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Text -- Jonah 2:5 (NET)

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Context
2:5 Water engulfed me up to my neck; the deep ocean surrounded me; seaweed was wrapped around my head.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: WEEDS | Repentance | Missions | Jonah | Head-dress | Flag | Fish | Faith | Deep, The | Conviction | Backsliders | Afflictions and Adversities | ABYSS | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , Defender , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable , Guzik

Other
Evidence

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: Jon 2:5 - -- It seems to mean, my case was as hopeless as that of a man wrapt about with weeds in the depth of the sea.

It seems to mean, my case was as hopeless as that of a man wrapt about with weeds in the depth of the sea.

JFB: Jon 2:5 - -- That is, threatening to extinguish the animal life.

That is, threatening to extinguish the animal life.

JFB: Jon 2:5 - -- He felt as if the seaweeds through which he was dragged were wrapped about his head.

He felt as if the seaweeds through which he was dragged were wrapped about his head.

Clarke: Jon 2:5 - -- The waters compassed me about even to the soul - So as to seem to deprive me of life. I had no hope left

The waters compassed me about even to the soul - So as to seem to deprive me of life. I had no hope left

Clarke: Jon 2:5 - -- The weeds were wrapped about my head - This may be understood literally also. He found himself in the fish’ s stomach, together with sea weeds,...

The weeds were wrapped about my head - This may be understood literally also. He found himself in the fish’ s stomach, together with sea weeds, and such like marine substances, which the fish had taken for its aliment.

Calvin: Jon 2:5 - -- Here in many words Jonah relates how many things had happened to him, which were calculated to overwhelm his mind with terror and to drive him far fr...

Here in many words Jonah relates how many things had happened to him, which were calculated to overwhelm his mind with terror and to drive him far from God, and to take away every desire for prayer. But we must ever bear in mind what we have already stated, — that he had to do with God: and this ought to be well considered by us. The case was the same with David, when he says in Psa 39:9, ‘Thou hast yet done it;’ for, after having complained of his enemies, he turned his mind to God: “What then do I? what do I gain by these complaints? for men alone do not vex me; thou, God, he says, hast done this.” So it was with Jonah; he ever set before him the wrath of God, for he knew that such a calamity had not happened to him but on account of his sins.

He therefore says that he was by waters beset, and then, that he was surrounded by the deep; but at length he adds, that God made his life to ascend, etc. All these circumstances tend to show that Jonah could not have raised up his mind to God except through an extraordinary miracle, as his life was in so many ways oppressed. When he says that he was beset with waters even to the soul, I understand it to have been to the peril of his life; for other explanations seem frigid and strained. And the Hebrews says that to be pressed to the soul, is to be in danger of one’s life; as the Latins, meaning the same thing, say that the heart, or the inside, or the bowels, are wounded. So also in this place the same thing is meant, ‘The waters beset me even to the soul,’ and then, ‘the abyss surrounds me.’ Some render סוף , suph, sedge; others sea-weed; others bulrush: but the sense amounts to the same thing. No doubt סוף , suph, is a species of sedge; and some think that the Red Sea was thus called, because it is full of sedges or bulrushes. They think also that bulrushes are thus called, because they soon putrefy. But what Jonah means is certain and that is, that weed enveloped his head, or that weed grew around his head: but to refer this to the head of the fish, as some do, is improper: Jonah speaks metaphorically when he says that he was entangled in the sedge, inasmuch as there is no hope when any one is rolled in the sedge at the bottom of the sea. How, indeed, can he escape from drowning who is thus held, as it were, tied up? It is then to be understood metaphorically; for Jonah meant that he was so sunk that he could not swim, except through the ineffable power of God.

Defender: Jon 2:5 - -- The "soul" (Hebrew nephesh) of Jonah was inundated, as well as his body. This suggests that he actually died by drowning, even before the great "fish"...

The "soul" (Hebrew nephesh) of Jonah was inundated, as well as his body. This suggests that he actually died by drowning, even before the great "fish" swallowed him. Jonah later said: "My soul fainted within me" (Jon 2:7), indicating that he at least had lost consciousness. Nevertheless, he then "remembered the Lord" and prayed, his prayer ascending even to God.

Defender: Jon 2:5 - -- The seaweeds on the ocean floor evidently had also surrounded his body before the fish swallowed him. He actually "went down to the bottoms of the mou...

