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Text -- Ezekiel 23:1-38 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Eze 23:2; Eze 23:3; Eze 23:4; Eze 23:4; Eze 23:4; Eze 23:4; Eze 23:4; Eze 23:5; Eze 23:5; Eze 23:6; Eze 23:7; Eze 23:10; Eze 23:10; Eze 23:10; Eze 23:10; Eze 23:15; Eze 23:15; Eze 23:15; Eze 23:17; Eze 23:18; Eze 23:19; Eze 23:20; Eze 23:23; Eze 23:23; Eze 23:23; Eze 23:23; Eze 23:24; Eze 23:24; Eze 23:24; Eze 23:24; Eze 23:24; Eze 23:25; Eze 23:25; Eze 23:29; Eze 23:32; Eze 23:34; Eze 23:34; Eze 23:34; Eze 23:34; Eze 23:35; Eze 23:38
Judah, and Israel, two kingdoms.
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Wesley: Eze 23:4 - -- That is, his own tabernacle; for Israel falling off from the house of David, fell off from the tabernacle, or temple of God; so that all the temple th...
That is, his own tabernacle; for Israel falling off from the house of David, fell off from the tabernacle, or temple of God; so that all the temple they had was of their own making.
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Wesley: Eze 23:4 - -- Greater for number of tribes, and for power, wealth, and for multitudes of people.
Greater for number of tribes, and for power, wealth, and for multitudes of people.
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Wesley: Eze 23:4 - -- That is, my tabernacle in her: the two tribes had the temple of God with them.
That is, my tabernacle in her: the two tribes had the temple of God with them.
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Wesley: Eze 23:4 - -- Were fruitful and brought forth children to me; they increased in numbers of people; and among these, some there were that were children of God by fai...
Were fruitful and brought forth children to me; they increased in numbers of people; and among these, some there were that were children of God by faith, love, and obedience.
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United in idolatry, with the Assyrians.
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When under my government, and protection.
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Skillful in riding, and well furnished with choice horses.
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Other nations, with whom she had commerce.
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Stript her naked, and exposed her to shame.
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The kingdom of Israel, under Hoshea, was by Salmanesar utterly destroyed.
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The Assyrians, had executed God's just displeasure upon her.
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With soldiers belts, which includes the rest of the habit of soldiers.
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Both rich, comely, large, and of divers colours.
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Wesley: Eze 23:19 - -- Remembering her idolatries in Egypt, her alliance with it in days past, which she now resolved to act over again.
Remembering her idolatries in Egypt, her alliance with it in days past, which she now resolved to act over again.
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The nations, that were confederate with the Egyptians.
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Pekod is the province between Tigris, and Lycus; in this was old Nineveh.
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Wesley: Eze 23:23 - -- Either Sia in Armenia, or the Sohia, among which were the Adiabeni, and this contained the middle part of the kingdom of Babylon.
Either Sia in Armenia, or the Sohia, among which were the Adiabeni, and this contained the middle part of the kingdom of Babylon.
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Wesley: Eze 23:23 - -- This bordered upon Media, the inhabitants were called Kohai, and dwelt about Arbela.
This bordered upon Media, the inhabitants were called Kohai, and dwelt about Arbela.
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All subjects of the Assyrian monarchy.
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Wesley: Eze 23:24 - -- Lest in their march the carriage wheels should break, a store of these were provided.
Lest in their march the carriage wheels should break, a store of these were provided.
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Wesley: Eze 23:24 - -- Give them a power in right of conquest over their rebels, as well as mine, and I will give them a spirit of judgment to discern the greatness of this ...
Give them a power in right of conquest over their rebels, as well as mine, and I will give them a spirit of judgment to discern the greatness of this people's sins.
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Condemn, and execute sentence upon thee.
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Wesley: Eze 23:24 - -- To their will, power, wrath, and custom, against rebels; for these are their rules of judgment.
To their will, power, wrath, and custom, against rebels; for these are their rules of judgment.
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As a jealous provoked husband, I will be as much against thee as they are.
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Wesley: Eze 23:25 - -- Either the people, who hid themselves in vaults and cellars, or what the Chaldeans cannot carry away, all this shall be devoured by fire.
Either the people, who hid themselves in vaults and cellars, or what the Chaldeans cannot carry away, all this shall be devoured by fire.
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Wesley: Eze 23:29 - -- Deprive thee of the comfortable use of all thy labour, which they will exact of thee in captivity.
Deprive thee of the comfortable use of all thy labour, which they will exact of thee in captivity.
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Wesley: Eze 23:32 - -- Is large, and contains what will last many years, even 'till the seventy years be expired.
Is large, and contains what will last many years, even 'till the seventy years be expired.
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Shalt stagger with sorrows, that shall intoxicate, and astonish.
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The dregs shalt thou drink, and multiply thine own sorrows.
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The guilt, I will impute it, the punishment, I will not pardon it.
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Wesley: Eze 23:38 - -- When they had newly polluted themselves with idolatry and murder, they thrust into the temple.
When they had newly polluted themselves with idolatry and murder, they thrust into the temple.
JFB -> Eze 23:2; Eze 23:3; Eze 23:3; Eze 23:3; Eze 23:4; Eze 23:4; Eze 23:4; Eze 23:5; Eze 23:5; Eze 23:6; Eze 23:6; Eze 23:7; Eze 23:8; Eze 23:9; Eze 23:10; Eze 23:10; Eze 23:11; Eze 23:12; Eze 23:12; Eze 23:13; Eze 23:14; Eze 23:15; Eze 23:15; Eze 23:15; Eze 23:16; Eze 23:17; Eze 23:18; Eze 23:19; Eze 23:20; Eze 23:20; Eze 23:20; Eze 23:21; Eze 23:21; Eze 23:22; Eze 23:23; Eze 23:23; Eze 23:23; Eze 23:24; Eze 23:24; Eze 23:24; Eze 23:25; Eze 23:26; Eze 23:27; Eze 23:28; Eze 23:29; Eze 23:29; Eze 23:31; Eze 23:34; Eze 23:34; Eze 23:35; Eze 23:35; Eze 23:35; Eze 23:36-44; Eze 23:36-44; Eze 23:38
Israel and Judah, one nation by birth from the same ancestress, Sarah.
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JFB: Eze 23:3 - -- Even so early in their history as their Egyptian sojourn, they committed idolatries (see on Eze 20:6-8; Jos 24:14).
Even so early in their history as their Egyptian sojourn, they committed idolatries (see on Eze 20:6-8; Jos 24:14).
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JFB: Eze 23:3 - -- An aggravation of their sin. It was at the very time of their receiving extraordinary favors from God (Eze 16:6, Eze 16:22).
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JFB: Eze 23:4 - -- That is, "Her tent" (put for worship, as the first worship of God in Israel was in a tent or tabernacle), as contrasted with Aholibah, that is, "My te...
That is, "Her tent" (put for worship, as the first worship of God in Israel was in a tent or tabernacle), as contrasted with Aholibah, that is, "My tent in her." The Beth-el worship of Samaria was of her own devising, not of God's appointment; the temple-worship of Jerusalem was expressly appointed by Jehovah, who "dwelt" there, "setting up His tabernacle among the people as His" (Exo 25:8; Lev 26:11-12; Jos 22:19; Psa 76:2).
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JFB: Eze 23:4 - -- Samaria is called "the elder" because she preceded Judah in her apostasy and its punishment.
Samaria is called "the elder" because she preceded Judah in her apostasy and its punishment.
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JFB: Eze 23:4 - -- Previous to apostasy under Jeroboam, Samaria (Israel, or the ten tribes), equally with Judah, worshipped the true God. God therefore never renounced t...
Previous to apostasy under Jeroboam, Samaria (Israel, or the ten tribes), equally with Judah, worshipped the true God. God therefore never renounced the right over Israel, but sent prophets, as Elijah and Elisha, to declare His will to them.
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Literally, "under Me," that is, subject to Me as her lawful husband.
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JFB: Eze 23:5 - -- On the northeast the kingdom of Israel bordered on that of Assyria; for the latter had occupied much of Syria. Their neighborhood in locality was embl...
On the northeast the kingdom of Israel bordered on that of Assyria; for the latter had occupied much of Syria. Their neighborhood in locality was emblematical of their being near in corruption of morals and worship. The alliances of Israel with Assyria, which are the chief subject of reprobation here, tended to this (2Ki 15:19; 2Ki 16:7, 2Ki 16:9; 2Ki 17:3; Hos 8:9).
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JFB: Eze 23:6 - -- Rather, "purple" [FAIRBAIRN]. As a lustful woman's passions are fired by showy dress and youthful appearance in men, so Israel was seduced by the pomp...
Rather, "purple" [FAIRBAIRN]. As a lustful woman's passions are fired by showy dress and youthful appearance in men, so Israel was seduced by the pomp and power of Assyria (compare Isa 10:8).
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There was nothing that she refused to her lovers.
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JFB: Eze 23:8 - -- The calves set up in Dan and Beth-el by Jeroboam, answering to the Egyptian bull-formed idol Apis. Her alliances with Egypt politically are also meant...
The calves set up in Dan and Beth-el by Jeroboam, answering to the Egyptian bull-formed idol Apis. Her alliances with Egypt politically are also meant (Isa 30:2-3; Isa 31:1). The ten tribes probably resumed the Egyptian rites, in order to enlist the Egyptians against Judah (2Ch 12:2-4).
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JFB: Eze 23:9 - -- God, in righteous retribution, turned their objects of trust into the instruments of their punishment: Pul, Tiglath-pileser, Esar-haddon, and Shalmane...
God, in righteous retribution, turned their objects of trust into the instruments of their punishment: Pul, Tiglath-pileser, Esar-haddon, and Shalmaneser (2Ki 15:19, 2Ki 15:29; 2Ki 17:3, 2Ki 17:6, 2Ki 17:24; Ezr 4:2, Ezr 4:10). "It was their sin to have sought after such lovers, and it was to be their punishment that these lovers should become their destroyers" [FAIRBAIRN].
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JFB: Eze 23:10 - -- Literally, "she became a name," that is, as notorious by her punishment as she had been by her sins, so as to be quoted as a warning to others.
Literally, "she became a name," that is, as notorious by her punishment as she had been by her sins, so as to be quoted as a warning to others.
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JFB: Eze 23:11 - -- Judah, the southern kingdom, though having the "warning" (see on Eze 23:10) of the northern kingdom before her eyes, instead of profiting by it, went ...
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JFB: Eze 23:12 - -- Literally, "to perfection." GROTIUS translates, "wearing a crown," or "chaplet," such as lovers wore in visiting their mistresses.
Literally, "to perfection." GROTIUS translates, "wearing a crown," or "chaplet," such as lovers wore in visiting their mistresses.
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Both alike forsaking God for heathen confidences.
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JFB: Eze 23:14 - -- The peculiar color of the Chaldeans, as purple was of the Assyrians. In striking agreement with this verse is the fact that the Assyrian sculptures la...
The peculiar color of the Chaldeans, as purple was of the Assyrians. In striking agreement with this verse is the fact that the Assyrian sculptures lately discovered have painted and colored bas-reliefs in red, blue, and black. The Jews (for instance Jehoiakim, Jer 22:14) copied these (compare Eze 8:10).
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JFB: Eze 23:15 - -- Rather, "in ample dyed turbans"; literally, "redundant with dyed turbans." The Assyrians delighted in ample, flowing, and richly colored tunics, scarf...
Rather, "in ample dyed turbans"; literally, "redundant with dyed turbans." The Assyrians delighted in ample, flowing, and richly colored tunics, scarfs, girdles, and head-dresses or turbans, varying in ornaments according to the rank.
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JFB: Eze 23:15 - -- Literally, a first-rate military class that fought by threes in the chariots, one guiding the horses, the other two fighting.
Literally, a first-rate military class that fought by threes in the chariots, one guiding the horses, the other two fighting.
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JFB: Eze 23:16 - -- (Eze 16:29). It was she that solicited the Chaldeans, not they her. Probably the occasion was when Judah sought to strengthen herself by a Chaldean a...
(Eze 16:29). It was she that solicited the Chaldeans, not they her. Probably the occasion was when Judah sought to strengthen herself by a Chaldean alliance against a menaced attack by Egypt (compare 2Ki 23:29-35; 2Ki 24:1-7). God made the object of their sinful desire the instrument of their punishment. Jehoiakim, probably by a stipulation of tribute, enlisted Nebuchadnezzar against Pharaoh, whose tributary he previously had been; failing to keep his stipulation, he brought on himself Nebuchadnezzar's vengeance.
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JFB: Eze 23:17 - -- Namely, from the Chaldeans: turning again to the Egyptians (Eze 23:19), trying by their help to throw off her solemn engagements to Babylon (compare J...
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JFB: Eze 23:18 - -- Literally, "was broken off from her." Just retribution for "her mind being alienated (broken off) from the Chaldeans" (Eze 23:17), to whom she had swo...
Literally, "was broken off from her." Just retribution for "her mind being alienated (broken off) from the Chaldeans" (Eze 23:17), to whom she had sworn fealty (Eze 17:12-19). "Discovered" implies the open shamelessness of her apostasy.
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JFB: Eze 23:19 - -- Israel first "called" her lusts, practised when in Egypt, "to her (fond) remembrance," and then actually returned to them. Mark the danger of sufferin...
Israel first "called" her lusts, practised when in Egypt, "to her (fond) remembrance," and then actually returned to them. Mark the danger of suffering the memory to dwell on the pleasure felt in past sins.
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JFB: Eze 23:20 - -- That is, her paramours among them (the Egyptians); she doted upon their persons as her paramours (Eze 23:5, Eze 23:12, Eze 23:16).
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JFB: Eze 23:20 - -- The membrum virile (very large in the ass). Compare Lev 15:2, Margin; Eze 16:26.
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JFB: Eze 23:20 - -- The seminal issue. The horse was made by the Egyptians the hieroglyphic for a lustful person.
The seminal issue. The horse was made by the Egyptians the hieroglyphic for a lustful person.
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JFB: Eze 23:22 - -- (Eze 23:17). Illicit love, soon or late, ends in open hatred (2Sa 13:15). The Babylonians, the objects formerly of their God-forgetting love, but now...
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JFB: Eze 23:23 - -- (Jer 50:21). Not a geographical name, but descriptive of Babylon. "Visitation," peculiarly the land of "judgment"; in a double sense: actively, the i...
