
Text -- Amos 2:10-16 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Amo 2:11 - -- Persons who bound themselves to a very sober and holy life; either for some certain time, or for their whole life.
Persons who bound themselves to a very sober and holy life; either for some certain time, or for their whole life.

Importuned them to drink wine, to violate their vow, and contemn God's law.

For their enemies shall be swifter than they.

Natural strength of body shall not deliver.

The valiant man, the man of the greatest courage.
"brought up" is the phrase, as Egypt was low and flat, and Canaan hilly.

JFB: Amo 2:10 - -- The Amorites strictly occupied both sides of the Jordan and the mountains afterward possessed by Judah; but they here, as in Amo 2:9, stand for all th...
The Amorites strictly occupied both sides of the Jordan and the mountains afterward possessed by Judah; but they here, as in Amo 2:9, stand for all the Canaanites. God kept Israel forty years in the wilderness, which tended to discipline them in His statutes, so as to be the better fitted for entering on the possession of Canaan.

JFB: Amo 2:11 - -- Additional obligations under which Israel lay to God; the prophets and Nazarites, appointed by Him, to furnish religious instruction and examples of h...
Additional obligations under which Israel lay to God; the prophets and Nazarites, appointed by Him, to furnish religious instruction and examples of holy self-restraint.

JFB: Amo 2:11 - -- It was a specimen of Israel's highly favored state, that, of the class most addicted to pleasures, God chose those who by a solemn vow bound themselve...
It was a specimen of Israel's highly favored state, that, of the class most addicted to pleasures, God chose those who by a solemn vow bound themselves to abstinence from all produce of the vine, and from all ceremonial and moral defilement. The Nazarite was not to shave (Num 6:2, &c.). God left nothing undone to secure the purity of their worship and their faithfulness to it (Lam 4:7). The same comes from a Hebrew root, nazar, "to set apart." Samson, Samuel, and John the Baptist were Nazarites.

JFB: Amo 2:12 - -- Ye so despised these My favors, as to tempt the Nazarite to break his vow; and forbade the prophets prophesying (Isa 30:10). So Amaziah forbade Amos (...
Ye so despised these My favors, as to tempt the Nazarite to break his vow; and forbade the prophets prophesying (Isa 30:10). So Amaziah forbade Amos (Amo 7:12-14).

JFB: Amo 2:13 - -- So CALVIN (Compare Isa 1:14). The Margin translates actively, "I will depress your place," that is, "I will make it narrow," a metaphor for afflicting...
So CALVIN (Compare Isa 1:14). The Margin translates actively, "I will depress your place," that is, "I will make it narrow," a metaphor for afflicting a people; the opposite of enlarging, that is, relieving (Psa 4:1; Pro 4:12). MAURER translates, "I will press you down" (not as Margin, "your place"; so the Hebrew, Job 40:12; or Amo 2:7 in Hebrew text). Amos, as a shepherd, appropriately draws his similes from rustic scenes.

Even the swift shall not be able to escape.

That is, shall not be able to use his strength.

JFB: Amo 2:16 - -- If any escape, it must be with the loss of accoutrements, and all that would impede rapid flight. They must be content with saving their life alone.
If any escape, it must be with the loss of accoutrements, and all that would impede rapid flight. They must be content with saving their life alone.
Clarke: Amo 2:12 - -- But ye gave the Nazarites wine - This was expressly forbidden in the laws of their institution. See Num 6:1-3
But ye gave the Nazarites wine - This was expressly forbidden in the laws of their institution. See Num 6:1-3

Clarke: Amo 2:12 - -- Prophesy not - They would not worship God, and they would not hear the voice of his prophets.
Prophesy not - They would not worship God, and they would not hear the voice of his prophets.

Clarke: Amo 2:13 - -- Behold, I am pressed under you - The marginal reading is better: "Behold, I will press your place, as a cart full of sheaves presseth."I will bring ...
Behold, I am pressed under you - The marginal reading is better: "Behold, I will press your place, as a cart full of sheaves presseth."I will bring over you the wheel of destruction; and it shall grind your place - your city and temple, as the wheel of a cart laden with sheaves presses down the ground, gravel, and stones over which it rolls.

Clarke: Amo 2:14 - -- The flight shall perish from the swift - The swiftest shall not be able to save himself from a swifter destruction. None, by might, by counsel, or b...
The flight shall perish from the swift - The swiftest shall not be able to save himself from a swifter destruction. None, by might, by counsel, or by fleetness, shall be able to escape from the impending ruin. In a word, God has so fully determined to avenge the quarrel of his broken covenant, that all attempts to escape from his judgments shall be useless.

Clarke: Amo 2:15 - -- Neither shall he that rideth the horse deliver himself - I believe all these sayings, Amo 2:13-16, are proverbs, to show the inutility of all attemp...
Neither shall he that rideth the horse deliver himself - I believe all these sayings, Amo 2:13-16, are proverbs, to show the inutility of all attempts, even in the best circumstances, to escape the doom now decreed, because the cup of their iniquity was full.

Clarke: Amo 2:16 - -- Shall flee away naked - In some cases the alarm shall be in the night; and even the most heroic shall start from his bed, and through terror not wai...
Shall flee away naked - In some cases the alarm shall be in the night; and even the most heroic shall start from his bed, and through terror not wait to put on his clothes.
Calvin: Amo 2:10 - -- He afterwards subjoins, I have made you to ascend from the land of Egypt; I have made you to walk in the desert for forty years, in order to possess...
He afterwards subjoins, I have made you to ascend from the land of Egypt; I have made you to walk in the desert for forty years, in order to possess the land of the Amorite. The circumstances here specified are intended to confirm the same thing, that God had miraculously redeemed his people. Men, we know, for the most part extenuate the favors of God; nay, this evil is innate in us. This is the reason why the Prophet so largely describes and extols the redemption of the people. Hence he says now that they had been led out of the land of Egypt. And they ought to have remembered what had been their condition in Egypt; for there they were most miserably oppressed. When therefore that coming out was set before them, it was the same as if God had reminded them how shamefully they had been treated, and how hard had been their bondage in Egypt. That beginning ought to have humbled them, and also to have stimulated them to the cultivation of piety. When now they proudly exulted against God, when no recollection of their deliverance laid hold on them, this vice is justly laid to their charge by the Prophet: “See,” he says, “ I have brought you forth from the land of Egypt; what were ye then? what was your nobility? what was your wealth or riches? what was your power? For the Egyptians treated you as the vilest slaves; your condition then was extremely ignominious; ye were as lost, and I redeemed you: and now buried is the recollection of so illustrious a kindness, which deserved to be for ever remembered.”
He afterwards adds, I have made you to walk, etc. The Prophet here reminds them of the desert, that the Israelites might know that God might have justly closed up against them an entrance into the land, though he had promised it for an inheritance to Abraham. For how was it that the Lord led them about for so long a time, except that they, as far as they could, had denied God, and rendered themselves unworthy of enjoying the promised land? Then the Prophet indirectly blames the Israelites here for having been the cause why God detained them for forty years without introducing them immediately into the promised land; which might have easily been done, had they not closed the door against themselves by their ingratitude. This is one reason why the Prophet now speaks of the forty years. And then, as God had in various ways testified his kindness towards the Israelites, he had thus bound them the more to himself; but an ungodly forgetfulness had buried all his favors. God daily rained manna on them from heaven; he also gave them drink from a dry rock; he guided them during the day by a pillar of cloud, and in the night by fire: and we also know how often God bore with them, and how many proofs he gave them of his forbearance. The Prophet, then, by speaking here of the forty years, meant to counsel the Israelites to call to mind the many favors, by which they were bound to God, while they were miraculously led by him for forty years in the desert.

