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Text -- Ezekiel 29:1-7 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Of Jeconiah's captivity.
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Wesley: Eze 29:3 - -- The crocodile; our prophet, as well as Isaiah, compares the Egyptian king to that devouring serpent, or dragon.
The crocodile; our prophet, as well as Isaiah, compares the Egyptian king to that devouring serpent, or dragon.
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Not only at rest, but waiting for prey.
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My kingdom, power, riches, and forces, all the strength and glory of Egypt.
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When thus brought out, I will leave thee.
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There was this king and his army ruined.
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Wesley: Eze 29:5 - -- These were not buried, but left in the wilderness, a prey to wild beasts, and birds.
These were not buried, but left in the wilderness, a prey to wild beasts, and birds.
JFB: Eze 29:2 - -- A common name of all the kings of Egypt, meaning "the sun"; or, as others say, a "crocodile," which was worshipped in parts of Egypt (compare Eze 29:3...
A common name of all the kings of Egypt, meaning "the sun"; or, as others say, a "crocodile," which was worshipped in parts of Egypt (compare Eze 29:3). Hophra or Apries was on the throne at this time. His reign began prosperously. He took Gaza (Jer 47:1) and Zidon and made himself master of Phœnicia and Palestine, recovering much that was lost to Egypt by the victory of Nebuchadnezzar at Carchemish (2Ki 24:7; Jer 46:2), in the fourth year of Jehoiakim [WILKINSON, Ancient Egypt, 1.169]. So proudly secure because of his successes for twenty-five years did he feel, that he said not even a god could deprive him of his kingdom [HERODOTUS, 2.169]. Hence the appropriateness of the description of him in Eze 29:3. No mere human sagacity could have enabled Ezekiel to foresee Egypt's downfall in the height of its prosperity. There are four divisions of these prophecies; the first in the tenth year of Ezekiel's captivity; the last in the twelfth. Between the first and second comes one of much later date, not having been given till the twenty-seventh year (Eze 29:17; Eze 30:19), but placed there as appropriate to the subject matter. Pharaoh-hophra, or Apries, was dethroned and strangled, and Amasis substituted as king, by Nebuchadnezzar (compare Jer 44:30). The Egyptian priests, from national vanity, made no mention to HERODOTUS of the Egyptian loss of territory in Syria through Nebuchadnezzar, of which JOSEPHUS tells us, but attributed the change in the succession from Apries to Amasis solely to the Egyptian soldiery. The civil war between the two rivals no doubt lasted several years, affording an opportunity to Nebuchadnezzar of interfering and of elevating the usurper Amasis, on condition of his becoming tributary to Babylon [WILKINSON]. Compare Jer 43:10-12, and see on Jer 43:13, for another view of the grounds of interference of Nebuchadnezzar.
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JFB: Eze 29:3 - -- Hebrew, tanim, any large aquatic animal, here the crocodile, which on Roman coins is the emblem of Egypt.
Hebrew, tanim, any large aquatic animal, here the crocodile, which on Roman coins is the emblem of Egypt.
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The mouths, branches, and canals of the Nile, to which Egypt owed its fertility.
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JFB: Eze 29:4 - -- (Isa 37:29; compare Job 41:1-2). Amasis was the "hook." In the Assyrian sculptures prisoners are represented with a hook in the underlip, and a cord ...
(Isa 37:29; compare Job 41:1-2). Amasis was the "hook." In the Assyrian sculptures prisoners are represented with a hook in the underlip, and a cord from it held by the king.
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JFB: Eze 29:4 - -- Pharaoh, presuming on his power as if he were God (Eze 29:3, "I have made it"), wished to stand in the stead of God as defender of the covenant-people...
