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Text -- Ezekiel 28:1-14 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
In thy heart.
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Subject to casualties, sorrows, and distresses.
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Thou hast entertained thoughts, which become none but God.
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Those beautiful things, in which thy wisdom appeared.
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Thou fanciest that fulness of wisdom, and perfection of beauty are in thee.
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Wesley: Eze 28:13 - -- Now the prophet notes their joys, musick, and songs, both to loud, and to softer musick, as the lute, and tabret in the day of their kings coronation,...
Now the prophet notes their joys, musick, and songs, both to loud, and to softer musick, as the lute, and tabret in the day of their kings coronation, and all this on instruments of most exquisite make, and of their own artists work; in this they exceeded as in the other.
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Wesley: Eze 28:14 - -- For thy wisdom, power, and excellency, like a cherub, or angel; for the sacredness of thy person, and office, as the anointed of God; for the exercise...
For thy wisdom, power, and excellency, like a cherub, or angel; for the sacredness of thy person, and office, as the anointed of God; for the exercise of thy power, as a shield, as a protector of the weak.
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I, whom thou forgetest have made thee so.
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Wesley: Eze 28:14 - -- Thou wast advanced to kingly dignity, (which David calls a mountain, Psa 30:7,) a sacred office, and of divine institution.
Thou wast advanced to kingly dignity, (which David calls a mountain, Psa 30:7,) a sacred office, and of divine institution.
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Surrounded with stones, that sparkle like fire.
JFB -> Eze 28:2; Eze 28:2; Eze 28:2; Eze 28:2; Eze 28:3; Eze 28:3; Eze 28:3; Eze 28:5; Eze 28:6; Eze 28:7; Eze 28:7; Eze 28:7; Eze 28:7; Eze 28:8; Eze 28:8; Eze 28:8; Eze 28:9; Eze 28:9; Eze 28:10; Eze 28:12; Eze 28:13; Eze 28:13; Eze 28:13; Eze 28:13; Eze 28:13; Eze 28:13; Eze 28:14; Eze 28:14; Eze 28:14; Eze 28:14; Eze 28:14
JFB: Eze 28:2 - -- Repeated resumptively in Eze 28:6. The apodosis begins at Eze 28:7. "The prince of Tyrus" at the time was Ithobal, or Ithbaal II; the name implying hi...
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JFB: Eze 28:2 - -- As God sits enthroned in His heavenly citadel exempt from all injury, so I sit secure in my impregnable stronghold amidst the stormiest elements, able...
As God sits enthroned in His heavenly citadel exempt from all injury, so I sit secure in my impregnable stronghold amidst the stormiest elements, able to control them at will, and make them subserve my interests. The language, though primarily here applied to the king of Tyre, as similar language is to the king of Babylon (Isa 14:13-14), yet has an ulterior and fuller accomplishment in Satan and his embodiment in Antichrist (Dan 7:25; Dan 11:36-37; 2Th 2:4; Rev 13:6). This feeling of superhuman elevation in the king of Tyre was fostered by the fact that the island on which Tyre stood was called "the holy island" [SANCONIATHON], being sacred to Hercules, so much so that the colonies looked up to Tyre as the mother city of their religion, as well as of their political existence. The Hebrew for "God" is El, that is, "the Mighty One."
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Thou thinkest of thyself as if thou wert God.
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JFB: Eze 28:3 - -- Ezekiel ironically alludes to Ithbaal's overweening opinion of the wisdom of himself and the Tyrians, as though superior to that of Daniel, whose fame...
Ezekiel ironically alludes to Ithbaal's overweening opinion of the wisdom of himself and the Tyrians, as though superior to that of Daniel, whose fame had reached even Tyre as eclipsing the Chaldean sages. "Thou art wiser," namely, in thine own opinion (Zec 9:2).
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JFB: Eze 28:7 - -- That is, against thy beautiful possessions acquired by thy wisdom on which thou pridest thyself (Eze 28:3-5).
That is, against thy beautiful possessions acquired by thy wisdom on which thou pridest thyself (Eze 28:3-5).
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JFB: Eze 28:8 - -- That is, the bottom of the sea; the image being that of one conquered in a sea-fight.
That is, the bottom of the sea; the image being that of one conquered in a sea-fight.
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Literally, "pierced through." Such deaths as those pierced with many wounds die.
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JFB: Eze 28:9 - -- But thy blasphemous boastings shall be falsified, and thou shalt be shown to be but man, and not God, in the hand (at the mercy) of Him.
But thy blasphemous boastings shall be falsified, and thou shalt be shown to be but man, and not God, in the hand (at the mercy) of Him.
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JFB: Eze 28:10 - -- That is, such a death as the uncircumcised or godless heathen deserve; and perhaps, also, such as the uncircumcised inflict, a great ignominy in the e...
That is, such a death as the uncircumcised or godless heathen deserve; and perhaps, also, such as the uncircumcised inflict, a great ignominy in the eyes of a Jew (1Sa 31:4); a fit retribution on him who had scoffed at the circumcised Jews.
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JFB: Eze 28:12 - -- Literally, "Thou art the one sealing the sum of perfection." A thing is sealed when completed (Dan 9:24). "The sum" implies the full measure of beauty...
Literally, "Thou art the one sealing the sum of perfection." A thing is sealed when completed (Dan 9:24). "The sum" implies the full measure of beauty, from a Hebrew root, "to measure." The normal man--one formed after accurate rule.
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JFB: Eze 28:13 - -- The king of Tyre is represented in his former high state (contrasted with his subsequent downfall), under images drawn from the primeval man in Eden, ...
The king of Tyre is represented in his former high state (contrasted with his subsequent downfall), under images drawn from the primeval man in Eden, the type of humanity in its most Godlike form.
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JFB: Eze 28:13 - -- The model of ideal loveliness (Eze 31:8-9; Eze 36:35). In the person of the king of Tyre a new trial was made of humanity with the greatest earthly ad...
The model of ideal loveliness (Eze 31:8-9; Eze 36:35). In the person of the king of Tyre a new trial was made of humanity with the greatest earthly advantages. But as in the case of Adam, the good gifts of God were only turned into ministers to pride and self.
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JFB: Eze 28:13 - -- So in Eden (Gen 2:12), "gold, bdellium, and the onyx stone." So the king of Tyre was arrayed in jewel-bespangled robes after the fashion of Oriental m...
So in Eden (Gen 2:12), "gold, bdellium, and the onyx stone." So the king of Tyre was arrayed in jewel-bespangled robes after the fashion of Oriental monarchs. The nine precious stones here mentioned answer to nine of the twelve (representing the twelve tribes) in the high priest's breastplate (Exo 39:10-13; Rev 21:14, Rev 21:19-21). Of the four rows of three in each, the third is omitted in the Hebrew, but is supplied in the Septuagint. In this, too, there is an ulterior reference to Antichrist, who is blasphemously to arrogate the office of our divine High Priest (Zec 6:13).
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Literally, "holes" in musical pipes or flutes.
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JFB: Eze 28:13 - -- That is, in the day of thine accession to the throne. Tambourines and all the marks of joy were ready prepared for thee ("in thee," that is, "with and...
That is, in the day of thine accession to the throne. Tambourines and all the marks of joy were ready prepared for thee ("in thee," that is, "with and for thee"). Thou hadst not, like others, to work thy way to the throne through arduous struggles. No sooner created than, like Adam, thou wast surrounded with the gratifications of Eden. FAIRBAIRN, for "pipes," translates, "females" (having reference to Gen 1:27), that is, musician-women. MAURER explains the Hebrew not as to music, but as to the setting and mounting of the gems previously mentioned.
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JFB: Eze 28:14 - -- GESENIUS translates from an Aramaic root, "extended cherub." English Version, from a Hebrew root, is better. "The cherub consecrated to the Lord by th...
