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Text -- Hosea 5:10 (NET)

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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Hos 5:10 - -- The ancient bounds which limited every one, and prevented the encroaching of covetous men.
The ancient bounds which limited every one, and prevented the encroaching of covetous men.

Proving that the scene of Hosea's labor was among the ten tribes.

JFB: Hos 5:9-10 - -- Namely, the coming judgment here foretold. It is no longer a conditional decree, leaving a hope of pardon on repentance; it is absolute, for Ephraim i...
Namely, the coming judgment here foretold. It is no longer a conditional decree, leaving a hope of pardon on repentance; it is absolute, for Ephraim is hopelessly impenitent.

JFB: Hos 5:10 - -- (Deu 19:14; Deu 27:17; Job 24:2; Pro 22:28; Pro 23:10). Proverbial for the rash setting aside of the ancestral laws by which men are kept to their du...
(Deu 19:14; Deu 27:17; Job 24:2; Pro 22:28; Pro 23:10). Proverbial for the rash setting aside of the ancestral laws by which men are kept to their duty. Ahaz and his courtiers ("the princes of Judah"), setting aside the ancient ordinances of God, removed the borders of the bases and the layer and the sea and introduced an idolatrous altar from Damascus (2Ki 16:10-18); also he burnt his children in the valley of Hinnom, after the abominations of the heathen (2Ch 28:3).
Clarke -> Hos 5:10
Clarke: Hos 5:10 - -- Like them that remove the bound - As execrable as they who remove the land-mark. They have leaped over law’ s enclosure, and scaled all the wal...
Like them that remove the bound - As execrable as they who remove the land-mark. They have leaped over law’ s enclosure, and scaled all the walls of right; they have despised and broken all laws, human and Divine.
Calvin -> Hos 5:10
Calvin: Hos 5:10 - -- Here the Prophet transfers the blame of all the evils which then reigned in the tribe of Judah to their princes. He says, that the people had fallen ...
Here the Prophet transfers the blame of all the evils which then reigned in the tribe of Judah to their princes. He says, that the people had fallen away and departed from God through their fault, and he uses a most fit similitude. We know that there is nothing certain in the possessions of men, except the boundaries of fields be fixed; for no one can otherwise keep his own. But by the metaphor of boundaries in fields, the Prophet refers to the whole political order. The meaning is, that all things were now in a state of disorder and confusion among the Jews; because their leaders who ought to have ruled the people and kept them in obedience, had destroyed the whole order of things. We now then understand what the Prophet had really in view.
But it must be observed that the tribe of Judah had been hitherto kept separate, as it were by limits, as God’s heritage; for Israel had become alienated. The possession of God had been diminished by the defection of Jeroboam; and he retained only one tribe and a half in his service. The Prophet says now, that the Jews had mixed with the Israelites, and had thus become themselves alienated from the Lord; for the princes themselves had taken away the boundaries, that is, they had, through indolence and other vices, destroyed all reverence for God, all care for religion, and also every concern for what was just and right: he therefore severely threatens them, “I will pour out”, he says, “my wrath upon them like waters”.
By this metaphor, he means that God would deal much more severely with them than with the common people: “I,” he says, “will with full force pour forth upon them my fury, as if it were the deluge of antiquity.” The meaning is, “I will overwhelm them in my vengeance, because they have done more evil by their bad examples, than if they had been private individuals.” We hence see that the corruption of the people is imputed to the princes, and therefore God’s more dreadful vengeance is denounced on them.
But we must bear in mind what I have before said, that the Prophet gives here metaphorically the name of boundaries to the lawful worship of God, and to whatever he had enjoined on the people, that they might be his certain possession, as fields among men are usually separated by bounds that every one may keep his own. It follows. —
TSK -> Hos 5:10
TSK: Hos 5:10 - -- princes : Hos 5:5
remove : Deu 19:14, Deu 27:17; 2Ki 16:7-9; 2Ch 28:16-22; Pro 17:14, Pro 22:28
like : Psa 32:6, Psa 88:17, Psa 93:3, Psa 93:4; Mat 7:...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Hos 5:10
Barnes: Hos 5:10 - -- The princes of Judah were like them that remove the bound - All avaricious encroachment on the paternal inheritance of others, was strictly for...
The princes of Judah were like them that remove the bound - All avaricious encroachment on the paternal inheritance of others, was strictly forbidden by God in the law, under the penalty of His curse. "Cursed is he that removeth his neighbor’ s landmark"Deu 27:17. "The princes of Judah,"i. e., those who were the king’ s counselors and chief in the civil polity, had committed sin, like to this. Since the prophet had just pronounced the desolation of Israel, perhaps that sin was, that instead of taking warning from the threatened destruction, and turning to God, they thought only how the removal of Ephraim would benefit them, by the enlargement of their borders. They might hope also to increase their private estates out of the desolate lands of Ephraim, their brother. The unregenerate heart, instead of being awed by God’ s judgment on others, looks out to see, what advantages it may gain from them. Times of calamity are also times of greediness. Israel had been a continual sore to Judah. The princes of Judah rejoiced in the prospect of their removal, instead of mourning their sin and fearing for themselves. More widely yet, the words may mean, that the "princes of Judah""burst all bounds, set to them by the law of God, to which nothing was to be added, from which nothing was to be diminished,"transferring to idols or devils, to sun, moon and stars, or to the beings supposed to preside over them, the love, honor, and worship, due to God Alone.