Pharaoh, presuming on his power as if he were God (Eze 29:3, "I have made it"), wished to stand in the stead of God as defender of the covenant-people, his motive being, not love to them, but rivalry with Babylon. He raised the siege of Jerusalem, but it was only for a time (compare Eze 29:6; Jer 37:5, Jer 37:7-10); ruin overtook not only them, but himself. As the fish that clung to the horny scales of the crocodile, the lord of the Nile, when he was caught, shared his fate, so the adherents of Pharaoh, lord of Egypt, when he was overthrown by Amasis, should share his fate.
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JFB: Eze 29:5 - -- Captivity beyond thy kingdom. The expression is used perhaps to imply retribution in kind. As Egypt pursued after Israel, saying, "The wilderness hath...
Captivity beyond thy kingdom. The expression is used perhaps to imply retribution in kind. As Egypt pursued after Israel, saying, "The wilderness hath shut them in" (Exo 14:3), so she herself shall be brought into a wilderness state.
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JFB: Eze 29:5 - -- As the crocodile is not, when caught, restored to the river, so no remnant of thy routed army shall be brought together, and rallied, after its defeat...
As the crocodile is not, when caught, restored to the river, so no remnant of thy routed army shall be brought together, and rallied, after its defeat in the wilderness. Pharaoh led an army against Cyrene in Africa, in support of Aricranes, who had been stripped of his kingdom by the Cyrenians. The army perished and Egypt rebelled against him [JUNIUS]. But the reference is mainly to the defeat by Nebuchadnezzar.
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JFB: Eze 29:6 - -- Alluding to the reeds on the banks of the Nile, which broke if one leaned upon them (see on Eze 29:4; Isa 36:6). All Israel's dependence on Egypt prov...
Alluding to the reeds on the banks of the Nile, which broke if one leaned upon them (see on Eze 29:4; Isa 36:6). All Israel's dependence on Egypt proved hurtful instead of beneficial (Isa 30:1-5).
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JFB: Eze 29:7 - -- By the splinters on which the shoulder or arm would fall, on the support failing the hand.
By the splinters on which the shoulder or arm would fall, on the support failing the hand.
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JFB: Eze 29:7 - -- That is, made them to be disabled. MAURER somewhat similarly (referring to a kindred Arabic form), "Thou hast stricken both their loins." FAIRBAIRN, n...
That is, made them to be disabled. MAURER somewhat similarly (referring to a kindred Arabic form), "Thou hast stricken both their loins." FAIRBAIRN, not so well, "Thou lettest all their loins stand," that is, by themselves, bereft of the support which they looked for from thee.
In the tenth year - Of Zedekiah; and tenth of the captivity of Jeconiah
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Clarke: Eze 29:1 - -- The ten month, in the twelfth day of the month - Answering to Monday, the first of February, A.M. 3415.
The ten month, in the twelfth day of the month - Answering to Monday, the first of February, A.M. 3415.
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Clarke: Eze 29:2 - -- Set thy face against Pharaoh king of Egypt - This was Pharaoh-hophra or Pharaoh-apries, whom we have so frequently met with in the prophecies of Jer...
Set thy face against Pharaoh king of Egypt - This was Pharaoh-hophra or Pharaoh-apries, whom we have so frequently met with in the prophecies of Jeremiah, and much of whose history has been given in the notes.
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Clarke: Eze 29:3 - -- The great dragon - התנים hattannim should here be translated crocodile, as that is a real animal, and numerous in the Nile; whereas the drag...
The great dragon -
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Clarke: Eze 29:3 - -- The midst of his rivers - This refers to the several branches of the Nile, by which this river empties itself into the Mediterranean. The ancients t...
The midst of his rivers - This refers to the several branches of the Nile, by which this river empties itself into the Mediterranean. The ancients termed them septem ostia Nili, "the seven mouths of the Nile."The crocodile was the emblem of Egypt.
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Clarke: Eze 29:4 - -- I will put hooks in thy jaws - Amasis, one of this king’ s generals, being proclaimed king by an insurrection of the people, dethroned Apries, ...