The seaweeds on the ocean floor evidently had also surrounded his body before the fish swallowed him. He actually "went down to the bottoms of the mountains" (Jon 2:6)."

TSK: Jon 2:5 - -- Psa 40:2, Psa 69:1, Psa 69:2; Lam 3:54

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Jon 2:5 - -- The waters compassed me about even to the soul - Words which to others were figures of distress (Psa 69:2. See the introduction to Jonah), "the...

The waters compassed me about even to the soul - Words which to others were figures of distress (Psa 69:2. See the introduction to Jonah), "the waters have come even to the soul,"were to Jonah realities. Sunk in the deep seas, the water strove to penetrate at every opening. To draw breath, which sustains life, to him would have been death. There was but a breath between him and death. "The deep encompassed me,"encircling, meeting him wherever he turned, holding him imprisoned on every side, so that there was no escape, and, if there otherwise had been, he was bound motionless, "the weed was wrapped around my head, like a grave-band.""The weed"was the well known seaweed, which, even near the surface of the sea where man can struggle, twines round him, a peril even to the strong swimmer, entangling him often the more, the more he struggles to extricate himself from it. But to one below, powerless to struggle, it was as his winding sheet.

Poole: Jon 2:5 - -- The former part of this verse seems to be an ingeminating of what was said Jon 2:3 , and bears the self-same meaning and interpretation. The waters...

The former part of this verse seems to be an ingeminating of what was said Jon 2:3 , and bears the self-same meaning and interpretation.

The waters literally, the waters of the sea; metaphorically, afflictions; mystically, temptations; these last arising from his own guilt, and from the tokens of God’ s displeasure against him in so unusual a manner.

Compassed me about, even to the soul to the endangering his life, and were forerunners (as he apprehended) of worse miseries, the foretastes of an eternal damnation: it was a miracle of providence to preserve my life, it was no less wonder of free grace to save my soul.

The depth closed me round about he was carried to the bottom of the sea, lay as in the deepest hole of the sea.

The weeds were wrapped about my head not immediately, as some conjecture, by the fish pulling them from the bottom of the sea and swallowing them down, where they wrapped Jonah’ s head; but mediately, when the fish swam amidst these: or rather it is a comparative speech; I was no more likely to escape drowning, than a man in the depth of the sea, wrapped up in, and held fast down by, the weeds in the bottom of the sea.

Haydock: Jon 2:5 - -- Eyes, in a sort of despair, like the psalmist, xxx. 23. Yet he presently resumes fresh confidence in God, notwithstanding the greatness of his offen...

Eyes, in a sort of despair, like the psalmist, xxx. 23. Yet he presently resumes fresh confidence in God, notwithstanding the greatness of his offences. ---

Temple. He went to Jerusalem, like other good Israelites.

Gill: Jon 2:5 - -- The waters compassed me about, even to the soul,.... Either when he was first cast into the sea, which almost suffocated him, and just ready to take ...

The waters compassed me about, even to the soul,.... Either when he was first cast into the sea, which almost suffocated him, and just ready to take away his life, could not breathe for them, as is the case of a man drowning; or these were the waters the fish drew into its belly, in such large quantities, that they compassed him about, even to the endangering of his life there. So the Targum,

"the waters surrounded me unto death.''

In this Jonah was a type of Christ in his afflictions and sorrows, which were so many and heavy, that he is said to be "exceeding sorrowful", or surrounded with sorrow, "even unto death", Mat 26:38; see also Psa 69:1;

the depth closed me round about; the great deep, the waters of the sea, both when he fell into it, and while in the belly of the fish: thus also Christ his antitype came into deep waters, where there was no standing, and where floods of sin, and of ungodly men, and of divine wrath, overflowed him; see Psa 18:4;

the weeds were wrapped about my head; the sea weeds, of which there are great quantities in it, which grow at the bottom of it, to which Jonah came, and from whence he rose up again, before swallowed by the fish; or these weeds were drawn into the belly of the fish, along with the water which it took in, and were wrapped about the head of the prophet as he lay there; or the fish went down with him into the bottom of the sea, and lay among those weeds; and so they may be said to be wrapped about him, he being there, as follows. The Targum is,

"the sea of Suph being over my head;''

the same with the Red sea, which is so called, Psa 106:9; and elsewhere, and that from the weeds that were in it; and R. Japhet, as Aben Ezra observes, says the sea of Suph is mixed with the sea of Joppa; that is, as a learned man e observes, by means of the river Rhinocorura, through which the lake of Sirbon mingles with the great sea; and which lake itself is so called from the weeds in it; yea, was anciently called Suph, and the sea of Suph, or "mare Scirpeum", hence Sirbon: and the same writer thinks that the father of Andromede, said to be devoured by a whale about Joppa, had his name of Cepheus from hence.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Jon 2:5 The noun סוּף (suf) normally refers to “reeds” – freshwater plants that grow in Egyptian rivers and marshes ...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Jon 2:1-10 - --1 The prayer of Jonah.10 He is delivered out of the belly of the fish.