Calvin: Amo 2:11 - -- He now subjoins, I have raised from your sons Prophets, and Nazarites from your young or strong men, (for בחרים , becharim, as we have elsew...
He now subjoins, I have raised from your sons Prophets, and Nazarites from your young or strong men, (for
And he mentions also the Nazarites. It appears sufficiently evident from Num 6:1, why God appointed Nazarites. Nothing is more difficult, we know, than to induce men to follow a common rule; for they ever seek something new; and hence have arisen so many devices, so many additions, in short, so many leavenings by which God’s worship is corrupted; for each wishes to be more holy than another, and affects some singularity. In case then any one had a wish to consecrate himself to God beyond what was commonly required, the Lord instituted a peculiar observance, that the people might not attempt any thing without at least his permission. Hence, when any one wished to consecrate himself to God, though they were all holy, he yet observed certain regulations: he abstained from wine; he allowed his hair to grow; in a word, he observed those ceremonial rites which we find in the chapter already referred to. God now reminds the Israelites that he had omitted nothing calculated to preserve them pure and holy, and entire in his worship.
After having related these two things, he asks them, Is not all this true? The facts were indeed well known: then the question, it may be said, was superfluous. But the Prophet designedly asked the Israelites the question here — Is it not so? that he might more deeply touch their hearts. We indeed often despise things well known, and we see how many heedlessly allow what they hear, and pass by things without any thought. Such must have been the torpidity of the Israelites; they might have confessed without disputing that all this was true, — that the Lord had raised up Prophets from their children, and that he had given to them that peculiar service of which we have spoken; but they mighty at the same time, have contemptuously overlooked the whole, had not this been added: “What do ye mean, O Israelites? ye do indeed see that nothing has been left undone by me to retain you in my service: how then is it now, that your lust leads you away from me, and that having shaken off the yoke, ye grow thus wanton against me?” We now perceive why the Prophet inserted this clause, for it was necessary that the Israelites should be more sharply roused, that being convicted, they might acknowledge their guilt.

Calvin: Amo 2:12 - -- But it now follows, Ye have to the Nazarites quaffed wine, and on the Prophets ye have laid a command, that they should not prophesy God complains ...
But it now follows, Ye have to the Nazarites quaffed wine, and on the Prophets ye have laid a command, that they should not prophesy God complains here that the service which he had instituted had been violated by the people. It seems indeed a light offense, that wine had been given to the Nazarites; for the kingdom of God, we know, is not meat and drink, (1Co 8:8) though this saying of Paul was not yet made known, it was yet true in all ages. It was then lawful for the Nazarites to drink wine, provided they used moderation. To this the simple answer is that it was lawful to drink wine, for they of their own accord undertook to abstain from it. In similar manner God forbade the priests to drink wine or strong drink whenever they entered the temple. God indeed did not wish to be served with this kind of ceremony; but his intention was to show, by such a rite, that a greater temperance is required in priests than in the people in general. His purpose then to withdraw them from the common mode of living, when they entered the temple; for they were as mediators between God and his people: they ought then to have consecrated themselves in a special manner. We now see that the priests were reminded by this external symbol, that greater holiness was required in them than in the people. The same thing must be also said of the Nazarites. The Nazarites might drink wine; but during the time they consecrated themselves to God, they were not allowed to drink wine, that they might thereby acknowledge that they were in a manner separated from the common habits of men, and were come nearer to God. We now understand why it was not lawful for the Nazarites to drink wine.
But it is frivolous for the Papists to pretend this example, and to introduce it in defense of their superstitions, and of their foolish and rash vows, which they undertake without any regard to God: for God expressly sanctioned and confirmed whatever the Nazarites did under the law. Let the Papists show a proof for their monastic vows, and foolish rites, by which they now trifle with God. We also know that there is a great difference between the Nazarites and the Papal monks; for the monks vow perpetual celibacy; others vow abstinence from flesh during life; and these things are done foolishly and rashly. They indeed think that the worship of God consists in these trifles. They promise what is not in their own power; for they renounce marriage, when they know not whether they are endued with the gift of chastity. And to abstain from flesh all their life is more foolish still, because they make this to be a part of God’s service. I do, at the same time, wonder that they bring forward this example, since there are none so holy under the Papacy as to abstain from wine. As for the Carthusians and other monks of the holier sort, they seem determined to take revenge on abstinence from flesh, for they choose the sweetest and the liveliest wine; as though they intended to get a compensation for the loss and deprivation they undergo, when they pledge to God their abstinence from flesh, by reserving the best wine for themselves. These things are extremely ludicrous. Besides it is a sufficient reply if we adduce what I have already said, that the Nazarites did nothing under the law but what God in his word approved and sanctioned.
Since God then so sharply and severely reproved the Israelites for giving wine to the Nazarites, what must be expected now, when we transgress the chief commandments of God, when we corrupt his whole spiritual worship? It seemed apparently but a venial sin, so to speak, in the Nazarites to drink wine. Had they become wanton or robbed, or had they done wrong to their brethren, or committed forgery, the charge against them would have doubtless been much more atrocious. Yet the Prophet does not now abstain from bitterly complaining that they drank wine. Then, since God would have us to worship him in a spiritual manner, a much heavier charge lies against us, if we violate his spiritual worship. As, for instance, if we now pollute the sacraments, if we corrupt the purity of divine worship, if we treat his word with scorn, yea, if we transgress as to these main points of religion, much less is our excuse. Let us then remember that the Prophet here reproves the Israelites for giving wine to the Nazarites.
He then adds, that they commanded the Prophets not to prophesy. It is certain that the Prophets were not forbidden to speak, at least expressly forbidden: but when the liberty of teaching faithfully as they ought to do is taken away from God’s servants, and a command to this effect is given them, it is the same thing as to reject wholly their doctrine. The Israelites wished Prophets to be among them; and yet they could not endure their plain reproofs. But when they had polluted the worship of God, when their whole conduct became dissolute, the Prophets sharply inveighed against them: this freedom could not be endured by the Israelites; they wished to be spared and flattered. What then the Prophet now lays to their charge is that they forbade God’s servants to declare the word freely and honestly as God had commanded them. Hence he says, On the Prophets they have laid a charge, that they should not prophesy.
This evil reigns in the world at this day. It would indeed be an execrable audacity wholly to reject the Lord’s word; this is what even ungodly men dare not openly to do: but they wish at the same time some middle course to be adopted, that God might not fully exercise authority over them. They then would gladly put restraint on the Holy Spirit, so as not to allow him to speak but within certain limitations: “See, we willingly allow thee some things, but this we cannot bear: so much asperity is extremely odious.” And under the Papacy at this day the liberty of prophesying is wholly suppressed: and among us how many there are who wish to impose laws on God’s servants beyond which they are not to pass? But we see what the Prophet says here, — that the word of God is repudiated when the freedom of teaching is restrained, and men wish to be flattered, and desire their sins to be covered, and cannot bear free admonitions.
Let us also notice the word command, which the Prophet uses.

