collapse all  

Text -- Amos 4:9 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
4:9 “I destroyed your crops with blight and disease. Locusts kept devouring your orchards, vineyards, fig trees, and olive trees. Still you did not come back to me.” The Lord is speaking!
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Palmer-worm | PALMERWORM | Mildew | LOCUST | JOEL (2) | Israel | HAGGAI | God | GARDEN | Famine | FIG, FIG-TREE | Blight | BLAST; BLASTING | Afflictions and Adversities | AMOS (1) | more
Table of Contents

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

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

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

Other
Evidence

collapse all
Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: Amo 4:9 - -- When they were most fruitful.

When they were most fruitful.

Wesley: Amo 4:9 - -- Eat up all, as is the manner of them.

Eat up all, as is the manner of them.

JFB: Amo 4:6-11 - -- Jehovah details His several chastisements inflicted with a view to reclaiming them: but adds to each the same sad result, "yet have ye not returned un...

Jehovah details His several chastisements inflicted with a view to reclaiming them: but adds to each the same sad result, "yet have ye not returned unto Me" (Isa 9:13; Jer 5:3; Hos 7:10); the monotonous repetition of the same burden marking their pitiable obstinacy.

JFB: Amo 4:6-11 - -- Explained by the parallel, "want of bread." The famine alluded to is that mentioned in 2Ki 8:1 [GROTIUS]. Where there is no food to masticate, the tee...

Explained by the parallel, "want of bread." The famine alluded to is that mentioned in 2Ki 8:1 [GROTIUS]. Where there is no food to masticate, the teeth are free from uncleanness, but it is the cleanness of want. Compare Pro 14:4, "Where no oxen are, the crib is clean." So spiritually, where all is outwardly smooth and clean, it is often because there is no solid religion. Better fighting and fears with real piety, than peace and respectable decorum without spiritual life.

JFB: Amo 4:9 - -- The blighting influence of the east wind on the corn (Gen 41:6).

The blighting influence of the east wind on the corn (Gen 41:6).

JFB: Amo 4:9 - -- In vain ye multiplied your gardens, &c., for I destroyed their produce. BOCHART supports Margin, "the multitude of your gardens."

In vain ye multiplied your gardens, &c., for I destroyed their produce. BOCHART supports Margin, "the multitude of your gardens."

JFB: Amo 4:9 - -- A species of locust is here meant, hurtful to fruits of trees, not to herbage or corn. The same east wind which brought the drought, blasting, and mil...

A species of locust is here meant, hurtful to fruits of trees, not to herbage or corn. The same east wind which brought the drought, blasting, and mildew, brought also the locusts into Judea [BOCHART], (Exo 10:13).

Clarke: Amo 4:9 - -- I have smitten you with blasting and mildew - He sent blasting and mildew on the crops, and the locust on the gardens, vineyards, and fields; and th...

I have smitten you with blasting and mildew - He sent blasting and mildew on the crops, and the locust on the gardens, vineyards, and fields; and this in such a way as to show it was a Divine judgment. They saw this; "yet they did not return to the Lord!"

Calvin: Amo 4:9 - -- Though one kind of punishment may not convince men, they are yet thereby proved with sufficient clearness to be guilty before God. But when in variou...

Though one kind of punishment may not convince men, they are yet thereby proved with sufficient clearness to be guilty before God. But when in various ways he urges them, and after having tried in vain to correct them in one way, he has recourse to another, and still effects nothing, it hence more fully appears that they, who are thus ever unmoved, and remain stupid whatever means God may adopt to lead them to repentance, are altogether past recovery. This is the drift of what the Prophet now adds: he says that they had been smitten by the east wind He shows that want of food does not always proceed from one cause; for men become hardened when they feel only one evil: as the case is when a country labors under a drought, it will be thought to be as it were its fate. But when God chastises men in various ways, they ought then no doubt to be touched and really affected: when, on the contrary, they pass by all punishments with their eyes closed, it is certain, that they are wholly obstinate and so fascinated by the devil, that they feel nothing and discern nothing. This is the reason why the Prophet records the various punishments which had been already inflicted on the people.

