Verse 1-2
Jonah 2:1-2. Then Jonah prayed —
Those devout thoughts and
feelings which he had at that
time, he afterward digested into
the following prayer, and added
a thanksgiving for his
deliverance at the end of it. So
several of David’s Psalms were
probably composed after his
trouble was over; but in a
manner suitable to the thoughts
he had at the time of his
affliction; and with a grateful
sense of God’s mercies for his
deliverance out of it: see Psalm
54. and 120. And he heard me —
He thanks God that, in
consequence of his prayer, his
life is wonderfully preserved.
Out of the belly of hell cried I
— The word שׁאולsignifies the
state of the dead. So it may
most properly be rendered the
grave here, as the margin reads:
the belly of the fish was to
Jonah instead of a grave.
Verses 4-7
Jonah 2:4-7. Then I said, I am
cast out, &c. — “My first
apprehensions were, that as I
had justly forfeited thy favour
by my disobedience, so thou
wouldest cast me out of thy
protection; yet, upon
recollecting myself, I thought
it my duty not to despair of thy
mercy, but direct my prayer
toward thy heavenly habitation.”
— Lowth. The waters compassed me
even to the soul — Or life; that
is, to the extreme hazard of my
life; and I thought of nothing
more than losing my life among
the waves. I went, &c. — I went
down to the bottom of the sea,
where the foundations of the
mountains lie. Or, the fish
carried me down as deep in the
sea as are the bottoms of the
mountains. The earth with her
bars was about me — I found
myself enclosed on every side,
without any way for escape; and
should have been enclosed for
ever, had not thy power
interposed. Yet hast thou
brought up my life from
corruption — But,
notwithstanding it was involved
in all these terrible
circumstances, which seemed to
preclude all possibility of its
being preserved, yet thou, O my
God, by thy power didst save my
life from destruction. When my
soul fainted within me — When I
seemed just expiring, and lost
all hopes of being preserved; I
remembered the Lord — I thought
of thy almighty power and
boundless mercy, O Jehovah, who
causest to be whatsoever thou
willest; and my prayer came in
unto thee — And therefore I
addressed my prayer to thee, as
being persuaded that thou
couldest still preserve me, even
in the most extreme dangers; and
my faith was not disappointed;
for I found, by the event, that
thou couldest deliver me, as I
believed thou wast able to do.
Verse 8-9
Jonah 2:8-9. They that observe
lying vanities, &c. — They that
seek to, or trust in, idols,
(often called by the names of
vanity and lies,) forsake their
own mercy — Forsake him who
alone is able to show mercy to
them, and preserve them in time
of danger: who, to all that
depend upon him, is an eternal
fountain of mercy, even a
fountain of living waters which
flow freely to all that seek
unto him for them. But I will
sacrifice unto thee, &c. — I
will offer to thee those thanks
which I solemnly promised to pay
in the time of my trouble, and
which will be as acceptable to
thee as the sacrifices of slain
beasts.
Verse 10
Jonah 2:10. And the Lord — This
should rather have been
rendered, For the Lord; because
what follows was not done after
the preceding thanksgiving, but
before it; and it is mentioned
here only to show the cause or
subject of the thanksgiving. The
Lord spake unto the fish, &c. —
God’s almighty power is
represented in Scripture as
bringing things to pass by his
bare will and command: see
Genesis 1:3. He willed that the
fish should cast Jonah up on the
dry land, and the fish did so.
Various are the traditions of
the Orientals respecting the
place where Jonah was
disembogued; but, as Calmet well
observes, amidst such doubt and
obscurity, the best part is
absolute silence, and the
sincere declaration that the
matter is entirely unknown. “The
fame of Jonah’s deliverance
appears to have spread among the
heathen nations; and the Greeks,
who were accustomed to adore the
memory of their heroes by every
remarkable event and
embellishment which they could
appropriate, added to the
fictitious adventures of
Hercules, that of his having
continued three days, without
injury, in the belly of a dog,
sent against him by Neptune.” —
Gray’s Key. Huetius (Demonst.
Evang., Prop. 4) supposes that
Jonah’s deliverance from the
whale’s belly gave occasion to
the Greek story of Arion, who,
after he was cast into the sea,
was conveyed by a dolphin to the
port of Corinth. |