I will put hooks in thy jaws - Amasis, one of this king’ s generals, being proclaimed king by an insurrection of the people, dethroned Apries, and seized upon the kingdom; and Apries was obliged to flee to Upper Egypt for safety
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Clarke: Eze 29:4 - -- I will cause the fish - to stick unto thy scales - Most fish are sorely troubled with a species of insect which bury their heads in their flesh, und...
I will cause the fish - to stick unto thy scales - Most fish are sorely troubled with a species of insect which bury their heads in their flesh, under their scales, and suck out the vital juices. The allusion seems to be to this. Pharaoh was the crocodile; the fish, the common people; and the sticking to his scales, the insurrection by which he was wasted and despoiled of his kingdom.
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Clarke: Eze 29:5 - -- I will leave thee thrown into the wilderness - Referring to his being obliged to take refuge in Upper Egypt. But he was afterwards taken prisoner, a...
I will leave thee thrown into the wilderness - Referring to his being obliged to take refuge in Upper Egypt. But he was afterwards taken prisoner, and strangled by Amasis. Herod. lib. 2 s. 169.
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Clarke: Eze 29:6 - -- They have been a staff of reed - An inefficient and faithless ally. The Israelites expected assistance from them when Nebuchadnezzar came against Je...
They have been a staff of reed - An inefficient and faithless ally. The Israelites expected assistance from them when Nebuchadnezzar came against Jerusalem; and they made a feint to help them, but retired when Nebuchadnezzar went against them. Thus were the Jews deceived and ultimately ruined, see Eze 29:7.
Defender -> Eze 29:2
Defender: Eze 29:2 - -- The last of Israel's neighbors to be the object of God's prophecies through Ezekiel was her ancient enemy, Egypt, once the world's greatest nation, bu...
The last of Israel's neighbors to be the object of God's prophecies through Ezekiel was her ancient enemy, Egypt, once the world's greatest nation, but now in rapid decline. She is called a "great dragon that lieth in the midst of his rivers" (Eze 29:3), comparing her to a monstrous dinosaur proud of her river kingdom, but soon to be devastated."
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TSK: Eze 29:2 - -- set : Eze 6:2, Eze 20:46, Eze 21:2, Eze 25:2, Eze 28:21, Eze 28:22
Pharaoh : This was Pharaoh-hophra, or Apries, who, Herodotus informs us, agreeably ...
set : Eze 6:2, Eze 20:46, Eze 21:2, Eze 25:2, Eze 28:21, Eze 28:22
Pharaoh : This was Pharaoh-hophra, or Apries, who, Herodotus informs us, agreeably to the character given him by the prophet, ""proudly and wickedly boasted of having established his kingdom so securely, that it was not in the power of any God to dispossess him of it.""Jer 44:30
against all : Ezek. 30:1-32:32; Isa. 18:1-19:17, Isa 20:1-6; Jer 9:25, Jer 9:26, Jer 25:18, Jer 25:19; Jer 43:8-13, Jer 46:2-16; Joe 3:19; Zec 14:18, Zec 14:19
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TSK: Eze 29:3 - -- I am : Eze 29:10, Eze 28:22; Psa 76:7; Jer 44:30; Nah 1:6
the great : Eze 32:2; Psa 74:13, Psa 74:14; Isa 27:1, Isa 51:9; Rev 12:3, Rev 12:4, Rev 12:1...
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TSK: Eze 29:4 - -- I will put : Eze 38:4; 2Ki 19:28; Job 41:1, Job 41:2; Isa 37:29; Amo 4:2
the fish : Hab 1:14, Hab 1:15
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TSK: Eze 29:5 - -- I will leave : Eze 31:18, Eze 32:4-6, Eze 39:4-6, Eze 39:11-20; Psa 110:5, Psa 110:6; Jer 8:2, Jer 16:4, Jer 25:33
open fields : Heb. face of the fiel...