Hence he says now, that they had been smitten by the east wind, and by the mildew. What mischief the mildew does to the standing corn, we know; when the sun rises after a cold rain, it burns out its substance, so that the ears grow yellow, and rottenness follows. God then says, that the standing corn of the people had been destroyed by this blasting, after dryness had already prevailed though not through the whole land in an equal degree; for God rained on one part, while a neighboring region was parched through want of rain: the Prophet having stated this, now mentions also the mildew.

He says further, that the fig-trees and vines had been consumed, that the gardens had been destroyed, and that the olive trees had been devoured by chafers or palmer worms. Since then the Israelites had been in so many ways warned, was it not a strange and monstrous blindness, that being affrighted they could bear these chastisements of God, and be not moved to return to the right way? If the first chastisement had no effect, if the second also had been without fruit, they ought surely at last to have repented; but as they proceeded in their usual course, and continued like themselves in that contumacy of which we have spoken, what any more remained for them, but to be wholly destroyed as those who had trifled with God? We now then understand what the Prophet means.

Moreover, this passage teaches, as other similar passages do, that seasons vary not by chance; that now drought prevails, and then continual rains destroy the fruits of the earth, that now chafers are produced, and then that heaven is filled with various infections, — that these things happen not by chance, is what this passage clearly shows: but that they are so many tokens of God’s wrath, set before our eyes. God indeed does not govern the world, according to what profane men think, as though he gave uncontrolled license both in heaven and earth; but he now withholds rain, then he pours it down in profusion; he now burns the corn with heat, then he temperates the air; he now shows himself kind to men, then he shows himself angry with them. Let us then learn to refer the whole order of nature to the special providence of God. I mention his special providence, lest we should dream only of some general operation, as ungodly men do: but let us know that God would have himself to be seen in daily events, so that the tokens of his love may make us to rejoice, and also that the tokens of his wrath may humble us, to the end that we may repent. Let this then be learnt from the present words of the Prophet.

Amos further teaches us, that wind and rain, hail and droughts heat and cold, are arms or weapons by which God executes vengeance on account of our sins. Whenever God then intends to inflict punishment on us, he puts on his armor, that is, he sends either rain, or wind, or drought, or heat, or hail. Since it is so, let us not think that either rain or heat is fortuitous, or that they depend on the situation of the stars as ungodly men imagine. Let us therefore know, that all nature so obeys God’s command, that when rain falls seasonably, it is a token of his love towards us, and that when it is unseasonable, it is a proof of his displeasure. It is meet to think the same of heat and of cold, and of all other things. Let us now go on with the words of the Prophet —

TSK: Amo 4:9 - -- with : Deu 28:22; 1Ki 8:37; 2Ch 6:28; Hag 2:17 when : etc. or, the multitude of your gardens, etc. did the palmer worm, etc the palmerworm : Amo 7:1, ...

with : Deu 28:22; 1Ki 8:37; 2Ch 6:28; Hag 2:17

when : etc. or, the multitude of your gardens, etc. did the palmer worm, etc

the palmerworm : Amo 7:1, Amo 7:2; Deu 28:42; Joe 1:4, Joe 2:25

yet : Amo 4:6, Amo 4:8; Job 36:8-13; Isa 1:5, Isa 42:24, Isa 42:25; Jer 5:3

collapse all
Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Amo 4:9 - -- I have smitten you with blasting - Literally, "an exceeding scorching,"such as the hot east wind produced, and "an exceeding mildew,"a blight, ...

I have smitten you with blasting - Literally, "an exceeding scorching,"such as the hot east wind produced, and "an exceeding mildew,"a blight, in which the ears turn untimely a pale yellow, and have no grain. Both words are doubly intensive. They stand together in the prophecy of Moses Deu 28:22, among the other scourges of disobedience; and the mention of these would awaken, in those who would hear, the memory of a long train of other warnings and other judgments.