Calvin: Amo 2:13 - -- The verb עיק , oik, in Hebrew is often transitive, and it is also a neuter. This place then may admit of two interpretations. The first is, tha...
The verb

Calvin: Amo 2:14 - -- I explained yesterday the verse, in which the Prophet says, in the name of God, that the people were like a grievous and heavy burden, as though they...
I explained yesterday the verse, in which the Prophet says, in the name of God, that the people were like a grievous and heavy burden, as though they were a wagon laden with many sheaves. I stated that the Prophet’s words are differently explained by many interpreters, who give this view, — that God compares himself to a loaded wagon, under which the people were to be crushed. But no necessity constrains us to take the same verb in two senses, active and neuter, as they do; and then the comparison seems not quite suitable; and farther, it is better, as I have said, to say, that God complains, that he was loaded and pressed down under the people, than to render
Hence the Prophet now denounces vengeance such as they deserved; and he says first, Perish shall flight from the swift, etc., that is, no one will be so swift as to escape by fleeing; and the valiant shall do nothing by fighting; for it is to confirm strength when one resists an adversary and repels assaults. The valiant, therefore, shall fight with no advantage; and then, The strong shall not deliver his own life: he who holds the bow shall not stand; that is, he who is equipped with a bow, and repels his enemy at a distance, shall not be able to stand in his place. He who is swift on foot shall not be able to flee, nor he who mounts a horse; which means that whether footmen or horsemen, they shall not, by their celerity, be able to escape death. And, lastly, he who is stout and intrepid in heart among the valiant shall flee away naked, being content with life alone, and only anxious to provide for his own safety.
The Prophet intimates by all these words, that so grievous would be the slaughter of the people, that it would be a miracle if any should escape.
We now then see how severely the prophet at the very beginning handled this people. He no doubt observed their great obduracy: for he would not have assailed them so sharply at first, had they not been for a long time rebellious and had despised all warnings and threatening. Amos was not the first who addressed them; but the Israelites had hardened themselves against all threatenings before he came to them. It therefore behaved him sharply to reprove them, as God treats men according to their disposition. I come now to the third chapter.
Defender -> Amo 2:12
Defender: Amo 2:12 - -- The Nazarites were dedicated to lives of abstinence from wine and strong drink (Num 6:1-8), and the prophets were called and trained to prophesy God's...
The Nazarites were dedicated to lives of abstinence from wine and strong drink (Num 6:1-8), and the prophets were called and trained to prophesy God's Word. It is doubly sinful not only to disobey God but also to induce or compel others to do so."
TSK: Amo 2:10 - -- I brought : Exo 12:51; Neh 9:8-12; Psa 105:42, Psa 105:43, Psa 136:10,Psa 136:11; Jer 32:20,Jer 32:21; Eze 20:10; Mic 6:4
and led : Num 14:34; Deu 2:7...
I brought : Exo 12:51; Neh 9:8-12; Psa 105:42, Psa 105:43, Psa 136:10,Psa 136:11; Jer 32:20,Jer 32:21; Eze 20:10; Mic 6:4
and led : Num 14:34; Deu 2:7, Deu 8:2-4; Neh 9:21; Psa 95:10; Act 7:42, Act 13:18
to possess : Num 14:31-35; Deu 1:20,Deu 1:21, Deu 1:39

TSK: Amo 2:11 - -- I raised : 1Sa 3:20, 1Sa 19:20; 1Ki 17:1, 1Ki 18:4, 1Ki 19:16, 1Ki 20:13, 1Ki 20:35, 1Ki 20:41, 1Ki 22:8; 2Ki 2:2-5; 2Ki 6:1, 2Ki 17:13; 2Ch 36:15; 2P...
I raised : 1Sa 3:20, 1Sa 19:20; 1Ki 17:1, 1Ki 18:4, 1Ki 19:16, 1Ki 20:13, 1Ki 20:35, 1Ki 20:41, 1Ki 22:8; 2Ki 2:2-5; 2Ki 6:1, 2Ki 17:13; 2Ch 36:15; 2Pe 1:20,2Pe 1:21
and : Amo 7:12, Amo 7:13; Isa 30:10,Isa 30:11; Jer 11:21, Jer 26:11; Mic 2:6; Mat 21:34-38; Act 4:18, Act 5:28, Act 7:51; 1Th 2:15, 1Th 2:16
Nazarites : Num 6:2; Jdg 13:4-7; Lam 4:7; Luk 1:3-17
Is it : Isa 5:3, Isa 5:4; Jer 2:5, Jer 2:31; Mic 6:3, Mic 6:4

TSK: Amo 2:13 - -- Behold : Psa 78:40; Isa 1:14, Isa 7:13, Isa 43:24; Eze 6:9, Eze 16:43; Mal 2:17
I am pressed : etc. or, I will press your place, as a cart full of she...

TSK: Amo 2:14 - -- the flight : Amo 9:1-3; Job 11:20 *marg. Ecc 9:11; Isa 30:16; Jer 9:23
himself : Heb. his soul, or life


TSK: Amo 2:16 - -- courageous : Heb. strong of his heart, Jer 48:41
flee : Jdg 4:17; 2Ki 7:8-20; Mar 14:52
courageous : Heb. strong of his heart, Jer 48:41
flee : Jdg 4:17; 2Ki 7:8-20; Mar 14:52

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Amo 2:10 - -- Also I - (Literally, "And I,"I, emphatic; thus and thus did ye to Me; and thus and thus, with all the mercy from the first, did I to you,) I br...
Also I - (Literally, "And I,"I, emphatic; thus and thus did ye to Me; and thus and thus, with all the mercy from the first, did I to you,) I brought you up from the land of Egypt It is this language in which God, in the law, reminded them of that great benefit, as a motive to obedience; "I brought thee forth out of the land of Egypt, out of the house of bondage"Exo 20:2; Deu 5:6; Deu 6:12; only there, since God has not as yet "brought them up"into the land which He promised them, but they were yet in the wilderness, He says, "brought them forth;"here, "brought them up,"as to a place of dignity, His own land.
And led you forty years through the wilderness - These are the very words of the law (Deu 29:4, (5 English), and reminded them of so many benefits during the course of those "forty years,"which the law rehearsed; the daily supply of manna, the water from the rock, the deliverance from the serpents and other perils, the manifold forgivenesses. To be "led forty years through the wilderness,"alone, had been no kindness, but a punishment. It was a blending of both. The abiding in the wilderness was punishment or austere mercy, keeping them back from the land which they had shown themselves unqualified to enter: God’ s "leading"them was, His condescending mercy. The words, taken from the law, must have re-awakened in the souls of Israelites the memory of mercies which they did not mention, how that same book relates "He found him in a desert land, and in the waste howling wilderness; He led him about; He instructed him; He kept him as the apple of His eye. The Lord alone did lead him"Deu 32:10, Deu 32:12. In the wilderness, where thou hast seen how that the Lord thy God bare thee, as a man doth bear his son, in all the way that ye went until ye came to this place"Deu 1:31; or that minute tender care, mentioned in the same place (Deu 29:4, (5, English)), "your clothes are not waxen old upon you, and thy shoe is not waxen old upon thy foot."But unless Israel had known the law well, the words would only have been very distantly suggestive of mercy, that it must have been well with them even in the wilderness, since God "led them."They had then the law in their memories, in Israel also , but distorted it or neglected it.