I will leave : Eze 31:18, Eze 32:4-6, Eze 39:4-6, Eze 39:11-20; Psa 110:5, Psa 110:6; Jer 8:2, Jer 16:4, Jer 25:33
open fields : Heb. face of the field
I have : 1Sa 17:44; Psa 74:14; Jer 7:33, Jer 34:20; Rev 19:17, Rev 19:18
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TSK: Eze 29:6 - -- know : Eze 28:22-24, Eze 28:26; Exo 9:14, Exo 14:18
a staff : 2Ki 18:21; Isa 20:5, Isa 20:6, Isa 30:2-7, Isa 31:1-3, Isa 36:6; Jer 2:36; Lam 4:17
know : Eze 28:22-24, Eze 28:26; Exo 9:14, Exo 14:18
a staff : 2Ki 18:21; Isa 20:5, Isa 20:6, Isa 30:2-7, Isa 31:1-3, Isa 36:6; Jer 2:36; Lam 4:17
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TSK: Eze 29:7 - -- they took : Eze 17:15-17; Jer 37:5-11
thou didst : Psa 118:8, Psa 118:9, Psa 146:3, Psa 146:4; Pro 25:19; Jer 17:5, Jer 17:6
they took : Eze 17:15-17; Jer 37:5-11
thou didst : Psa 118:8, Psa 118:9, Psa 146:3, Psa 146:4; Pro 25:19; Jer 17:5, Jer 17:6
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Eze 29:1 - -- The tenth year - Jerusalem had been besieged, but not taken. Jeremiah delivered his prophecy against Egypt, about the time when the approach of...
The tenth year - Jerusalem had been besieged, but not taken. Jeremiah delivered his prophecy against Egypt, about the time when the approach of Pharaoh Hophra’ s army caused the Chaldaeans for the time to raise the siege Jer 37:5. This was the solitary instance of Egypt meddling with the affairs of Palestine or Syria after the battle of Carchemish (compare 2Ki 24:7); it met with speedy punishment.
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Barnes: Eze 29:3 - -- The king is addressed as the embodiment of the state. Dragon - Here the crocodile, the great monster of the Nile, which was regarded very diff...
The king is addressed as the embodiment of the state.
Dragon - Here the crocodile, the great monster of the Nile, which was regarded very differently in different parts of Egypt. By some it was worshipped and embalmed after death, and cities were named after it (e. g., in the Arsinoite nome). Others viewed it with the utmost abhorrence. An animal so terrible, so venerated, or so abhorred, was an apt image of the proud Egyptian monarch - the more so, perhaps, because it was in truth less formidable than it appeared, and often became an easy prey to such as assailed it with skill and courage.
Lieth in the midst of his rivers - Sais, the royal city, during the twenty-sixth dynasty was in the Delta, in the very midst of the various branches and canals of the Nile.
My river is mine own ... - It was the common boast of Hophra (Apries), that "not even a god could dispossess him of power."The river was at all times the source of fertility and wealth to Egypt, but especially so to the Saite kings, who had their royal residence on the river, and encouraged contact with foreigners, by whose commerce the kingdom was greatly enriched.
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Barnes: Eze 29:4 - -- Hooks in thy jaws - Compare Job 41:2. The crocodile is thus rendered an easy prey. Fish of thy rivers - i. e., the allies of Egypt shall ...
Hooks in thy jaws - Compare Job 41:2. The crocodile is thus rendered an easy prey.
Fish of thy rivers - i. e., the allies of Egypt shall be involved in her ruin.
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Barnes: Eze 29:6 - -- Staff of reed - The "reed"was especially appropriate to Egypt as the natural product of its river.
Staff of reed - The "reed"was especially appropriate to Egypt as the natural product of its river.
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Barnes: Eze 29:7 - -- So Egypt was continually proving to Israel, to Jehoiakim and to Zedekiah. The tenses are present not past. To be at a stand - Others, "to tott...
So Egypt was continually proving to Israel, to Jehoiakim and to Zedekiah. The tenses are present not past.