When your gardens ... increased - Better, as English margin. "the multitude of your gardens."The garden of the east united the orchard Job 8:16; Son 4:13-14; Son 6:11, herb Deu 11:10; Son 4:14; Son 6:2, and flower garden. It comprised what was necessary for use as well as what was fragrant. It furnished part of their support Amo 9:14; Jer 29:5, Jer 29:28. Its trees Ecc 2:6, as well as the garden (Son 4:15; Ecclus. 24:30) generally, being mostly watered artificially, it was beyond the reach of ordinary drought. The tree, "planted by the channels of waters"(Psa 1:3; Jer 17:8; add Isa 58:11; Jer 31:12, contrariwise Isa 1:30), was an image of abiding freshness and fertility, Yet neither would these escape God’ s sentence. On these He sent the locusts, which, in a few hours - all leaves - flower, herb or tree, are as dead (see the note at Joe 1:7).

Poole: Amo 4:9 - -- To other judgments inflicted on you I have added this also, my hand hath been heavy upon you, I have smitten you with blasting the excessive heat ...

To other judgments inflicted on you I have added this also, my hand hath been heavy upon you,

I have smitten you with blasting the excessive heat and drought have turned your corn into black and parched smut or ashes;

and mildew a bane to corn through too much wet; the seasons were extremely unkind, and all spoiled with it.

When your gardens about your houses for convenience and pleasure.

Vineyards planted for your support and to enrich you, to cheer your heart.

Fig trees which were excellent, of very great use and profit in those countries.

Olive trees a principal commodity arose from their oliveyards: all that was for delight, profit, and necessary use.

Increased when they were seemingly most fruitful.

The palmer-worm: see Joe 1:3,10-12 .

Devoured eat up all, as is the manner of that worm.

Haydock: Amo 4:9 - -- Wind. Protestants, "blasting." (Haydock) --- "Pestilential air," (Septuagint, Symmachus, &c.) which destroys the corn (Calmet) and men. (Haydock)

Wind. Protestants, "blasting." (Haydock) ---

"Pestilential air," (Septuagint, Symmachus, &c.) which destroys the corn (Calmet) and men. (Haydock)

Gill: Amo 4:9 - -- I have smitten you with blasting and mildew,.... "Blasting" is what we commonly call "blights", generally occasioned by an east wind; and so Kimchi in...

I have smitten you with blasting and mildew,.... "Blasting" is what we commonly call "blights", generally occasioned by an east wind; and so Kimchi interprets the word here used; and the Vulgate Latin version renders it, "a burning wind"; which causes the buds and leaves of trees to shrivel up as if they were burnt with fire. "Mildew" is a kind of clammy dew, which falling upon corn, &c. corrupts and destroys by its moisture; and is a kind of jaundice to the fruits of the earth; and has its name as that, from yellowness, in the Hebrew language: when the Lord is said to smite them with these the sense is, that he sent these upon the fruits of their gardens, fields and vineyards, which consumed them:

when your gardens and your vineyards and your fig trees and your olive trees increased, the palmer worm devoured them; just when they were budding and blossoming, and bringing forth fruit; and so what the blasting and mildew did not consume, that the palmer worm, a kind of locust, did; which has its name from its biting and cutting off the leaves and branches of trees, as of those mentioned vines, olives and fig trees, with which the land of Canaan abounded, the cutting off which was a great calamity. The Targum is,

"the multitude of your gardens, &c. the palmer worm hath eaten:''

yet have ye not returned unto me, saith the Lord; this dispensation of Providence was also without its desired fruit and effect; See Gill on Amo 4:6.

expand all
Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Amo 4:9 Or “gardens.”

expand all
Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Amo 4:1-13 - --1 He reproves Israel for oppression,4 for idolatry,6 and for their incorrigibleness.

Maclaren: Amo 4:4-13 - --Smitten In Vain Come to Beth-el, and transgress; at Gilgal multiply transgression; and bring your sacrifices every morning, and your tithes after thr...

MHCC: Amo 4:6-13 - --See the folly of carnal hearts; they wander from one creature to another, seeking for something to satisfy, and labour for that which satisfies not; y...

Matthew Henry: Amo 4:6-13 - -- Here, I. God complains of his people's incorrigibleness under the judgments which he had brought upon them in order to their humiliation and reforma...