Barnes: Amo 2:11 - -- And I raised up of your sons for prophets - Amos turns from outward mercies to inward, front past to present, from miracles of power to miracle...
And I raised up of your sons for prophets - Amos turns from outward mercies to inward, front past to present, from miracles of power to miracles of grace. God’ s past mercies live on in those of today; the mercies of today are the assurance to us that we have a share in the past; His miracles of grace are a token that the miracles of His power are not our condemnation. God had, from the time of Moses, "raised up"prophets. Eldad and Medad Num 11:26-29 were images Of those, whom God would raise up beyond the bounds of His promise. Samuel was an Ephrathite 1Sa 1:1; Ahijah the Shilonite, that is, of Shiloh in Ephraim, lived on to old age in the kingdom of the ten tribes after their schism, the witness against the apostasy of Jeroboam 1Ki 14:7-14; 1Ki 15:29, yet acknowledged by the king whose rise and of the destruction of whose house he prophesied 1Ki 14:2, 1Ki 14:4.
Jehu, son of Hanani, was the prophet of both kingdoms 1Ki 16:1, 1Ki 16:7, 1Ki 16:12; 2Ch 19:2; 2Ch 20:34; Micaiah, son of Imlah, was well known to Ahab, as "prophesying evil concerning him"1Ki 22:8, 1Ki 22:18 continually; unknown to Jehoshaphat 1Ki 22:7. That wondrous pair, marvelous for superhuman sanctity and power among the marvelous miracles of God, Elijalh and Elisha, were both "sons"of Israel, whom God "raised up; Elijjah the Tishbite"1Ki 17:1, born doubtless at Thisbe, a village of Naphthali , and one of the sojourners in Gilead; Elisha of Abelmeholah 1Ki 19:16, on the west side of the valley of the Jordan . And even now He had raised up to them of their own "sons,"Hosea and Jonah. Their presence was the presence of God among them, who, out of the ordinary way of His Providence, "raised"them "up"and filled them with His Spirit; and where the presence of God is, if there is fear, yet there is also hope.
And of your young men for Nazarites - The Nazarite was a fruit of the grace of God in its moral and religions workings, superhuman in holiness and self-denial, as the prophets were of that same grace, conferring superhuman wisdom and knowledge also. Of both, God says, "I raised up,"teaching that both alike, holiness of life and superhman wisdom, were His own special gift to each individual, His own creation. God survived His people, called, and "raised up,"by His grace, out of the crowd, those souls which responded to His call. The life of the Nazarites was a continual protest against the self-indulgence and worldliness of the people. It was a life above nature. Unless any prophet like Samuel 1Sa 1:11, was also a Nazarite, they had no special office except to live that life. Their life taught. Nay, it taught in one way the more, because they had no special gifts of wisdom or knowledge, nothing to distinguish them from ordinary people, except extraordinary grace.
They were an evidence, what all might do and be, if they used the grace of God. The power of the grace of God shows itself the more wondrously in these who have nought beside. The essence of the Nazarite life, as expressed by its name, was "separation,"separation from things of the world, with a view to God. The separation was not, necessarily, for more than a limited time. In such case, it answered to the strictness of the Christian Lent. It was a considerable discipline for a time. In those simpler days, when luxury had not been so busy , the absolute prohibition of anything fermented Num 6:3-4, whether from the grape or any other substance or vinegar made of either, or any liquor or refreshing food or drink, made in any way from the grape, fresh or dry, its husks or its kernels, while it cut off every evasion, involved the giving up not only every drink, in any way exciting or stimulating, but very much also, which was refreshing. Water, which in the east has seldom the freshness of ours, was their only drink. This, which to individuals may be an easy rule, would not be so in the main.
Those only think an undeviating rule slight, who have never tried one, nor set themselves on system to conquer self-will. Such a rule would not be acted upon, except for God. The long never-shorn hair was probably intended to involve the neglect of personal appearance. Yet this was the body only of the vow; its soul was the dedication to God. The Nazarite not only "separated himself from"Num 6:3 those earthly things; he "separated himself to"the Lord Num 6:2, Num 6:5-6 : he "consecrated to the Lord the days of his separation Num 6:12 : all the days of his separation he was holy to the Lord Num 6:8 : the separation of his God was upon his head."Num 6:7. The vow was a great and singular thing. "When man or woman shall vow a special vow of a Nazarite"Num 6:2. The ritual of the Nazarite likened him to the priest. Giving him no priestly office, it yet even intensified some of the rules of the priesthood.
The priest was to abstain from wine and strong drink, only "when"he "went into the tabernacle of the congregations,"that he might "put difference between holy and unholy, and teach Israel the statutes"of the Lord Lev 10:9-11 : the Nazarite, so long as he remained such. The priest might defile himself for certain very near dead Lev 21:1-3; the high priest alone and the Nazarite, "neither for father nor mother"Lev 21:11-12; Num 6:7 : and that for the kindred reason; the high priest, "because the crown of the anointing oil of his God"was "upon him;"the Nazarite, "because the consecration of his God was upon his head!"His consecrated hair was called by the self-same name Num 6:19 as the mitre of the priest. It appears to have been woven into "seven locks"Jdg 16:13, itself a number of consecration. If his consecration came to an end, that hair was mingled with the sacrifice Num 6:18, and on "his"hands alone, besides the priest’ s at his consecration, was part of the offering laid Num 6:19.
All Israel was, in God’ s purpose, "a kingdom of priests"Exo 19:6; and, among them, the Nazarite was brought yet nearer, not to the priest’ s office, but to his character. This must have diffused itself indefinitely through the outward and inward life. Further strictness probably lay in the spirit of the vow. The outward appearance of the Nazarites appears to have been changed by their abstemiousness. "Her Nazarites were purer than snow; they were whiter than milk"Lam 4:7. Their countenance had that transparent purity, which sometimes results from a pure abstemious life; as Athanasius is said to have been "bloodless."John the Immerser, the counterpart of Elijah, ate only of the food of the wilderness, "locusts and wild honey;"his clothing was the hair cloth Luk 1:15; Luk 7:33; Mat 3:4.
Of James the Just it is related with reference to the Nazarite vow ; "He was holy from his mother’ s womb; wine and strong drink he drank not, nor ate any living thing; the razor came not up upon his head; he anointed him not with oil, and he used not a bath."Nazarites there had been in the most disorganized times of Israel. The histories of Samson and Samuel stand over against one another, as Nazarites who, the one forfeited, the other persevered in, his vocation. Elijah’ s ascetic character is as if he had been one of them, or deepened the lines of their rule. Ahaziah’ s ungodly messengers described him contemptously as "a man, lord of hair,"as though he had nothing but his prophet’ s broad mantle of hair, and "the leather girdle about his loins".
The Rechabites, although Kenites by origin 1Ch 2:55, had been enrolled in the people of God, and had received a rule from their father, uniting with the abstinence of the Nazarites, a mode of life which kept them aloof from the corruptions of cities Jer 35:7, Jer 35:9. The rules of their Nomadic life were consecrated to God, for He says, "There shall not be cut off from Jonadub, the son of Rechab, a man standing before Me for ever"Jer 35:19, that is, as the servant of God. God uses as to them the term which marks the service of the Levites Deu 10:8, priests Jdg 20:28, and prophets 1Ki 17:1. Jonadab, the author of their rule, was plainly an ascetic, through whose presence Jehu hoped to cast a religious character over his ambitious execution of God’ s command .
But the value which the artful, though impetuous 2Ki 9:20, bloodstained, captain attached to the presence of the ascetic shows the weight which they had with the people. Strange sight it must have been, the energetic warrior in his coat of mail, and the ascetic, as energetic, in his hair-cloth. Deeper far the cotrast within. But the more marvelous the contrast, the more it attests the influence which the unworldly ascetic had over the world. Like the garb of the prophets, their appearance was a standing rebuke to a life of sense. Like the patriarchs, it professed that they were "strangers and pilgrims upon the earth."They who sought nothing of the world or of time, were a witness to the belief in their eternal home. The Nazarites must now have been a numerous body, since Amos speaks of them, as a known class, like the prophets, of whose numbers we hear incidentally .
Yet the memory of these, who, amid the general corruption, were, each in his own sphere, centers of pure faith and life, is embalmed in these few words only. So little reason is there to think that God’ s commands were neglected by all, because their observance is not related. Amos appeals publicly to the people that the fact was so, that God had raised up Nazarites as well as prophets among them. He had His "little flock"Luk 12:32, His "seven thousand"1Ki 19:18, who escaped the eye even of Elijah. The gift of the Nazarites was a special favor to Israel, as a memorial what the grace of God could do for man, what man could do, with the grace of God. His "raising up Nazarites, out of their young men,"men in their first bloom of unmarried , virgin (Deu 32:25; 2Ch 36:17; Jer 51:22; and in the plur. Psa 78:63; Psa 148:12; Isa 23:4;. Jer 31:13; Lam 1:18; Lam 2:21; Zec 9:17; and by Amos himself, Amo 8:13), life their picked "very chosen men,"such as furnished the prime of their warriors , stengthened that teaching.
Even now, one devoted to God in his youth is a witness for God, leaven of the world around him. But the Nazarite had also to bear an outward mark for good, to be singular. His appearance bespoke that he had chosen God. His vow was not only a living up to the law; it lay beyond the law, the free-will offering of those whom God called. At an age, when so many do things unlawful, to gratitfy passion, these abstained even from things lawful. "Canst thou not do what these youths and these maidens can? or can they either in themselves, and not rather in the Lord their God?"was Augustine’ s upbraiding of himself , on the eve of his conversion, in thought of those who were living a devoted virgin life.
Is it not even thus? - It were enough that God, the Truth, said it. But He condemns not, without giving space for excuse or defense. So he describes the Day of Judgment Mat 25:24-30, Mat 25:41-45; Mat 22:11. "The books were opened - and the dead were judged out of those things which were written in the books, according to their works"Rev 20:12. Now, in the time of grace, the question asks, what, written under the picture of Christ crucified, once converted a sinner; "This have I done for thee: What doest thou for Me?"What did they? What had they done? What would they do?