To be at a stand - Others, "to totter."
Poole: Eze 29:1 - -- The tenth year of Jeconiah’ s captivity. The tenth month, which answers to part of our December and part of January.
The tenth year of Jeconiah’ s captivity. The tenth month, which answers to part of our December and part of January.
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Poole: Eze 29:2 - -- Set thy face: see Eze 20:46 21:2 .
Pharaoh Hophra, as the Scripture styles him, Jer 44:30 ; the Greek authors call him Apries, and Vaphres: most li...
Set thy face: see Eze 20:46 21:2 .
Pharaoh Hophra, as the Scripture styles him, Jer 44:30 ; the Greek authors call him Apries, and Vaphres: most like he was grandson to Necho, who slew Josiah in fight, 2Ch 35:23,24 .
Prophesy against him in prophetic style and authority declare what shall be done to him in his person.
All Egypt the whole multitude of Egyptians; for it is the place for the people dwelling in it.
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Poole: Eze 29:3 - -- Thus saith the Lord God that God that drowned one of thy predecessors with his army, horsemen, and horses in the Red Sea, at whose name thou shouldst...
Thus saith the Lord God that God that drowned one of thy predecessors with his army, horsemen, and horses in the Red Sea, at whose name thou shouldst tremble, who ever fulfilled his word, and is the same, it is he foretells thee by my mouth what is to be. I am against thee: see Eze 28:22 . Pharaoh : see Eze 29:2 .
Great it may refer either to the grandeur of this king, as if he had been Pharaoh the Great, or to the largeness of this creature, to which he is by this hieroglyphic compared.
Dragon: some would have it the whale, but that lies not in rivers, as in his own place: it is surely the crocodile, of which Nilus hath many; and Eze 32:2 , our prophet doth, and so Isa 51:9 , compare the Egyptian king to that devouring serpent, or dragon.
That lieth not only at rest, but waiting for a prey, which never escapes, if this devourer lay any considerable hold of it.
In the midst of his rivers: Nilus was the chief river of Egypt; but either there were some less rivers that run into Nilus, or some divisions of it, where it made some islands, or the seven mouths of it, where it falls into the sea, which may give the name of rivers to it, or those channels that were cut large and deep, to convey water into the country; in all which these crocodiles bred, and rested, and waited for their prey.
Which hath said which hath thought, accounted, and boasted; by which it appears the prophet speaks of a dragon in a figurative sense.
My river kingdom, power, riches, and forces, signified here by a river. All the strength and glory of Egypt are mine, saith this proud king.
Is mine own at my dispose and will. It is probable that this king of Egypt was an aspiring king, who aimed at absolute power, and thought he had secured it to himself; for the river, the emblem of the kingdom, is mine, saith he. I have made it : this seems to give some credit to the conjecture, that this king had raised the prerogative royal, and done what others before him would, but could not, and therefore assumes it to himself, as his own work, forgetting God, who gives kingdoms, and whose they are.
I have made it for myself somewhat like the proud boast,
I have built for the glory of my name Dan 4:30 , and like to meet as sad an end.
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Poole: Eze 29:4 - -- Thou art secure against all, but God will draw thee out of thy river to thy ruin.
Hooks the allegory is continued; fish are drawn out with hooks a...
Thou art secure against all, but God will draw thee out of thy river to thy ruin.
Hooks the allegory is continued; fish are drawn out with hooks and lines, and God hath hooks for this proud dragon, first Areasis, and next the Babylonian king. The expedition of Areasis at the head of the Cyreneans and Grecians, and the event of it, is exactly represented in this hieroglyphic in the text. Amasis with those forces mastered Libya, the king thereof applies for help to this Pharaoh, he gathers all the power of Egypt out of Egypt with him into Cyrene, where he was defeated, lost all but a few that fled with him, and on this occasion the Egyptians rebelled against him: now this short history opens the parable. The first hook you see in the jaws of this dragon, this drew him out of his river, i.e. his kingdom.