MHCC: Jon 2:1-9 - --Observe when Jonah prayed. When he was in trouble, under the tokens of God's displeasure against him for sin: when we are in affliction we must pray. ...

Matthew Henry: Jon 2:1-9 - -- God and his servant Jonah had parted in anger, and the quarrel began on Jonah's side; he fled from his country that he might outrun his work; but we...

Keil-Delitzsch: Jon 2:5-7 - -- x720 5    Waters surrounded me even to the soul: the flood encompassed me, Sea-grass was wound round my head. x720 6  ...

Constable: Jon 1:1--2:10 - --I. The disobedience of the prophet chs. 1--2 The first half of this prophecy records Jonah's attempt to flee fro...

Constable: Jon 2:2-9 - --F. Jonah's psalm of thanksgiving 2:2-9 The following prayer is mainly thanksgiving for deliverance from drowning. It is not thanksgiving for deliveran...

Guzik: Jon 2:1-10 - --Jonah 2 - In the Belly of the Fish A. Jonah in the fish. 1. (1:17) Jonah's three days and nights in the fish. Now the LORD had prepared a great fi...

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Commentary -- Other

Evidence: Jon 2:2-6 Perhaps here we have insight into the sufferings of the Savior. The waters of the wrath of God encompassed Him as His soul was made an offering for si...

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Introduction / Outline

JFB: Jonah (Book Introduction) JONAH was the son of Amittai, of Gath-hepher in Zebulun (called Gittah-hepher in Jos 19:10-13), so that he belonged to the kingdom of the ten tribes, ...

JFB: Jonah (Outline) JONAH'S COMMISSION TO NINEVEH, FLIGHT, PUNISHMENT, AND PRESERVATION BY MIRACLE. (Jon. 1:1-17) JONAH'S PRAYER OF FAITH AND DELIVERANCE. (Jon 2:1-10) J...

TSK: Jonah 2 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Jon 2:1, The prayer of Jonah; Jon 2:10, He is delivered out of the belly of the fish.

Poole: Jonah 2 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 2 The prayer of Jonah, Jon 1:1-9 . He is delivered out of the belly of the fish, Jon 1:10 .

MHCC: Jonah (Book Introduction) Jonah was a native of Galilee, 2Ki 14:25. His miraculous deliverance from out of the fish, rendered him a type of our blessed Lord, who mentions it, s...

MHCC: Jonah 2 (Chapter Introduction) (Jon 2:1-9) The prayer of Jonah. (Jon 2:10) He is delivered from the fish.

Matthew Henry: Jonah (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Book of Jonah This book of Jonah, though it be placed here in the midst of the prophetical books of...

Matthew Henry: Jonah 2 (Chapter Introduction) We left Jonah in the belly of the fish, and had reason to think we should hear no more of him, that if he were not destroyed by the waters of the s...

Constable: Jonah (Book Introduction) Introduction Background Jonah is the fifth of the Minor Prophets (the Book of the Twel...

Constable: Jonah (Outline) Outline I. The disobedience of the prophet chs. 1-2 A. Jonah's attempt to flee from God 1:1-...

Constable: Jonah Jonah Bibliography Allen, Leslie C. The Books of Joel, Obadiah, Jonah and Micah. New International Commentary o...

Haydock: Jonah (Book Introduction) THE PROPHECY OF JONAS. INTRODUCTION. Jonas prophesied in the reign of Jeroboam II, as we learn from 4 Kings xiv. 25., to whom also he foreto...

Gill: Jonah (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO JONAH This book, in the Hebrew copies, is called "Sepher Jonah", the Book of Jonah; by the Vulgate Latin version "the Prophecy of J...

Gill: Jonah 2 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO JONAH 2 This chapter contains the prayer of Jonah, when in the fish's belly; the time when he prayed, the person he prayed unto, an...

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