Barnes: Amo 2:12 - -- But ye gave the Nazarites wine to drink - Literally, "and,"(this, on their part, was the consequence of what God did for them) "ye caused the N...
But ye gave the Nazarites wine to drink - Literally, "and,"(this, on their part, was the consequence of what God did for them) "ye caused the Nazarites to drink wine."God appointed; Israel strove to undo His appointment. God "raised up Nazarites,"as a testimony to them; they sought to make His servants break their vow, in order to rid themselves of that testimony. Their pains to destroy it, is a strong proof of its power. The world is mad against true religion, because it feels itself condemned by it. People set themselves against religion and the religious, the Church or the priesthood, only when and because they feel their power on God’ s side against them. What people despise, they do not oppose. "They kill us, they do not despise us,"were true words of a French priest, as to the "reign of reason"in the first French revolution. If the people in power had not respected the Nazarites, or felt that the people respected them, they would not have attempted to corrupt or to force them to break their vow. The word, "cause"them "to drink,"does not express whether they used constraint or seduction. Israel’ s consciences supplied it. Yet since they "persecuted the prophets"and put them to death, it seems likely that Amos means that they used violence, either by forcing the wine into their mouths, as the swine-flesh was forced into the mouth of Eleazar (2 Macc. 6:18), and, in the Decian persecution an infant was made to eat of the idol oblation , or by threat of death.
And commanded the prophets, saying, Prophesy not - God had commanded the prophets to prophesy. Israel issued and laid upon them his commands against the commands of God. The more God reveals His Will, the directer and more determinate the opposition of those who will not yield. God’ s perseverance in trying to win them irritates them; they oppose grace, and are angered at not being let alone. This large statement of Amos means much more than the prohibition of Amaziah to himself Amo 7:13. Jeroboam I was prevented only by miracle 1Ki 13:4 from seizing the prophet who denounced the altar at Bethel. Ahab, during the famine foretold by Elijah, sought him everywhere to destroy him 1Ki 18:10-12, and Jezebel, after the miracle at Carmel and the death of her prophets, swore by her gods to do so 1Ki 19:2-3. Ahab’ s last act was to imprison Micaiah 1Ki 22:26-27, the son of Imlath, for prophesying his death, when adjured by himself to speak truly.
Ahaziah, his son, undeterred by the fire from heaven which destroyed two captains, each with his fifty, sent yet a 3d to take Elijah, when he prophesied that the king would not recover from his sickness 2Ki 1:9-13. Jehoram, his second son, swore by God to destroy Elisha, 2Ki 6:31, laying the evils of the siege to the prophet, as the Romans did the evils of their decaying empire to the Christian. Micah and Isaiah, a little later, speak of such opposition, in Judah, as habitual Mic 2:6; Isa 30:10-11; much more in Israel, where the opposition to God’ s law was more fundamental, and where God’ s prophet’ s had been all but exterminated. Even Asa, in his degenerate days, imprisoned Hanani for prophesying that he would "have wars"2Ch 16:7, 2Ch 16:10; Joash killed Zechariah son of Jehoiada 2Ch 24:20-21; Amaziah silenced the prophet who rebuked him, "Art thou made of the king’ s council? forbear. Why shouldest thou be smitten?"2Ch 25:15-16.
Jehoiakim sent even into Egypt to fetch Uriah and killed him Jer 26:20-23. Jeremiah’ s life was one continuous encounter with false accusations Jer 20:10; Jer 37:13; Jer 38:4, contradictions by false prophets (Jer 23:17 ff; Jer 27:9-10, Jer 27:14-16; Jer. 28; Jer. 29), hatred Jer 15:10, mockery Jer 17:15; Jer 20:7-8; Jer 23:33, persecution Jer 17:18, imprisonment Jer 20:2; Jer 32:3; Jer 33:1; Jer 37:15-21; Jer 38:6-13, attempts to destroy him (Jer 11:18-21; Jer 18:18, Jer 18:20-23; Jer 26:8 ff; Jer 36:26). The complaint was, as here, "wherefore dost thou prophesy?"Jer 32:3. What, when our Lord gives it as the characteristic of Jerusalem , that she was "the slayer of the prophets, the stoner of those sent unto her?"They would not have slain the prophets, if they could have silenced them.
People are loath to go to extremities with God; they will make an armistice with Him; their awe of holiness makes them inwardly shrink from laying hands on it. Like the wolf in the fable, they must have a plea against it; and that plea against those who have the truth is obstinacy . If the Christians would have abstained from converting the world, they would not have been persecuted. The Chief-priests at first sought simply to silence the Apostles Act 4:18, Act 4:21; then they enforced their command with scourges Act 5:40; then persecuted them and the Christians to death Act 7:57-59; Act 8:1-4; Act 9:1-2; Act 12:1-3; Act 22:4-5. Direct contumacy to God’ s known voice and silencing His messenger, is a last stage of obduracy and malice, which leaves God no further avenue to the soul or the people. His means of grace are exhausted when the soul or people not only deaden His voice within, but obstruct it without. One who, through vehemence of his passions, refuses to hear, is within the reach of the grace of God, afterward. He who stifles God’ s word to others has mostly hardened his heart deliberately and maliciously in unlove to man, as well as contempt of God. Hence, God speaks, as though this brought the day of grace to a close.