(Jer 50:21). Not a geographical name, but descriptive of Babylon. "Visitation," peculiarly the land of "judgment"; in a double sense: actively, the inflicter of judgment on Judah; passively, as about to be afterwards herself the object of judgment.
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JFB: Eze 23:23 - -- "rich . . . noble"; descriptive of Babylon in her prosperity, having all the world's wealth and dignity at her disposal. MAURER suggests that, as desc...
"rich . . . noble"; descriptive of Babylon in her prosperity, having all the world's wealth and dignity at her disposal. MAURER suggests that, as descriptive appellatives are subjoined to the proper name, "all the Assyrians" in the second hemistich of the verse (as the verse ought to be divided at "Koa"), so Pekod, Shoa, and Koa must be appellatives descriptive of "The Babylonians and . . . Chaldeans" in the first hemistich; "Pekod" meaning "prefects"; Shoa . . . Koa, "rich . . . princely."
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JFB: Eze 23:23 - -- Strong irony. Alluding to Eze 23:12, these "desirable young men" whom thou didst so "dote upon" for their manly vigor of appearance, shall by that ver...
Strong irony. Alluding to Eze 23:12, these "desirable young men" whom thou didst so "dote upon" for their manly vigor of appearance, shall by that very vigor be the better able to chastise thee.
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JFB: Eze 23:24 - -- Or, "with armaments"; so the Septuagint; "axes" [MAURER]; or, joining it with "wagons," translate, "with scythe-armed wagons," or "chariots" [GROTIUS]...
Or, "with armaments"; so the Septuagint; "axes" [MAURER]; or, joining it with "wagons," translate, "with scythe-armed wagons," or "chariots" [GROTIUS].
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JFB: Eze 23:24 - -- The unusual height of these increased their formidable appearance (Eze 1:16-20).
The unusual height of these increased their formidable appearance (Eze 1:16-20).
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JFB: Eze 23:25 - -- Adulteresses were punished so among the Egyptians and Chaldeans. Oriental beauties wore ornaments in the ear and nose. How just the retribution, that ...
Adulteresses were punished so among the Egyptians and Chaldeans. Oriental beauties wore ornaments in the ear and nose. How just the retribution, that the features most bejewelled should be mutilated! So, allegorically as to Judah, the spiritual adulteress.
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JFB: Eze 23:27 - -- The captivity has made the Jews ever since abhor idolatry, not only on their return from Babylon, but for the last nineteen centuries of their dispers...
The captivity has made the Jews ever since abhor idolatry, not only on their return from Babylon, but for the last nineteen centuries of their dispersion, as foretold (Hos 3:4).
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JFB: Eze 23:31 - -- Of punishment (Psa 11:6; Psa 75:8; Jer 25:15, &c.). Thy guilt and that of Israel being alike, your punishment shall be alike.
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JFB: Eze 23:34 - -- So greedily shalt thou suck out every drop like one drinking to madness (the effect invariably ascribed to drinking God's cup of wrath, Jer 51:7; Hab ...
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Enraged against them as the ministers to thine adultery.
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A summing up of the sins of the two sisters, especially those of Judah.
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JFB: Eze 23:38 - -- On the very day that they had burned their children to Molech in the valley of Gehenna, they shamelessly and hypocritically presented themselves as wo...
On the very day that they had burned their children to Molech in the valley of Gehenna, they shamelessly and hypocritically presented themselves as worshippers in Jehovah's temple (Jer 7:9-10).
Clarke: Eze 23:2 - -- Son of man, there were two women - All the Hebrews were derived from one source, Abraham and Sarah; and, till the schism under Rehoboam, formed but ...
Son of man, there were two women - All the Hebrews were derived from one source, Abraham and Sarah; and, till the schism under Rehoboam, formed but one people: but as these ten tribes and a half separated from Judah and Benjamin, they became two distinct people under different kings; called the kingdom of Judah, and the kingdom of Israel. They are called here, because of their consanguinity, two sisters. The elder, Samaria, (for there was the seat of government for the kingdom of Israel), was called
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Clarke: Eze 23:5 - -- And Aholah played the harlot - Without entering into detail here, or following the figures, they both became idolatrous, and received the impure rit...
And Aholah played the harlot - Without entering into detail here, or following the figures, they both became idolatrous, and received the impure rites of the Egyptians, Assyrians, and Chaldeans, of which connection the prophet speaks here as he did in chap. 16, which see
In this chapter there are many of what we would call indelicate expressions, because a parallel is run between idolatry and prostitution, and the circumstances of the latter illustrate the peculiarities of the former. In such cases, perhaps, the matter alone was given to the prophet, and he was left to use his own language, and amplify as he saw good. Ezekiel was among the Jews what Juvenal was among the Romans, - a rough reprover of the most abominable vices. They both spoke of things as they found them; stripped vice naked, and scourged it publicly. The original is still more rough than the translation; and surely there is no need of a comment to explain imagery that is but too generally understood. I have said enough on Ezekiel 16, and to that I must refer the reader. It is true that there are a few things here in the shade that might be illustrated by anatomy; and it would not be difficult to do it: but they are not necessary to salvation, and I shall not take off the covering. They were sufficiently understood by those for whose use they were originally designed.
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Clarke: Eze 23:6 - -- Clothed with blue - The purple dye was highly valued among the ancients, and at first was only used by kings, at last it was used among the military...
Clothed with blue - The purple dye was highly valued among the ancients, and at first was only used by kings, at last it was used among the military, particularly by officers of high rank in the country.
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Clarke: Eze 23:20 - -- She doted upon their paramours - פלגשיהם pillagsheyhem , their harlots or concubines. Anciently harlot meant in our language either the male...
She doted upon their paramours -
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Clarke: Eze 23:23 - -- Pekod, and Shoa, and Koa - פקוד ושוע וקוע . These names have been thought to designate certain people bordering on the Chaldeans; but n...
Pekod, and Shoa, and Koa -
In our old translations these names were considered appellatives - rulers, mighty men, and tyrants. Others, following the literal import of the words, have translated, visiting, shouting and retreating. Others have applied them to the habits of the Chaldean soldiers. Pekod signifying the muster or review of armies; Shoa, the magnificence of their uniform and arms; and Koa, the marks or embroidery of the clothes of the captains and generals. Grotius thought that they might be names of contiguous nations: Pekod, the Bactrians; Shoa, a people of Armenia; and Boa, the Medes. I have nothing to add that would satisfy myself, or be edifying to my readers.
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Clarke: Eze 23:25 - -- Shall take away thy nose - A punishment frequent among the Persians and Chaldeans, as ancient authors tell. Adulteries were punished in this way; an...
Shall take away thy nose - A punishment frequent among the Persians and Chaldeans, as ancient authors tell. Adulteries were punished in this way; and to this Martial refers: -
Quis tibi persuasit nares abscindere moecho
"Who has counselled thee to cut off the adulterer’ s nose?
Women were thus treated in Egypt. See Calmet.
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Clarke: Eze 23:32 - -- Thou shalt drink of thy sister’ s cup - Thou shalt be ruined and desolated as Samaria was.
Thou shalt drink of thy sister’ s cup - Thou shalt be ruined and desolated as Samaria was.
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Clarke: Eze 23:34 - -- Thou shalt - pluck off thine own breasts - Thou shalt tear them; a frequent action in extreme sorrow and desolation. Weeping, tearing the bosom, and...
Thou shalt - pluck off thine own breasts - Thou shalt tear them; a frequent action in extreme sorrow and desolation. Weeping, tearing the bosom, and beating the breasts
Tunc vero rupique sinus, et pectora planxi
Ovid’ s Ep. 5.
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They have defiled my sanctuary - By placing idols there.
Defender -> Eze 23:4
Defender: Eze 23:4 - -- This long chapter is a graphic account of the spiritual harlotry of Israel and Judah and their respective capitals, Samaria and Jerusalem, under the f...
This long chapter is a graphic account of the spiritual harlotry of Israel and Judah and their respective capitals, Samaria and Jerusalem, under the figure of two wanton sisters, Aholah ("her tent") and Aholibah ("my tent is in her"). The extended and lurid account of their whoredoms evidently has the dual purpose of condemning Israel's blatant spiritual prostitution, and also of reaffirming God's hatred of actual sexual activity - especially promiscuity - outside the marriage relation. Both warnings seem urgent today as well."
TSK -> Eze 23:2; Eze 23:3; Eze 23:4; Eze 23:5; Eze 23:6; Eze 23:7; Eze 23:8; Eze 23:9; Eze 23:10; Eze 23:11; Eze 23:12; Eze 23:13; Eze 23:14; Eze 23:15; Eze 23:16; Eze 23:17; Eze 23:18; Eze 23:19; Eze 23:20; Eze 23:22; Eze 23:23; Eze 23:24; Eze 23:25; Eze 23:26; Eze 23:27; Eze 23:28; Eze 23:29; Eze 23:30; Eze 23:31; Eze 23:32; Eze 23:33; Eze 23:34; Eze 23:35; Eze 23:36; Eze 23:37; Eze 23:38
two : Eze 16:44, Eze 16:46; Jer 3:7-10
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TSK: Eze 23:3 - -- in Egypt : Eze 20:8; Lev 17:7; Deu 29:16; Jos 24:14
in their : Eze 23:8, Eze 23:19, Eze 23:21, Eze 16:22; Hos 2:15
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TSK: Eze 23:4 - -- the names : The kingdom of Israel, of which Samaria was the capital, containing ten tribes, and occupying a larger extent of country than that of Juda...
the names : The kingdom of Israel, of which Samaria was the capital, containing ten tribes, and occupying a larger extent of country than that of Judah, is therefore called ""her elder sister;""and Aholah, the name given to her, implies that the whole religious establishment in Israel was a human invention, a temple and service of their own, and not of God’ s appointment. Aholibah, the name given to Judah, implies that the worship established there was from God, and that His temple was truly at Jerusalem.
the elder : Eze 16:40; 1Ki 12:20
they were : Eze 16:8, Eze 16:20; Exo 19:5, Exo 19:6; Psa 45:11-16; Jer 2:2, Jer 2:3; Rom 7:4
Aholah : that is, His tent, or tabernacle, 1Ki 12:26-33; Joh 4:22
Aholibah : that is, My tabernacle in her, 1Ki 8:29; Psa 76:2, Psa 132:13, Psa 132:14
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TSK: Eze 23:5 - -- Aholah : The Israelites, in addition to their former gross idolatries, received the impure idolatrous worship of the Assyrians, who became their neigh...
Aholah : The Israelites, in addition to their former gross idolatries, received the impure idolatrous worship of the Assyrians, who became their neighbours by the conquest of Syria. 1Ki 14:9, 1Ki 14:16, 1Ki 15:26, 1Ki 15:30, 1Ki 16:31, 1Ki 16:32, 1Ki 21:26; 2Ki 17:7-18
doted : Eze 23:7, Eze 23:9, Eze 23:12, Eze 23:16, Eze 23:20, Eze 16:37; Jer 50:38
on the : Eze 16:28; 2Ki 15:19, 2Ki 16:7, 2Ki 17:3; Hos 5:13, Hos 8:9, Hos 8:10, Hos 10:6, Hos 12:1
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TSK: Eze 23:7 - -- committed her whoredoms with them : Heb. bestowed her whoredoms upon them, Eze 16:15
the chosen men of Assyria : Heb. the choice of the children of As...
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TSK: Eze 23:8 - -- whoredoms : Eze 23:3, Eze 23:19, Eze 23:21; Exo 32:4; 1Ki 12:28; 2Ki 10:29, 2Ki 17:16
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TSK: Eze 23:9 - -- 2Ki 15:29, 2Ki 17:3-6, 2Ki 17:23, 2Ki 18:9-12; 1Ch 5:26; Hos 11:5; Rev 17:12, Rev 17:13, Rev 17:16
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TSK: Eze 23:10 - -- discovered : Eze 23:29, Eze 16:37-41; Hos 2:3, Hos 2:10
they took : Eze 23:47
famous : Heb. a name, Eze 23:48; Jer 22:8, Jer 22:9
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TSK: Eze 23:11 - -- her sister : Eze 23:4; Jer 3:8
was more corrupt in her inordinate love than she : Heb. she corrupted her inordinate love more than she. her sister in...
her sister : Eze 23:4; Jer 3:8
was more corrupt in her inordinate love than she : Heb. she corrupted her inordinate love more than she. her sister in her whoredoms. Heb. the whoredoms of her sister. Eze 16:47-51; Jer 3:8-11
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TSK: Eze 23:12 - -- upon : Eze 23:5, Eze 16:28; 2Ki 16:7-15; 2Ch 28:16-23
captains : Eze 23:6, Eze 23:23
upon : Eze 23:5, Eze 16:28; 2Ki 16:7-15; 2Ch 28:16-23
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TSK: Eze 23:15 - -- with girdles : 1Sa 18:4; Isa 22:21
all of : Jdg 8:18; 2Sa 14:25
look to : That is, ""princes in appearance;""which seem to have been the deified men w...
with girdles : 1Sa 18:4; Isa 22:21
look to : That is, ""princes in appearance;""which seem to have been the deified men worshipped by the Chaldeans. The inhabitants of Judah, like the Israelites, connected themselves with the Assyrians, and were enamoured with their idols; and then with the Chaldeans, and followed their idols; still retaining their attachment to the Egyptians and their idolatrous rites.
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TSK: Eze 23:16 - -- as soon as she saw them with her eyes : Heb. at the sight of her eyes, Eze 16:29; Gen 3:6, Gen 6:2, Gen 39:7; 2Sa 11:2; 2Ki 24:1; Job 31:1; Psa 119:37...
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TSK: Eze 23:17 - -- Babylonians : Heb. children of Babel, Gen 10:10, Gen 11:9
and her : Eze 23:22, Eze 23:28, Eze 16:37; 2Sa 13:15
alienated : Heb. loosed, or disjointed
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TSK: Eze 23:18 - -- discovered : Eze 16:36, Eze 21:24; Isa 3:9; Jer 8:12; Hos 7:1
then : Deu 32:19; Psa 78:59, Psa 106:40; Jer 6:8, Jer 12:8, Jer 15:1; Lam 2:7; Hos 2:2; ...