GESENIUS translates from an Aramaic root, "extended cherub." English Version, from a Hebrew root, is better. "The cherub consecrated to the Lord by the anointing oil" [FAIRBAIRN].
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JFB: Eze 28:14 - -- The imagery employed by Ezekiel as a priest is from the Jewish temple, wherein the cherubim overshadowed the mercy seat, as the king of Tyre, a demi-g...
The imagery employed by Ezekiel as a priest is from the Jewish temple, wherein the cherubim overshadowed the mercy seat, as the king of Tyre, a demi-god in his own esteem, extended his protection over the interests of Tyre. The cherub--an ideal compound of the highest kinds of animal existence and the type of redeemed man in his ultimate state of perfection--is made the image of the king of Tyre, as if the beau ideal of humanity. The pretensions of Antichrist are the ulterior reference, of whom the king of Tyre is a type. Compare "As God . . . in the temple of God" (2Th 2:4).
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JFB: Eze 28:14 - -- In ambitious imagination he stood in the place of God, "under whose feet was, as it were, a pavement of sapphire," while His glory was like "devouring...
Clarke: Eze 28:2 - -- Say unto the prince of Tyrus - But who was this prince of Tyrus? Some think Hiram; some, Sin; some, the devil; others, Ithobaal, with whom the chron...
Say unto the prince of Tyrus - But who was this prince of Tyrus? Some think Hiram; some, Sin; some, the devil; others, Ithobaal, with whom the chronology and circumstances best agree. Origen thought the guardian angel of the city was intended
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Clarke: Eze 28:2 - -- I am a god - That is, I am absolute, independent, and accountable to none. He was a man of great pride and arrogance.
I am a god - That is, I am absolute, independent, and accountable to none. He was a man of great pride and arrogance.
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Clarke: Eze 28:3 - -- Thou art wiser than Daniel - Daniel was at this time living, and was reputable for his great wisdom. This is said ironically. See Eze 14:14; Eze 26:...
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Clarke: Eze 28:5 - -- By thy great wisdom - He attributed every thing to himself; he did not acknowledge a Divine providence. As he got all by himself, so he believed he ...
By thy great wisdom - He attributed every thing to himself; he did not acknowledge a Divine providence. As he got all by himself, so he believed he could keep all by himself, and had no need of any foreign help.
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I will bring strangers upon thee - The Chaldeans.
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Clarke: Eze 28:9 - -- Wilt thou yet say before him that slayeth thee - Wilt thou continue thy pride and arrogance when the sword is sheathed in thee, and still imagine th...
Wilt thou yet say before him that slayeth thee - Wilt thou continue thy pride and arrogance when the sword is sheathed in thee, and still imagine that thou art self-sufficient and independent?
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Clarke: Eze 28:10 - -- The deaths of the uncircumcised - Two deaths, temporal and eternal. Ithobaal was taken and killed by Nebuchadnezzar.
The deaths of the uncircumcised - Two deaths, temporal and eternal. Ithobaal was taken and killed by Nebuchadnezzar.
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Clarke: Eze 28:12 - -- Thou sealest up - This has been translated, "Thou drawest thy own likeness.""Thou formest a portrait of thyself; and hast represented thyself the pe...
Thou sealest up - This has been translated, "Thou drawest thy own likeness.""Thou formest a portrait of thyself; and hast represented thyself the perfection of wisdom and beauty."I believe this to be the meaning of the place.
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Clarke: Eze 28:13 - -- Thou hast been in Eden - This also is a strong irony. Thou art like Adam, when in his innocence and excellence he was in the garden of Eden
Thou hast been in Eden - This also is a strong irony. Thou art like Adam, when in his innocence and excellence he was in the garden of Eden
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Clarke: Eze 28:13 - -- Every precious stone was thy covering - For a description of these stones see the note on Exo 28:17.
Every precious stone was thy covering - For a description of these stones see the note on Exo 28:17.
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Clarke: Eze 28:14 - -- Thou art the anointed cherub that covereth - The irony is continued; and here he is likened to the Cherub that guarded the gates of Paradise, and ke...
Thou art the anointed cherub that covereth - The irony is continued; and here he is likened to the Cherub that guarded the gates of Paradise, and kept the way of the tree of life; or to one of the cherubs whose wings, spread out, covered the mercy-seat
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Clarke: Eze 28:14 - -- Thou mast upon the holy mountain of God - The irony is still continued; and now he is compared to Hoses, and afterwards to one of the chief angels, ...
Thou mast upon the holy mountain of God - The irony is still continued; and now he is compared to Hoses, and afterwards to one of the chief angels, who has walked up and down among the stones of fire; that is, thy floors have been paved with precious stones, that shone and sparkled like fire
Lucan, describing the splendor of the apartments of Cleopatra, queen of Egypt, speaks in nearly a similar language: -
Nec summis crustata domus, sectisque niteba
Marmoribus, stabatque sibi non segnis achates
Purpureusque lapis, totusque effusus in aul
Calcabatur onyx
Pharsal. lib. x
Rich as some fane by slavish zealots reared
For the proud banquet stood the hall prepared
Thick golden plates the latent beams infold
And the high roof was fretted o’ er with gold
Of solid marble all the walls were made
And onyx e’ en the meaner floor inlaid
While porphyry and agate round the cour
In massy columns rose, a proud support
Of solid ebony each post was wrought
From swarthy Meroe profusely brought
With ivory was the entrance crusted o’ er
And polished tortoise hid each shining door
While on the cloudy spots enchased was see
The trusty emerald’ s never-fading green
Within the royal beds and couches shone
Beamy and bright with many a costly stone
The glowing purple rich
Rowe.
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Defender: Eze 28:2 - -- The "prince of Tyrus" at the time of Ezekiel's prophecy is believed to have been Ethbaal III. In any case, this monarch obviously must have been extre...
The "prince of Tyrus" at the time of Ezekiel's prophecy is believed to have been Ethbaal III. In any case, this monarch obviously must have been extremely proud and arrogant, even claiming to be God.
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Defender: Eze 28:2 - -- It would seem insanity for any man to think he is God, except for the pantheistic context in which such assertions are made. Both ancient pagan religi...
It would seem insanity for any man to think he is God, except for the pantheistic context in which such assertions are made. Both ancient pagan religions and some religions today believe that the cosmos is its own creator and that men, as the highest products of its processes, are in union with the cosmic consciousness, "as gods" (Gen 3:5). It is easy, then, for some great leader to go further and believe that he is the greatest of the gods."
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Defender: Eze 28:3 - -- Daniel's reputation was already widely known to his contemporaries, even as far away from Babylon as Tyre, yet the king of Tyre, being "God," thought ...
Daniel's reputation was already widely known to his contemporaries, even as far away from Babylon as Tyre, yet the king of Tyre, being "God," thought himself wiser than Daniel."
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Defender: Eze 28:12 - -- This new section of the prophecy is directed against "the king of Tyrus" rather than "the prince of Tyrus" (Eze 28:2), and the whole tenor of the prop...
This new section of the prophecy is directed against "the king of Tyrus" rather than "the prince of Tyrus" (Eze 28:2), and the whole tenor of the prophecy indicates that a different personage is in view. In fact, the description of this person could not be applied literally to any human being, no matter how rich or powerful or proud. Yet the one is obviously in some sense an extension of the description of the human "prince.""
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Defender: Eze 28:13 - -- No one was in Eden, the garden of God, except Adam, Eve, and Satan. We are forced to conclude that this "king of Tyrus" is none other than Satan, pers...
No one was in Eden, the garden of God, except Adam, Eve, and Satan. We are forced to conclude that this "king of Tyrus" is none other than Satan, personally possessing and controlling the willing body of the proud "prince of Tyrus." Just as he possessed the body of the "king of Babylon" (see notes on Isa 14:12-15) and the body of Judas (Luk 22:3), he was able to possess and control the Tyrian monarch. His strategy in first personally taking control of an earlier king of Babylon and then the prince of Tyre, rather than leaving them to lower powers in the demonic hierarchy, probably had to do with the great military influence developing in Babylon and the preeminent economic influence of Phoenicia. By controlling the leaders of these two world powers, he could largely control the world, firmly establishing his anti-God materialistic, pantheistic, evolutionistic religious system almost everywhere. In this, he had largely succeeded.
