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Text -- Zephaniah 1:9 (NET)

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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
At the same time.

Wesley: Zep 1:9 - -- Either the oppressing kings, whose officers these were, or publick officers and judges, whose servants thus spoiled the poor.
Either the oppressing kings, whose officers these were, or publick officers and judges, whose servants thus spoiled the poor.

Goods taken by force, by false accusations, or by suborned evidence.
JFB: Zep 1:9 - -- The servants of the princes, who, after having gotten prey (like hounds) for their masters, leap exultingly on their masters' thresholds; or, on the t...
The servants of the princes, who, after having gotten prey (like hounds) for their masters, leap exultingly on their masters' thresholds; or, on the thresholds of the houses which they break into [CALVIN]. JEROME explains it of those who walk up the steps into the sanctuary with haughtiness. ROSENMULLER translates, "Leap over the threshold"; namely, in imitation of the Philistine custom of not treading on the threshold, which arose from the head and hands of Dragon being broken off on the threshold before the ark (1Sa 5:5). Compare Isa 2:6, "thy people . . . are soothsayers like the Philistines." CALVIN'S view agrees best with the latter clause of the verse.

That is, with goods obtained with violence, &c.
Clarke -> Zep 1:9
Clarke: Zep 1:9 - -- That leap on the threshold - Or, that leap over the threshold. It is most probable that the Philistines are here meant. After the time that Dagon fe...
That leap on the threshold - Or, that leap over the threshold. It is most probable that the Philistines are here meant. After the time that Dagon fell before the ark, and his hands were broken off on the threshold of his temple, his worshippers would no more set a foot upon the threshold, but stepped or leaped over it, when they entered into his temple. The Chaldee understands this of the Philistines, without giving this reason for it. Some understand it of haughtiness and pride: others think that leaping on the threshold refers to the customs of the Arabs, who used to ride into people’ s houses and take away whatever they could carry; and that this is the reason why, in several parts of the East, they have their doors made very low, to prevent those depredators from entering. In this manner, we learn the Persians have frequently oppressed the poor Armenians, going on horseback into their houses, and taking whatever they thought proper. Mr. Harmer understands it in this way.
TSK -> Zep 1:9
TSK: Zep 1:9 - -- those : Or, ""that leap over the threshold,""by which is probably meant the Philistines, who, after the time that Dagon fell before the ark and was br...
those : Or, ""that leap over the threshold,""by which is probably meant the Philistines, who, after the time that Dagon fell before the ark and was broken on the threshold, leaped over it when entering his temple.
leap : 1Sa 5:5
which : 1Sa 2:15, 1Sa 2:16; 2Ki 5:20-27; Neh 5:15; Pro 29:12; Act 16:19