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TSK: Eze 23:19 - -- multiplied : Eze 23:14, Eze 16:25, Eze 16:29, Eze 16:51; Amo 4:4
in calling : Eze 23:3, Eze 23:8, Eze 23:21, Eze 16:22, Eze 20:7
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TSK: Eze 23:22 - -- I will raise : Eze 23:9, Eze 23:28, Eze 16:37; Isa 10:5, Isa 10:6, Isa 39:3, Isa 39:4; Hab 1:6-10; Rev 17:16
from : Eze 23:17
and I : Jer 6:22, Jer 6:...
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TSK: Eze 23:23 - -- Babylonians : Eze 21:19-27; 2Ki 20:14-17, 2Ki 25:1-3
the Chaldeans : 2Ki 24:2; Job 1:17; Isa 23:13; Act 7:4
Pekod : Jer 50:21
the Assyrians : Gen 2:14...
Babylonians : Eze 21:19-27; 2Ki 20:14-17, 2Ki 25:1-3
the Chaldeans : 2Ki 24:2; Job 1:17; Isa 23:13; Act 7:4
Pekod : Jer 50:21
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TSK: Eze 23:24 - -- with chariots : Eze 26:10; Jer 47:3; Nah 2:3, Nah 2:4, Nah 3:2, Nah 3:3
I will set : Eze 23:45, Eze 16:38, Eze 21:23; 2Sa 24:14; Jer 39:5, Jer 39:6
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TSK: Eze 23:25 - -- I will set : Eze 5:13, 8:1-18, Eze 16:38-42; Exo 34:14; Deu 29:20, Deu 32:21, Deu 32:22; Pro 6:34; Son 8:6; Zep 1:18
they shall take away : This refer...
I will set : Eze 5:13, 8:1-18, Eze 16:38-42; Exo 34:14; Deu 29:20, Deu 32:21, Deu 32:22; Pro 6:34; Son 8:6; Zep 1:18
they shall take away : This refers to the severe vengeance which enraged husbands took on their faithless wives, and implies that God would employ the Chaldeans to destroy the princes and priests of Judah, for violating their covenants and treaties. Such punishments were anciently common; and such is the present practice in one of the South Sea Islands.
they shall take thy : Eze 23:47; Hos 2:4, Hos 2:5
thy residue : Eze 15:6, Eze 15:7, Eze 20:47, Eze 20:48, Eze 22:18-22; Rev 18:8
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TSK: Eze 23:26 - -- strip : Eze 23:29, Eze 16:16, Eze 16:37, Eze 16:39; Jer 13:22; Hos 2:3, Hos 2:9, Hos 2:10; Rev 17:16, Rev 18:14-17
fair jewels : Heb. instruments of t...
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TSK: Eze 23:27 - -- will I : Eze 16:41, Eze 22:15; Isa 27:9; Mic 5:10-14; Zec 13:2
and thy : Eze 23:3, Eze 23:19
so that : These severe judgments shall effectually deter ...
will I : Eze 16:41, Eze 22:15; Isa 27:9; Mic 5:10-14; Zec 13:2
so that : These severe judgments shall effectually deter you from idolatry, and make you abhor the least approaches to it. This often repeated prediction has received a most wonderful accomplishment. For neither the authority, frowns, examples, or favour of their conquerors or powerful neighbours, nor their own fears, hopes, interests, or predilection for the sensual worship of idols, could prevail with them to run into gross idolatry, either during the captivity, or ever afterwards, to the present day, a period of 2,414 years.
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TSK: Eze 23:29 - -- deal : Eze 23:25, Eze 23:26, Eze 23:45-47, Eze 16:39; Deu 28:47-51; 2Sa 13:15
the nakedness : Eze 23:18, Eze 16:36, Eze 16:37
deal : Eze 23:25, Eze 23:26, Eze 23:45-47, Eze 16:39; Deu 28:47-51; 2Sa 13:15
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TSK: Eze 23:30 - -- thou hast : Eze 23:12-21, Eze 6:9; Psa 106:35-38; Jer 2:18-20, Jer 16:11, Jer 16:12, Jer 22:8, Jer 22:9
because thou art : Eze 23:7, Eze 23:17
thou hast : Eze 23:12-21, Eze 6:9; Psa 106:35-38; Jer 2:18-20, Jer 16:11, Jer 16:12, Jer 22:8, Jer 22:9
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TSK: Eze 23:31 - -- walked : Eze 23:13, Eze 16:47-51; Jer 3:8-11
her : 2Ki 21:13; Jer 7:14, Jer 7:15; Dan 9:12
walked : Eze 23:13, Eze 16:47-51; Jer 3:8-11
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TSK: Eze 23:32 - -- drink : Psa 60:3; Isa 51:17; Jer 25:15-28, Jer 48:26; Mat 20:22, Mat 20:23; Rev 16:19; Rev 18:6
thou shalt be : Eze 22:4, Eze 22:5, Eze 25:6, Eze 26:2...
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TSK: Eze 23:33 - -- filled : Jer 25:27; Hab 2:16
with the cup of astonishment : Isa 51:17, Isa 51:22
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TSK: Eze 23:35 - -- Because : Eze 22:12; Isa 17:10; Jer 2:32, Jer 3:21, Jer 13:25, Jer 23:27, Jer 32:33; Hos 8:14, Hos 13:6; Rom 1:28
and cast : 1Ki 14:9; Neh 9:26
theref...
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TSK: Eze 23:36 - -- wilt : Eze 20:4, Eze 22:2; Jer 1:10; 1Co 6:2, 1Co 6:3
judge : or, plead for, Jer 11:14, Jer 14:11
Aholah : Eze 23:4
declare : Eze 16:2; Isa 58:1; Hos ...
wilt : Eze 20:4, Eze 22:2; Jer 1:10; 1Co 6:2, 1Co 6:3
judge : or, plead for, Jer 11:14, Jer 14:11
Aholah : Eze 23:4
declare : Eze 16:2; Isa 58:1; Hos 2:2; Mic 3:8-11; Matt. 23:13-35; Luk 11:39-52; Act 7:51-53
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TSK: Eze 23:37 - -- they have : Eze 23:5, Eze 16:32; Hos 1:2, Hos 3:1
and blood : Eze 23:39, Eze 23:45, Eze 16:36, Eze 16:38, Eze 22:2-4, Eze 24:6-9; 2Ki 24:4; Psa 106:37...
they have : Eze 23:5, Eze 16:32; Hos 1:2, Hos 3:1
and blood : Eze 23:39, Eze 23:45, Eze 16:36, Eze 16:38, Eze 22:2-4, Eze 24:6-9; 2Ki 24:4; Psa 106:37, Psa 106:38; Isa 1:15; Jer 7:6, Jer 7:9; Hos 4:2; Mic 3:10; Luk 13:34
have also : Eze 23:4, Eze 16:20,Eze 16:21, Eze 16:36, Eze 16:45, Eze 20:26, Eze 20:31; Lev 18:21, Lev 20:2-5; Deu 12:31; 2Ki 17:17, 2Ki 21:6; Jer 7:31, Jer 32:35
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TSK: Eze 23:38 - -- they have : Eze 7:20, Eze 8:5-16; 2Ki 21:4, 2Ki 21:7, 2Ki 23:11, 2Ki 23:12
and have : Eze 20:13, Eze 20:24, Eze 22:8; Neh 13:17, Neh 13:18; Jer 17:27
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
The seventh word of judgment. The allegory of Aholah and Aholibah.
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Of one mother - Israel and Judah were branches of the same stock.
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Barnes: Eze 23:4 - -- Aholah ... and Aholibah - More correctly "Oholah"("her own tent or tabernacle") and "Oholibah"("My tent or tabernacle is in her"): names chosen...
Aholah ... and Aholibah - More correctly "Oholah"("her own tent or tabernacle") and "Oholibah"("My tent or tabernacle is in her"): names chosen to express that after the division Israel set up her own tabernacle in the place of the temple in which God dwelt 1Ki 12:32, while with Judah the Temple of God still remained. The presence of God aggravated Judah’ s sins. In the times of the captivity it was customary among the Jews to give their children names connected with the temple or tabernacle.
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Barnes: Eze 23:6 - -- The army of the Assyrians is described. War-horses formed an important part in the armies of Assyria and Egypt; Israel was deficient in this respect...
The army of the Assyrians is described. War-horses formed an important part in the armies of Assyria and Egypt; Israel was deficient in this respect Isa 36:8.
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Barnes: Eze 23:9 - -- For the cause which at last brought destruction on Israel, see marginal reference.
For the cause which at last brought destruction on Israel, see marginal reference.
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Barnes: Eze 23:10 - -- Famous - Or, "infamous among women;"literally as in the margin, i. e., a byword among women.
Famous - Or, "infamous among women;"literally as in the margin, i. e., a byword among women.
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Barnes: Eze 23:11 - -- The idolatries of Manasseh’ s reign exceeded all that had gone before either in Israel or in Judah 2 Kings 21:1-16; 2Ch 33:1-10.
The idolatries of Manasseh’ s reign exceeded all that had gone before either in Israel or in Judah 2 Kings 21:1-16; 2Ch 33:1-10.
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Barnes: Eze 23:14 - -- After Israel’ s captivity Judah intrigued first with Assyria, then with Babylon, courting their monarchs, imitating their customs, and learning...
After Israel’ s captivity Judah intrigued first with Assyria, then with Babylon, courting their monarchs, imitating their customs, and learning their idolatries.
Pourtrayed upon the wall - The monuments of Nineveh show how the walls of its palaces were adorned with figures precisely answering to this description. There is evidence that these sculptures were highly colored with vermilion, or rather, red ochre.
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Barnes: Eze 23:17 - -- After Josiah’ s death and the usurpation of dominion by the Egyptians, the Babylonians were no doubt welcomed as friends 2Ki 24:1. But the Jews...
After Josiah’ s death and the usurpation of dominion by the Egyptians, the Babylonians were no doubt welcomed as friends 2Ki 24:1. But the Jews were soon tired of their alliance and disgusted with their friends, and this led to the rebellion of Jehoiakim and the first captivity.
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Barnes: Eze 23:19 - -- Egypt - The kings of Judah played alternately Egypt against Babylon, and Babylon against Egypt. Jehoahaz was displaced by Necho for Jehoiakim, ...
Egypt - The kings of Judah played alternately Egypt against Babylon, and Babylon against Egypt. Jehoahaz was displaced by Necho for Jehoiakim, who then turned to the Chaldaeans, and afterward rebelling sought aid from Egypt. So Zedekiah was continually meditating help from Egypt, against which Jeremiah and Ezekiel were continually protesting.
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Barnes: Eze 23:23 - -- Pekod, and Shoa, and Koa - Possibly words expressive of rank, or names of small Chaldaean tribes, selected for their resemblance to expressive ...
Pekod, and Shoa, and Koa - Possibly words expressive of rank, or names of small Chaldaean tribes, selected for their resemblance to expressive Hebrew words.
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With chariots ... - Better "with armor, horsemen, and chariot."
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Barnes: Eze 23:25 - -- Take away thy nose and thine ears - Alluding to the barbarous custom of mutilating prisoners in the east Dan 2:5. An Egyptian law prescribed th...
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Barnes: Eze 23:37 - -- Blood - One of the chief sins of Manasseh was that he shed innocent blood 2Ki 21:16; 2Ki 24:4.
Poole -> Eze 23:2; Eze 23:3; Eze 23:4; Eze 23:5; Eze 23:6; Eze 23:7; Eze 23:8; Eze 23:9; Eze 23:10; Eze 23:11; Eze 23:12; Eze 23:13; Eze 23:14; Eze 23:15; Eze 23:16; Eze 23:17; Eze 23:18; Eze 23:19; Eze 23:20; Eze 23:21; Eze 23:22; Eze 23:23; Eze 23:24; Eze 23:25; Eze 23:26; Eze 23:27; Eze 23:28; Eze 23:29; Eze 23:30; Eze 23:31; Eze 23:32; Eze 23:33; Eze 23:34; Eze 23:35; Eze 23:36; Eze 23:37; Eze 23:38
Poole: Eze 23:2 - -- Two women Judah and Israel, the two kingdoms.
Daughters of one mother sprung from Sarah; or, as some, daughters of the synagogue. They rose from on...
Two women Judah and Israel, the two kingdoms.
Daughters of one mother sprung from Sarah; or, as some, daughters of the synagogue. They rose from one family; these two were daughters, that is parts, and the mother is the whole posterity of the twelve tribes.
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Poole: Eze 23:3 - -- They committed whoredoms in Egypt when they came down into Egypt, and sojourned there: possibly they might commit bodily whoredoms, but spiritual who...
They committed whoredoms in Egypt when they came down into Egypt, and sojourned there: possibly they might commit bodily whoredoms, but spiritual whoredoms, i.e. idolatry, they did certainly commit, as appears Jos 24:14 Eze 20:7,8 , which see; in a low condition, by converse with the idolatrous Egyptians they fell in with their idolatry.
In their youth early; though it is no where said when they began, yet by this it appears that it was not long after their coming down into Egypt.
There were their breasts pressed: this and what follows is an allusion, which illustrates what was before spoken; while they were constant to God and his worship, they were as beautiful, chaste, and lovely virgins; when seduced to idolatry, they became as loathsome harlots or strumpets.
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Poole: Eze 23:4 - -- That we might know them, they are described.
Aholah which, rendered in English, is, His own tabernacle; for Israel, falling off from the house of ...
That we might know them, they are described.
Aholah which, rendered in English, is, His own tabernacle; for Israel, falling off from the house of David, also fell off from the tabernacle or temple of God, so that all the temple and worship they had amongst them was of their own making.
The elder greater for number of tribes, being ten of twelve; and greater for power, wealth, and multitudes of people.
Aholibah: this, rendered in English, is, My tabernacle in her: the two tribes had the temple and worship of God with them; God’ s own tent was pitched there, and his solemn services.
They were mine by solemn marriage covenant, Eze 16:18 .
They bare sons and daughters were fruitful, and brought forth children to me, saith God; they increased in numbers of people, and among these, some there were that were children of God by faith, love, and obedience.
Samaria the chief city of the apostate ten tribes.
Jerusalem the chief city of the two tribes.
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Poole: Eze 23:5 - -- Aholah the kingdom of Israel, or the ten tribes,
played the harlot united in confederacy in civil concerns, and in idolatry as to religious concern...
Aholah the kingdom of Israel, or the ten tribes,
played the harlot united in confederacy in civil concerns, and in idolatry as to religious concerns, with the Assyrians.
When she was mine when under my government and protection, or in my presence, or before I had abdicated and cast her off.
