
Text -- Ezekiel 19:2 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Eze 19:2 - -- What resemblance shall I use to set out the nature, deportment, and state of the mother of these princes? Thy - One of whom was upon the throne at onc...
What resemblance shall I use to set out the nature, deportment, and state of the mother of these princes? Thy - One of whom was upon the throne at once, and therefore the prophet speaks to one at a time.

Wesley: Eze 19:2 - -- The land of Judea, and Jerusalem, the chief city of it, the royal family of David.
The land of Judea, and Jerusalem, the chief city of it, the royal family of David.

Wesley: Eze 19:2 - -- Tho' chosen of God to execute justice; yet they soon degenerated into the fierce and ravening nature of the lioness.
Tho' chosen of God to execute justice; yet they soon degenerated into the fierce and ravening nature of the lioness.

Wesley: Eze 19:2 - -- Associated, and grew familiar with neighbour kings, called here lions; fierce and bloody.
Associated, and grew familiar with neighbour kings, called here lions; fierce and bloody.

Wesley: Eze 19:2 - -- Either foreign princes and kings, or some of the fierce, unjust, tyrannizing princes at home.
Either foreign princes and kings, or some of the fierce, unjust, tyrannizing princes at home.
JFB: Eze 19:2 - -- The mother of Jehoiachin, the representative of David's line in exile with Ezekiel. The "mother" is Judea: "a lioness," as being fierce in catching pr...
The mother of Jehoiachin, the representative of David's line in exile with Ezekiel. The "mother" is Judea: "a lioness," as being fierce in catching prey (Eze 19:3), referring to her heathenish practices. Jerusalem was called Ariel (the lion of God) in a good sense (Isa 29:1); and Judah "a lion's whelp . . . a lion . . . an old lion" (Gen 49:9), to which, as also to Num 23:24; Num 24:9, this passage alludes.

JFB: Eze 19:2 - -- She herself had "lain" among lions, that is, had intercourse with the corruptions of the surrounding heathen and had brought up the royal young ones s...
She herself had "lain" among lions, that is, had intercourse with the corruptions of the surrounding heathen and had brought up the royal young ones similarly: utterly degenerate from the stock of Abraham.

JFB: Eze 19:2 - -- Or "couched," is appropriate to the lion, the Arab name of which means "the coucher."
Or "couched," is appropriate to the lion, the Arab name of which means "the coucher."
Clarke -> Eze 19:2
Clarke: Eze 19:2 - -- What is thy mother? A lioness - Judea may here be the mother; the lioness, Jerusalem. Her lying down among lions, her having confederacy with the ne...
What is thy mother? A lioness - Judea may here be the mother; the lioness, Jerusalem. Her lying down among lions, her having confederacy with the neighboring kings; for lion here means king.
Calvin -> Eze 19:2
Calvin: Eze 19:2 - -- He says next, that their mother lay down among lions, alluding to the people’s origin from lions, as we said before, when the Prophet calls Judea ...
He says next, that their mother lay down among lions, alluding to the people’s origin from lions, as we said before, when the Prophet calls Judea the descendant of Canaan, and the sister of Sodom and Samaria. When he now says, their mother lay down among lions, he means that they were shamefully mixed with the corruption of the Gentiles, so that they did not differ from them. But God had chosen them as his peculiar people on the very condition of being separate from all the filth of the Gentiles. There was, therefore, a certain withdrawing of God’s favor when the mother of the people lay down among the lions, that is, when they all promiscuously gave themselves up to the perverse morals and superstitions of the Gentiles. He says, that she brought up whelps, or young lions, which she produced to these lions; since their origin was impure, being all Abraham’s children, but, as I have said, a degenerate race. He afterwards adds, that the lion’s whelp, or young lion, grew up till it became a lion: then it learnt to seize prey, says he, and to devour men. He refers to King Jehoahaz, son of Josiah, (2Kg 23:30 :) but he had before asserted that the whole people had a lion’s disposition, and that the princes, who were more exalted, were like whelps. As only one lion is here brought forward, it ought to be referred to the violence by which that wicked king manifested his real disposition. But if it be asked whence the lion went forth, the reply is, from amidst his brethren, for they were all lions’ whelps, or young lions. They could not administer the government either together or singly, but each devoured his brother, and was devoted to robbery and rapine. The king only, because freed from all fear, could surpass the rest in rapine and robbery with impunity. We see, then, that not only the king was here condemned, but that he becomes the type of the whole nation; because, since no one could restrain his passions, he could rob and devour mankind with unbridled freedom.
TSK -> Eze 19:2
TSK: Eze 19:2 - -- A lioness : Judea, which possessed strength, courage, and sovereignty. Nah 2:11, Nah 2:12; Zep 3:1-4
she lay : Had confederacy with the neighbouring k...
A lioness : Judea, which possessed strength, courage, and sovereignty. Nah 2:11, Nah 2:12; Zep 3:1-4
she lay : Had confederacy with the neighbouring kings, and learned their manners.
her whelps : The sons of Josiah, who learned to be oppressive tyrants from the surrounding princes.
young lions : Job 4:11; Psa 58:6; Isa 5:29, Isa 11:6-9; Zec 11:3