Barnes: Amo 2:13 - -- Behold, I am pressed under you - God bore His people, as the wain bears the sheaves. "Ye yourselves have seen,"He said to them by Moses, "how I...
Behold, I am pressed under you - God bore His people, as the wain bears the sheaves. "Ye yourselves have seen,"He said to them by Moses, "how I bare you on eagle’ s wings, and brought you unto Myself"Exo 19:4. "Thou hast seen how the Lord thy God bare thee, as a man doth bear his son, in all the way that ye went, until ye came into this place"Deu 1:31. And by Isaiah, "He bare them and carried them all the days of old"Isa 63:9; and, "which are born"by Me "from the belly, which are carried from the womb"Isa 46:3. Now, He speaks of Himself as wearied by them, as by Isaiah, "thou hast wearied Me with thine iniquities"Isa 43:24; and by Malachi, "ye have wearied the Lord: yet ye say, where with have we wearied Him?"Mal 2:17. His long-suffering was, as it were, worn out by them. He was straitened under them, as the wain groans under the sheaves with which it is over-full. The words are literally, "Behold I, I"(emphatic I, your God, of whom it would seem impossible) "straiten myself"(that is, of My own Will allow Myself to be straitened"under you",
"As the wain full for itself,"that is, as full as ever it can contain, is "straitened, groans,"as we say. God says, (the word in Hebrew is half active) that He allows Himself to be straitened, as in Isaiah, He says, "I am weary to bear,"literally, "I let Myself be wearied."We are simply passive under weariness or oppressiveness: God endures us, out of His own free condescension in enduring us. But it follows, that when He shall cease to endure our many and grievous sins, He will cast them and the sinner forth from Him.

Barnes: Amo 2:14-16 - -- Israel relied, against God, on his own strength. "Have we not,"they said, "taken to us horns by our own strength?"Amo 6:13. Amos tells them then, th...
Israel relied, against God, on his own strength. "Have we not,"they said, "taken to us horns by our own strength?"Amo 6:13. Amos tells them then, that every means of strength, resistance, flight, swiftness of foot, of horse, place of refuge, should fail them. Three times he repeats, as a sort of dirge, "he shall not deliver himself."
Therefore the flight shall perish - (Probably place of flight Job 11:20; Psa 142:5; Jer 25:35). They had despised God, as their "place of refuge", so "the place of refuge, should perish from the swift,"as though it were not. He should flee amain, but there would be no "place to flee unto."God alone "renews strength;"therefore "the strong"man should not "strengthen his force or might,"should not be able to gather or "collect his strength"as we say. Fear should disable him. "The handler of the bow"(as in Jer 46:9), and who by habit is a skilled archer, although himself out of the immediate reach of the enemy, and able, unharmed, to annoy him and protect the fugitives, "shall not stand"(as in Jer 46:21; Nah 2:8). Panic should overtake him. The "mighty"man, the "fleet of foot"should "not deliver,"yea, "the horseman"should not "deliver himself;"yea, he who, "among the mighty,"was "strongest of his heart,"firm-souled among those of mightiest prowess, "shall flee away naked,"that is, bared of all, armor or dress, which might encumber his flight "in that day"which the Lord made a day of terror His own day.
Saith the Lord - Probably literally, "the secret utterance of the Lord."Amos, more than Hosea, uses this special authentication of his words , which is so common in Isaiah, Jeremiah, Ezekiel, and Zechariah. He claims a knowledge, which those around him had not, and ratifies it by the express appeal to the direct, though secret, revelation of God; what those who were not of God, would deny; what they who were of God, would believe.
Poole: Amo 2:10 - -- You did not rescue yourselves out of the hands of your enemies, I did in mere mercy with a mighty arm save and rescue you, and brought you up from t...
You did not rescue yourselves out of the hands of your enemies, I did in mere mercy with a mighty arm save and rescue you, and brought you up from the land of Egypt, where you were oppressed servants, and exposed to ruin.
Led you as a shepherd leads his flock: nay, miraculously conducting by the pillar of a cloud and fire, and feeding with manna from heaven.
Forty years reckoning from their coming out of Egypt.
Through the wilderness: they passed through many wildernesses, named in Scripture according as they were then called, but all these lay so contiguous to each other, that they all made up one great wilderness, as the many names given to parts of the sea make us know what particular part is spoken of, but all make one sea.
To possess as an heir possesseth that he hath a hereditary right to, the land of the Amorite, including all the rest of the accursed and dispossessed nations.

Poole: Amo 2:11 - -- I raised up gave prophetic endowments, stirred up their minds, commissioned them to prophesy, and carried them through by an undaunted courage given ...
I raised up gave prophetic endowments, stirred up their minds, commissioned them to prophesy, and carried them through by an undaunted courage given to them, that they, should not fear to set upon, or faint in attending to, their office.
Of your sons for prophets did not employ strangers, whose affections you might with some colour of reason suspect, but your own sons, whose affections to you and to their own country are unquestionable, were sent prophets to tell you of your sins, to foretell your dangers, and to importune you to repent of your sins, and to prevent your dangers.
Your young men though that age be generally inclined to please their own fancies, to walk after the sight of their eyes, Ecc 11:9 , yet did God change the mind of some of them in their youth, and inclined them to eminency in religion, to be examples to others.
Nazarites which were religious persons under vow bound to a very sober, abstemious, and holy life; either for some certain limited time, or for their whole life: see Num 6:1,2 , &c. These were not to drink any strong or intoxicating liquors.
Is it not even thus? God appeals to them in this matter whether he had not done this for them, given prophets to teach them, and Nazarites to be examples to them, in both which God showed his love and care of them.
Ye children of Israel apostatized Israel, you of the ten tribes.
Saith the Lord: this is added to excite them to serious pondering what is said to them.