Doted were madly enamoured with the Assyrian idols, temples, and manner of worship.
Her lovers whom she loved, not that I find they so much loved her.
The Assyrians so often mentioned, nothing needs be said of them.
Her neighbours so they were now by their seizing of Syria, and possessing it as their own 2Ki 15:19 .
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Poole: Eze 23:6 - -- Clothed with blue richly apparelled, and, as the humour of that nation, in rich and beautiful blue, very magnificent to the eye.
Captains daring, v...
Clothed with blue richly apparelled, and, as the humour of that nation, in rich and beautiful blue, very magnificent to the eye.
Captains daring, valiant men, and fit for wars, who might defend the Jews in time of danger.
Rulers worthy of authority, and fit to govern in times of peace.
Desirable young men young and vigorous, full of beauty and strength to commend them to the desire and choice.
Horsemen riding upon horses skilful in riding, and well furnished with choice horses, on which these deluded apostatizing Israelites relied for help, as appears, Hos 14:3 .
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Poole: Eze 23:7 - -- Thus by the eye and familiar converse, she fell to idolatry. Committed her whoredoms: see Eze 23:3 .
With all them she embraced the friendship and ...
Thus by the eye and familiar converse, she fell to idolatry. Committed her whoredoms: see Eze 23:3 .
With all them she embraced the friendship and religion of all of them, and relied on the Assyrian’ s idols for deliverance and peace.
And with all i.e. other nations with whom she had commerce and made leagues,
on whom she doted like an adulterous wife, she was mad in her love to them, to their persons, customs, idols, and religion, with all which she polluted herself.
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Poole: Eze 23:8 - -- Neither left she her whoredoms brought from Egypt though she took in so many gods of the Assyrians, yet she did not renounce or cast off the gods of ...
Neither left she her whoredoms brought from Egypt though she took in so many gods of the Assyrians, yet she did not renounce or cast off the gods of Egypt, but kept them too. It is plain the Israelites learnt idolatry in Egypt, carried it with them out of Egypt, and retained it to the last.
In her youth & c. see Eze 23:3 .
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Poole: Eze 23:9 - -- Wherefore for this boundless idolatry and lewdness
I have delivered her long ago I have delivered the ten tribes: first, Pul put them under tribute...
Wherefore for this boundless idolatry and lewdness
I have delivered her long ago I have delivered the ten tribes: first, Pul put them under tribute, 2Ki 15:19,20 , about two hundred years before our prophet’ s time; then Tiglath-pileser, 2Ki 15:29 ; and finally into Shalmaneser’ s hand, who destroyed the kingdom, 2Ki 17:6 .
Into the hand of the Assyrians upon whom she doted; punished them for their sins by those who were fellow sinners with her.
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Poole: Eze 23:10 - -- These used her as lewd women deserve, stripped her naked, and exposed her to shame, as Eze 23:26 . God her Husband had clothed her, and covered her ...
These used her as lewd women deserve, stripped her naked, and exposed her to shame, as Eze 23:26 . God her Husband had clothed her, and covered her nakedness, but she lightly esteemed her God, doted on idols, and idolaters strip her.
They took her sons and her daughters made them captives, and carried them away as slaves, to serve the lusts of barbarous conquerors; so both sexes were used.
Slew her with the sword: as a person slain with the sword ceaseth to be, so this kingdom of Israel under Hoshea was by the sword of Shalmaneser utterly destroyed.
She became famous her lewdness made her infamous, and God’ s judgments for it made her more known in the world.
For they the Assyrians, a proud, bitter, and violent enemy,
had executed judgment upon her had executed their own malicious revenges, but God’ s just displeasure, upon her.
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Poole: Eze 23:11 - -- Aholibah Judah, yet two tribes.
Saw this both the sins and punishments of the kingdom of Israel, which should have been her admonition.
She was mo...
Aholibah Judah, yet two tribes.
Saw this both the sins and punishments of the kingdom of Israel, which should have been her admonition.
She was more corrupt ran more violently into both friendship, confederacies, and idolatries with the Assyrians,
than her sister, Samaria Jerusalem had more idols in it, and more abominable idolatry, than any we read of in Samaria that, at present, I can remember.
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Poole: Eze 23:12 - -- This verse is the same with Eze 23:6 , which see; only the clothing of blue there is here clothing of beauty; i.e. most beautiful.
This verse is the same with Eze 23:6 , which see; only the clothing of blue there is here clothing of beauty; i.e. most beautiful.
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Poole: Eze 23:13 - -- Then when she took not warning, neither feared.
She was defiled her heart was already on her idols. Both Samaria and Jerusalem took one way; chose ...
Then when she took not warning, neither feared.
She was defiled her heart was already on her idols. Both Samaria and Jerusalem took one way; chose the same idols and idolatry.
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Poole: Eze 23:14 - -- Increased her whoredoms added to the number of her idolatries.
When she saw men portrayed upon the wall: wherever it was the Jews saw, there it was...
Increased her whoredoms added to the number of her idolatries.
When she saw men portrayed upon the wall: wherever it was the Jews saw, there it was they doted on their persons and habits: it is probable enough they might see them in the idol temples, or in the house of the king of Judah, or of the great men, who promoted the friendships and leagues with these nations.
The images the counterfeits of strangers, and such as were far off, as the Chaldeans were.
With vermilion which, as it is a very glossy and shining colour, so, duly mixed with ceruse, doth lively express the colour of man’ s flesh.
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Poole: Eze 23:15 - -- With girdles upon their loins with soldiers’ belts about their loins, which includes the rest of the garb, dress, or habit of soldiers.
Exceed...
With girdles upon their loins with soldiers’ belts about their loins, which includes the rest of the garb, dress, or habit of soldiers.
Exceeding in dyed attire both rich, comely, large, and of divers colours, and those of the choicest that art or money could prepare.
Princes to look to of princely aspect and majesty.
After the manner agreeable to the garments, of the rich and proud Babylonians.
Of Chaldea which probably was the most fruitful part of that kingdom, and most pleasant, and where the pride and luxury of the inhabitants exceeded others.
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Poole: Eze 23:16 - -- Saw them the portraits of them.
She doted upon them like an unsatiable and most impudent adulteress, she fell into most inordinate affection for th...
Saw them the portraits of them.
She doted upon them like an unsatiable and most impudent adulteress, she fell into most inordinate affection for their persons on sight of their pictures.
Sent messengers unto them courted the love of those strangers, and wooed their embraces, sent to make alliances with them, prostituted herself to them.
Into Chaldea: though it was a long journey, troublesome and costly, all this hinders not this extravagant, lewd woman, she sends to these remote parts, and forgets her God.
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Poole: Eze 23:17 - -- The Babylonians came: the prophet prosecuteth the allegory; the adulteress sent, and invited, and here the Chaldeans comply with it, they came, ambas...
The Babylonians came: the prophet prosecuteth the allegory; the adulteress sent, and invited, and here the Chaldeans comply with it, they came, ambassadors no doubt first to make a confederacy, and then free intercourse in trade, and religion too.
The bed of love so the impudently lascivious call the polluted, forbidden bed, as the harlot, Pro 7:18 . It is like with this commerce and confederacy the lustful Babylonians did spread that disease, the Jewish nation were too much inclined to corporal adulteries and fornications; but metaphorically it is a delightful communicating with them in their idolatry in their idol temples and feasts.
Defiled her made her unclean and loathsome.
Whoredom spiritual and corporal.
Polluted greatly defiled, as the doubling the expression imports. Her mind was alienated from them; like an arrant adulteress, wearied, but not satisfied with her adulterers, she changeth mind and friendships, and seeks new ones. So did this people, weary of the Chaldeans, seek new confederates.
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Poole: Eze 23:18 - -- So, by this unsatiableness and change of lovers,
she discovered her whoredoms made it appear to all, far and near, that she was a most notorious a...
So, by this unsatiableness and change of lovers,
she discovered her whoredoms made it appear to all, far and near, that she was a most notorious and infamous strumpet.
Her nakedness her weakness, and her shame.
Then when I saw the lewdness, impudence, and boundlessness of her adulteries,
my mind was alienated turned from her with abhorrency, I could no longer endure it.
From her Jerusalem, the land of Judea, the kingdom of the two tribes.
As from her sister Samaria, the ten tribes; and I resolved to destroy them both alike by their lovers.
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Poole: Eze 23:19 - -- Yet Heb. And.
Multiplied added more and greater to her former sins of idolatry and whoredoms, and persisted in them.
In calling to remembrance: ...
Yet Heb. And.
Multiplied added more and greater to her former sins of idolatry and whoredoms, and persisted in them.
In calling to remembrance: this may refer either to the Jewish nation remembering their idolatries in Egypt, their alliances with and reliance upon it in days past, which she now resolves to act over again; or it may refer to God, who, by these continued courses of Judah’ s lewdness is provoked to remember and punish old perfidious and idolatrous practices.
The days of her youth: see Eze 23:3 .
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Poole: Eze 23:20 - -- Doted: see Eze 23:5 .
Upon their paramours Egyptians, and the nations that were confederate with the Egyptians; looking on them as able to defend b...
Doted: see Eze 23:5 .
Upon their paramours Egyptians, and the nations that were confederate with the Egyptians; looking on them as able to defend by their power, enrich by their trade, and make prosperous by their friendship.
Whose flesh & c.: in these terms the prophet expresseth the vehement desire of the Jews to Egyptian idolatry, compared to whoredom, and may, for aught I know, tax the lustful impudence of some of the Jewish women in their corporal uncleannesses with the Egyptians, who were it seems (by report of authors) naturally disposed for that vice, and fittest for unsatiable, lustful women: see Eze 16:26 .
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Poole: Eze 23:21 - -- Calledst to remembrance: see Eze 23:19 .
The lewdness of thy youth: Eze 23:3 .
The paps of thy youth the beauty and loveliness of them, when God h...
Calledst to remembrance: see Eze 23:19 .
The lewdness of thy youth: Eze 23:3 .
The paps of thy youth the beauty and loveliness of them, when God had formed them, allured the Egyptians: this may be understood both politically, of the growing state of the Jewish commonwealth, or literally, of the beauty of their young women.
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Poole: Eze 23:22 - -- Thy lovers thy confederates.
From whom thy mind is alienated whom thou hast first loathed and forsaken, and thereby enraged them against thee.
Bri...
Thy lovers thy confederates.
From whom thy mind is alienated whom thou hast first loathed and forsaken, and thereby enraged them against thee.
Bring them against thee be not only an exciter to stir them up against thee, but I will be a guide and conducter of them.
On every side so no way left for thy escape.
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Poole: Eze 23:23 - -- The Babylonians and Chaldeans these are known.
Pekod & c.: some reckon these the titles of some of the great commanders in this army, which come aga...
The Babylonians and Chaldeans these are known.
Pekod & c.: some reckon these the titles of some of the great commanders in this army, which come against Jerusalem, but they are names of distinct countries or provinces under the Babylonish government; and so Pekod is the province between Tigris and Lycus rivers, in this was old Nineveh, and was the principal province of the kingdom; though some others think Pekod was Bactriana, now called Usbeck, and Corassan, fierce, thievish, and barbarous of old.
Shoa either Sia in Armenia, or the Sohai, among which were the Adiabeni; and this contained the middle part of the kingdom of Babylon, and was Assyria Mediana.
Koa bordered on Media; the inhabitants were called Kohai, and dwelt about Arbel, or Arbelis, or Arbela, and comprehended Ganyamela, where a fortress Ganga looks like this Koa, being easily changed from Koa to Ganga by change of the original letters
And all all these sons or subjects of the Assyrian monarchy, or confederates.
Desirable young men & c.: most of these are already explained Eze 23:6 , where they were objects of love, now they are objects of terror; so God turns the occasions of men’ s sins into occasions of greater terror and punishment.
Renowned Heb. called , or invited, first by the Jews to sin with them, Eze 23:16 , now called of God to punish their fellow sinners.
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Poole: Eze 23:24 - -- They mentioned before, Eze 23:23 ,
shall come against thee or upon thee, surprise thee with a speedy march, for they were swift in their course.
W...
They mentioned before, Eze 23:23 ,
shall come against thee or upon thee, surprise thee with a speedy march, for they were swift in their course.
With chariots the Hebrew is of larger sense, and more properly speaks all kind of arms for the war, a thorough furniture; so the Chaldee paraphrase, with instruments of war, or arms.
Wagons Heb. chariots , and is oftener so rendered; for expedition, for ease of their commanders on their march, and for strength against the enemy in the battle.
Wheels whether distinct from all other, or whether prepared lest in their march the carriage wheels should break, and they be at a stand, therefore beforehand store of these were provided.
An assembly a mighty confluence of people, and a mixture, where the worst and cruellest are the most numerous.
Which shall set against thee buckler, and shield, and helmet yet for their own defence well armed, and with armature fitted to defeat the arrows and offensive weapons of their enemy, and to maintain a siege, such as they should weary Jerusalem with.
I will set judgment before them give them a power by their victory, and in right of conquest over their rebels, as well as mine; and I will give them a spirit of judgment to discern the greatness of this people’ s sins.
They shall judge thee plead with thee, convince, condemn, and execute sentence upon thee.
According to their judgments to their will, power, wrath, and custom against rebels, for these are their rules of judgment; all which appeared when the chief of all the people were condemned to slavery, the wise counsellors and valiant commanders sentenced to die, Zedekiah’ s children slain, his own eyes put out, and city and temple to be burnt.
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Poole: Eze 23:25 - -- I will set my jealousy against thee as a jealous provoked husband, I will be as much against thee as they are, their fury shall avenge my quarrel.
T...
I will set my jealousy against thee as a jealous provoked husband, I will be as much against thee as they are, their fury shall avenge my quarrel.
They shall deal furiously with thee their disposition naturally is to furious wrath, my jealousy shall enkindle it more.
They shall take away thy nose and thine ears as thou hast prostituted thy beauty like a harlot, so they shall use thee as such, and mar thy beauty, and brand thee for ever, as thou deservest, and that thou mayst be as loathsome in thy deformity as ever thou wast thought lovely in thy beauty. This punishment of adulteresses is known to have been used, and is yet in use.
Thy remnant shall fall by the sword or else, at last thy latter end shall be to fall by the sword, those that do not live under such reproach shall die by the sword of the enemy.
They shall take thy sons and thy daughters for captives and slaves for work, and somewhat a thousand times worse.