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Zep 1:9
Barnes: Zep 1:9 - -- I will punish all those that leap on the threshold - Neither language nor history nor context allow this to be understood of the idolatrous cus...
I will punish all those that leap on the threshold - Neither language nor history nor context allow this to be understood of the idolatrous custom of Ashdod, not to tread on the threshold of the temple of Dagon. It had indeed been a strange infatuation of idolatry, that God’ s people should adopt an act of superstitious reverence for an idol in the very instance in which its nothingness and the power of the true God had been shown. Nothing is indeed too brutish for one who chooses an idol for the true God, preferring Satan to the good God. Yet, the superstition belonged apparently to Ashdod alone; the worship of Dagon, although another form of untrue worship, does not appear, like that of Baal, to have fascinated the Jews; nor would Zephaniah, to express a rare superstition, have chosen an idiom, which might more readily express the contrary, that they "leapt "on"the threshold,"not over it.
They are also the same persons, who "leap on the threshold,"and who "fill their masters’ houses with violence and deceit."Yet, this relates, not to superstition, but to plunder and goods unjustly gotten. As then, before, he had declared God’ s judgments upon idolatry, so does he here upon sins against the second table, whether by open violence, or secret fraud, as do also Habakkuk Hab 1:2-3, and Jeremiah Jer 5:27. All, whether open or hidden from man, every wrongful dealing, (for every sin as to a neighbor’ s goods falls under these two, violence or fraud) shall be avenged in that day. Here again all which remains is the sin. They enriched, as they thought, their masters by art or by force; they schemed, plotted, robbed; they succeeded to their heart’ s wish; but, "ill-gotten, ill-spent!"They "filled their masters’ houses"quite full; but wherewith? with violence and deceit, which witnessed against them, and brought down the judgments of God upon them.
Poole -> Zep 1:9
Poole: Zep 1:9 - -- In the same day not to be taken for a single day, but more largely for that time wherein God would visit and punish.
That leap on the threshold ins...
In the same day not to be taken for a single day, but more largely for that time wherein God would visit and punish.
That leap on the threshold insolently, and with rage, break open the doors of such whose goods they seize, upon pretence of forfeitures or fines; a sin that Ezekiel both taxed and threatened, Eze 8:17 12:19 45:9 .
Their masters either the oppressing kings, whose officers these were, or public officers and judges, whose servants thus did (to enrich their masters) spoil the poor and the oppressed.
With violence goods taken away by force, and kept as much against right, as at first taken away without right;
and deceit by false accusations, and by suborned evidence for proof, and by perjuries.
Haydock -> Zep 1:9
Haydock: Zep 1:9 - -- Entereth the temple, as if to shew themselves, Amos vi. 1. Hebrew, "jumpeth over," &c., denoting the Philistines. (Chaldean) (1 Kings v. 5.) (Cal...
Entereth the temple, as if to shew themselves, Amos vi. 1. Hebrew, "jumpeth over," &c., denoting the Philistines. (Chaldean) (1 Kings v. 5.) (Calmet) ---
Septuagint, "I will take vengeance on all openly before the gate in that day," (Haydock) on all who have cast themselves out of the Church. (St. Jerome) ---
Lord. Hebrew, of their masters with," &c. This may relate to the Philistines, (Calmet) or to those who made the house of God a place of traffic, (Matthew xxi. 13.) and offered victims unjustly acquired. (Haydock)
Gill -> Zep 1:9
Gill: Zep 1:9 - -- In the same day also will I punish all those that leap on the threshold,.... Not in a ludicrous way, who, by dancing and leaping, made sport for perso...
In the same day also will I punish all those that leap on the threshold,.... Not in a ludicrous way, who, by dancing and leaping, made sport for persons, and brought their masters much gain, as the damsel possessed with a spirit of divination did, Act 16:16 rather, that entered rashly and irreverently into the house of God; or else in an idolatrous way, who, when they went into an idol's temple, did not tread upon the threshold, but leaped over it, as the priests of Dagon, after the fall of that idol on the threshold, 1Sa 5:4. So the Targum,
"and I will visit all those that walk in the laws (or according to the customs) of the Philistines;''
whose idol Dagon was: but it seems better to interpret it of such, who, seeing houses full of good things, in a rude, bold, insolent manner, thrust themselves, or jumped into them, and took away what they pleased; or when they returned to their masters' houses with their spoil, who set them on, and encouraged them in these practices, leaped over the threshold for joy of what they had got, as Aben Ezra observes; which agrees with what follows:
which fill their masters' houses with violence and deceit; that is, with goods got by rapine and force, and by fraudulent ways and methods: this is to be understood of the servants of great men, who, to feed the ambition and avarice of their masters, used very oppressive methods with inferior persons to get their substance from them, and gratify their masters. Cocceius interprets these "three" verses of the day of Christ's coming in the flesh being at hand, when the true sacrifice should be offered up, and God would call his people to feed by faith upon it; when all civil power and authority in the sanhedrim and family of David should be removed from the Jews; and all friendship with the nations of the world, signified by likeness of garments; and the priestly dignity, the priests, according to him, being those that leaped over the threshold; that is, of the house of the Lord, the temple, and filled it with the spoil of widows' houses, unsupportable precepts, and false doctrines.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Zep 1:9 Heb “who fill…with violence and deceit.” The expression “violence and deceit” refers metonymically to the wealth taken b...
Geneva Bible -> Zep 1:9
Geneva Bible: Zep 1:9 In the same day also will I punish all those that ( e ) leap on the threshold, which fill their masters' houses with violence and deceit.
( e ) He me...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Zep 1:1-18
TSK Synopsis: Zep 1:1-18 - --1 The time when Zephaniah prophesied.2 God's severe judgments against Judah.
MHCC -> Zep 1:7-13
MHCC: Zep 1:7-13 - --God's day is at hand; the punishment of presumptuous sinners is a sacrifice to the justice of God. The Jewish royal family shall be reckoned with for ...
Matthew Henry -> Zep 1:7-13
Matthew Henry: Zep 1:7-13 - -- Notice is here given to Judah and Jerusalem that God is coming forth against them, and will be with them shortly; his presence, as a just avenger,...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Zep 1:8-9
Keil-Delitzsch: Zep 1:8-9 - --
The judgment will fall with equal severity upon the idolatrous and sinners of every rank (Zep 1:8-11), and no one in Jerusalem will be able to save ...
Constable: Zep 1:2--3:9 - --II. The day of Yahweh's judgment 1:2--3:8
Zephaniah's prophecies are all about "the day of the LORD." He reveale...

Constable: Zep 1:4--2:4 - --B. The judgment on Judah 1:4-2:3
The Lord gave more details about this worldwide judgment. It would incl...





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