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Defender: Eze 28:13 - -- The description of this Eden, emphasizing precious stones, seems quite different from the tree-filled garden described in Genesis 2; probably the eart...
The description of this Eden, emphasizing precious stones, seems quite different from the tree-filled garden described in Genesis 2; probably the earthly Eden was prepared by God as a terrestrial model of His own Eden in heaven. When He finally was forced to expel Adam and Eve from the garden, He left the cherubims there to guard its entrance.
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Defender: Eze 28:13 - -- The mighty being addressed here was clearly of the angelic order, for he had been "created," not born. This statement could not have been true of an e...
The mighty being addressed here was clearly of the angelic order, for he had been "created," not born. This statement could not have been true of an earthly king of Tyre."
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Defender: Eze 28:14 - -- The "anointed cherub" on God's "holy mountain," covering the heavenly Eden and God's throne, was evidently the highest of the cherubim and, therefore,...
The "anointed cherub" on God's "holy mountain," covering the heavenly Eden and God's throne, was evidently the highest of the cherubim and, therefore, the highest of all God's created angels."
TSK: Eze 28:2 - -- the prince : Josephus states, on the authority of Menander, who translated the Phoenician annals into Greek, and Philostratus, that this prince was It...
the prince : Josephus states, on the authority of Menander, who translated the Phoenician annals into Greek, and Philostratus, that this prince was Ithobal.
Because : Eze 28:5, Eze 28:17, Eze 31:10; Deu 8:14; 2Ch 26:16; Pro 16:18, Pro 18:12; Isa 2:12; Dan 5:22; Dan 5:23; Hab 2:4; 1Ti 3:6; 1Pe 5:5
I am : Eze 28:6, Eze 28:9; Gen 3:5; Act 12:22, Act 12:23; Rev 17:3
I sit : Eze 28:12-14; Isa 14:13, Isa 14:14; Dan 4:30,Dan 4:31; 2Th 2:4
in the midst : Heb. in the heart, Eze 27:3, Eze 27:4, Eze 27:26, Eze 27:27 *marg.
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TSK: Eze 28:3 - -- thou art : Dan 1:20, Dan 2:48, Dan 5:11, Dan 5:12; Zec 9:2, Zec 9:3
no secret : 1Ki 4:29-32, 1Ki 10:3; Job 15:8; Psa 25:14; Dan 2:22, Dan 2:27, Dan 2:...
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TSK: Eze 28:4 - -- Eze 29:3; Deu 8:17, Deu 8:18; Pro 18:11, Pro 23:4, Pro 23:5; Ecc 9:11; Hab 1:16; Zec 9:2-4
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TSK: Eze 28:5 - -- thy great wisdom : Heb. the greatness of thy wisdom, Pro 26:12; Isa 5:21; Rom 12:16
and by : Ezek. 27:12-36; Psa 62:10; Isa 23:3, Isa 23:8; Hos 12:7, ...
thy great wisdom : Heb. the greatness of thy wisdom, Pro 26:12; Isa 5:21; Rom 12:16
and by : Ezek. 27:12-36; Psa 62:10; Isa 23:3, Isa 23:8; Hos 12:7, Hos 12:8; Zec 9:3; Jam 4:13, Jam 4:14
and thine : Eze 28:2, Eze 16:49; Deu 6:11, Deu 6:12, Deu 8:13, Deu 8:14; 2Ch 25:19, 2Ch 32:23-25; Job 31:24, Job 31:25; Psa 52:7, Psa 62:10; Pro 11:28, Pro 30:9; Isa 10:8-14; Dan 4:30,Dan 4:37; Hos 13:6; Luk 12:16-21; 1Ti 6:17
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TSK: Eze 28:7 - -- I will : Eze 26:7-14; Isa 23:8, Isa 23:9; Amo 3:6
the terrible : Eze 30:11, Eze 31:12, Eze 32:12; Deu 28:49, Deu 28:50; Isa 25:3, Isa 25:4; Dan 7:7; H...
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TSK: Eze 28:8 - -- shall bring : Eze 32:18-30; Job 17:16, Job 33:18, Job 33:28; Psa 28:1, Psa 30:9, Psa 55:15, Psa 88:4, Psa 88:5; Pro 1:12; Pro 28:17; Isa 38:17
are sla...
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TSK: Eze 28:9 - -- say : Eze 28:2; Dan 4:31, Dan 4:32, Dan 5:23-30; Act 12:22, Act 12:23
thou shalt : Psa 82:7; Isa 31:3
slayeth : or, woundeth
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TSK: Eze 28:10 - -- the deaths : Eze 31:18, Eze 32:19, Eze 32:21, Eze 32:24-30, Eze 44:7, Eze 44:9; Lev 26:41; 1Sa 17:26, 1Sa 17:36; Jer 6:10; Jer 9:25, Jer 9:26; Joh 8:2...
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TSK: Eze 28:12 - -- take up : Eze 28:2, Eze 19:1, Eze 19:14, Eze 26:17, Eze 27:2, Eze 27:32, Eze 32:2, Eze 32:16; 2Ch 35:25; Isa 14:4; Jer 9:17-20
Thou sealest : Eze 28:2...
take up : Eze 28:2, Eze 19:1, Eze 19:14, Eze 26:17, Eze 27:2, Eze 27:32, Eze 32:2, Eze 32:16; 2Ch 35:25; Isa 14:4; Jer 9:17-20
Thou sealest : Eze 28:2-5, Eze 27:3, Eze 27:4; Rom 15:28; 2Co 1:22
full : Pro 21:30; Isa 10:13; Jer 9:23; Luk 2:40; Act 6:3; 1Co 1:19, 1Co 1:20, 1Co 3:19; Col 1:9, Col 2:3; Jam 3:13-18
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TSK: Eze 28:13 - -- in Eden : Eze 31:8, Eze 31:9, Eze 36:35; Gen 2:8, Gen 3:23, Gen 3:24, Gen 13:10; Isa 51:3; Joe 2:3; Rev 2:7
every : Eze 27:16, Eze 27:22; Gen 2:11, Ge...
in Eden : Eze 31:8, Eze 31:9, Eze 36:35; Gen 2:8, Gen 3:23, Gen 3:24, Gen 13:10; Isa 51:3; Joe 2:3; Rev 2:7
every : Eze 27:16, Eze 27:22; Gen 2:11, Gen 2:12; Exo 28:17-20, Exo 39:10-21; Isa 54:11, Isa 54:12; Rev 17:4; Rev 21:19, Rev 21:20
sardius : or, ruby
beryl : or, chrysolite
emerald : or, chrysoprase. the workmanship. Eze 26:13; Isa 14:11, Isa 23:16, Isa 30:32
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TSK: Eze 28:14 - -- the anointed : Eze 28:16; Exo 25:17-20, Exo 30:26, Exo 40:9
and I : Exo 9:16; Psa 75:5-7; Isa 10:6, Isa 10:15, Isa 37:26, Isa 37:27; Dan 2:37, Dan 2:3...
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Eze 28:1-10; Eze 28:11-19
Barnes: Eze 28:1-10 - -- The prophecy against the prince of Tyre. Throughout the east the majesty and glory of a people were collected in the person of their monarch, who in...