Poole: Amo 2:12 - -- But ye for whose benefit both Nazarites and prophets were raised, you who should have heard their word, and imitated their example,
gave the Nazarit...
But ye for whose benefit both Nazarites and prophets were raised, you who should have heard their word, and imitated their example,
gave the Nazarites wine importuned, urged, or it may be (as is the custom of excessive drinkers) forced them to drink wine, to violate their vow, and contemn God’ s law too, Num 6:3,4 .
Commanded: by this passage it appears that they were men in authority who did this; it is not probable that mean persons who had no authority would enjoin silence on the prophets, Isa 30:10 Amo 7:13 Mic 2:6 . It is evident Amaziah was chief priest in Beth-el, and by virtue of his jurisdiction there silenceth the prophet.
The prophets the true, faithful, and plain-dealing prophets, who rebuked their sins, required them to repent, and threatened judgments if they did not repent.
Saying, Prophesy not: see Isa 30:10 Amo 7:13 Mic 2:6,11 ;

Poole: Amo 2:13 - -- Hitherto the Lord by the prophet had declared the sins of the kingdom of the ten tribes, now he is about to pronounce judgment against them; he call...
Hitherto the Lord by the prophet had declared the sins of the kingdom of the ten tribes, now he is about to pronounce judgment against them; he calls for their attention, and diligent weighing what he is about to speak.
I the Lord, who have so multiplied mercies to this people,
am pressed under you, as a cart is pressed that is full of sheaves: some read this passage actively, and make this the sense, I will lead you with these judgments as a cart is loaded, and you shall cry and groan under these judgments, as a cart heavy loaded makes a noise in its motion under such pressures. Perhaps sheaves, the loading of a harvest season, are mentioned, to intimate the ripeness of their sins, and God’ s reaping them or cutting them down by his judgments, and carrying them together to be thrashed by further judgments.

Poole: Amo 2:14 - -- Therefore because they first loaded God with their sins, and now he loads them with punishments, no way of escape shall be left.
The flight shall pe...
Therefore because they first loaded God with their sins, and now he loads them with punishments, no way of escape shall be left.
The flight shall perish from the swift not by swiftness of foot fleeing from the judgments, for their enemies shall be swifter than they, Isa 30:16 .
The strong shall not strengthen his force natural strength of body shall not deliver; such, though they might do more than weaker men, yet shall not save themselves, for they shall not know how to use their strength they shall want courage to do it.
The mighty the valiant, and man of greatest courage, shall not be able to deliver himself, his courage shall fail.

Poole: Amo 2:15 - -- Neither shall he stand though at distance from the enemies, yet shall not dare to keep his place.
That handleth the bow much used in the wars of th...
Neither shall he stand though at distance from the enemies, yet shall not dare to keep his place.
That handleth the bow much used in the wars of those times, and used by strong and valiant men, but now both strength and valour should fail Israel’ s bow-men.
He that is swift of foot shall not deliver himself: this is the same, and explains that in the 14th verse.
Neither shall he that rideth the horse deliver himself: here the prophet foretells that the swiftness of the horse, which some will make use of, shall as little avail, nor his strength joined with his speed shall deliver the rider; neither the strength of the horse shall carry him through, nor his swiftness carry him away from the hand of the pursuer.

Poole: Amo 2:16 - -- This verse is not a bare repetition of what he had said before, to confirm it, but he doth foretell an inevitable ruin to those who were the most li...
This verse is not a bare repetition of what he had said before, to confirm it, but he doth foretell an inevitable ruin to those who were the most likely to escape, and a most shameful manner of flight.
Courageous among the mighty a description of the most famous warriors amongst Israel, such as were known for valour among the mighty and valiant ones, like David’ s worthies, such as had the heart of a lion.
Shall flee away naked either without his clothes and furniture, or without his weapons and arms, which were cast away to expedite his flight.
In that day when God will by the Assyrians, under the conduct of Tiglath-pileser first, and finally under the conduct of Shalmaneser, straiten these sinners. and besiege them in their cities.
Saith the Lord all confirmed under the seal of Heaven.
Haydock: Amo 2:11 - -- Nazarites. Some went secretly to Jerusalem for this purpose; or perhaps they performed these rites illegally at Bethel: for many parts of the law we...
Nazarites. Some went secretly to Jerusalem for this purpose; or perhaps they performed these rites illegally at Bethel: for many parts of the law were observed, though not perfectly, chap iv. 4. The Nazarites were in high estimation, Lamentations iv. 7. But the dissolute Israelites (Calmet) derided them as well as the prophets, (Haydock) and attempted to make them transgress. (Calmet)

Haydock: Amo 2:13 - -- I will screek. Unable to bear any longer the enormous load of your sins, &c. The Spirit of God, as St. Jerome takes notice, accommodates itself to ...
I will screek. Unable to bear any longer the enormous load of your sins, &c. The Spirit of God, as St. Jerome takes notice, accommodates itself to the education of the prophet, and inspires him with encouragements taken from country affairs. (Challoner) ---
Septuagint, "I am overturned." Hebrew, "pressed." (Calmet)

Haydock: Amo 2:14 - -- Swift. Jeroboam I. Other kings are described afterwards. (St. Jerome) ---
In the latter times all was in confusion. (Calmet)
Swift. Jeroboam I. Other kings are described afterwards. (St. Jerome) ---
In the latter times all was in confusion. (Calmet)
Gill: Amo 2:10 - -- Also I brought you up from the land of Egypt,.... Where they were bond slaves, and in great affliction and distress, and unable to help themselves; bu...
Also I brought you up from the land of Egypt,.... Where they were bond slaves, and in great affliction and distress, and unable to help themselves; but the Lord wrought deliverance for them, and brought them out of this house of bondage with a high hand and a mighty arm:
and led you forty years through the wilderness: going before them in a pillar of cloud by day, and in a pillar of fire by night; providing them with all things necessary, with food and raiment, and protecting them from all their enemies:
to possess the land of the Amorite; the whole land of Canaan, so called from a principal nation of it.

Gill: Amo 2:11 - -- And I raised up of your sons for prophets,.... Such as Moses, Joshua, and the seventy elders, and others; not only to foretell things to come, but to ...
And I raised up of your sons for prophets,.... Such as Moses, Joshua, and the seventy elders, and others; not only to foretell things to come, but to teach and instruct the people in the doctrines and duties of religion, and to warn them of their sins, and the danger of them:
and of your young men for Nazarites: as Samson, Samuel, and others; whose vow not only obliged them from shaving their hair, but to abstain from drinking wine, and eating grapes, which the youthful age is inclined unto; but such grace was given them, as enabled them to deny themselves sensual gratifications, and to be examples of piety and constant attendance on the service of God, and instructing the people. The Targum is,
"of your young men for teachers;''
these were the spiritual mercies, as the former were the temporal ones, the Lord bestowed on these people, for the truth of which he appeals to them:
is it not even thus, O ye children of Israel, saith the Lord? can ye deny it? the thing was too notorious to be contradicted.