The fish these are the people of Egypt, the subjects of this kingdom.
To stick unto thy scales to adhere to their king in this war.
I will bring thee up out of the midst of thy rivers both the king and his subjects, which made up his army, go out of the rivers, leave Egypt, and march into Cyrene (which was part of that kingdom now called Bares) with their king, as if they had been little fishes on the back of a mighty one. Thus far the emblem; the rest follows.
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Poole: Eze 29:5 - -- When thus brought out, as a fish out of the water, I will leave thee. God left this king.
The wilderness the deserts of Libya and Cyrene.
All the...
When thus brought out, as a fish out of the water, I will leave thee. God left this king.
The wilderness the deserts of Libya and Cyrene.
All the fish the whole army of Egyptians. Thou shalt fall upon the open fields; there was this king and his army ruined.
Thou shalt not be brought together, nor gathered as usually the slain are to be buried; these were not buried, but left in the wilderness, where they fell to be a prey to wild beasts, and birds of prey which haunted the wilderness, and would soon gather to their prey.
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Poole: Eze 29:6 - -- This mighty overthrow shall be known through all Egypt, and as it shall fill them with fears and troubles, so it should be a convincing argument to ...
This mighty overthrow shall be known through all Egypt, and as it shall fill them with fears and troubles, so it should be a convincing argument to them that God had done this, and punished them, and their proud king, who used to say, as Herodotus reports, that God could not turn him out of his kingdom. Because they, both king, princes, counsellors, and people of Egypt,
have been a staff of reed treacherously, as next verse, dealt with the Jews, whom they seduced to trust and depend on them, and then perfidiously broke promise with them. It was the sin of the Jews to trust Egypt; it was Egypt’ s great sin to falsify promise with the Jews, and for this God now punisheth Egypt.
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Poole: Eze 29:7 - -- When they the Jews, unable to stand on their own legs, as men ready to fall, took hold of thee by thy hand; caught thine hand to lean on, as when bes...
When they the Jews, unable to stand on their own legs, as men ready to fall, took hold of thee by thy hand; caught thine hand to lean on, as when besieged by the Chaldeans.
Thou didst break: it includes a designed and voluntary failure; Egypt would not support.
And rend all their shoulder didst tear, and pierce, and wound arm and shoulder, didst them much mischief instead of benefiting them, as thou hadst promised, Jer 37:7 42:17 .
When they leaned & c.; the same thing in words little different.
The loins are the strength of a man: thou hast put them to use all their strength to repel the enemy, thou hast been chief occasion of their engaging against.
Haydock: Eze 29:1 - -- Eleventh. Hebrew, "twelfth." Septuagint, "first of the twelfth month of the twelfth year." There are other variations in the versions. St. Jerome...
Eleventh. Hebrew, "twelfth." Septuagint, "first of the twelfth month of the twelfth year." There are other variations in the versions. St. Jerome reads the first in Hebrew, as Theodoret does, who says that it and the Syriac have the twelfth year: which is true, if we neglect the points. (Calmet) ---
The prophets do not observe the order of times. What is here delivered, was sooner fulfilled; or Tyre and Sodom lay nearer than Egypt. (Worthington) ---
The three next chapters regard that country.
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Haydock: Eze 29:2 - -- Pharao, Ephree, Jeremias xliv 30. He came to assist Sedecias; but the Chaldeans raised the siege, went to meet him, an defeated his army. After the...
Pharao, Ephree, Jeremias xliv 30. He came to assist Sedecias; but the Chaldeans raised the siege, went to meet him, an defeated his army. After they had subdued the neighbouring nations, Tyre, &c., they fell upon Egypt. (The year of the world 3433.) (Calmet)
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Haydock: Eze 29:3 - -- Dragon. Hebrew tannin, (Haydock) whence thunnus may be derived, means any water monster, and seems here put for the crocodile, (Calmet) which ...
