
Text -- Ezekiel 19:12 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
God raised up the king of Babylon to pull up this sinful kingdom.

Wesley: Eze 19:12 - -- Blasted all her fruit, deposed her king, captivated him, his family, and the whole kingdom.
Blasted all her fruit, deposed her king, captivated him, his family, and the whole kingdom.
JFB: Eze 19:12 - -- Not gradually withered. The sudden upturning of the state was designed to awaken the Jews out of their torpor to see the hand of God in the national j...
Not gradually withered. The sudden upturning of the state was designed to awaken the Jews out of their torpor to see the hand of God in the national judgment.
Clarke: Eze 19:12 - -- But she was plucked up in fury - Jerusalem; taken after a violent and most destructive siege; Nebuchadnezzar being violently enraged against Zedekia...
But she was plucked up in fury - Jerusalem; taken after a violent and most destructive siege; Nebuchadnezzar being violently enraged against Zedekiah for breaking his oath to him

Clarke: Eze 19:12 - -- She was cast down to the ground - Jerusalem was totally ruined, by being burned to the ground
She was cast down to the ground - Jerusalem was totally ruined, by being burned to the ground

Clarke: Eze 19:12 - -- Her strong rods were broken - The children of Zedekiah were slain before his eyes, and after that his own eyes pulled out; and he was laden with cha...
Her strong rods were broken - The children of Zedekiah were slain before his eyes, and after that his own eyes pulled out; and he was laden with chains, and carried into Babylon.
Calvin -> Eze 19:12
Calvin: Eze 19:12 - -- Let us come now to the second clause. He says that the vine was torn away in wrath, thrown on the ground, and dried by the east wind, and that its b...
Let us come now to the second clause. He says that the vine was torn away in wrath, thrown on the ground, and dried by the east wind, and that its boughs were broken off and withered, and consumed by fire. I have now briefly explained the Prophet’s meaning. As the Jews had grown stupid in their calamity, and were not humbled so as suppliantly to fly to God’s mercy, the Prophet corrects their torpor when he shows them their origin. He now says that they were reduced to extreme wretchedness by a sudden assault; for a change which took place in a short space of time ought to affect them to the quick; but if they had been slowly diminished, the change had not been so remarkable: but when the vine was struck by lightning, torn up, withered, and burnt, that instantaneous slaughter, as I have said, showed that it was not by chance, but by the evident wrath of God. For this reason he says that the vine was violently torn up, and cast upon the ground. If the vine had been dried up by degrees, it, would not have been so wonderful; but its sudden tearing up ought to have made them sensible of the wrath of God, towards which they had grown callous. This is the reason why the Prophet adds one simile to another. The plucking up would have been sufficient; but he adds, it was cast upon the ground, that it should wither away completely. He adds, the east wind, which destroys both fruits and trees, as is sufficiently evident from many passages; and not only so, but he says that the boughs were broken, or plucked off, and withered: lastly, they were consumed with fire In fine, the hand of God appeared visibly in that horrible slaughter of the people, when they were torn up, cut off, withered, and burnt. It follows —
TSK -> Eze 19:12
TSK: Eze 19:12 - -- she was : The kingdom was entirely ruined, and her princes cut off. Eze 15:6-8; Psa 52:5, Psa 80:12, Psa 80:13, Psa 80:16, Psa 89:40-45; Isa 5:5, Isa ...
she was : The kingdom was entirely ruined, and her princes cut off. Eze 15:6-8; Psa 52:5, Psa 80:12, Psa 80:13, Psa 80:16, Psa 89:40-45; Isa 5:5, Isa 5:6; Jer 31:28
the east : Eze 17:10; Jer 4:11, Jer 4:12; Hos 13:15
strong : Eze 19:11; 2Ki 23:29, 2Ki 23:34, 2Ki 24:6, 2Ki 24:14-16, 2Ki 25:6, 2Ki 25:7; Jer 22:10,Jer 22:11, Jer 22:18, Jer 22:19, Jer 22:25-27, Jer 22:30
the fire : Eze 15:4, Eze 20:47, Eze 20:48; Deu 32:22; Isa 27:11; Mat 3:10; Joh 15:6