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Eze 19:2
Poole -> Eze 19:2
Poole: Eze 19:2 - -- What resemblance shall I use to set out the nature, deportment, and state of the mother of these princes? an unhappy mother of unhappy children! Or,...
What resemblance shall I use to set out the nature, deportment, and state of the mother of these princes? an unhappy mother of unhappy children! Or, Alas! thy mother, &c.
Thy one of these was upon the throne at once, and therefore the prophet speaks to one at a time, in the singular number. Mother; the land of Judea and Jerusalem, the chief city of it, the royal family of David.
A lioness though chosen of God to execute justice, defend the poor, to be his vicegerents, and to delight in mercy; yet once advanced, they soon degenerated into the fierce and ravening nature of the lioness, and as violently seized the prey.
She lay down associated, couched, and grew familiar with, by leagues, commerce, and intermixture of marriages with neighbour kings, called here lions: thou didst learn their manners, and grewest fierce and bloody, as they.
She nourished: the Hebrew includes both her bringing forth many, and her advancing them to greatness: the royal family of flat nation had many kings, and some very great, but the time the prophet points now at in particular was after Josiah, whose character, given Jer 22:16 , is, that he judged the poor and needy, but his successors were of another temper, as Jer 22:13-15,17 .
Her whelps i.e. her sons, successors to the crown, which could be called nothing else, to keep the decorum of the parable.
Among young lions either foreign princes and kings, or else some of the fiercer, unjuster, aspiring, and tyrannizing princes at home; for such there were in these, as well as in Rehoboam’ s times, who would have the son’ s finger thicker than the father’ s loins.
Haydock -> Eze 19:2
Haydock: Eze 19:2 - -- Lioness; Jerusalem (Challoner) which made alliances with the lions, or nations. (Calmet)
Lioness; Jerusalem (Challoner) which made alliances with the lions, or nations. (Calmet)
Gill -> Eze 19:2
Gill: Eze 19:2 - -- And say, what is thy mother?.... That is, say so to the then reigning prince, Zedekiah, what is thy mother like? to what is she to be compared? by wh...
And say, what is thy mother?.... That is, say so to the then reigning prince, Zedekiah, what is thy mother like? to what is she to be compared? by whom is meant, not the royal family of David only, or Jerusalem the metropolis of the nation, but the whole body of the people; and so the Targum interprets it of the congregation of Israel. The answer to the question is,
a lioness; she is like to one, not for her strength and glory, but for her cruelty and rapine; for her want of humanity, mercy, and justice:
she lay down among lions; that is, kings, as the Targum interprets it Heathen princes, the kings of the nations about them, as of Egypt and Babylon, Jer 50:17; so called for their despotic and arbitrary power, tyranny, and cruelty: now this lioness, the people of the Jews, lay down among them, joined with them in leagues and marriages, and learned their manners, and became of the same temper and disposition:
she nourisheth her whelps among young lions; princes, as the Targum explains it; either the princes of Judah, who were become like young lions, fierce and cruel; or the princes of other nations, among whom the children of the royal family were brought up; or, however, they were trained up in the principles of such, even of arbitrary and despotic power, and were taught to oppress their subjects, and not execute justice and mercy among them.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Eze 19:2
NET Notes: Eze 19:2 Lions probably refer to Judahite royalty and/or nobility. The lioness appears to symbolize the Davidic dynasty, though some see the referent as Hamuta...
Geneva Bible -> Eze 19:2
Geneva Bible: Eze 19:2 And say, What [is] thy ( b ) mother? A lioness: she lay down among lions, she nourished her whelps among young lions.
( b ) That is Jehoahaz's mother...

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 19:1-9
MHCC: Eze 19:1-9 - --Ezekiel is to compare the kingdom of Judah to a lioness. He must compare the kings of Judah to a lion's whelps; they were cruel and oppressive to thei...
Matthew Henry -> Eze 19:1-9
Matthew Henry: Eze 19:1-9 - -- Here are, I. Orders given to the prophet to bewail the fall of the royal family, which had long made so great a figure by virtue of a covenant of ro...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Eze 19:1-9
Keil-Delitzsch: Eze 19:1-9 - --
Capture and Exile of the Princes
Eze 19:1. And do thou raise a lamentation for the princes of Israel, Eze 19:2. And say, Why did thy mother, a ...
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...