Dragon. Hebrew tannin, (Haydock) whence thunnus may be derived, means any water monster, and seems here put for the crocodile, (Calmet) which Pharao signifies. (Grotius) ---
It was the symbol of Egypt, (Calmet) and adored by the people, Jeremias xv. 2. ---
Rivers; the different branches of the Nile, and the canals. ---
Myself. I owe my power to no other. (Calmet) ---
"Apries is said to think that no god could deprive him of the kingdom, so well he seemed to have established it." (Herodotus ii. 169.) ---
So the ancient Pharao said; I know not the Lord, Exodus v. 2. He boasts of having conducted the waters of the Nile through the land, ver. 9. (Menochius) ---
This river was honoured as the greatest of the gods. (Heliod. 9.) ---
Terra suis contenta bonis non indiga mercis
Aut Jovis; in solo tanta est fiducia Nilo. (Lucan viii.)
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Haydock: Eze 29:4 - -- Bridle. The Tentyrians jump upon the crocodile's back, give it a club to bite at, which they seize with both hands, and bring it to the shore. (Pli...
Bridle. The Tentyrians jump upon the crocodile's back, give it a club to bite at, which they seize with both hands, and bring it to the shore. (Pliny, [Natural History?] viii. 25.) ---
Others throw a hook baited with swine's flesh, and holding the rope on the shore, make a little pig squeak, with draws the attention of the crocodile; and, as it comes for its prey, it swallows the hook, and its eyes being filled with dust is easily slain. (Herodotus ii. 70.) ---
Apries sent an army against Cyrene, which being defeated as it was thought by the king's fault, many of the Egyptians revolted. He sent Amasis, entered Egypt, drove Apries into Higher Egypt, slew many of the inhabitants, and Jews, &c., and left Amasis to govern the wretched remains of the kingdom. (Usher, the year of the world 3430.) The Scripture, however, seems to say that Pharao was slain; (Jeremias xliii., &c.; Calmet) which Ctesias assures us was done by Amasis, though Herodotus (ii. 169.) says he was killed by the people, and buried with his fathers. This latter circumstance is not very probable: but the historian followed the account of the priests, who would mention what was most honourable for the nation. He seems to have been left unburied, ver. 5. Scales. The people depended on the king and share his fate. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Eze 29:6 - -- Israel, tempting them to rebel. (St. Jerome) ---
He promised more than he was able or strove to perform, though he made a show of giving aid.
Israel, tempting them to rebel. (St. Jerome) ---
He promised more than he was able or strove to perform, though he made a show of giving aid.
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Haydock: Eze 29:7 - -- Loins. They fell upon thee, and thou didst wound (Calmet) or "dissolve" their loins. (Haydock)
Loins. They fell upon thee, and thou didst wound (Calmet) or "dissolve" their loins. (Haydock)
Gill: Eze 29:1 - -- In the tenth year, in the tenth month, in the twelfth day of the month,.... In the tenth year Jeconiah's captivity, and Zedekiah's reign. The Septuagi...
In the tenth year, in the tenth month, in the twelfth day of the month,.... In the tenth year Jeconiah's captivity, and Zedekiah's reign. The Septuagint version has it, the twelfth year; and the Arabic version, the twelfth month; and the Septuagint version again, the first day of the month; and the Vulgate Latin, the eleventh day of it. This month was the month Tebet, and answers to part of December, and part of January. This prophecy was delivered before that concerning Tyre, though placed after it, because fulfilled after it, which gave Nebuchadnezzar Egypt as a reward for besieging and taking Tyre:
the word of the Lord came unto me, saying; as follows.
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Gill: Eze 29:2 - -- Son of man, set thy face against Pharaoh king of Egypt,.... Pharaoh was a name common to all the kings of Egypt; the name of this king was Pharaohhoph...