The prophecy against the prince of Tyre. Throughout the east the majesty and glory of a people were collected in the person of their monarch, who in some nations was worshipped as a god. The prince is here the embodiment of the community. Their glory is his glory, their pride his pride. The doom of Tyre could not be complete without denunciation of the prince of Tyre. Idolatrous nations and idolatrous kings were, in the eyes of the prophet, antagonists to the true God. In them was embodied the principle of evil opposing itself to the divine government of the world. Hence, some of the fathers saw upon the throne, not simply a hostile monarch, but "the Prince of this world, spiritual wickedness (or wicked spirits) in high places."Whenever evil in any way domineers over good, there is a "prince of Tyrus,"against whom God utters His voice. The "mystery of iniquity is ever working, and in that working we recognize the power of Satan whom God condemns and will destroy.
Thou hast said, I am a god - Compare Eze 29:3; Dan 4:30; Act 12:22; 2Th 2:4.
I sit in the seat of God - Words denoting the speaker’ s pride; but the situation of the island-city, full of beauty, in the midst of the blue water of the Mediterranean, gives force to the expression. Compare the words describing the lot of Tyre as having been in Eden Eze 28:13.
Thou art a man - Rather, thou art man.
Thou art wiser than Daniel - The passage is one of strong irony. Compare Eze 14:14; Dan 6:3.
But thou shalt be a man - Rather, yet art thou man.
The uncircumcised - The pagan idolaters as opposed to the covenant-people.
The prophecy against the prince of Tyre. Throughout the east the majesty and glory of a people were collected in the person of their monarch, who in some nations was worshipped as a god. The prince is here the embodiment of the community. Their glory is his glory, their pride his pride. The doom of Tyre could not be complete without denunciation of the prince of Tyre. Idolatrous nations and idolatrous kings were, in the eyes of the prophet, antagonists to the true God. In them was embodied the principle of evil opposing itself to the divine government of the world. Hence, some of the fathers saw upon the throne, not simply a hostile monarch, but "the Prince of this world, spiritual wickedness (or wicked spirits) in high places."Whenever evil in any way domineers over good, there is a "prince of Tyrus,"against whom God utters His voice. The "mystery of iniquity is ever working, and in that working we recognize the power of Satan whom God condemns and will destroy.
Thou hast said, I am a god - Compare Eze 29:3; Dan 4:30; Act 12:22; 2Th 2:4.
I sit in the seat of God - Words denoting the speaker’ s pride; but the situation of the island-city, full of beauty, in the midst of the blue water of the Mediterranean, gives force to the expression. Compare the words describing the lot of Tyre as having been in Eden Eze 28:13.
Thou art a man - Rather, thou art man.
Thou art wiser than Daniel - The passage is one of strong irony. Compare Eze 14:14; Dan 6:3.
But thou shalt be a man - Rather, yet art thou man.
The uncircumcised - The pagan idolaters as opposed to the covenant-people.
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Barnes: Eze 28:11-19 - -- The dirge of the prince of Tyre, answering to the dirge of the state. The passage is ironical; its main purpose is to depict all the glory, real or ...
The dirge of the prince of Tyre, answering to the dirge of the state. The passage is ironical; its main purpose is to depict all the glory, real or assumed, of "the prince of Tyrus,"in order to show how deplorable should be his ruin.
To "seal the sum"is to make up the whole measure of perfection. Compare the Septuagint
Thou hast been in Eden - " Thou"wast etc. The prince of Tyrus is ironically described as the first of creation; but at the same time the parallel is to be maintained in his fall from glory. Like Adam in the enjoyment of paradise, he shall be like Adam in his fall.
Every precious stone - All the stones here named are found in the High priest’ s breastplate Exo 28:17-20, but their order is different, and three stones named in Exodus (the third row) are wanting. The prophet may purposely have varied the description because the number twelve (that of the tribes of Israel) had nothing to do with the prince of Tyrus, and he wished to portray, not a high priest, but a king, having in view a figure which was to a Jew, especially to a priest, the very type of magnificence.
Tabrets - (or, drums) and "pipes"were a common expression for festivity and triumph.
Thou art - Better,"Thou"wert. "the anointed cherub that covereth"In the temple the cherubim and all holy things were consecrated and anointed with oil (Exo 30:26 ff). The prince of Tyre was also anointed as a sovereign priest - covering or protecting the minor states, like the cherubim with outstretched wings covering the mercy-Seat.
Thou wast upon the holy mountain - As the cherub was in the temple on the holy mountain, so the prince of Tyre was presiding over the island-city, rising like a mountain from the deep.
Stones of fire - i. e., bright and shining. Decked with bright jewels, the prince walked among jewels in gorgeous splendor.
The "perfection"was false, unsuspected until the "iniquity"which lay beneath was found out.
Poole: Eze 28:2 - -- Unto of.
The princes king, whose name was either Ethbaal, or Ithobaal.
Thine heart is lifted up thou art waxen proud, and aspirest above all reas...
Unto of.
The princes king, whose name was either Ethbaal, or Ithobaal.
Thine heart is lifted up thou art waxen proud, and aspirest above all reason, and boastest extravagantly in thyself, state policy, and power.
Hast said thought, imagined, or flattered thyself.
A god or the mighty and strong one, for so the Hebrew is, and perhaps were better so rendered; he gloried in his strength, as if he were a god. The like you have Isa 14:14 .
In the seat of God: as a magistrate he did bear the name and authority of God; but he thought not of this; he dreams of the stateliness, strength, convenience, safety, and inaccessibleness of his seat, as if he were safe and impregnable as heaven itself.
A man subject to all the casualties, sorrows, and distresses of man’ s state and life, thou art Adam, of earth, not El, nor like unto the Mighty One in heaven.
Thou set thine heart as the heart of God thou hast entertained thoughts which become none but God, thou hast projected things which none but God can effect, thou hast promised thyself perpetual peace, safety, riches, and happiness in thyself, and from thyself.
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Poole: Eze 28:3 - -- Thou art wiser in thy own thoughts of thyself, than Daniel, who was then famous for his wisdom, which was imparted to him from Heaven, Eze 14:20 Dan ...
Thou art wiser in thy own thoughts of thyself, than Daniel, who was then famous for his wisdom, which was imparted to him from Heaven, Eze 14:20 Dan 1:20 2:20,48 .
That they can hide from thee that any sort of men can conceal, that thine adversaries shall contrive against thee to thy danger or hurt: all this ironically said.
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Poole: Eze 28:4 - -- With thy wisdom by thy policy in government, and by thy skill in trading, for he speaks of that kind of prudence to which these names are given.
Got...
With thy wisdom by thy policy in government, and by thy skill in trading, for he speaks of that kind of prudence to which these names are given.
Gotten or
made so the word. Riches; power and might, so the Hebrew, as well as wealth and riches, and so the Gallic version reads
puissance the princes of Tyre had been prudent, and so increased their power and interest.
Into thy treasures into both his own private purse, and into the public treasuries too.
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Poole: Eze 28:5 - -- Thy great wisdom: here the eminent degree of this prince’ s wisdom is owned.
And by thy traffic: and might as well be spared, for as it is not...
Thy great wisdom: here the eminent degree of this prince’ s wisdom is owned.
And by thy traffic: and might as well be spared, for as it is not in the Hebrew, so it rather obscures than clears the text; let it be read, By thy great wisdom in thy traffic, and it is very plain, and so the French reads it increased; made great or enlarged.
Thy riches thy power, as Eze 28:4 .
Is lifted up exalts itself, carrieth it loftily and proudly above thy neighbours, which is not good; above thyself, which is worse; and above God too, which is worst of all, as Eze 28:2 .
Thy riches thy puissance at home and abroad, by nature and art.
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Poole: Eze 28:6 - -- Hast set thine heart: see Eze 28:2 .
As the heart of God who doth, as justly he may, design himself, his own glory, in all he designeth and worketh...
Hast set thine heart: see Eze 28:2 .
As the heart of God who doth, as justly he may, design himself, his own glory, in all he designeth and worketh, and take the glory to himself; thou hast done so too, designed thy own greatness, and gloried in it.
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Poole: Eze 28:7 - -- Will bring cause to come.
