
Text -- Ezekiel 25:7 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Eze 25:7
Wesley: Eze 25:7 - -- Thus God will bring those that were strangers to him into an acquaintance with him, and it will be a blessed effect of their calamities. How much bett...
Thus God will bring those that were strangers to him into an acquaintance with him, and it will be a blessed effect of their calamities. How much better is it, to be poor and know God, than to be rich, and ignorant of him?
JFB: Eze 25:6-7 - -- "Because thou hast clapped thine hands," exulting over the downfall of Jerusalem, "I also will stretch out Mine hand upon thee" (to which Eze 21:17 al...
"Because thou hast clapped thine hands," exulting over the downfall of Jerusalem, "I also will stretch out Mine hand upon thee" (to which Eze 21:17 also may refer, "I will smite Mine hands together").

JFB: Eze 25:6-7 - -- With the whole inward feeling, and with every outward indication. Stamping with the foot means dancing for joy.
With the whole inward feeling, and with every outward indication. Stamping with the foot means dancing for joy.

JFB: Eze 25:7 - -- So the Hebrew Margin, or Keri, for the text or Chetib, "meat" (so Eze 26:5; Eze 34:28). Their goods were to be a "spoil to the foe"; their state was t...
Clarke -> Eze 25:7
Clarke: Eze 25:7 - -- I will cause thee to perish - Except in history, the name of the Ammonites does not now exist.
I will cause thee to perish - Except in history, the name of the Ammonites does not now exist.
Defender -> Eze 25:7
Defender: Eze 25:7 - -- Unlike Israel, whose existence was guaranteed forever, the Ammonites have been thoroughly extinguished as a distinctive people, though now amalgamated...
TSK -> Eze 25:7