Gill: Amo 2:12 - -- But ye gave the Nazarites wine to drink,.... Contrary to their vow and calling, and in contempt of it, and to make them like themselves; they either p...
But ye gave the Nazarites wine to drink,.... Contrary to their vow and calling, and in contempt of it, and to make them like themselves; they either persuaded them, or forced them to it:
and commanded the prophets, saying, prophesy not; hard and heavy things, judgments and denunciations of vengeance, only smooth things; by this authoritative language it appears that this is said of the rulers and governors of the people, as king, princes, and priests; see Amo 7:12.

Gill: Amo 2:13 - -- Behold, I are pressed under you,.... With the weight of their sins, with which they had made him to serve, and had wearied him; his patience was quite...
Behold, I are pressed under you,.... With the weight of their sins, with which they had made him to serve, and had wearied him; his patience was quite wore out, he could bear them no longer:
as a cart is pressed that is full of sheaves; as a cart in harvest time, in which the sheaves of corn are carried home; when one sheaf is laid upon another, till they can lay no more, and the cart is loaded and overloaded with them, and ready to break, or be pressed into the earth with them: thus. Jehovah represents himself as loaded and burdened with the sins of these people, and therefore would visit for them, and inflict deserved punishment. Some render it actively, "behold, I press" z, or "am about to press your place, as a cart full of sheaves presseth" a; the horse or horses which draw it, especially the last; or the ground it goes upon; or as a cart stuck with iron spikes, and loaded with stones, being drawn over a corn floor, presses the full sheaves, and beats out the grain, which was their way of pressing it: so the Lord signifies he would afflict and distress this people, bring them into strait circumstances, by a close siege, and other judgments, which should ruin and destroy them; and which was first begun by Tiglathpileser king of Assyria, and finished by Shalmaneser, who carried away the ten tribes captive. So the Targum,
"behold, I bring distress upon you, and it shall straiten you in your place, as a cart is straitened which is loaded with sheaves.''

Gill: Amo 2:14 - -- Therefore the flight shall perish from the swift,.... They should be so straitened and cooped up, and be so loaded with pressures, that those, as swif...
Therefore the flight shall perish from the swift,.... They should be so straitened and cooped up, and be so loaded with pressures, that those, as swift of foot as Asahel, should not be able to make their escape by fleeing:
and the strong shall not strengthen his force; should not increase it, or muster it up, and exert it to such a degree, as to be able to defend and secure himself from the enemy:
neither shall the mighty deliver himself; "his soul" or "life"; a soldier, a man of war, an expert and courageous officer at the head of his troop, or even the general of the army; see Psa 33:16.

Gill: Amo 2:15 - -- Neither shall he stand that handleth the bow,.... That is, at some distance, and can make use of his instruments of war afar off; yet will not think i...
Neither shall he stand that handleth the bow,.... That is, at some distance, and can make use of his instruments of war afar off; yet will not think it safe to stand his ground, but will betake himself to his heels as fast as he can to save himself:
and he that is swift of foot shall not deliver himself; this is repeated, lest any should place confidence in their agility, and to show how complete and inevitable the affliction will be:
neither shall he that rideth the horse deliver himself; by fleeing on horseback, no more than he that is on foot; no ways that can be devised or thought on would preserve from this general calamity; see Psa 33:17.

Gill: Amo 2:16 - -- And he that is courageous among the mighty,.... Or "strong in his heart" b; one that is of a great heart, famous for courage and bravery, that excels...
And he that is courageous among the mighty,.... Or "strong in his heart" b; one that is of a great heart, famous for courage and bravery, that excels in it among the mighty; the most valiant soldiers and officers:
shall flee away naked in that day: shall throw away his armour, nay, put off his clothes, as being both a hinderance to him in his flight; and that he may make the better speed:
saith the Lord: which is added to show the certainty of all this; it might be depended upon that so it would be, since the Lord God of truth had spoken it; and it was fulfilled about eighty years after this prophecy.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Amo 2:11 Or perhaps “religious devotees” (also in the following verse). The Hebrew term נָזִיר (nazir) refers t...


NET Notes: Amo 2:13 The precise meaning of this verse is unclear. Various suggested meanings have been proposed (see S. M. Paul, Amos [Hermeneia], 94): (1) One option is ...


NET Notes: Amo 2:15 The last two lines read literally, “The one fast in his feet will not rescue [his life], and the rider of the horse will not rescue his life....

Geneva Bible: Amo 2:11 And I raised up of your sons for prophets, and of ( i ) your young men for Nazarites. [Is it] not even thus, O ye children of Israel? saith the LORD. ...

Geneva Bible: Amo 2:13 Behold, I am ( k ) pressed under you, as a cart is pressed [that is] full of sheaves.
( k ) You have wearied me with your sins; (Isa 1:14).

Geneva Bible: Amo 2:14 Therefore the flight shall perish from the ( l ) swift, and the strong shall not strengthen his force, neither shall the mighty deliver himself:
( l ...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Amo 2:1-16
TSK Synopsis: Amo 2:1-16 - --1 God's judgments upon Moab,4 upon Judah,6 and upon Israel.9 God complains of their ingratitude.
MHCC -> Amo 2:9-16
MHCC: Amo 2:9-16 - --We need often to be reminded of the mercies we have received; which add much to the evil of the sins we have committed. They had helps for their souls...
Matthew Henry -> Amo 2:9-16
Matthew Henry: Amo 2:9-16 - -- Here, I. God puts his people Israel in mind of the great things he has done for them, in putting them into possession of the land of Canaan, the gre...
Keil-Delitzsch: Amo 2:9-10 - --
And if this daring contempt of the commandments of God was highly reprehensible even in itself, it became perfectly inexcusable if we bear in mind t...

Keil-Delitzsch: Amo 2:11-12 - --
But Jehovah had not only put Israel into possession of Canaan; He had also continually manifested Himself to it as the founder and promoter of its s...

Keil-Delitzsch: Amo 2:13-16 - --
This base contempt of their covenant mercies the Lord would visit with a severe punishment. Amo 2:13. "Behold, I will press you down, as the cart p...
Constable: Amo 1:3--7:1 - --II. Prophetic messages that Amos delivered 1:3--6:14
The Book of Amos consists of words (oracles, 1:3-6:14) and ...

Constable: Amo 1:3--3:1 - --A. Oracles against nations 1:3-2:16
An oracle is a message of judgment. Amos proceeded to deliver eight ...

Constable: Amo 2:6-16 - --8. An oracle against Israel 2:6-16
The greater length of this oracle as well as its last positio...

Constable: Amo 2:9-12 - --God's past grace 2:9-12
In this section Amos reminded the Israelites of Yahweh's past blessings on them. This made the heinousness of their sins even ...

Constable: Amo 2:12 - --Israel's response to God's grace 2:12
Even though God gave His people prophets and Nazir...