Strangers a foreign people, called strangers for their multitude, and to intimate how little regard they would have to th...
Will bring cause to come.
Strangers a foreign people, called strangers for their multitude, and to intimate how little regard they would have to the Tyrian glory; these strangers were the Babylonian forces. The terrible of the nations ; a fierce, violent, and cruel nation, Hab 1:7,8 .
The beauty of thy wisdom those beautiful things, in which thy wisdom appeared; either thy noble, regular, and strong buildings, or thy beautiful well-stored arsenal and army, or the unparalleled rarities, which all but rudest soldiers would esteem, and spare these monuments of thy wisdom. Defile; pour contempt and stain.
Thy brightness thy royal dignity, depose thee from thy throne, and kill thy authority and thy person.
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Poole: Eze 28:8 - -- These strangers shall slay thee, which is a blemish to the honour of a king thus to be brought to the pit.
The pit a usual periphrasis of death an...
These strangers shall slay thee, which is a blemish to the honour of a king thus to be brought to the pit.
The pit a usual periphrasis of death and the grave.
The deaths in the plural, because of the many terrors, dangers, and wounds such meet with, the successive deaths, slain, drowned, eat of fish, cast upon shore, and become meat to sea fowl.
In the midst of the seas if literally understood, thou shalt die as other common mariners, and be cast overboard; if figuratively, seas for great distresses, then amidst multitude of deep distresses thou shalt meet with more than one death, be often dying.
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Poole: Eze 28:9 - -- A cutting taunt, or sarcasm: What will become of thy godship then? Wilt thou then dream of immortality and almighty power, when thine enemy is cutti...
A cutting taunt, or sarcasm: What will become of thy godship then? Wilt thou then dream of immortality and almighty power, when thine enemy is cutting thy throat?
Thou shalt be a man appear thou to thyself and others to be a mortal, weak, conquered man, who dieth a sacrifice to the conqueror’ s pride and cruelty.
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Poole: Eze 28:10 - -- The deaths: Eze 28:8 . A twofold death, temporal and eternal.
Of the uncircumcised of the wicked, or an accursed death: the Jews do express a vile a...
The deaths: Eze 28:8 . A twofold death, temporal and eternal.
Of the uncircumcised of the wicked, or an accursed death: the Jews do express a vile and miserable death thus. Or, the uncircumcised, i.e. heathens, cruel and merciless men, shall slay thee; and this suits with what follows in the verse, and this was ignominious with the Jews, 1Sa 31:4 .
I have spoken it, saith the Lord God O thou proud, self-admiring prince! slight not what is threatened, for God, the God of truth, hath spoken it.
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Poole: Eze 28:12 - -- A lamentation: see Eze 27:2 .
The king called prince, Eze 28:2 .
Thou sealest up the sum in the search into the frame of thy government, the mana...
A lamentation: see Eze 27:2 .
The king called prince, Eze 28:2 .
Thou sealest up the sum in the search into the frame of thy government, the management of it, the prosperity thereof, and its glory, power, riches, and confederacies, thou dost think thyself but just to thy kingdom to account it the perfect idea of a good government, that in the Tyrian state nothing is wanting that might be required in a good government, in the best government, and so sealest to the premises; thus vainly puffed up, thou wilt have it that fulness of wisdom and perfection of beauty are in thee, but neither thy wisdom shall prevent or defeat the attempts of thine enemies, nor thy beauty charm their rage; thou shalt fall by them.
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Poole: Eze 28:13 - -- Thou hast been thou hast dwelt and reigned.
In Eden in the midst of all delights; and though nature made thy lot a very barren rock, thy art and in...
Thou hast been thou hast dwelt and reigned.
In Eden in the midst of all delights; and though nature made thy lot a very barren rock, thy art and industry, added to that of thy progenitors, have made it as pleasant, rich, and beautiful as Eden, that place of all desirable enjoyments.
The garden of God: this is explicative of the former; a garden is a place of delight, and men have made some delightful to a wonder, but none ever like that God planted: this of Tyre came as near as any, and yet ungrateful and atheistical Tyre dreams of Divine power and stability, forgetting human frailty and uncertainty.
Every precious stone every sort of rich stones.
Thy covering bought to adorn thy crown, thy robes, thy bed, &c.
The sardius of a red, and by some said to be the ruby.
Topaz of a yellowish green.
The diamond of clear, waterish, sparkling colour.
The beryl of a sea-green colour, the best.
The onyx resembles the whiteness of the nail of a man’ s hand.
The jasper of divers colours, but the best green.
The sapphire of sky colour, or blue.
The emerald green interspersed with golden spots.
The carbuncle of flame colour.
Gold beside the abundance of which in their public treasures, much was used about the clothes and robes of this proud prince; it is like these precious stones were set in gold, that they might the safer be put upon his garments. This was the accoutrement of solemnities, especially of the coronation, as appears in the close of the verse.
The workmanship of thy tabrets & c: now the prophet notes their joys, music and songs; both to wind or loud music, and to softer music, as the lute and tabret, in the day of their king’ s coronation, and all this music on instruments of most exquisite make, and of their own artists’ work too; in this they exceeded as in the other.
Wast created either born, for the birth of princes hath been celebrated with great joys; or rather in the day of this king’ s coronation, or investiture in the kingdom and royal dignity.
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Poole: Eze 28:14 - -- Thou art the anointed cherub: I would rather keep the order of the words in the Hebrew, which the French also keep, Thou art a cherub, anointed, a pr...
Thou art the anointed cherub: I would rather keep the order of the words in the Hebrew, which the French also keep, Thou art a cherub, anointed, a protector, or one who covereth for defence. For thy wisdom, power, and excellency, like a cherub or angel; for the sacredness of thy person and office, as the anointed of God; for the exercise of thy power and office, as a shield or a protector of the weak; thus thou art, or thinkest thyself to be, and pridest thyself herein.
I have set thee so I, whom thou forgettest, I have made thee so, set thee above others; this should have been matter of thanks and humility, not of pride and atheism. Thus the sarcasm is continued, and he is upbraided for his insolence.
Thou wast upon the holy mountain of God or thus, in the holy mountain a god thou hast been; so it is an irony, and suits the rest; or else, in pursuance of our version, thou wast advanced to kingly dignity, (which David calls a mountain, Psa 30:7 Jer 51:25 Dan 2:35 ) a sacred office, and of Divine institution and consecration, and thou hast in pride exalted thyself above me, as well as above men.
Walked up and down in proud and stately manner, surrounded every way in thy chambers and beds and clothes with stones that sparkle like fire, thy crown, thy throne, thy chariots, thy umbrellas or canopies, glistering and dazzling beholders; as if thus also thou wouldst contend with God, who is clothed with light.
Haydock: Eze 28:2 - -- Prince. The Jews say Hiram, (St. Jerome) supposing that he lived a thousand years; though this is not requisite, as he died only four hundred and th...
Prince. The Jews say Hiram, (St. Jerome) supposing that he lived a thousand years; though this is not requisite, as he died only four hundred and thirty years before. The idea is childish. The king who was taken and slain, at this siege, was probably (Calmet) Ithobalos. (Josephus, Antiquities x. 11.) ---
Origen applies this to the angel guardian of Tyre. St. Augustine thins an allusion is made to the fall of Lucifer. But it may all refer to the king, (Calmet) though others explain part of him and the rest of the devil. (St. Jerome) (Estius)
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Haydock: Eze 28:3 - -- Than Daniel; viz., in thy own conceit. The wisdom of Daniel was so much celebrated in his days, that it became a proverb among the Chaldeans, when a...
Than Daniel; viz., in thy own conceit. The wisdom of Daniel was so much celebrated in his days, that it became a proverb among the Chaldeans, when any one would express an extraordinary wisdom, to say he was as wise as Daniel. (Challoner) (Worthington) ---
He was now at court, and had explained the dream of Nabuchodonosor, Daniel ii. 27.