Thy residue either the people who did hide themselves in vaults and cellars, and came not out; or else what remains of that the Chaldeans cannot carry away; all this shall be devoured by fire, as when the city was burnt.
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Poole: Eze 23:26 - -- Strip thee out of thy clothes both as lewd, disgraced harlots and as captives are used: see Eze 16:39 .
Thy fair jewels all thy rich, beautiful orn...
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Poole: Eze 23:27 - -- By these destroying judgments, which shall make thee cease to be a people, I will put an end to the lewdness thou wouldst never have put end to, tho...
By these destroying judgments, which shall make thee cease to be a people, I will put an end to the lewdness thou wouldst never have put end to, thou shalt never have opportunity, if thou hadst heart, to do the like.
Thy whoredom idolatries,
brought from the land of Egypt when thou camest out under my hand.
Thou shalt not lift up thine eyes with desire and affection toward them, as once, when thou dotedst on them;
nor remember Egypt any more with love, trust, imitation, and desire of commerce with her, but all thy remembrance of Egypt shall be with deep shame and loathing.
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Poole: Eze 23:28 - -- Deliver thee give thee up,
into the hand to the power and will,
of them whom thou hatest: those shall be the masters, and domineer over thee, who...
Deliver thee give thee up,
into the hand to the power and will,
of them whom thou hatest: those shall be the masters, and domineer over thee, whom of all men thou didst most desire might not. It is doubled for certainty of the thing, and to make deeper impression; they shall certainly lord it over thee, whom of all men thou dost most loathe.
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Poole: Eze 23:29 - -- Deal with thee use thee, and ever demean themselves toward thee,
hatefully in hatred; whatever drudgery hardship, base and vile employment, their s...
Deal with thee use thee, and ever demean themselves toward thee,
hatefully in hatred; whatever drudgery hardship, base and vile employment, their spite and hatred can invent, they shall cast on thee.
Take away all thine labour spoil thee of all thou hadst got in Judea, as they did when they conquered and plundered; and deprive thee of all the right and comfortable use of all thy labour, which they will exact of thee in captivity, and make thee know a slave hath no right to any thing.
Naked both literally thou shalt not have clothes to cover thy nakedness; and figuratively, thou shalt be left in a most disgraced state, and the shame of all thy sins shall cover thee: all this, as this prophet usually doth, is doubled to affect the more.
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Poole: Eze 23:30 - -- This verse gives the same reason which hath been often given, why the Lord proceeds in this severity, because, as an obstinate, lewd, untractable ad...
This verse gives the same reason which hath been often given, why the Lord proceeds in this severity, because, as an obstinate, lewd, untractable adulteress abuseth the best husband, till none can forbear, so had the Jews dealt with God, and God will deal with them.
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Poole: Eze 23:31 - -- Thou O Jerusalem and Judah,
hast walked hast run into the same sinful enormities.
Thy sister Samaria and the ten tribes, both great idolatresses....
Thou O Jerusalem and Judah,
hast walked hast run into the same sinful enormities.
Thy sister Samaria and the ten tribes, both great idolatresses.
Her cup of judgments and sorrow, expressed frequently by a cup, Psa 75:8 Jer 25:15 : I will punish thee with punishments like hers, since thou hast made thyself in sins like her.
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Poole: Eze 23:32 - -- Thou shalt drink thou shalt not put it by, and shift it off.
Deep towards the dregs, where the bitterest poison of it lieth.
And large in great q...
Thou shalt drink thou shalt not put it by, and shift it off.
Deep towards the dregs, where the bitterest poison of it lieth.
And large in great quantity; thy punishment shall be most grievous who must drink so deep of this cup of astonishment.
Thou shalt be laughed to scorn when sick as heart can hold, and needest pity and help to relieve, instead hereof thou shalt be derided and abused: these will be cruel mockings.
It the cup,
containeth much is large, and contains what will last many years, till the seventy years be expired; and of this cup thou shalt still drink, and be derided.
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Poole: Eze 23:33 - -- Thy afflictions shall be as great as thou canst hold, as a vessel filled with liquor. Thou shalt stagger with sorrows, that shall intoxicate and ast...
Thy afflictions shall be as great as thou canst hold, as a vessel filled with liquor. Thou shalt stagger with sorrows, that shall intoxicate and astonish. In the verse each part explains the other, sorrow explains drunkenness, astonishment explains sorrow, desolation explains astonishment, and the cup of Samaria, elsewhere called the line of Samaria, explains all: Samaria was made a heap, Mic 1:6 ; so shall Jerusalem be.
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Poole: Eze 23:34 - -- Thou shalt even drink it nothing shall divert the punishment.
And suck it out the dregs shalt thou drink, and multiply thine own sorrows.
Break th...
Thou shalt even drink it nothing shall divert the punishment.
And suck it out the dregs shalt thou drink, and multiply thine own sorrows.
Break the sherds either out of indignation, or to suck out what was imbibed.
Pluck off thine own breasts which tempted others, and undid thyself, for which cause thou now revengest thyself upon thyself.
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Poole: Eze 23:35 - -- Thou hast forgotten me Eze 22:12 , which is here explained by what follows; it was a wilful forgetting of God, and voluntary despising his law, ordina...
Thou hast forgotten me Eze 22:12 , which is here explained by what follows; it was a wilful forgetting of God, and voluntary despising his law, ordinances, worship, favour, and presence; so God is cast behind a sinner’ s back.
Bear thou the guilt, I will impute it; the punishment, I will not pardon it; and the shame, for I will pour out contempt upon thee: bear both sorrow and reproach for thy sins.
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Poole: Eze 23:36 - -- Wilt thou judge excuse or plead for such adultresses. so Eze 22:2 .
Declare unto them plainly, fully tell them, what they have been, and what they ...
Wilt thou judge excuse or plead for such adultresses. so Eze 22:2 .
Declare unto them plainly, fully tell them, what they have been, and what they must expect for all their abominations.
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Poole: Eze 23:37 - -- They have committed adultery: this seems to refer to corporal uncleannesses.
Blood is in their hands innocent blood of the murdered prophets and ju...
They have committed adultery: this seems to refer to corporal uncleannesses.
Blood is in their hands innocent blood of the murdered prophets and just men.
Committed adultery spiritual adultery, i.e. idolatry.
Caused their sons to pass through the fire most unheard of cruelty, and unnatural murders, under pretext of religion! thus Eze 16:20 .
To devour them they destroyed, took away the life of their sons in a barbarous manner.
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Poole: Eze 23:38 - -- This which is declared in the following words, it was some great injury or affront done to God.
Defiled my sanctuary my holy things, house, altar, ...
This which is declared in the following words, it was some great injury or affront done to God.
Defiled my sanctuary my holy things, house, altar, sacrifices, and oblations; one part of the temple put for all parts of the holy things of God.
In the same day when they had newly polluted themselves with most horrid crimes, idolatry and murder, they thrust into the temple; whereas by the law, if they had been but unclean by touch of a dead body, they must have been cleansed by sacrifices before they ought to come into company with the Jews.
Profaned my sabbaths by offering sacrifices to idols, and doing that on those days which God, nature, and all civil nations abhor, only the devil is pleased with, who is a murderer from the beginning, and promotes such bloody cruelties.
Haydock: Eze 23:3 - -- Fornication. That is, idolatry. (Challoner) ---
Down. Virgins used the stomacher, or (Haydock) fascia pectoralis, Isaias iii. 24. This chapte...
Fornication. That is, idolatry. (Challoner) ---
Down. Virgins used the stomacher, or (Haydock) fascia pectoralis, Isaias iii. 24. This chapter resembles the 16th. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Eze 23:4 - -- Oolla and Ooliba. God calls the kingdom of Israel Oolla, which signifies their own habitation, because they separated themselves from his temple; ...
Oolla and Ooliba. God calls the kingdom of Israel Oolla, which signifies their own habitation, because they separated themselves from his temple; and the kingdom of Juda Ooliba, which signifies his habitation in her, because of his temple among them in Jerusalem. (Challoner) ---
The ten tribes first gave way to idolatry, and were more numerous. (Calmet) -- In Egypt the people were united, yet abandoned to idolatry in their youth, when they were only beginning to increase. Afterwards the ten tribes set up altars for themselves, at Dan and Bethel. (Worthington)
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Haydock: Eze 23:5 - -- Assyrians. That is, the idols of the Assyrians: for all that is said in this chapter of the fornications of Israel and Juda, is to be understood in ...
Assyrians. That is, the idols of the Assyrians: for all that is said in this chapter of the fornications of Israel and Juda, is to be understood in a spiritual sense of their disloyalty to the Lord, by worshipping strange gods. (Challoner) (Worthington) ---
The Assyrians taught the worship of Baal, the high places, &c. The Egyptians also promoted their abominations. (Calmet)
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Blue, or purple. This was reserved for the principal nobility.
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Haydock: Eze 23:8 - -- Egypt. They always retained an affection for those idols, the calf, Adonis, &c.
Egypt. They always retained an affection for those idols, the calf, Adonis, &c.
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Haydock: Eze 23:10 - -- Disgrace: satisfying their passions, ver. 29. (Calmet) ---
Women. Having once lost all sense of decorum, they became more abandoned. (Haydock)
Disgrace: satisfying their passions, ver. 29. (Calmet) ---
Women. Having once lost all sense of decorum, they became more abandoned. (Haydock)
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This; not chastisement, but dissolution.
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Haydock: Eze 23:14 - -- Colours. She was enamoured at the account or picture of these people, without ever having seen them.
Colours. She was enamoured at the account or picture of these people, without ever having seen them.
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Haydock: Eze 23:16 - -- Messengers. Achaz invited the Assyrians, and imitated their altars, &c., 4 Kings xvi. 2., &c. (Calmet) ---
The Chaldeans afterwards possessed the ...
Messengers. Achaz invited the Assyrians, and imitated their altars, &c., 4 Kings xvi. 2., &c. (Calmet) ---
The Chaldeans afterwards possessed the country. (Haydock)
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Haydock: Eze 23:17 - -- Love. Literally, "of breasts," as Hebrew also signifies. Here it denotes the temples. (Haydock)
Love. Literally, "of breasts," as Hebrew also signifies. Here it denotes the temples. (Haydock)
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Haydock: Eze 23:19 - -- Remembering, or "causing to be remembered" by God, who seemed to have forgotten those ancient scenes of wickedness, chap. xxi. 24.
Remembering, or "causing to be remembered" by God, who seemed to have forgotten those ancient scenes of wickedness, chap. xxi. 24.
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Haydock: Eze 23:20 - -- Asses. He means the Egyptians, (chap. xvi. 26.) in whom the kings of Juda trusted. (Calmet)
Asses. He means the Egyptians, (chap. xvi. 26.) in whom the kings of Juda trusted. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Eze 23:22 - -- About. The Philistines, Ammonites, &c., shall join the Chaldeans, (Haydock) and Egypt shall desert the Jews in their greatest need. (Calmet)
About. The Philistines, Ammonites, &c., shall join the Chaldeans, (Haydock) and Egypt shall desert the Jews in their greatest need. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Eze 23:23 - -- Nobles. Protestants, "Pekod, and Shoah, and Roa:" (Haydock) which Junius takes to be the three great divisions of the empire. Others suppose they d...
Nobles. Protestants, "Pekod, and Shoah, and Roa:" (Haydock) which Junius takes to be the three great divisions of the empire. Others suppose they denote the dignities, though they occur not in Daniel. ---
Captains. Hebrew, "Phachat, and Saganim, (ver. 6, 12.) and Schalischim:" officers mentioned [in] Exodus xiv. 7., and 2 Kings xxiii. 8. ---
Renowned, called to the assemblies and councils of the princes, Numbers i. 16. (Calmet) ---
Horsemen. Protestants, "all of them riding upon horses." (Haydock)
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Judgments, at Reblatha, 4 Kings xxv. 6.
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Haydock: Eze 23:25 - -- Jealousy, the most violent of passions. (Calmet) ---
So the Chaldeans are styled, as Assur is the rod, Isaias x. 5. (Worthington) ---
Ears, th...
Jealousy, the most violent of passions. (Calmet) ---
So the Chaldeans are styled, as Assur is the rod, Isaias x. 5. (Worthington) ---
Ears, the punishment of adulteresses: both king and priests suffer. (St. Jerome) ---
Thus the captives were probably treated. (Calmet) See Seneca, Ira. iii. 20. ---
Fire, by Ismahel, chap. xix. 14.
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Glory; vanity, or of the temple, chap. xvi. 17., and Osee ii. 4.
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Haydock: Eze 23:31 - -- Cup. Thou shalt be punished like Samaria, dreadfully, 4 Kings xvii. 4. (Calmet)
Cup. Thou shalt be punished like Samaria, dreadfully, 4 Kings xvii. 4. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Eze 23:34 - -- Fragments, as drunkards sometimes bite (Haydock) the cup in their rage. ---
Rend. What had been the occasion of thy fall: (Calmet) pectori planxi...
Fragments, as drunkards sometimes bite (Haydock) the cup in their rage. ---
Rend. What had been the occasion of thy fall: (Calmet) pectori planxi. (Ovid, ep. 5.)
Gill -> Eze 23:1; Eze 23:2; Eze 23:3; Eze 23:4; Eze 23:5; Eze 23:6; Eze 23:7; Eze 23:8; Eze 23:9; Eze 23:10; Eze 23:11; Eze 23:12; Eze 23:13; Eze 23:14; Eze 23:15; Eze 23:16; Eze 23:17; Eze 23:18; Eze 23:19; Eze 23:20; Eze 23:21; Eze 23:22; Eze 23:23; Eze 23:24; Eze 23:25; Eze 23:26; Eze 23:27; Eze 23:28; Eze 23:29; Eze 23:30; Eze 23:31; Eze 23:32; Eze 23:33; Eze 23:34; Eze 23:35; Eze 23:36; Eze 23:37; Eze 23:38
Gill: Eze 23:1 - -- The word of the Lord came unto me,.... The word of prophecy, as the Targum; another prophecy, one upon the same subject, as in Eze 16:1,
saying; as...
The word of the Lord came unto me,.... The word of prophecy, as the Targum; another prophecy, one upon the same subject, as in Eze 16:1,
saying; as follows:
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Gill: Eze 23:2 - -- Son of man, there were two women,.... Or two nations and kingdoms, the kingdom of Israel or the ten tribes, and the kingdom of Judah or the two tribes...