I will pour out My wrath like water - So long as those bounds were not broken through, the justice of God, although manifoldly provoked, was yet stayed. When Judah should break them, they would, as it were, make a way for the chastisement of God, which should burst in like a flood upon them, over-spreading the whole land, yet bringing, not renewed life, but death. Like a flood, it overwhelmed the land; but it was a flood, not of water, but of the wrath of God. They had burst the bounds which divided them from Israel, and had let in upon themselves its chastisements.
Poole -> Hos 5:10
Poole: Hos 5:10 - -- The princes the great men about the king and court, the rulers and governors, who by the law of God and man should have been the maintainers of equit...
The princes the great men about the king and court, the rulers and governors, who by the law of God and man should have been the maintainers of equity and justice among the people.
Of Judah of the kingdom of Judah, or the two tribes.
Were have been, and now are in the days of Ahaz, for to this man’ s time the prophet now pointeth.
Like them that remove the bound the ancient bounds which limited every one, prevented controversies and oppressions of encroaching, covetous men. The prophet, I doubt not, aims at reproving the sin of these great ones in changing the laws of religion, as well as altering the bounds of civil rights, whether by encroaching upon foreigners, and enlarging the kingdom of Judah by entrenching on the neighbouring kingdoms, or, which is more certain, by injustice and violence seizing what was another’ s.
Therefore I will pour out my wrath upon them: this was sin and forbidden, Deu 19:14 ; this practice is cursed, Deu 27:17 , and God now will punish it.
Like water like an overflowing flood.
Haydock -> Hos 5:10
Haydock: Hos 5:10 - -- Bound. This was a capital crime, under Numa, and forbidden, Deuteronomy xix. 14. (Calmet) ---
Juda hoped to seize what was abandoned. (St. Jerome...
Bound. This was a capital crime, under Numa, and forbidden, Deuteronomy xix. 14. (Calmet) ---
Juda hoped to seize what was abandoned. (St. Jerome) ---
They deferred doing penance, and removed the boundaries set by their fathers, (Theodoret; Calmet) the virtuous patriarchs, whom they would not imitate.
Gill -> Hos 5:10
Gill: Hos 5:10 - -- The princes of Judah were like them that remove the bound,.... Or landmark, which to do was contrary to the law, Deu 19:14; and has always been reckon...
The princes of Judah were like them that remove the bound,.... Or landmark, which to do was contrary to the law, Deu 19:14; and has always been reckoned a heinous sin among all nations, and is only done by such who have no regard to right and wrong, and by them secretly; and such were the kings, princes, and nobles of Judah; they secretly committed the grossest iniquities, yea, were abandoned to their vile lusts, and could not be contained within any bounds. The "caph" here used is, according to Kimchi and Ben Melech, not a note of similitude, but of certainty; and then the sense is, that the princes of Judah did remove the bound; either, in a literal sense, by force and violence seized on the possessions and inheritances of their neighbours which lay next to theirs; or, in a figurative sense, they broke through all bounds and limits, and transgressed the laws of God and men, being not to be restrained by either:
therefore I will pour out my wrath upon them like water; in great abundance, and with such force and vehemence, as not to be stopped, but utterly destroy; like a flood of water, which overflows the banks, or breaks them down, and carries all before it; or like the flood of water that came upon the earth, and carried off the world of the ungodly; in like manner should the wrath of God be poured down from heaven upon these princes without measure, exceeding all bounds, in just retaliation for their removing the bounds of their neighbours, or transgressing the laws of God: this was fulfilled either in the times of Ahaz, when Rezin king of Syria, and Pekah king of Israel, as well as Tiglathpileser king of Assyria, greatly afflicted Judah, 2Ch 28:1; or at the time of the Babylonish captivity.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Hos 5:10
NET Notes: Hos 5:10 Heb “like water” (so KJV, NAB, NRSV); NLT “like a waterfall.” The term מַיִם (mayim, “wate...
Geneva Bible -> Hos 5:10
Geneva Bible: Hos 5:10 The princes of Judah were like them that ( k ) remove the bound: [therefore] I will pour out my wrath upon them like water.
( k ) They have turned up...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Hos 5:1-15
TSK Synopsis: Hos 5:1-15 - --1 The judgments of God are denounced against the priests, people, and princes, both of Israel and Judah, for their manifold sins.15 An intimation is g...
MHCC -> Hos 5:8-15
MHCC: Hos 5:8-15 - --The destruction of impenitent sinners is not mere talk, to frighten them, it is a sentence which will not be recalled. And it is a mercy that we have ...
Matthew Henry -> Hos 5:8-15
Matthew Henry: Hos 5:8-15 - -- Here is, I. A loud alarm sounded, giving notice of judgments coming (Hos 5:8): Blow you the cornet in Gibeah and in Ramah, two cities near toget...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Hos 5:9-10
Keil-Delitzsch: Hos 5:9-10 - --
"Ephraim will become a desert in the day of punishment: over the tribes of Israel have I proclaimed that which lasts. Hos 5:10. The princes of Jud...
Constable: Hos 4:1--6:4 - --IV. The third series of messages on judgment and restoration: widespread guilt 4:1--6:3
The remaining messages t...

Constable: Hos 4:1--5:15 - --A. The judgment oracles chs. 4-5
Chapters 4 and 5 contain more messages of judgment. Chapter 4 focuses o...

Constable: Hos 5:1-15 - --2. The guilt of both Israel and Judah ch. 5
The general pattern of accusation of guilt followed ...




