah,
Habakkuk, Obadiah, Haggai,
Zechariah, Malachi.
Hosea, whose prophecy first
claims our attention, began his
public ministry in the latter
part of the reign of Jeroboam
II. king of Israel, about 785
years before Christ, twenty
before the Olympiads, and more
than forty before the foundation
of Rome; and he continued to
prophesy till the reign of
Hezekiah king of Judah. And
since he was of age to choose a
wife for himself when he first
entered upon his office, he must
have lived to extreme old age.
If, as many commentators have
supposed, he witnessed the
accomplishment of the judgment
which he denounced upon Samaria
and the ten tribes, he must have
attained his hundredth year at
least. But it is more “probable
that he was removed before that
event took place. For in all his
prophecies the kingdom of
Samaria is mentioned, as
sentenced indeed to excision;
but as yet subsisting, at the
time when they were delivered.”
“Inasmuch as he reckons the time
of his ministry by the
succession of the kings of
Judah, the learned have been
induced to believe that he
himself belonged to that
kingdom. However this may be, it
appears that he took a
particular interest in the
fortunes of the sister kingdom.
For he describes, with much more
exactness than any other
prophet, the distinct destinies
of the two great branches of the
chosen people, the different
judgments impending on them, and
the different manner of their
final restoration; and he is
particularly pathetic in the
exhortations he addresses to the
ten tribes. It is a great
mistake, however, to suppose
that his prophecies are almost
wholly against the kingdom of
Israel; or that the captivity of
the ten tribes is the immediate
and principal subject, the
destiny of the two tribes being
only occasionally introduced.
Hosea’s principal subject is
that which is the principal
subject indeed of all the
prophets, the guilt of the
Jewish nation in general, their
disobedient, refractory spirit,
the heavy judgments that awaited
them, their final conversion to
God, their re-establishment in
the land of promise, and their
restoration to God’s favour, and
to a condition of the greatest
national prosperity, and of high
pre-eminence among the nations
of the earth; under the
immediate protection of Messiah,
in the latter ages of the world.
He confines himself more closely
to this single subject than any
other prophet. Comparatively, he
seems to care but little about
other people. He wanders not,
like Isaiah, Jeremiah, and
Ezekiel, into the collateral
history of the surrounding
heathen nations. He meddles not,
like Daniel, with the revolution
of the great empires of the
world. His own country seems to
engross his whole attention; her
privileges, her crimes, her
punishment, her pardon. He
predicts indeed, in the
strongest and clearest terms,
the ingrafting of the Gentiles
into the church of God. But he
mentions it only generally; he
enters not, like Isaiah, into a
minute detail of the business.
He alludes to the calling of our
Lord from Egypt; to the
resurrection on the third day;
he touches, but only in general
terms, upon the final overthrow
of the antichristian army in
Palestine, by the immediate
interposition of Jehovah; and he
celebrates, in the loftiest
strains of triumph and
exultation, the Saviour’s final
victory over death and hell. But
yet, of all the prophets, he
certainly enters the least into
the detail of the mysteries of
redemption. His country, and his
kindred, are the subject next
his heart. Their crimes excite
his indignation, their
sufferings interest his pity,
and their future exaltation is
the object on which he fixes
with delight.” — Bishop Horsley.
Very similar is the character
given of this prophecy by
Archbishop Newcome, though in
few words: “He chiefly addresses
Israel, but introduces frequent
mention of Judah. He not only
inveighs against the vices of
the people, but sharply arraigns
the conduct of their kings,
princes, and priests. Like many
of the Hebrew prophets, he
tempers denunciations of God’s
vengeance against an idolatrous
and vicious people with promises
of abundant mercies in store for
them; and his transitions from
one of these subjects to the
other are rapid and unexpected.”
As to the style of Hosea, it
indicates antiquity; it is
nervous, acute, concise,
strongly marked with the graces
of poetry, and retains the
sententious brevity of the more
ancient prophets whose writings
are handed down to us. Though
this, doubtless, was at first
esteemed a peculiar elegance,
yet, in the present devastations
of the Hebrew language, it is
productive of obscurity; and
though the general subject of
the prophet be plain enough, yet
there is scarce any other so
difficult and intricate: see
Bishop Lowth’s Twenty-first
Prelection. “He delights,” says
another acknowledged critic, “in
a style which always becomes
obscure when the language of the
writer ceases to be a living
language. He is commatic, to use
St. Jerome’s word, that is,
concise, more than any other of
the prophets. He writes in
short, detached, disjointed
sentences, not wrought up into
periods, in which the connection
of one clause with another is
made manifest to the reader by
an artificial collocation, and
by those connective particles
which make one discourse of
parts which otherwise appear as
a string of independent
propositions. His transitions
from reproof to persuasion, from
threatening to promise, from
terror to hope, and the
contrary, are rapid and
unexpected. His similes are
brief, accumulated, and often
introduced without the particle
of similitude. Yet these are not
the vices, but the perfections,
of the holy prophet’s style; for
to these circumstances it owes
that eagerness and fiery
animation which are the
characteristic excellence of his
writings, and are so peculiarly
suited to his subject.” The same
learned author observes
elsewhere, “The style of Hosea
is poetical in the very highest
degree. In maxim, solemn,
sententious, brief; in
persuasion, pathetic; in
reproof, severe; in its
allusions, always beautiful and
striking, often sublime; rich in
its images; bold in hyperbole;
artificial, though perspicuous,
in its allegory; possessing, in
short, according to the variety
of the matter, all the
characters by which poetry, in
any language, is distinguished
from prose. And there cannot be
a doubt that the composition was
originally in the metrical form.
But as the division of the
hemistichs [verses] is not
preserved in the MSS. nor in any
of the versions, I consider the
metrical form as lost.” — Bishop
Horsley. We shall only add to
the above, that, with respect to
the alleged obscurity of Hosea’s
style, this may easily be
accounted for from the duration
of his ministry, which, being
prolonged during the reigns of
four kings of Judah, must, of
course, include a very
considerable space of time and a
great variety of events, or
matters, to which they refer,
and we have now only a small
volume of his principal
prophecies; and these
transmitted to us in a continued
series, with no marks of
distinction as to the times in
which they were published, or
the subjects of which they
treat. There is, therefore, no
cause to wonder if, in perusing
these prophecies, we sometimes
find ourselves in a similar
predicament with those who
consulted the scattered leaves
of the sibyl.
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