Son of man, there were two women,.... Or two nations and kingdoms, the kingdom of Israel or the ten tribes, and the kingdom of Judah or the two tribes. So the Targum,
"son of man, prophesy concerning two provinces, which are as two women:''
the daughters of one mother; either Sarah the wife of Abraham, from whom they sprung; or because they were originally one kingdom and nation; so they were when they came out of Egypt, and during the times of the judges, and in the reigns of David and Solomon; but became two in the days of Rehoboam the son of Solomon, from whom ten tribes revolted, and set up a separate kingdom, with Jeroboam at the head of it.
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Gill: Eze 23:3 - -- And they committed whoredoms in Egypt,.... When they were but one body, one nation; and while they sojourned as strangers in that land they learned an...
And they committed whoredoms in Egypt,.... When they were but one body, one nation; and while they sojourned as strangers in that land they learned and practised the idolatries of it, Jos 24:14, and so the Targum,
"and they erred in Egypt, after the worship of their idols they erred, and there they corrupted their works:''
they committed whoredoms in their youth; as soon as they were come out of Egypt, and were formed into a political and ecclesiastical state, had the law of God given them, and promised obedience to him, and were espoused by him, which times are called the days of their youth and espousal, Jer 2:2, and then were they guilty of whoredom, or spiritual adultery, which idolatry, in making and worshipping the golden calf, after the manner of Egypt; and in joining themselves to Baalpeor, the god of the Moabites, Exo 32:1;
there were their breasts pressed, there they bruised the teats of their virginity; that is, the Egyptians, who drew them into idolatry, and with whom they committed it; which is expressed by the actions of adulterous persons, suggesting that, before this, they were as chaste and pure virgins to God, adhered to his worship, and served him only, and were not defiled with the superstition and idolatry of the Heathens: or, "they made l the teats or paps of their virginity"; that is, made them swell and increase, being impregnated by them, and their idolatry completed; or to move and heave being pressed.
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Gill: Eze 23:4 - -- And the names of them were Aholah the elder,.... Or, "the greater" m meaning the ten tribes of Israel, which were more in number than Judah, and great...
And the names of them were Aholah the elder,.... Or, "the greater" m meaning the ten tribes of Israel, which were more in number than Judah, and greater in power and riches; their name, Aholah, signifies "her tent or tabernacle", which was entirely their own, and not the Lord's: their worship, and places of worship, were of their own appointing, namely, their calves at Dan and Bethel; God had nothing to do with them, there he did not dwell; his tabernacle was not there, that was at Salem, Psa 76:1,
and Aholibah her sister; which name signifies "my tent or tabernacle is in her": this is the name of Judah or the two tribes, in which stood the temple of the Lord, where he was worshipped, and where he dwelt: some think these were proper names of two Egyptian harlots; others think there is allusion to the wife of Esau, Gen 36:2,
and they were mine; or, "I had them n"; when they were together; they were originally espoused unto him; he avouched them to be his people, and they avouched him to be their God; he chose them for himself above all other people, and they professed themselves to be his, and promised to serve and worship him; and for a while did continue in his service and worship: and they bare sons and daughters; to the Lord, whom they brought up in the fear of God, and taught them to serve him: the phrase is expressive of their increase, and of their happiness and prosperity, while they adhered to the pure worship of God:
thus were their names; this is the application of them: "Samaria is Aholah"; or Aholah signifies Samaria, which was the metropolis of Ephraim, and belonged to the ten tribes, and is put for the whole, Isa 7:9, "and Jerusalem Aholibah"; or Aholibah designs Jerusalem, the head city of Judah, and stands for the two tribes of Judah and Benjamin.
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Gill: Eze 23:5 - -- And Aholah played the harlot when she was mine,.... His married wife, and so ought to have cleaved to him alone: or, under me o; under his cover, powe...
And Aholah played the harlot when she was mine,.... His married wife, and so ought to have cleaved to him alone: or, under me o; under his cover, power, and protection, and therefore it was their interest to serve him only: or, "instead of me" p; or, as the Syriac version, "besides me": they worshipped other gods in the room of the true God, or other gods besides him. The Targum is,
"and Aholah erred from my worship;''
the ten tribes fell into idolatry, when they were God's professing people:
and she doted on her lovers; whom she loved even to madness; she was mad with love, to the idols, temples, altars, and idolatrous worship of the Heathens; particularly doted "on the Assyrians her neighbours"; who were become so by the conquest of Syria; and these they treated as their neighbours, and sought to have them to be their allies and confederates; courted their help and assistance, and gave them much money for that purpose; as Menahem gave to Pul king of Assyria a thousand talents of silver, to confirm the kingdom in his hand, 2Ki 15:19.
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Gill: Eze 23:6 - -- Which were clothed with blue,.... A colour the Assyrians were fond of, and clothed their soldiers in, and was taking to the eye; and is mentioned, bec...
Which were clothed with blue,.... A colour the Assyrians were fond of, and clothed their soldiers in, and was taking to the eye; and is mentioned, because that men, finely clothed find beautifully arrayed, are more engaging to women, who are fond of dress:
captains and rulers; men of power and authority in military and civil affairs, either in the camp, or in the court; officers either in the army, or in the king's palace; and which was a recommendation of them:
desirable young men; for their youth, strength, beauty, and honourable employments and offices:
horsemen riding upon horses: of which there was a scarcity in Judea; wherefore such were the more desirable to them, as appearing more grand, and being more serviceable and helpful to them.
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Gill: Eze 23:7 - -- Thus she committed her whoredoms with them,.... Entered into alliance with them, and joined them in their idolatrous worship:
with all them that we...
Thus she committed her whoredoms with them,.... Entered into alliance with them, and joined them in their idolatrous worship:
with all them that were the chosen men of Assyria; before described by their habit, office, and age:
and with all on whom she doted; had an insatiable desire and lust after:
with all their idols she defiled herself; worshipped all the idols the Assyrians did; and which were defiling, as they must needs be, since, as the word used signifies, they were dunghill gods.
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Gill: Eze 23:8 - -- Neither left she her idols brought from Egypt,.... Though the Israelites took in the gods of the Assyrians into their worship, they did not relinquish...
Neither left she her idols brought from Egypt,.... Though the Israelites took in the gods of the Assyrians into their worship, they did not relinquish the golden calves set up at Dan and Bethel, in imitation of the Egyptian deities; the idolatrous worship of which they learned in Egypt, and brought from thence:
for in her youth they lay with her; the Egyptians enticed the Israelites to idolatry when among them, as soon as they began to be a people; See Gill on Eze 23:3,
and they bruised the breasts of her virginity; who before retained the pure worship of God, and was like a chaste virgin:
and poured their whoredom upon her; expressive of the numerous acts of idolatry committed together by them.
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Gill: Eze 23:9 - -- Wherefore I have delivered her into the hand of her lovers,.... To destruction; their persons, families, riches, and kingdom itself:
into the hand ...
Wherefore I have delivered her into the hand of her lovers,.... To destruction; their persons, families, riches, and kingdom itself:
into the hand of the Assyrians, on whom she doted; first into the hands of Pul, then Tiglathpileser, then Shalmaneser, all kings of Assyria, by whom they were spoiled or carried captive; by the two first in part, by the last wholly; see 2Ki 15:19.
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Gill: Eze 23:10 - -- These discovered her wickedness,.... That is, stripped them of all their substance:
they took her sons and her daughters; and carried them captive:...
These discovered her wickedness,.... That is, stripped them of all their substance:
they took her sons and her daughters; and carried them captive:
and slew her with the sword; put an end to the kingdom of Israel, or the ten tribes, and which was never recovered to this day:
and she became famous among women; or among the provinces, as the Targum; she became famous, or rather infamous, among other nations; was talked of for her sins, her whoredoms and idolatries, and the vengeance of God upon her for them; she became a byword and a proverb among the kingdoms of the world for her wickedness and her destruction:
for they had executed judgment upon her; that is, the Assyrians, who were the instruments in God's hand in doing justice to her, and inflicting his judgments on her, and for that she became famous.
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Gill: Eze 23:11 - -- And when her sister Aholibah saw this,.... The two tribes of Judah and Benjamin, when, they saw the idolatries the ten tribes fell into, and the destr...
And when her sister Aholibah saw this,.... The two tribes of Judah and Benjamin, when, they saw the idolatries the ten tribes fell into, and the destruction which came upon them for the same; instead of receiving instruction, and taking caution by all this,
she was more corrupt in her inordinate love than she; in courting the friendship, alliance, and help of their Heathen neighbours:
and in her whoredoms more than her sister in her whoredoms; guilty of more idolatries than the ten tribes, as in the times of Manasseh; see Jer 2:28.
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Gill: Eze 23:12 - -- She doted upon the Assyrians her neighbours,.... As in the times of Ahaz, who sent to Tiglathpileser, king of Assyria, for help; and from whence he to...
She doted upon the Assyrians her neighbours,.... As in the times of Ahaz, who sent to Tiglathpileser, king of Assyria, for help; and from whence he took the pattern of an altar, and had one built like it at Jerusalem, and offered upon it, 2Ki 16:7,
captains and rulers clothed most gorgeously; or "perfectly" q; with all kind of precious garments, and of all manner of colours; not with blue only, but purple, scarlet, crimson, &c.
horsemen riding upon horses, all of them desirable young men; See Gill on Eze 23:6.
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Gill: Eze 23:13 - -- Then I saw that she was defiled,.... With idols, and the worship of them, Eze 23:7,
that they took both one way; the same way of idolatry; worshipp...
Then I saw that she was defiled,.... With idols, and the worship of them, Eze 23:7,
that they took both one way; the same way of idolatry; worshipped the same idols, lived the same course of life, were guilty of the same sin, both Israel and Judah.
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Gill: Eze 23:14 - -- And that she increased her whoredoms,.... Added to the number of her idols, increased her idols, and even was guilty of more than her sister:
for w...
And that she increased her whoredoms,.... Added to the number of her idols, increased her idols, and even was guilty of more than her sister:
for when she saw men portrayed on the wall; of the temple, as idols were, Eze 8:10 or upon the wall of a private house, where they were worshipped as household gods:
the images of the Chaldeans portrayed with vermilion: the images of their heroes, who after death were deified; and these, being drawn upon the wall with vermilion, which, being mixed with ceruse, made a flesh colour, were worshipped; as Bel, Nebo, Merodach, which are names of their idols, Isa 46:1 or these were graven on the walls, or etched out upon them with minium or red lead; or rather were "painted" r, as some render the word, with minium, vermilion, or cinnabar, which are the same; See Gill on Jer 22:14, and it may be observed, that it was usual with the Heathens to paint the images and statues of their gods with these. Thus Virgil s represents Pan, the god of Arcadia, coloured red with minium or vermilion; and Pausanius t speaks of the statue of Bacchus being besmeared with cinnabar: and Pliny u says the face of the image of Jupiter used to be anointed with minium or vermilion on festival days; and observes, that the nobles of Ethiopia used to colour themselves all over with it; this being the colour of the images of their gods, which they reckoned more august, majestic, and sacred. Hence the Romans, in their triumphs, used to paint themselves with vermilion; particularly it is said of Augustus Caesar, that he did this to make himself the more conspicuous and respectable, after the example of the Assyrians and Medes w: and the triumphers chose to be rubbed all over with a red colour, that they might, according to Isidore x, resemble the divine fire.
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Gill: Eze 23:15 - -- Girded with girdles upon their loins,.... As a token of dignity and authority; see Isa 11:5, which was the peculiar custom of the Babylonians, as Kimc...
Girded with girdles upon their loins,.... As a token of dignity and authority; see Isa 11:5, which was the peculiar custom of the Babylonians, as Kimchi, from the Talmudists, observes: "exceeding in dyed attire upon their heads"; having turbans of various colours upon their heads, after the manner of the Persians:
all of them princes to look to; bore the resemblance of kings, princes, and the great men of the earth, and whose images indeed they were; even of such who in their lifetime were famous for military exploits, or for some excellency or another, either real or pretended, and after death reckoned among the gods, and worshipped:
after the manner of the Babylonians of Chaldea, the land of their nativity; either where these heroes were born whose images were portrayed; or where Abraham, the father of the Jewish nation, was born, and so called from thence the land of their nativity; putting them in mind of their original, and of the idolatries of their ancestors, which they were now returning to.
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Gill: Eze 23:16 - -- And as soon as she saw them with her eyes, she doted upon them,.... As lustful women, on the sight of the pictures of men, fall in love with them, and...
And as soon as she saw them with her eyes, she doted upon them,.... As lustful women, on the sight of the pictures of men, fall in love with them, and are mad after them; such a vehement desire after the idols of the Chaldeans prevailed, upon seeing their images:
and sent messengers unto them in Chaldea; to make alliances with the Chaldeans, and to have their idols, and worship them.
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Gill: Eze 23:17 - -- And the Babylonians came to her in the bed of love,.... Entered into alliance with the Jews, and worshipped together in the same idols' temple. Jarchi...
And the Babylonians came to her in the bed of love,.... Entered into alliance with the Jews, and worshipped together in the same idols' temple. Jarchi thinks this refers to the messengers of the king of Babylon to Hezekiah; who were gladly received by him, and to whom he showed all the treasures of his house:
and they defiled her with their whoredom; or with their idols, as the Targum; they drew them into their idolatrous practices; which were defiling them, and by which they were corrupted from the simplicity of the true worship of God:
and she was polluted with them, and her mind was alienated from them: or "plucked", or "disjoined from them" y; the Chaldeans, broke league and covenant with them, hating them as much as before they doted upon them; this was done in the times of Jehoiakim and Zedekiah, who rebelled against the king of Babylon, 2Ki 24:1 as it often is the case with lewd women, when they have satisfied their lust with their gallants, loath and despise them, and cast them off.
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Gill: Eze 23:18 - -- So she discovered her whoredoms, and discovered her nakedness,.... The Jews did not cease from their idolatries when they broke with the Babylonians; ...
So she discovered her whoredoms, and discovered her nakedness,.... The Jews did not cease from their idolatries when they broke with the Babylonians; but were rather more frequent and impudent in them, and courted the friendship and alliance of other Heathen nations, and their worship; even as a lewd woman, when she has cast off her former lovers, does not leave her lewdness, but seeks after others; and by her impudence in discovering her whoredoms, and her nakedness, and by all the signs of a prostitute, draws in others to commit lewdness with her:
then my mind was alienated from her, like as my mind was alienated from her sister; as a virtuous husband is alienated from an adulterous wife, and cannot admit her to his bed and board, so the mind of the Lord was alienated from the Jews, because of their idolatries; nor could he favour them with his presence, and the blessings of his providence and goodness, as he had formerly done; even as his mind had been alienated, on the same account, from the ten tribes of Israel, and which he showed by suffering them to be carried captive.