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Haydock: Eze 28:10 - -- Uncircumcised. The Jews deemed this a disgrace, 1 Kings xxxi. 4. The king would be exposed to eternal death, being devoid of faith, &c. (Calmet)
Uncircumcised. The Jews deemed this a disgrace, 1 Kings xxxi. 4. The king would be exposed to eternal death, being devoid of faith, &c. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Eze 28:12 - -- Resemblance. The king of Tyre, by his dignity and his natural perfections, bore in himself a certain resemblance to God, by reason of which he might...
Resemblance. The king of Tyre, by his dignity and his natural perfections, bore in himself a certain resemblance to God, by reason of which he might be called the seal of resemblance, &c. But what is here said to him is commonly understood of Lucifer, the king over all the children of pride. (Challoner) ---
A seal is perfect when it represents things exactly. The prophet speaks ironically, to repress the king's vanity.
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Haydock: Eze 28:13 - -- Paradise. Thou hadst every thing delightful at Tyre. (Calmet) ---
Covering. Hebrew, "bandage;" diadem, (Haydock) or belt. Septuagint specify tw...
Paradise. Thou hadst every thing delightful at Tyre. (Calmet) ---
Covering. Hebrew, "bandage;" diadem, (Haydock) or belt. Septuagint specify twelve stones. See Exodus xxviii. 17. ---
Pipes; music used at the coronation, which was celebrated as a birth-day. (Calmet) ---
God give and withdraws power from all kings. As long as they act well, they are a sort of sanctuary. (Haydock)
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Haydock: Eze 28:14 - -- Stretched out. That is, thy wings extended. This alludes to the figure of the cherubims in the sanctuary, which with stretched out wings covered ...
Stretched out. That is, thy wings extended. This alludes to the figure of the cherubims in the sanctuary, which with stretched out wings covered the ark, (Challoner) on the holy mountain. (St. Jerome, &c.) ---
Fire. That is, bright and precious stones, which sparkle like fire. (Challoner) ---
With these the king's robes glittered, or he walked upon them, Esther i. 6. (Calmet) ---
Calcacabatur onyx. (Lucan x.)
Gill: Eze 28:1 - -- The word of the Lord came again unto me,.... With another prophecy; as before against the city of Tyre, now against the king of Tyre:
saying; as fo...
The word of the Lord came again unto me,.... With another prophecy; as before against the city of Tyre, now against the king of Tyre:
saying; as follows:
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Gill: Eze 28:2 - -- Son of man, say unto the prince of Tyre,.... Whose name was Ethbaal, or Ithobalus, as he is called in Josephus; for that this was Hiram that was in th...
Son of man, say unto the prince of Tyre,.... Whose name was Ethbaal, or Ithobalus, as he is called in Josephus; for that this was Hiram that was in the days of Solomon, and lived a thousand years, is a fable of the Jewish Rabbins, as Jerom relates: this prince of Tyre is thought by some to be an emblem of the devil; but rather of antichrist; and between them there is a great agreement, and it seems to have a prophetic respect to him:
thus saith the Lord God, because thine heart is lifted up: with pride, on account of his wisdom and knowledge, wealth and riches, as later mentioned:
and thou hast said, I am a god; this he said in his heart, in the pride of it, and perhaps expressed it with his lips, and required divine homage to be given him by his subjects, as some insolent, proud, and haughty monarchs have done; in which he was a lively type of antichrist, who shows himself, and behaves, as if he was God, taking upon him what belongs to God; pardoning the sins of men; opening and shutting the gates of heaven; binding men's consciences with laws of his own making, and dispensing with the laws of God and man; and calling himself or suffering himself to be called God, and to be worshipped as such; See Gill on 2Th 2:4,
I sit in the seat of God; in a place as delightful, safe and happy, as heaven itself, where the throne of God is; so antichrist is said to sit in the temple of God, in the house and church of God; where he assumes a power that does not belong to him, calling himself God's vicegerent, and Christ's vicar; see 2Th 2:4, and the Arabic version here renders it "in the house of God": it follows,
in the midst of the seas; surrounded with them as Tyre was, and lord of them as its king was; sending his ships into all parts, and to whom all brought their wares; thus the whore of Rome is said to sit upon many waters, Rev 17:2,
yet thou art a man, and not God; a frail, weak, mortal man, and not the mighty God, as his later destruction shows; and as the popes of Rome appear to be, by their dying as other men; and as antichrist will plainly be seen to be when he shall be destroyed with the breath of Christ's mouth, and the brightness of his coming:
though thou set thine heart as the heart of God; as if it was as full of wisdom and knowledge as his; and thinkest as well of thyself, that thou art a sovereign as he, and to be feared, obeyed, and submitted to by all.
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Gill: Eze 28:3 - -- Behold; thou art wiser than Daniel,.... That is, in his own opinion; or it is ironically said. The Septuagint, Syriac, and Arabic versions, render it ...
Behold; thou art wiser than Daniel,.... That is, in his own opinion; or it is ironically said. The Septuagint, Syriac, and Arabic versions, render it by way of interrogation, "art thou not wiser than Daniel?" who was now at the court of Babylon, and was famous throughout all Chaldea for his knowledge in politics, his wisdom and prudence in government, as well as his skill in interpreting dreams. The Jews have a saying, that
"if all the wise men of the nations were in one scale, and Daniel in the other, he would weigh them all down.''
And perhaps the fame of him had reached the king of Tyre, and yet he thought himself wiser than he; see Zec 9:2, antichrist thinks himself wiser than Daniel, or any of the prophets and apostles; he is wise above that which is written, and takes upon him the sole interpretation of the Scriptures, and to fix the sense of them:
there is no secret that they can hide from thee; as he fancied; he had sagacity to penetrate into the councils of neighbouring princes, and discover all plots and intrigues against him; he understood all the "arcana" and secrets of government, and could counterwork the designs of his enemies. Antichrist pretends to know all mysteries, and solve all difficulties, and pass an infallible judgment on things; as if he was of the privy council of heaven, and nothing was transacted there but he was acquainted with it, and had full knowledge of the mind of God in all things.
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Gill: Eze 28:4 - -- With thy wisdom and with thy understanding thou hast gotten thee riches,.... Through skill in navigation and trade, for which the Tyrians and their pr...
With thy wisdom and with thy understanding thou hast gotten thee riches,.... Through skill in navigation and trade, for which the Tyrians and their princes were famous, they acquired great wealth: so antichrist, by carnal policy, and hellish subtlety, has amassed vast treasures together; the sale of pardons and indulgences has brought immense riches into the pope's coffers:
and hast gotten gold and silver into thy treasures; in great quantities; see Rev 18:3.
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Gill: Eze 28:5 - -- By thy great wisdom and by thy traffic,.... Or, "by thy great wisdom in thy traffic" i; through great skill in trade and commerce:
hast thou increa...
By thy great wisdom and by thy traffic,.... Or, "by thy great wisdom in thy traffic" i; through great skill in trade and commerce:
hast thou increased thy riches; to a very great degree, a prodigious bulk; so antichrist has done, especially through trafficking with the souls of men, which is one part of his merchandise, as it was of Tyre, Rev 18:13,
and thine heart is lifted up because of thy riches; which are apt to puff up and make men highminded, and swell them with a vain opinion of themselves, and to make haughty, insolent, and scornful, in their behaviour to others; thus elated with worldly grandeur and riches, the whore of Rome is represented as proud, vain, and haughty, Rev 18:7.
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Gill: Eze 28:6 - -- Therefore thus saith the Lord God,.... Now follows the punishment threatened, because of all this pride, haughtiness, and blasphemy:
because thou h...
Therefore thus saith the Lord God,.... Now follows the punishment threatened, because of all this pride, haughtiness, and blasphemy:
because thou hast set thine heart as the heart of God; seeking thine own glory; setting up thyself above all others; assuming that to thyself which belongs to God; and making thyself equal to him, or showing thyself as if thou wast God; See Gill on Eze 28:2.
