
Text -- Amos 2:9 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
The mightiest nation of all the Canaanites.

Another proverbial speech denoting their great strength.

The old standards; that present generation.
My former benefits to you heighten your ingratitude.

JFB: Amo 2:9 - -- The most powerful of all the Canaanite nations, and therefore put for them all (Gen 15:16; Gen 48:22; Deu 1:20; Jos 7:7).
Clarke -> Amo 2:9
Clarke: Amo 2:9 - -- Yet destroyed I the Amorite - Here follow general heads of God’ s mercies to them, and the great things he had done for them
1. &nbs...
Yet destroyed I the Amorite - Here follow general heads of God’ s mercies to them, and the great things he had done for them
1. Bringing them out of Egypt
2. Miraculously sustaining them in the wilderness forty years
3. Driving out the Canaanites before them, and giving them possession of the promised land
4. Raising up prophets among them to declare the Divine will
5. And forming the holy institution of the Nazarites among them, to show the spiritual nature of his holy religion, Amo 2:9-11.
Calvin -> Amo 2:9
Calvin: Amo 2:9 - -- God expostulates here with the Israelites for their ingratitude. He records the benefits he had before conferred on that people; and then shows how u...
God expostulates here with the Israelites for their ingratitude. He records the benefits he had before conferred on that people; and then shows how unworthily and disgracefully they had conducted themselves; for they forgot their many blessings and proudly despised God, and acted as if they were like other nations, and not bound to God for the singular benefit of adoption. The sum then is that God here complains that he had ill bestowed his blessings; and he reproves the people for their impiety, inasmuch as they did not lead a holier life after having been freely redeemed.
He says first, I have exterminated the Amorite before their face. God shows here that he was disgracefully defrauded by the Israelites, for whose sake he had previously destroyed the Amorites. For why were the Amorites exterminated, but that God would cleanse the land, and also, that he might give there a dwelling to his own people, that he might be purely worshipped? Then the people of Israel ought to have given up themselves wholly to the service of God; but as they neglected to do this, they frustrated the purpose of God, who had expelled the Amorites from that land, yea, and entirely destroyed them. The first complaint then is, that the children of Israel were nothing better than the Amorites, though God had given them the land, which was taken from its natives, that they might dwell in it, and on the condition, that his name should be there worshipped. Hence the Prophets say elsewhere, that they were Amorites. They ought to have been a new people; but as they followed the examples of others, in what did they differ from them? They are therefore called their posterity. But the Prophet speaks not here so severely; he only reproves the Israelites, because they differed in nothing from the Amorites, whom they knew to have been destroyed that they might be introduced into their place, and succeed to their inheritance.
It is then added, that the Amorites were tall in stature, and also that they were strong men. By these words the Prophet intimates that the Amorites were not conquered by the people’s valor, but by the wonderful power of God. We indeed know that they were dreaded by the people of Israel, for they were like giants. Then the Prophet speaks here of their height and strength, that the Israelites might consider that they overcame them not by their own valor, but that the land was given them by a miracle, for they had to do with giants, on whom they could hardly dare to look. It was then God who prostrated the cedars and the oaks before his people. We hence learn, that the Israelites could not boast of their own strengths as though they took possession of the land, because by means of war they ejected their enemies; for this was done by the singular kindness of God. They could not indeed have contended with their enemies, had not that been fulfilled which the Lord had so often foretold, ‘For you, while still, I will fight,’ (Exo 14:14) We now perceive the Prophet’s intention. But we may hence farther learn, that the Israelites had not possessed the land, because they were more excellent than the Amorites, its ancient inhabitants; but because it so pleased God. There was therefore no reason for the people of Israel to be proud on account of any excellency. It hence appears that they, who did not consider this remarkable kindness done to them, were more than doubly ungrateful to God.
He says that their fruit above and root below were destroyed. By this metaphor God enlarges on what he said before, that the Amorites had been exterminated, so that none of them remained. “I have demolished,” he says, or, “I have entirely destroyed the root beneath and the fruit above; I have extinguished the very name of the nation.” And yet the Israelites were not better, though the Amorites were thus destroyed; but having succeeded in their place, they became like them: this was utterly inexcusable. The more severe God’s vengeance had been towards the Amorites, the more ought the Israelites to have extolled his favor: but when with closed eyes they passed by so remarkable a testimony of God’s paternal love, it appears that they were extremely wicked and ungrateful.
Defender -> Amo 2:9
Defender: Amo 2:9 - -- The exploits of the "giants" were still remembered some 600 or more years after the conquests of Moses and Joshua (Deu 2:10-21). They had been actual ...
The exploits of the "giants" were still remembered some 600 or more years after the conquests of Moses and Joshua (Deu 2:10-21). They had been actual living men, possibly demonically controlled, but certainly not mere mythical creatures."
TSK -> Amo 2:9
TSK: Amo 2:9 - -- I the : Gen 15:16; Exo 3:8, Exo 34:11; Num 21:24; Deu 2:24-33; Jos 3:10, Jos 24:8-12; Jdg 11:21-23; Neh 9:22-24; Psa 135:10-12, Psa 136:17-22
whose : ...
I the : Gen 15:16; Exo 3:8, Exo 34:11; Num 21:24; Deu 2:24-33; Jos 3:10, Jos 24:8-12; Jdg 11:21-23; Neh 9:22-24; Psa 135:10-12, Psa 136:17-22
whose : Num 13:28, Num 13:29, Num 13:32, Num 13:33; Deu 1:28, Deu 2:10,Deu 2:11, Deu 3:11, Deu 9:1-3
I destroyed : Jos 11:21, Jos 11:22; 2Sa 23:16-22; Job 18:16; Isa 5:24; Mal 4:1