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Eze 25:1-7
Barnes: Eze 25:1-7 - -- It was a distinct part of scriptural prophecy to address pagan nations. In Isaiah Isa. 13\endash 19, Jeremiah Jer. 46\endash 51, and here Ezek. 25\e...
It was a distinct part of scriptural prophecy to address pagan nations. In Isaiah Isa. 13\endash 19, Jeremiah Jer. 46\endash 51, and here Ezek. 25\endash 32, one section is specially devoted to a collection of such prophecies. Every such prediction had the general purpose of exhibiting the conflict ever waging between the servants of God and the powers of the world, the struggle in which the Church of Christ has still to wrestle against her foes Eph 6:12, but in which she will surely prevail.
It was a distinct part of scriptural prophecy to address pagan nations. In Isaiah Isa. 13\endash 19, Jeremiah Jer. 46\endash 51, and here Ezek. 25\endash 32, one section is specially devoted to a collection of such prophecies. Every such prediction had the general purpose of exhibiting the conflict ever waging between the servants of God and the powers of the world, the struggle in which the Church of Christ has still to wrestle against her foes Eph 6:12, but in which she will surely prevail.
This series of prophecies, with one exception, was delivered at the time of the fall of Jerusalem; some shortly before, and some shortly after, the capture of the city. They were collected together to illustrate their original purpose of warning the nations not to exult in their neighbor’ s fall. Seven nations are addressed, which have had most contact with the children of Israel - on their eastern borders Moab and Ammon, to the south, Edom, on the south-west Philistia, northward Tyre (the merchant city) and the more ancient Sidon, and lastly Egypt, alternately the scourge and the false stay of the chosen people. The number "seven"is symbolic of completeness. "Seven"prophecies against Egypt the chief of "seven"nations, denote the completeness of the overthrow of the pagan power, the antagonist of the kingdom of God. While other prophets hold out to these pagan nations some prospect of future mercy (e. g., Isa 16:14; Jer 49:6, Jer 49:11), Ezekiel speaks of their complete ruin. He was contemplating "national"ruin. In the case of Jerusalem there would be national restoration, but in the case of the pagan no such recovery. The "national"ruin was irretrievable; the remnant to whom the other prophets hold out hopes of mercy were to find it as individuals gathered into God’ s Church, not as nations to be again set up. Ezekiel does not, like other prophets, prophesy against Babylon; it was his mission to show that for the moment, Babylon was the righteous instrument of the divine wrath, doing God’ s work in punishing His foes. In prophesying against foreign nations, Ezekiel often adopts the language of those who preceded him.
In Ezek. 25, the four nations most closely connected with one another by geographical position and by contact, are addressed in a few brief sentences concluding with the same refrain - "Ye shall know that I am the Lord"(e. g. Eze 25:5). This prophecy was delivered immediately after the capture of the city by Nebuchadnezzar, and so is later, in point of time, than some of the prophecies that follow it.
The Ammonites were inveterate foes of the descendants of Abraham.
Men of the east - The wild wandering Arabs who should come in afterward upon the ruined land. The name was a common term for the nomadic tribes of the desert. Compare Isa 13:20.
Palaces - encampments. The tents and folds of nomadic tribes. After subjugation by Nebuchadnezzar Eze 21:28, the land was subjected to various masters. The Graeco-Egyptian kings founded a city on the site of Rabbah Eze 25:5, called Philadelphia, from Ptolemy Philadelphus. In later times, Arabs from the east have completed the doom pronounced against Rabbah.
For a spoil - Or, for a portion.
Poole -> Eze 25:7
Poole: Eze 25:7 - -- Thou stretchedst out thy hand in joy,
I will stretch out mine in wrath; thou, against my people, I, against thee.
For a spoil for a prey, or for...
Thou stretchedst out thy hand in joy,
I will stretch out mine in wrath; thou, against my people, I, against thee.
For a spoil for a prey, or for meat, so the word will bear. The greedy, covetous soldier shall make thy wealth his prey; the hungry enemy shall eat thee up.
The heathen Babylonians, and their confederates.
I will cut thee off explained by that follows; Ammon, thou shalt no more be accounted among the nations, but cease from being a people. I will destroy thee; so shalt thou be destroyed.
Thou shalt know: see Eze 25:5 .
Haydock -> Eze 25:7
Haydock: Eze 25:7 - -- Lord, and that it was not through impotence that my people became a prey. Ammon and Moab returned after some time, ver. 10., and chap. xvi. 53., and ...
Lord, and that it was not through impotence that my people became a prey. Ammon and Moab returned after some time, ver. 10., and chap. xvi. 53., and Jeremias xlix. 6.
Gill -> Eze 25:7
Gill: Eze 25:7 - -- Behold, therefore, I will stretch out mine hand upon thee,.... In just retaliation for clapping their hands against his people; and which hand of the ...
Behold, therefore, I will stretch out mine hand upon thee,.... In just retaliation for clapping their hands against his people; and which hand of the Lord they would find to be a heavy one, and which they would not be able either to resist or bear. The Targum is,
"I will lift up the stroke of my power upon thee:''
and will deliver thee for a spoil to the Heathen; to the Chaldeans first, and then to the Arabians, to be spoiled and plundered by them of their wealth and substance: some render it, "for meat" s unto them; to be devoured and consumed by them:
and I will cut thee off from the people, and I will cause thee to perish out of the countries; so as to be no more a people and a country; or be reckoned among the people and countries; or have any alliance with them, or help from them:
I will destroy thee, and thou shalt know that I am the Lord; who has said and done all this; See Gill on Eze 25:5.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Eze 25:1-17
TSK Synopsis: Eze 25:1-17 - --1 God's vengeance, for their insolency against the Jews, upon the Ammonites;8 upon Moab and Seir;12 upon Edom;15 and upon the Philistines.
MHCC -> Eze 25:1-7
MHCC: Eze 25:1-7 - --It is wicked to be glad at the calamities of any, especially of God's people; it is a sin for which he will surely reckon. God will make it appear tha...
Matthew Henry -> Eze 25:1-7
Matthew Henry: Eze 25:1-7 - -- Here, I. The prophet is ordered to address himself to the Ammonites, in the name of the Lord Jehovah the God of Israel, who is also the God of t...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Eze 25:1-7
Keil-Delitzsch: Eze 25:1-7 - --
Against the Ammonites
Eze 25:1. And the word of Jehovah came to me, saying, Eze 25:2. Son of man, direct thy face towards the sons of Ammon, an...
Constable: Eze 25:1--32:32 - --III. Oracles against foreign nations chs. 25--32
It is appropriate that this section appears at this point in Ez...

Constable: Eze 25:1-17 - --A. Oracles against Judah's closest neighbors ch. 25
This chapter ties in very closely with the preceding...