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Gill: Eze 28:7 - -- Behold, therefore, I will bring strangers upon thee,.... The Chaldean army, who not only lived at a distance from Tyre, but were unknown to them, not ...
Behold, therefore, I will bring strangers upon thee,.... The Chaldean army, who not only lived at a distance from Tyre, but were unknown to them, not trading with them; nor are they mentioned among the merchants of Tyre: these, in the mystical sense, may design the angels that shall pour out the vials on the antichristian states, the kings of Protestant nations:
the terrible of the nations; as the Babylonians were, very formidable to the world, having conquered many countries, and their armies consisting of men of all nations, mighty, courageous, and expert in war; and alike formidable will the Protestant princes be to the antichristian powers, when they shall with their united strength attack them:
and they shall draw their swords against the beauty of thy wisdom; their beautiful city and spacious buildings, the palaces of their king and nobles, their walls and towers erected with so much art and skill; or their forces, the men of war within their city, which made their beauty complete, so well skilled in military affairs, Eze 27:10, or their ships, and the merchandise of them, and the curious things brought in them: even everything that was rich and valuable, the effect of their art and wisdom: all which may be applied to the city of Rome, when it will be taken, ransacked, and burnt, Rev 18:8,
and they shall defile thy brightness; profane thy crown, cast down thy throne, destroy thy kingdom, and all that is great and glorious in thee; thus the whore of Rome shall be made bare and desolate, Rev 17:16. The Targum renders it,
"the brightness of thy terror;''
which shall no more strike the nations, or affect them.
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Gill: Eze 28:8 - -- They shall bring thee down to the pit,.... Or, "to corruption" k; to the grave, the pit of corruption and destruction; so antichrist shall go into per...
They shall bring thee down to the pit,.... Or, "to corruption" k; to the grave, the pit of corruption and destruction; so antichrist shall go into perdition, into the bottomless pit from whence he came, Rev 17:8,
and thou shalt die the deaths of them that are slain in the midst of the seas; that die in a sea fight, whose carcasses are thrown overboard, and devoured by fishes.
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Gill: Eze 28:9 - -- Wilt thou yet say before him that slayeth thee, I am God?.... When thou art in the enemies' hands, and just going to be put to death, wilt thou then c...
Wilt thou yet say before him that slayeth thee, I am God?.... When thou art in the enemies' hands, and just going to be put to death, wilt thou then confidently assert thy deity, and to his face tell him that thou art God? surely thy courage and thy confidence, thy blasphemy and impiety, will leave thee then; a bitter sarcasm this! and so the pope of Rome, the antichristian beast, when taken, and just going to be cast into the lake of fire along with the false prophet, will not have the impudence to style himself God, or to call himself Christ's vicar on earth:
but thou shalt be a man, and no god, in the hand of him that slayeth thee; that is, thou shalt appear to be a poor, weak, frail, mortal, trembling, dying man, when got into the hand of the enemy, and he is just going to put an end to thy life; where will be then thy boasted deity?
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Gill: Eze 28:10 - -- Thou shalt die the deaths of the uncircumcised,.... Or the death of the wicked, as the Targum; the first and second death, temporal and eternal: the f...
Thou shalt die the deaths of the uncircumcised,.... Or the death of the wicked, as the Targum; the first and second death, temporal and eternal: the former
by the hand of strangers, the Chaldeans, in various shapes; and the latter will follow upon it: it may denote the various kinds of death which the inhabitants of Rome will die when destroyed, some by famine, some by pestilence, and others by fire; when these plagues shall come upon her in one day, Rev 18:8.
for I have spoken it, saith the Lord God; and therefore it shall surely come to pass; strong is the Lord that will judge, condemn, and destroy mystical Babylon, or Tyre.
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Gill: Eze 28:11 - -- Moreover the word of the Lord came unto me,.... After the prophecy concerning the ruin of the prince of Tyre, the word of the Lord came to the prophet...
Moreover the word of the Lord came unto me,.... After the prophecy concerning the ruin of the prince of Tyre, the word of the Lord came to the prophet, ordering him to take up a lamentation on the king of Tyre:
saying; as follows:
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Gill: Eze 28:12 - -- Take up a lamentation upon the king of Tyrus,.... Who is before called the prince of Tyre; and who he was See Gill on Eze 28:2, the bishop of Rome was...
Take up a lamentation upon the king of Tyrus,.... Who is before called the prince of Tyre; and who he was See Gill on Eze 28:2, the bishop of Rome was first only a "nagid", a prince, ruler, governor, and leader in the church; afterwards he became a king, a head, even over other kings, princes, and states; perhaps this may also point to his twofold power, secular and ecclesiastical, and so he is represented by two beasts, Rev 13:1, here a lamentation or funeral ditty is ordered to be taken up and said for him, to denote his certain destruction and ruin; though some have thought the fall of the angels, and others the fall of Adam, is referred to; several passages are interpreted of Adam in the Talmud l:
and say unto him, thus saith the Lord God, thou sealest up the sum; or "pattern" m; of everything that is excellent; thou art in all things, consummately so, as that nothing could be added; that is, in his own esteem and account. Junius thinks it refers to the sealing of goods exported, for which a duty was to be paid, without doing which merchandise was not allowed. Antichrist would not suffer any to buy or sell but such as receive his mark or seal on their right hand, or in their forehead, Rev 13:16. Cocceius renders it, "the sealer of the measure" n; and takes it to be an allusion to the custom of sealing measures, used in buying and selling; and that it respects the man of sin, who takes upon him the power of making rules and canons for faith and practice:
full of wisdom, and perfect in beauty; a most accomplished man for parts and person in his own conceit: antichrist assumes to himself a perfect knowledge of the Scriptures, and sets up himself as an infallible judge of controversies; and glories in the splendour and order of his church, and the government of it.
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Gill: Eze 28:13 - -- Thou hast been in Eden the garden of God,.... Not only in Eden, but in the garden which was in Eden, and was of the Lord's immediate planting; and the...
Thou hast been in Eden the garden of God,.... Not only in Eden, but in the garden which was in Eden, and was of the Lord's immediate planting; and therefore called the garden of God, as well as because of its excellency, fragrancy, and delight; not that the king of Tyre was literally there, or ever dwelt in it; but his situation in Tyre was as safe, and as pleasant and delightful, as Adam's was in the garden of Eden, at least in his own imagination. So the Targum,
"thou delightest thyself with plenty of all good things and delectable ones, as if thou dwellest in the garden of God;''
in the mystical sense, this designs the church of God, which is an Eden, a garden, a paradise; see Son 4:12 and where antichrist first appeared, and took his seat, and seated himself as if he was God, 2Th 2:4,
every precious stone was thy covering; not only the covering of his head, his crown, was decked with jewels and precious stones of all sorts; but his clothes, the covering of his body, were adorned with them. So the Targum,
"all precious stones were set in order upon thy garments.''