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Amo 2:9
Barnes: Amo 2:9 - -- Yet - (and I) I (Emphatic) destroyed Such were "their"doings; such their worship of "their God."And what had "God"done? what was it, which they...
Yet - (and I) I (Emphatic) destroyed Such were "their"doings; such their worship of "their God."And what had "God"done? what was it, which they thus requited?
The Amorite - These, as one of the mightiest of the Canaanite tribes, stand in Moses for all. Moses, in rehearsing to them the goodness of God and their backsliding, reminds them, how he had said, "Ye have come to the mountain of the Amorites, which the Lord your God giveth you"Deu 1:20; and that they, using this same word, said, "Because the Lord hateth us, He hath brought us forth out of the land of Egypt, to give us into the hand of the Amorite to destroy us"Deu 1:27. The aged Joshua, in rehearsing God’ s great deeds for Israel, places first by itself the destruction of the Amorite before them, with the use of this same idiom , "I brought you into the land of the Amorites which dwelt on the other side of Jordan - and I destroyed them before you."The Amorites were descended from the 4th son of Canaan Gen 10:16.
At the invasion of Chedorlaomer, a portion of them dwelt at Hazezon-Tamar or Engedi, half way on the west side of the Dead Sea, and at Hebron near it (Gen 14:7, Gen 14:13; compare Gen 13:18; 2Ch 20:2). Their corruption had not yet reached its height, and the return of Israel was delayed to the four hundredth year, "because the iniquity of the Amorite was not yet full"Gen 15:16. When Israel returned, the Amorites, (together with the Hittites and the Jebusites) held the hill country Num 13:29; Deu 1:7, Deu 1:44, Jerusalem, Hebron, Gibeon 2Sa 21:2, and, on the skirts of the mountains westward Jarmuth, Lachish, and Eglon Jos 10:3, Jos 10:5. They dwelt on the side of the Jordan westward Jos 5:1, besides the two kingdoms which they had formed east of Jordan, reaching to Mount Hermon Deu 3:8 and Bashan up to the territory of Damascus. Afterward a small remnant remained only in the portion of Dan, and in the outskirts of Judah, from the south of the Dead Sea, Maaleh Akrabbim (Scorpion-pass) and Petra Jdg 1:35-36. Those near Idumea were probably absorbed in Edom; and the remnant in Dan, after becoming tributary to Ephraim Jdg 1:35-36, lost their national existence perhaps among the Philistines, since we have thenceforth only the single notice in the days of Samuel after the defeat of the Philistines, "there was peace between Israel and the Amorites"1Sa 7:14.
Whose height was like the height of the cedars - The giant sons of Anak were among the Amorites at "Hebron"Num 13:22 (called for a time Kiriath Arba Jos 14:15; Jos 15:13-14 from their giant father) "Debir, Ahab, and the mountains of Judah and Israel Jos 11:21. The valley of Rephaim"2Sa 5:18, southwest of Jerusalem, connects this giant race with the Amorites, as does the fact that Og, king of the Amorites in Basan, was "of the remnant of the Rephaim"Deu 3:11; Jos 12:4; Jos 13:19. Basan and Argob were, in Moses’ time, still called "the land of Rephaim"Deu 3:13. The Rephaim, with the Perizzites, dwelt still in woody mountains near Ephraim; from where, on the complaint that the lot of the sons of Joseph was too narrow, Joshua bade his tribe to expel them Jos 17:15, Jos 17:18. The Rephaim are mentioned between the Perizzites and the Amorites Gen 15:20-21, in God’ s first promise of the land to Abraham’ s seed, and perhaps some intermixture of race gave the giant stature to the Amorites. It is clear from Amos that the report of the spies, "all the people that we saw in it were men of stature"Num 13:32, was no exaggeration, nor did Joshua and Caleb deny "this."The name of the Amorite is probably connected with "commanding,"describing some quality of their forefather, which descended to his race.