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Gill: Eze 23:19 - -- Yet she multiplied her whoredoms,.... Though the Lord frowned upon the Jews in the times of Jehoiakim and Zedekiah, yet still they went on, and increa...
Yet she multiplied her whoredoms,.... Though the Lord frowned upon the Jews in the times of Jehoiakim and Zedekiah, yet still they went on, and increased their alliances and idolatries with the Heathen nations:
in calling to remembrance the days of her youth, wherein she had played the harlot in the land of Egypt; they called to mind with pleasure the idolatries of their fathers in Egypt, and committed the same themselves; they sent ambassadors to Egypt, in the times of Zedekiah, for help and assistance, and to enter into alliance with them, when they renewed among them the idolatries of that nation; see Eze 17:15.
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Gill: Eze 23:20 - -- For she doted upon their paramours,.... Or "concubines" z; the neighbouring nations and allies of the Egyptians, whose friendship the Jews courted, an...
For she doted upon their paramours,.... Or "concubines" z; the neighbouring nations and allies of the Egyptians, whose friendship the Jews courted, and whose idols they served: the Septuagint and Arabic versions wrongly read the Chaldeans:
whose flesh is as the flesh of asses, and whose issue is like the issue of horses; by "flesh" is meant the "membrum virile", which in asses is very large, and therefore dedicated to Priapus by the Heathens; and vast is the profusion of seed in coitus by horses, to which the flesh and issue of the Egyptian paramours are compared; who were very libidinous, and therefore desirable to insatiable women; all which serves to express the eagerness of the people of the Jews after idolatry.
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Gill: Eze 23:21 - -- Thus thou calledst to remembrance the lewdness of thy youth,.... By committing the same; the same idolatries their fathers committed in Egypt they now...
Thus thou calledst to remembrance the lewdness of thy youth,.... By committing the same; the same idolatries their fathers committed in Egypt they now committed, being in alliance with the same people: or,
thou causest to be visited the lewdness of thy youth a; by the Lord, who remembered their sins, and punished them for them:
in bruising thy teats by the Egyptians for the paps of thy youth: committing spiritual fornication, that is, idolatry with them; signified by pressing and bruising the breasts and paps of virgins, by corporeal fornication with them.
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Gill: Eze 23:22 - -- Therefore, O Aholibah, thus saith the Lord God,.... Or, ye two tribes of Benjamin and Judah, hear what the Lord says unto you:
behold, I will raise...
Therefore, O Aholibah, thus saith the Lord God,.... Or, ye two tribes of Benjamin and Judah, hear what the Lord says unto you:
behold, I will raise up thy lovers against thee; the Chaldeans, whom they had formerly loved, and in whose alliance they were, and whose idols they worshipped:
from whom thy mind is alienated; having broke covenant with them, and cast off their yoke, and rebelled against them:
and I will bring them against thee on every side; to besiege and encompass Jerusalem on every side with their army, as they did, so that there was no escaping.
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Gill: Eze 23:23 - -- The Babylonians, and all the Chaldeans,.... Both the inhabitants of the city of Babylon, called in the Hebrew text the children of Babylon, and all th...
The Babylonians, and all the Chaldeans,.... Both the inhabitants of the city of Babylon, called in the Hebrew text the children of Babylon, and all the inhabitants of the several parts of the country of Chaldean, of which Babylon was the metropolis:
Pekod, and Shoa, and Koa; the Vulgate Latin version, and so Jerom, take these words to be appellatives, and render them noblemen, tyrants, and princes; as some mentioned by Jarchi do, governors, princes, and rulers; and Kimchi b thinks they are the titles of the Babylonian princes spoken of in Jeremiah, as Nebuzaradan. Nebushasban, Rabsaris, Rabmag, &c. Jer 39:3, but with others they are the proper names of persons or places: and so the Targum calls them, Pekodaites, Shoaites, and Koaites; that is, the inhabitants of places so called; and certain it is that Pekod was a province of Babylon, Jer 50:21, which, according to Junius, lay between the two rivers Tigris and Lycus, and in which was the famous city of Nineveh; and, according to him, Shoa, or the Shoaites, lay between the rivers Lycus and Gorgus, among where were the Adiabeni, and the town called Siai by Ptolemy; and the Koaites were situated in the inward part of Assyria, by Arbelitis, where formerly was the fortified town of Koah, by historians called Gauga; and by Strabo Gaugamela. Grotius thinks that Pekod are the Bactriani; and that Shoa is Siai in Armenia with Ptolemy; and that Koa is Choana of Media, with the same Ptolemy; but, be they who they will, they were such people as were to come with the Chaldean army against the Jews:
and all the Assyrians with them: which were now one people with the Chaldeans and Babylonians, by whom formerly the ten tribes were carried captive:
all of them desirable young men, captains and rulers, great lords and renowned, all of them riding upon horses; persons of high rank and dignity, in chief offices at court or in the camp, all in the bloom and strength of youth; men of name and renown for their honour and valour; and all well mounted, a famous cavalry of them; and who before were lovely on these accounts, when they were their gallants and lovers, their confederates and allies, but now formidable and terrible being their enemies; see Eze 23:5.
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Gill: Eze 23:24 - -- And they shall come against thee with chariots, wagons, and wheels,.... With "chariots", in which were their princes and great men, their chief comman...
And they shall come against thee with chariots, wagons, and wheels,.... With "chariots", in which were their princes and great men, their chief commanders, generals, and captains, and in which they fought, as was usual in those times; and with "wagons", to carry their provisions and warlike stores; and with "wheels", that is, either with chariots and wagons that ran upon wheels, or with wheels for them in case they should break down; the first of these words here, according to some Jewish interpreters, as Donesh in Jarchi, signifies warlike instruments in general; and the second word is used for chariots: and so the whole is paraphrased by the Targum,
"and they shall come against thee with instruments of war, with chariots and wheels;''
all which denotes how well prepared they should be, and with what swiftness they would come:
and with an assembly of people, which shall set against thee buckler, and shield, and helmet, round about; a multitude of people, a vast army gathered out of all the provinces of Babylon, having bucklers and shields about their bodies, and helmets on their heads to protect and defend them; and these should surround the city of Jerusalem. So the Targum,
"an army of people, armed with shields and helmets, shall set themselves against thee round about:''
and I will set judgment before them, and they shall judge thee according to their judgments; that is, I will deliver you into their hands, and they shall judge and condemn you; not according to my laws and yours, but according to their own laws, according to the customs and usages among them, according to the law of nations; they shall deal with you as rebels and covenant breakers, such Zedekiah was; he broke covenant with the king of Babylon, and rebelled against him: and this was fulfilled when he fell into his hands, and when he slew his children before his face, and then put out his eyes.
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Gill: Eze 23:25 - -- And I will set my jealousy against thee, and they shall deal furiously with thee,.... As a jealous husband, enraged against his adulterous wife, falls...
And I will set my jealousy against thee, and they shall deal furiously with thee,.... As a jealous husband, enraged against his adulterous wife, falls upon her in his fury, and uses her with great severity; so the Jews having committed spiritual fornication, that is, idolatry, and departed from the Lord, he threatens to stir up the fury of his jealousy, and punish them severely by the Chaldeans, as follows:
they shall take away thy nose and thine ears, and thy remnant shall fall by the sword; as gallants use their harlots when they leave them, or jealous husbands their adulterous wives, disfiguring them, that they may be marked and known what they are, and be despised by others; and as has been the custom in some countries, particularly with the Egyptians, to cut off the noses of adulterous persons; here it is to be understood figuratively: by the "nose", according to Jarchi, Kimchi, and Ben Melech, is meant the king, who is higher than his people, as the nose is the highest part in a man's face; and by the "ears" the priest, who caused a noise to be heard when he entered into the temple with his bells; or rather because it was the priest's office to attend to the word of God, and teach it the people; in general, these denote everything that was excellent among the Jews, their city, temple, king, kingdom, princes, priests, and prophets, which should be demolished and removed; and by the remnant is meant the common people, that should come into the hands of the Chaldeans, and fall by their sword. So the Targum paraphrases it,
"thy princes and thy nobles shall go into captivity, and thy people shall be killed with the sword:''
they shall take thy sons and thy daughters, and thy residue shall be devoured by the fire; take and carry their sons and daughters captive, and burn with fire the city left by them. Thus the Targum,
"they shall carry thy sons and daughters captive, and the beauty of thy land shall be burnt with fire;''
that is, the city of Jerusalem, the temple, the king's palaces, the houses of the great men, and others in it, which were all burnt with fire when taken by the Chaldeans, Jer 52:13.
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Gill: Eze 23:26 - -- They shall also strip thee out of thy clothes,.... As such who are taken captives are usually served:
and take away, thy fair jewels; their ornamen...
They shall also strip thee out of thy clothes,.... As such who are taken captives are usually served:
and take away, thy fair jewels; their ornaments of every kind: or "the vessels of thy glory" c; Kimchi observes this may be meant either of the garments of the priests, and the vessels of the sanctuary; or of whole spoil of the city in general, whether in the temple, or in other houses.
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Gill: Eze 23:27 - -- Thus will I make thy lewdness to cease from thee,.... That is, their idolatry; for, after this captivity, the Jews never were guilty of idolatry any m...
Thus will I make thy lewdness to cease from thee,.... That is, their idolatry; for, after this captivity, the Jews never were guilty of idolatry any more:
and thy whoredom brought from the land of Egypt; the idolatry which they learned there, and brought from thence; so the Targum,
"the worship of thine idols, which was with thee when thou wast in the land of Egypt:''
so that thou shall not lift up thine eyes unto them; to the idols of Egypt, to pray unto them, and worship them:
nor remember Egypt any more; with any delight and pleasure, and so as to desire an alliance with them, and help from them, or to join with them in their idolatries: so the Targum,
"and the idols of the Egyptians thou shalt remember no more.''
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Gill: Eze 23:28 - -- For thus saith the Lord God, I will deliver thee into the hand of them whom thou hatest,.... The Chaldeans and Babylonians, before loved by her, and d...
For thus saith the Lord God, I will deliver thee into the hand of them whom thou hatest,.... The Chaldeans and Babylonians, before loved by her, and doted upon, but now hated and rebelled against; and to fall into such hands must be a sore judgment; and this the Lord threatens to bring upon the Jews for their sins; and he having said it, it might be depended upon it would be performed; and, for the greater certainty of it, it is repeated in different words:
into the hand of them from whom thy mind is alienated; See Gill on Eze 23:17.
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Gill: Eze 23:29 - -- And they shall deal with thee hatefully,.... The Chaldeans should hate the Jews as much as before they loved them, when they came into the bed of love...
And they shall deal with thee hatefully,.... The Chaldeans should hate the Jews as much as before they loved them, when they came into the bed of love to them, Eze 23:17 and as much as the Jews hated them; which they showed by their severe and rigorous usage of them, putting some to the sword, carrying the rest captive, and employing them in hard service and labour; and, which is still worse, and an aggravation of all this:
and shall take away all thy labour; whatever they got by labour, that they should not enjoy, but should be taken away from them:
and shall leave thee naked and bare: stripped of all the necessaries and conveniences of life:
and the nakedness of thy whoredoms shall be discovered, both thy lewdness and thy whoredoms; it shall then be manifest to all that thou hast been guilty of idolatry, and hast departed from the Lord thy God, which has caused him to bring these judgments upon thee for thy sins. The Targum paraphrases the latter part of the clause thus,
"the sins of thy wicked counsels, and thy pride.''
It seems to be a heap of words, to express the grossness of their idolatries, which now should be exposed.
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Gill: Eze 23:30 - -- And I will do these things unto thee,.... What the Chaldeans did God is said to do, because he suffered them to do these things, as a punishment for t...
And I will do these things unto thee,.... What the Chaldeans did God is said to do, because he suffered them to do these things, as a punishment for their sins; yea, it was according to his will, and by his orders. The Septuagint and Vulgate Latin versions render it, "they have done these things unto thee"; that is, the Chaldeans. The Targum is,
"thy sins are the cause of these things unto thee;''
that is, their idolatry and other iniquities. Hence the Syriac version is very particular,
"for thy whoredoms these things shall be done unto thee;''
and the Arabic version,
"thy whoredom hath done (or is the cause of) these things unto thee,''
as follows:
because thou hast gone a whoring after the Heathen, and because thou art polluted with their idols; imitated them in their idolatries; worshipped the same dunghill gods as they did, as the word signifies; with which it was no wonder they should be polluted, and become abominable unto God.
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Gill: Eze 23:31 - -- Thou hast walked in the way of thy sister,.... Samaria, or the ten tribes of Israel; followed them in their idolatrous practices, were guilty of the s...
Thou hast walked in the way of thy sister,.... Samaria, or the ten tribes of Israel; followed them in their idolatrous practices, were guilty of the same:
therefore will I give her cup into thine hand; the cup of her vengeance, as the Targum; inflict the same punishment on the two tribes as on the ten, and suffer them to be carried captive as they had been.
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Gill: Eze 23:32 - -- Thus saith the Lord God, thou shall drink of thy sister's cup deep and large,.... That is, partake of the same punishment, which was very great, signi...
Thus saith the Lord God, thou shall drink of thy sister's cup deep and large,.... That is, partake of the same punishment, which was very great, signified by a deep and large cup, which holds much:
thou shall be laughed to scorn, and had in derision; by the nations round about, who, instead of pitying them under their troubles, will rejoice at them; just as drunken men are laughed at, when intoxicated and reeling about:
it containeth much; the cup of wrath and vengeance; as much as will last severity years drinking. The Targum connects this with the preceding clause,
"and thou shalt be for derision and for laughter, because of the greatness of the tribulation that shall come upon thee.''
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Gill: Eze 23:33 - -- Thou shalt be filled with drunkenness and sorrow,.... Sorrow is the effect of drunkenness; these two generally go together; when a man is filled with ...