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Eze 19:12
Barnes: Eze 19:12 - -- This is a dirge; and therefore that which is foreseen by the prophet, the capture and burning of Jerusalem, is described as already accomplished.
This is a dirge; and therefore that which is foreseen by the prophet, the capture and burning of Jerusalem, is described as already accomplished.
Poole -> Eze 19:12
Poole: Eze 19:12 - -- This flourishing vine first degenerated, brought forth fruit to itself, not to God, and grew proud, abused God’ s mercies to all manner of sin....
This flourishing vine first degenerated, brought forth fruit to itself, not to God, and grew proud, abused God’ s mercies to all manner of sin.
She was plucked up in fury was violently, suddenly, and totally rooted out, tore up by the roots; so was the once flourishing kingdom of the Jews overthrown.
She was cast down to the ground had she been again set, there might have been some hope, but plucked up root and branch together it is perished for ever. To hasten the utter destruction hereof, an east wind, that blasting, piercing wind, blows upon her; the king of Babylon with all his power, raised of God to pull up this sinful kingdom.
Dried up her fruit blasted all her fruit; deposed her king, captivated him, his family, and the whole kingdom.
Her strong rods all the choice men, the counsellors, warriors, artificers, all that were like to be the strength of the kingdom, were broken; by Nebuchadnezzar’ s hand plucked away, and removed into Babylon, where they lay as withered branches.
The fire consumed them called fury in the former part of the verse. God’ s displeasure for their sins, their adversaries’ rage, and their own animosities, burnt them up; their houses and palaces, their city and temple, all burnt, yea, and some persons with this fire were consumed also, beside some that the conqueror roasted.
Gill -> Eze 19:12
Gill: Eze 19:12 - -- But she was plucked up in fury,.... This vine being turned into a degenerate plant of a strange vine; or the people of the Jews becoming wicked, disob...
But she was plucked up in fury,.... This vine being turned into a degenerate plant of a strange vine; or the people of the Jews becoming wicked, disobedient to God, and disregarding his laws and ordinances, the wrath of God came upon them, and let in the Assyrians among them, who carried off ten tribes at once; and the tribes of Judah and Benjamin not taking warning hereby, but continuing and increasing in sinful courses, great part of them were carried captive into Babylon, with their king Jeconiah, who succeeded Jehoiakim before mentioned; when the kingdom seemed to be utterly ruined and destroyed, and is what is here referred to:
she was cast down to the ground; a phrase expressive of, he entire overthrow of the nation; for a vine, though plucked up, yet, if immediately planted again, might grow; but being plucked up, and left on the ground, and there lie, there is no hope of it; so that this denotes the desperate case of this people at this time, being in captivity. So the Targum paraphrases both clauses,
"and it was rooted up with strength out of the land of the house of the Shechinah, and translated into another land;''
and the east wind dried up her fruit; Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon, and the Chaldean army, compared to an east wind, because hurtful and pernicious, as that is to trees and fruit, and because Babylon lay northeast of Judea; the people of, he land are meant by the fruit of the vine, with their wealth and riches, which were seized upon and wasted, or carried into Babylon. So the Targum,
"and a king strong as the east wind slew her people;''
her strong rods were broken and withered; or, "strong rod"; the singular for the plural; which may design King Jeconiah particularly, who with his mother, wives, princes, and officers, and the mighty of the land, even all the mighty men of valour, with the craftsmen and smiths, were taken and carried captive, 2Ki 24:14;
the fire consumed them; the wrath of God, which is often compared to fire, the same with fury in the beginning of the verse; which shows that it was for sin, which had provoked the Lord to wrath and anger, that all this ruin came upon the Jewish nation. The Targum is,
"her strong governors removed, and were carried captive; and the people which are strong, as fire consumed them.''

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Eze 19:1-14
TSK Synopsis: Eze 19:1-14 - --1 A lamentation for the princes of Israel, under the parable of lion's whelps taken in a pit;10 and for Jerusalem, under the parable of a wasted vine.
MHCC -> Eze 19:10-14
MHCC: Eze 19:10-14 - --Jerusalem was a vine, flourishing and fruitful. This vine is now destroyed, though not plucked up by the roots. She has by wickedness made herself lik...
Matthew Henry -> Eze 19:10-14
Matthew Henry: Eze 19:10-14 - -- Jerusalem, the mother-city, is here represented by another similitude; she is a vine, and the princes are her branches. This comparison we had befor...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Eze 19:10-14
Keil-Delitzsch: Eze 19:10-14 - --
Destruction of the Kingdom, and Banishment of the People
Eze 19:10. Thy mother was like a vine, planted by the water in thy repose; it became a fr...
Constable: Eze 4:1--24:27 - --II. Oracles of judgment on Judah and Jerusalem for sin chs. 4-24
This section of the book contains prophecies th...

Constable: Eze 12:1--19:14 - --C. Yahweh's reply to the invalid hopes of the Israelites chs. 12-19
"The exiles had not grasped the seri...