Whose height was like the height of cedars - Giant height is sometimes a cause of weakness. Amos, in a degree like Hosea combines distinct images to make up the idea of stateliness and strength. The cedar is the ideal of eastern trees for height Isa 2:13; Eze 17:22; Eze 31:3; 1Ki 4:33; 2Ki 14:9, stretching forth its arms as for protection , "It groweth to an exceeding height, and with increasing time ever riseth higher."The oak has its Hebrew name from strength. The more majestic the tall strength of the Amorite, the more manifest that Israel "got not the land in possession by their own sword"Psa 44:3, who had counted themselves, in sight of the Amorite, "as grasshoppers"Num 13:33. God, who gave him that strength, took it away, as we say, "root and branch,"leaving him no show above, no hope of recovered life below (see Hos 9:16; Job 18:16; Eze 17:9). Having compared each Amorite to a majestic tree, he compares the excision of the whole nation to the cutting down of that one tree , so swift, so entire, so irrecoverable. Yet the destruction of the Amorite, a mercy to Israel in the purpose of God, was a warning to israel when it became as they. God’ s terrors are mercies to the repentant; God’ s mercies are terrors to the impenitent. "Ye shall keep My statutes and My judgments and shall not commit any of these abominations,"was the tenure upon which they held the Lord’ s land, "that the land spue not you out also, when ye defile it, as it spued out the nations that were before you"Lev 18:26, 38.
Poole -> Amo 2:9
Poole: Amo 2:9 - -- Yet destroyed I whom they have ungratefully forgotten and forsaken, and set up idol’ s in competition with me; nay, cast off my law and worship,...
Yet destroyed I whom they have ungratefully forgotten and forsaken, and set up idol’ s in competition with me; nay, cast off my law and worship, and embraced idolatry, worshipped idols that never could do them good, nor destroy their enemies; this they did after I had destroyed their enemies.
The Amorite the mightiest nation of all the Canaanites, and therefore expressly mentioned as an instance of God’ s great mercy, and Israel’ s great ingratitude: by this nation mentioned all the rest of the Canaanitish nations are to be understood. These Amorites dwelt beyond Jordan, between that and Moab, and their land fell by lot unto Reuben, Gad, and the half tribe of Manasseh. Before them, the children of Israel under the conduct of Moses, Deu 2:24 , &c.; Deu 3:1-14 , at the very sight of whom these mighty men fled, for God had struck them with terror that they might not stand before Israel.
Whose height was like the height of the cedars: the Amorites were men of largest size, they were of the race of the giants, Num 13:32,33 . This is a proverbial speech, and sets out the Amorites, exceeding ordinary men in stature as much as the cedar exceeds ordinary trees in height.
Strong as the oaks another proverbial speech, denoting their great strength above the strength of other men.
I destroyed utterly rooted them out.
His fruit from above: trees propagated by fruit are diminished by destroying the fruit which is the seed of them; so God cut off the children of the Amorites, and thereby prevented all succession.
His roots from beneath: this refers to the destroying the old standards, that present generation: this last clause refers to the command God gave, Deu 7:2 .
Haydock -> Amo 2:9
Beneath. The Israelites seemed like locusts in comparison, Numbers xiii. 34.
Gill -> Amo 2:9
Gill: Amo 2:9 - -- Yet destroyed I the Amorite before them,.... Here the Lord by the prophet reckons up the many favours and blessings he had bestowed upon Israel, which...
Yet destroyed I the Amorite before them,.... Here the Lord by the prophet reckons up the many favours and blessings he had bestowed upon Israel, which was an aggravation of their sins, and showed them to be guilty of great ingratitude, and a justification of him in his punishment of them he drove out the seven nations of Canaanites from before them, to make way for them, and destroyed them, of which the Amorite was a principal, and is here put for all the rest:
whose height was like the height of the cedars; being both tall of stature, and in great honour and dignity with the other nations, and in very opulent and flourishing circumstances:
and he was strong as the oaks: not only like the tall cedars of Lebanon for their height and largeness of stature, but like the sturdy oaks for the strength of their bodies, being of the race of the giants, Num 13:28;
yet I destroyed his fruit from above, and his roots from beneath; that is, utterly destroyed him, root and branch, so that nothing of him remained; still persisting in the metaphor of a tree. Jarchi interprets it of their superior and inferior princes; but it seems best to understand it of children with their parents, the one being the fruit, the other the root; and, both being destroyed, there must be utter ruin.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

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
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...
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...