Keil-Delitzsch: Amo 4:6-11 - -- But as Israel would not desist from its idolatrous worship, Jehovah would also continue to visit the people with judgments, as He had already done, ...

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 3:1--6:14 - --B. Messages of Judgment against Israel chs. 3-6 After announcing that God would judge Israel, Amos deliv...

Constable: Amo 4:1-13 - --2. The second message on women, worship, and stubbornness ch. 4 This message consists of seven p...

Constable: Amo 4:6-11 - --Refusal to repent 4:6-11 4:6 The Lord had brought famine throughout the land to warn His people about their disobedience and His displeasure, but this...

Guzik: Amo 4:1-13 - --Amos 4 - "Yet You Have Not Returned to Me" A. The sinful women of Israel. 1. (1) Amos describes the indulgent women of Israel. Hear this...

expand all
Commentary -- Other

Evidence: Amo 4:6-10 At times, the power of hunger, thirst, pestilence and plague may not be enough to soften the hard hearts of wicked men.

expand all
Introduction / Outline

JFB: Amos (Book Introduction) AMOS (meaning in Hebrew "a burden") was (Amo 1:1) a shepherd of Tekoa, a small town of Judah, six miles southeast from Beth-lehem, and twelve from Jer...

JFB: Amos (Outline) GOD'S JUDGMENTS ON SYRIA, PHILISTIA, TYRE, EDOM, AND AMMON. (Amo 1:1-15) CHARGES AGAINST MOAB, JUDAH, AND LASTLY ISRAEL, THE CHIEF SUBJECT OF AMOS' P...

TSK: Amos 4 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Amo 4:1, He reproves Israel for oppression, Amo 4:4, for idolatry, Amo 4:6, and for their incorrigibleness.

Poole: Amos (Book Introduction) THE ARGUMENT IF we might be allowed to make a conjecture at the quality of our prophet’ s sermons by the signification of his name, we must co...

Poole: Amos 4 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 4 Israel reproved for oppression, Amo 4:1-3 ; for idolatry, Amo 4:4,5 ; and for their incorrigibleness, Amo 4:6-13 . This verse is an int...

MHCC: Amos (Book Introduction) Amos was a herdsman, and engaged in agriculture. But the same Divine Spirit influenced Isaiah and Daniel in the court, and Amos in the sheep-folds, gi...

MHCC: Amos 4 (Chapter Introduction) (Amo 4:1-5) Israel is reproved. (Amo 4:6-13) Their impenitence shown.

Matthew Henry: Amos (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Prophecy of Amos Though this prophet appeared a little before Isaiah, yet he was not, as some have ...

Matthew Henry: Amos 4 (Chapter Introduction) In this chapter, I. The oppressors in Israel are threatened for their oppression of the poor (Amo 4:1-3). II. The idolaters in Israel, being join...

Constable: Amos (Book Introduction) Introduction Title and Writer The title of the book comes from its writer. The prophet...

Constable: Amos (Outline) Outline I. Prologue 1:1-2 A. Introduction 1:1 B. Theme 1:2 ...

Constable: Amos Amos Bibliography Alter, Robert. The Art of Biblical Poetry. New York: Basic, 1985. Andersen, F...

Haydock: Amos (Book Introduction) THE PROPHECY OF AMOS. INTRODUCTION. Amos prophesied in Israel about the same time as Osee, and was called from following the cattle to denoun...

Gill: Amos (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO AMOS This book in the Hebrew Bibles is called "Sepher Amos", the Book of Amos; and, in the Vulgate Latin and Syriac versions, the P...

Gill: Amos 4 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO AMOS 4 In this chapter, the great ones, or the people of Israel, are threatened with calamities for their oppression of the poor, A...

Advanced Commentary (Dictionaries, Hymns, Arts, Sermon Illustration, Question and Answers, etc)


TIP #21: 'To learn the History/Background of Bible books/chapters use the Discovery Box.' [ALL]
created in 0.10 seconds
powered by
bible.org - YLSA