Thou shalt be filled with drunkenness and sorrow,.... Sorrow is the effect of drunkenness; these two generally go together; when a man is filled with the one, he is with the other; this expresses the greatness of the sorrow and distress of the Jews in captivity:
with the cup of astonishment and desolation; their punishment would be so great, and their condition be so desolate, that it should astonish them, and bereave them of their senses; and they should be like mad men, as their actions in the following verse show:
with the cup of thy sister Samaria; the same punishment as inflicted on the ten tribes.
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Gill: Eze 23:34 - -- Thou shalt even drink it, and suck it out,.... The very dregs of it, that which lies at the bottom, which is the most nauseous and the most pernicious...
Thou shalt even drink it, and suck it out,.... The very dregs of it, that which lies at the bottom, which is the most nauseous and the most pernicious; not through love to it, but through force, shall be obliged to it; see Psa 75:8,
and thou shall break the sherds thereof; and suck them, so that not a drop of the liquor shall be lost; even what has penetrated into the earthen vessel, which this cup is supposed to be; and therefore it shall be broken to pieces, and these pieces sucked, that all may be got out; suggesting that there will be no abatement of the punishment, it shall be endured to the utmost: or it may be an allusion to drunkards, who, having drunk up their liquor, and become drunk, break their glasses, pots, and cups, and to which the next clause agrees:
and pluck off thine own breasts; as men in their drunken fits, being like mad men, tear their own flesh; and so the Targum paraphrases it,
"thou shall tear thy flesh;''
so the Jews, under punishment for sin, and pressed with the guilt of it, through indignation at themselves should tear their flesh, and particularly pluck off their breasts: the allusion is to fornication, to which idolatry is compared, in which those parts are particularly affected; see Eze 23:21, the Syriac version renders this and the former clause thus, "thou shall shave thine hair and cut off thy breasts"; Kimchi thinks by the "breasts" are meant the oral and written laws, which ceased in the time of the captivity; but without any foundation:
for I have spoken it, saith the Lord; and therefore it shall be done.
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Gill: Eze 23:35 - -- Therefore thus saith the Lord God, because thou hast forgotten me,.... His word, worship, and ordinances, and did not attend unto them, but worshipped...
Therefore thus saith the Lord God, because thou hast forgotten me,.... His word, worship, and ordinances, and did not attend unto them, but worshipped strange gods: so the Targum,
"because thou hast left my worship:''
and cast me behind thy back; or, as the same paraphrase,
"hast cast the fear of me from before thine eyes;''
or out of thy sight, his laws and statutes; see Neh 9:26, as men cast behind their backs that which they have no value for and loath, and which they do not care to see, and choose to forget:
therefore bear thou also thy lewdness and thy whoredoms; that is, the guilt of their sins, the punishment of their idolatries, and shame and confusion for them.
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Gill: Eze 23:36 - -- The Lord said moreover unto me, son of man, wilt thou judge Aholah and Aholibah?.... Plead the cause of Israel and Judah? say any thing in their defen...
The Lord said moreover unto me, son of man, wilt thou judge Aholah and Aholibah?.... Plead the cause of Israel and Judah? say any thing in their defence, and in excuse of them? or intercede and pray for them, that threatened judgments may not come upon them? no, do nothing of this kind; if thou wilt do anything, do as follows:
yea, declare unto them their abominations; their abominable sins, their murders, adulteries, and idolatries; set them in a true light before them, in all their aggravated circumstances; that, if it can be, they may be brought to a true sight and sense of them, to repent of them, be ashamed of them, loath them, confess them, and forsake them.
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Gill: Eze 23:37 - -- That they have committed adultery,.... Either literally, adultery with their neighbours' wives, which was a prevailing sin with this people; or figura...
That they have committed adultery,.... Either literally, adultery with their neighbours' wives, which was a prevailing sin with this people; or figuratively, spiritual adultery, that is, idolatry:
and blood is in their hands; the Targum is,
"they have shed the blood of innocents with their hands;''
the blood of prophets and righteous men, sent unto them; and the blood of their infants in sacrificing to idols, as after mentioned:
and with their idols have they committed adultery; by worshipping them, which is spiritual adultery; and this being so explicitly mentioned, it seems to be distinguished from corporeal adultery in the first clause, which may be only there designed; and so Kimchi thinks:
and have also caused their sons, whom they bare unto me, to pass for them through the fire, to devour them; their children, who were the Lord's by national adoption, and who ought to have been trained up in the worship and service of God, were, in a most barbarous and unnatural manner, caused to pass through the fire, for or to the idols Molech and Baal; and that not merely by way of lustration and dedication, which was sometimes done by passing between two fires, but so as to be devoured and destroyed by the fire.
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Gill: Eze 23:38 - -- Moreover this they have done unto me,..... The following piece of wickedness, which was very provoking to the Lord:
they have defiled my sanctuary ...
Moreover this they have done unto me,..... The following piece of wickedness, which was very provoking to the Lord:
they have defiled my sanctuary in the same day; as they caused their children to pass through the tire to their idols, by entering into the sanctuary when they had so done, and were thus defiled, and by offering sacrifices to their idols in it; or under pretence of serving the Lord, when they had just been guilty of murder and idolatry:
and have profaned my sabbaths; not only by doing their own worldly and civil business, but by slaying their infants on those days, and sacrificing them to idols.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Eze 23:3; Eze 23:4; Eze 23:4; Eze 23:5; Eze 23:5; Eze 23:5; Eze 23:5; Eze 23:7; Eze 23:8; Eze 23:9; Eze 23:10; Eze 23:11; Eze 23:14; Eze 23:15; Eze 23:16; Eze 23:16; Eze 23:17; Eze 23:17; Eze 23:18; Eze 23:18; Eze 23:18; Eze 23:20; Eze 23:21; Eze 23:21; Eze 23:21; Eze 23:22; Eze 23:23; Eze 23:23; Eze 23:23; Eze 23:24; Eze 23:24; Eze 23:24; Eze 23:24; Eze 23:25; Eze 23:25; Eze 23:25; Eze 23:25; Eze 23:27; Eze 23:27; Eze 23:28; Eze 23:28; Eze 23:29; Eze 23:29; Eze 23:30; Eze 23:31; Eze 23:32; Eze 23:33; Eze 23:34; Eze 23:34; Eze 23:34; Eze 23:35; Eze 23:35; Eze 23:36; Eze 23:37; Eze 23:37; Eze 23:38
NET Notes: Eze 23:3 In the Hebrew text the subject is left unstated and must be supplied from the context.
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NET Notes: Eze 23:4 In this allegory the Lord is depicted as being the husband of two wives. The OT law prohibited a man from marrying sisters (Lev 18:18), but the practi...
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NET Notes: Eze 23:5 The term apparently refers to Assyrian military officers; it is better construed with the description that follows. See D. I. Block, Ezekiel (NICOT), ...
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NET Notes: Eze 23:9 Heb “I gave her into the hand of her lovers, into the hand of the sons of Assyria.”
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NET Notes: Eze 23:16 The Chaldeans were prominent tribal groups of Babylonia. The imagery is reminiscent of events in the reigns of Hezekiah (2 Kgs 20:12-15) and Jehoiakim...
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NET Notes: Eze 23:20 Heb “She lusted after their concubines (?) whose flesh was the flesh of donkeys.” The phrase “their concubines” is extremely p...
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NET Notes: Eze 23:21 Heb “for the sake of,” but the expression is awkward and is better emended to read “to squeeze.” See L. C. Allen, Ezekiel (WBC...
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NET Notes: Eze 23:22 The word הִנֵּה (hinneh, traditionally “behold”) indicates becoming aware of something and has been tr...
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NET Notes: Eze 23:29 Heb “The nakedness of your prostitution will be exposed, and your obscene conduct and your harlotry.”
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NET Notes: Eze 23:30 The infinitive absolute continues the sequence begun in v. 28: “Look here, I am about to deliver you.” See Joüon 2:430 §123.w.
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NET Notes: Eze 23:31 Heb “her cup.” A cup of intoxicating strong drink is used, here and elsewhere, as a metaphor for judgment because both leave one confused ...
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NET Notes: Eze 23:32 The image of a deep and wide cup suggests the degree of punishment; it will be extensive and leave the victim helpless.
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NET Notes: Eze 23:34 The severe action is more extreme than beating the breasts in anguish (Isa 32:12; Nah 2:7). It is also ironic for these are the very breasts she so bl...
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NET Notes: Eze 23:35 The word “punishment” is not in the Hebrew text but is demanded by the context.
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NET Notes: Eze 23:36 Heb “will you judge.” Here the imperfect form of the verb is probably used with a desiderative nuance. Addressed to the prophet, “ju...
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NET Notes: Eze 23:37 Heb “they have passed to them for food.” The verb is commonly taken to refer to passing children through fire, especially as an offering t...
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Geneva Bible: Eze 23:2 Son of man, there were two women, the daughters of one ( a ) mother:
( a ) Meaning, Israel and Judah who both came out of one family.
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Geneva Bible: Eze 23:3 And they committed harlotries in ( b ) Egypt; they committed harlotries in their youth: there were their breasts pressed, and there they bruised the t...
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Geneva Bible: Eze 23:4 And the names of ( c ) them [were] Aholah the elder, and Aholibah her sister: and they were mine, and they bore sons and daughters. Thus [were] their ...
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Geneva Bible: Eze 23:5 And Aholah played the harlot when ( d ) she was mine; and she doted on her lovers, on the Assyrians [her] neighbours,
( d ) When the Israelites were ...
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Geneva Bible: Eze 23:8 Neither left she her harlotries [brought] from Egypt: for in her youth they ( e ) lay with her, and they bruised the breasts of her virginity, and pou...
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Geneva Bible: Eze 23:10 These uncovered her nakedness: they took her sons and her daughters, and slew her with the sword: and she became a byword among women; for ( f ) they ...
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Geneva Bible: Eze 23:14 And [that] she increased her harlotries: for when she saw men ( g ) portrayed upon the wall, the images of the Chaldeans portrayed with vermilion,
( ...
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Geneva Bible: Eze 23:23 The Babylonians, and all the Chaldeans, ( h ) Pekod, and Shoa, and Koa, [and] all the Assyrians with them: all of them desirable young men, captains a...
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Geneva Bible: Eze 23:25 And I will set my jealousy against thee, and they shall deal furiously with thee: they shall take away thy ( i ) nose and thy ears; and thy remnant sh...
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Geneva Bible: Eze 23:29 And they shall deal with thee in hatred, and shall take away all thy ( k ) labour, and shall leave thee naked and bare: and the nakedness of thy harlo...
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Geneva Bible: Eze 23:31 Thou hast walked in the way of thy sister; therefore will I give her ( m ) cup into thy hand.
( m ) I will execute the same judgments and vengeance a...
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Geneva Bible: Eze 23:33 Thou shalt be filled with ( n ) drunkenness and sorrow, with the cup of horror and desolation, with the cup of thy sister Samaria.
( n ) Meaning that...
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Geneva Bible: Eze 23:37 That they have committed adultery, and blood [is] in their hands, and with their idols have they committed adultery, and have also caused their sons, ...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Eze 23:1-49
TSK Synopsis: Eze 23:1-49 - --1 The whoredoms of Aholah and Aholibah.23 Aholibah is to be plagued by her lovers.36 The prophet reproves the adulteries of them both;45 and shews the...
MHCC -> Eze 23:1-49
MHCC: Eze 23:1-49 - --In this parable, Samaria and Israel bear the name Aholah, " her own tabernacle;" because the places of worship those kingdoms had, were of their own ...
Matthew Henry: Eze 23:1-10 - -- God had often spoken to Ezekiel, and by him to the people, to this effect, but now his word comes again; for God speaks the same thing once, ye...
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Matthew Henry: Eze 23:11-21 - -- The prophet Hosea, in his time, observed that the two tribes retained their integrity, in a great measure, when the ten tribes had apostatized (Hos ...
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Matthew Henry: Eze 23:22-35 - -- Jerusalem stands indicted by the name of Aholibah, for that she, as a false traitor to her sovereign Lord the God of heaven, not having his fear b...
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Matthew Henry: Eze 23:36-49 - -- After the ten tribes were carried into captivity, and that kingdom was made quite desolate, the remains of it by degrees incorporated with the kingd...
Keil-Delitzsch: Eze 23:1-4 - --
The Sisters Oholah and Oholibah
Eze 23:1. And the word of Jehovah came to me, saying, Eze 23:2. Son of man, two women, daughters of one mother ...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Eze 23:5-10 - --
Samaria's Whoredom and Punishment
Eze 23:5. And Oholibah played the harlot under me, and burned towards her lovers, even as far as Assyria, stan...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Eze 23:11-21 - --
Whoredom of Judah
Eze 23:11. And her sister Oholibah saw it, and carried on her coquetry still more wantonly than she had done, and her whoredom...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Eze 23:22-35 - --
Punishment of the Harlot Jerusalem
Eze 23:22. Therefore, Oholibah, thus saith the Lord Jehovah, Behold, I raise up thy lovers against thee, from...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Eze 23:36-49 - --
Another Summary of the Sins and Punishment of the Two Women
Eze 23:36. And Jehovah said to me, Son of man, wilt thou judge Oholah and Oholibah, th...
Constable -> Eze 4:1--24:27; Eze 20:1--23:49; Eze 23:1-49; Eze 23:1-4; Eze 23:5-10; Eze 23:11-21; Eze 23:22-35; Eze 23:36-49
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...
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Constable: Eze 20:1--23:49 - --D. Israel's defective leadership chs. 20-23
This section of the book is the final collection of propheci...
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Constable: Eze 23:1-49 - --4. The parable of the two sisters ch. 23
This chapter is the final climactic one in Ezekiel's co...
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Constable: Eze 23:1-4 - --Israel's lustful youth 23:1-4
23:1-3 The Lord gave Ezekiel a story about two sisters who had one mother (cf. Jer. 3:7). These young girls became prost...
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Constable: Eze 23:5-10 - --Samaria's prostitution 23:5-10
23:5-8 Oholah proved unfaithful to the Lord by lusting after her attractive neighbors, the Assyrians.
"The appeal, then...
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Constable: Eze 23:11-21 - --Jerusalem's prostitution 23:11-21
23:11-13 Oholibah observed her sister's behavior and fate, but she did not learn from them. As many historians have ...
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Constable: Eze 23:22-35 - --Jerusalem's judgment for prostitution 23:22-35
Four messages announce God's judgment on Jerusalem for her unfaithfulness (vv. 22-27, 28-31, 32-34, 35)...
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