Kimchi renders it "thine hedge", or "fence" o; and takes it to be an hyperbole, as if his house, or garden, or vineyard, were fenced with precious stones. This fitly describes the whore of Rome arrayed in purple and scarlet colour, and decked with gold and precious stones, Rev 17:4. The pope's triple crown is stuck with them, and a cross of precious stones is upon his slipper, when he holds out his toe to be kissed:
the sardius, topaz, and the diamond, the beryl, the onyx, and the jasper, the sapphire, the emerald, and the carbuncle, and gold. Writers differ very much about these stones; and it is difficult to say what answer to the Hebrew words here used. The stone "sardius", or the sardine stone, is of a blood colour, commonly called a cornelian, and is found in Sardis and Sardinia, from whence some say it has its name. The "topaz" is a hard transparent stone, said to be of a beautiful yellow or gold colour by those who confound it with the chrysolite; otherwise the true topaz is of a fine green colour, as Pliny p and Isidore q; the best is what is found in Ethopia, Job 28:19. The "diamond" is a precious stone, the first in rank, value, hardness and lustre; the most perfect colour is the white. The "beryl" is a stone of a pale green colour, thought to be the diamond of the ancients: the word is "tarshish", and thought by some the "chrysolite". The "onyx" resembles a man's nail, from whence it has its name: the word "shoham" here used is supposed to mean the "sardonyx", a compound of the "sardian" and "onyx" stones. The "jasper" is a stone of various colours and spots, variegated like a panther; hence the Targum here renders it "pantherin"; the most valuable is the green spotted with red or purple. The "sapphire" is a stone of an azure colour or sky blue, exceeding hard and transparent. The "emerald" is of an exceeding fine green colour, very bright, and clear, and delightful to the eye; but is rather intended by the next word, as the "carbuncle" by this, which is a stone of the ruby kind, and very rare; see Isa 54:12. "Gold" is mentioned along with them, and last of all, as being less valuable; but chiefly because these stones were set in gold, as the Targum paraphrases it; these are nine of the stones which were in the breastplate of the Jewish high priest r, whom the king of Tyre might have knowledge of and imitate, as it is certain the pope of Rome does in some things:
the workmanship of thy tabrets and of thy pipes was prepared in thee in the day that thou wast created; either born into the world; or made a crowned king; against which time, drums, and pipes, and such like instruments of music, were prepared in Tyre, and at them made use of by way of rejoicing: and as this was literally true of the king of Tyre at his coronation, so of the bishop of Rome at his creation and inauguration, which is attended with bells ringing, drums beating, trumpets sounding; and so in mystical Babylon is heard, though the time is coming when it will not be heard, the voice of harpers, musicians, pipers, and trumpeters, Rev 18:22.
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Gill: Eze 28:14 - -- Thou art the anointed cherub that covereth,.... In allusion to the cherubim over the mercy seat, which covered it with their wings; and which, as the ...
Thou art the anointed cherub that covereth,.... In allusion to the cherubim over the mercy seat, which covered it with their wings; and which, as the ark of the testimony and all the vessels of the tabernacle were anointed, were so likewise; in all probability the king of Tyre is called a "cherub" because of his wisdom and power; "anointed", because of his royal dignity; and "that covereth", because of his office, which was to protect his people; all which he either was, or ought to be, or was in his own opinion so: antichrist makes great boasts of his wisdom, power, and authority, as a teacher, pastor, or bishop, the cherubim being symbolical of the ministers of the word; and of his being anointed by men, that he may be the cover and shield of the church; and of his being the Lord's anointed, and the vicar of Christ, and head and protector of the church, as he calls himself s. The Targum understands all this of regal power, and renders it,
"thou art a king anointed for a kingdom:''
and I have set thee so; from whom all kings have their sceptres, crowns, and kingdoms; and by whom they reign; and who can put them down as well as set them up at his pleasure. It may be rendered, "I have given thee" t; or suffered thee to be so, as the word "give" is often used; it is by divine permission that antichrist has taken such power to himself, and in judgment to them over whom he rules, who are given up to believe a lie; yea, God "put", or, as it is in the original text, "gave" it into the hearts of the kings to agree and give their kingdom to the beast, Rev 17:17,
thou wast upon the holy mountain of God; not on Sinai, nor on Zion; on neither of which was the king of Tyre; nor was this literally true of him; for to say, as Kimchi does to illustrate it, that Hiram king of Tyre assisted Solomon with materials to build the temple, is very foreign; but this is true of the antitype of the king of Tyre, antichrist; who has set his foot on God's holy mountain the church; here he first appeared and stood, as before observed on the preceding verse:
thou hast walked up and down in the midst of the stones of fire; which some understand of the precious stones with which the king of Tyre was adorned, which glittered like fire; though rather they design the people of God, those living lively stones of which the spiritual house is built; who, for their clear light, and burning zeal and love, may be said to be as stones of fire; and among these the bishop of Rome, or the antichristian king of Tyre, first walked: so Kimchi interprets them of the Israelites, who were a holy people; and Jarchi of the kings of Israel, who were as the ministering angels; the seraphim perhaps he means, so called from their burning and flaming love. The Targum is,
"and over the holy people thou hast thought to rule.''
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
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NET Notes: Eze 28:10 The Phoenicians practiced circumcision, so the language here must be figurative, indicating that they would be treated in a disgraceful manner. Uncirc...
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NET Notes: Eze 28:12 For a discussion of possible nuances of this phrase, see M. Greenberg, Ezekiel (AB), 2:580-81.
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NET Notes: Eze 28:13 The exact identification of each gemstone is uncertain. The list should be compared to that of the priest in Exod 28:17-20, which lists twelve stones ...
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NET Notes: Eze 28:14 Heb “you (were) an anointed cherub that covers and I placed you.” In the Hebrew text the ruler of Tyre is equated with a cherub, and the v...
Geneva Bible: Eze 28:2 Son of man, say to the prince of Tyre, Thus saith the Lord GOD; Because thy heart [is] lifted up, and thou hast said, ( a ) I [am] a god, I sit [in] t...
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Geneva Bible: Eze 28:3 Behold, thou [art] wiser than ( b ) Daniel; there is no secret that they can hide from thee:
( b ) Thus he speaks by derision: for Daniel had declare...
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Geneva Bible: Eze 28:10 Thou shalt die the deaths of the ( c ) uncircumcised by the hand of strangers: for I have spoken [it], saith the Lord GOD.
( c ) Like the rest of the...
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Geneva Bible: Eze 28:12 Son of man, take up a lamentation upon the king of Tyre, and say to him, Thus saith the Lord GOD; Thou sealest up the sum, full of ( d ) wisdom, and p...
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Geneva Bible: Eze 28:14 Thou [art] ( e ) the anointed cherub that covereth; and I have set thee ( f ) [so]: thou wast upon the holy mountain of God; thou hast walked up and d...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Eze 28:1-26
TSK Synopsis: Eze 28:1-26 - --1 God's judgment upon the prince of Tyrus for his sacrilegious pride.11 A lamentation of his great glory corrupted by sin.20 The judgment of Zidon.24 ...
MHCC -> Eze 28:1-19
MHCC: Eze 28:1-19 - --Ethbaal, or Ithobal, was the prince or king of Tyre; and being lifted up with excessive pride, he claimed Divine honours. Pride is peculiarly the sin ...
Matthew Henry -> Eze 28:1-10; Eze 28:11-19
Matthew Henry: Eze 28:1-10 - -- We had done with Tyrus in the foregoing chapter, but now the prince of Tyrus is to be singled out from the rest. Here is something to be said to him...
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Matthew Henry: Eze 28:11-19 - -- As after the prediction of the ruin of Tyre (ch. 26) followed a pathetic lamentation for it (ch. 27), so after the ruin of the king of Tyre is foret...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Eze 28:1-10; Eze 28:11-19
Keil-Delitzsch: Eze 28:1-10 - --
Fall of the Prince of Tyre
Eze 28:1. And the word of Jehovah came to me, saying, Eze 28:2. Son of man, say to the prince of Tyre, Thus saith the ...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Eze 28:11-19 - --
Lamentation over the King of Tyre
Eze 28:11. And the word of Jehovah came to me, saying, Eze 28:12. Son of man, raise a lamentation over the ki...
Constable: Eze 25:1--32:32 - --III. Oracles against foreign nations chs. 25--32
It is appropriate that this section appears at this point in Ez...
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Constable: Eze 26:1--28:20 - --B. Judgment on Tyre 26:1-28:19
The length of this oracle reflects the great significance of Tyre at this...
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Constable: Eze 28:1-10 - --3. A judgment speech against the ruler of Tyre 28:1-10
28:1-2 Ezekiel was to speak an oracle to the contemporary leader (Heb. nagid, prince, ruler, ki...
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