Son of man, set thy face against Pharaoh king of Egypt,.... Pharaoh was a name common to all the kings of Egypt; the name of this king was Pharaohhophra, Jer 44:30, and who, by Herodotus x, is called Apries:
and prophesy against him, and against all Egypt; prophesy of his destruction, and of the destruction of the whole land that is under his dominion.
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Gill: Eze 29:3 - -- Speak, and say, thus saith the Lord God,.... The one only, living, and true God, the almighty, eternal, and unchangeable Jehovah, which the gods of Eg...
Speak, and say, thus saith the Lord God,.... The one only, living, and true God, the almighty, eternal, and unchangeable Jehovah, which the gods of Egypt were not:
behold, I am against thee, Pharaoh king of Egypt; who, though so great a king, was not a match for God, yea, nothing in his hands; nor could he stand before him, or contend with him; or,
I am above thee y; though the king of Egypt was so high above others, and thought so highly of himself, as if he was a god; yet the Lord was higher than he:
the great dragon that lieth in the midst of his rivers; the chief river of Egypt was the Nile, which opened in seven mouths or gates into the sea, and out of which canals were made to water the whole land; and which abounding with rivers and watery places, hence the king of it is compared to a great fish, a dragon or whale, or rather a crocodile, which was a fish very common, and almost peculiar to Egypt; and with which the description here agrees, as Bochart observes; and who also remarks that Pharaoh in the Arabic language signifies a crocodile; and to which he may be compared for his cruel, voracious, and mischievous nature; and is here represented as lying at ease, and rolling himself in the enjoyment of his power, riches, and pleasures:
which hath said, my river is mine own, and I have made it for myself; alluding to the river Nile, which his predecessors had by their wisdom cut out into canals, for the better watering of the land; and which he might have improved, so that it stood in no need of rain, nor of the supplies of other countries, having a sufficiency from its own product; though he chiefly designs his kingdom, which was his own, and he had established it, and made himself great in it; for the last clause may be rendered, either, "I have made it", as the Syriac version, the river Nile, ascribing that to himself which belonged to God; or, "I have made them", the rivers among whom he lay, as the Septuagint and Arabic versions; or, "I have made myself", as the Vulgate Latin version; that is, a great king. So the Targum,
"the kingdom is mine, and I have subdued it.''
Herodotus says of this king, that he was so lifted up with pride, and so secure of his happy state, that he said there was no God could deprive him of his kingdom z. This proud tyrannical monarch was an emblem of that beast that received his power from the dragon, and who himself spake like one; of the whore of Babylon that sits upon many waters, and boasts of her sovereignty and power, of her wealth and riches, of her ease, peace, pleasure, prosperity, and settled estate, Rev 13:2.
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Gill: Eze 29:4 - -- But I will put hooks in thy jaws,.... The allusion is to fishhooks, which are taken by fishes with the bait into their mouths, and stick in their jaws...
But I will put hooks in thy jaws,.... The allusion is to fishhooks, which are taken by fishes with the bait into their mouths, and stick in their jaws, by which they are drawn out of the river, and taken. The king of Egypt being before compared to a fish, these hooks design some powerful princes and armies, which should be the ruin of Pharaoh; one of them, according to Junius and Grotius, was Amasis, at the head of the Cyreneans and Greeks; and another was Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon; see Job 41:1,
and I will cause the fish of thy rivers to stick unto thy scales; the people of his kingdom, especially his soldiers, generals, princes, and great men, to cleave to him, follow him, and go out with him in his expedition against Amasis. The Targum is,
"I will kill the princes of thy strength with thy mighty ones:''
and I will bring thee up out of the midst of thy rivers: alluding to the crocodile, to which he is compared, which sometimes comes out of the river, and goes on dry land. The king of Egypt was brought out of his kingdom by the following means: Amasis, with the Cyreneans and Greeks, having seized upon Lybia, and drove the king of it from thence, he applied to Pharaoh for help, who gathered a large army of Egyptians, and led them out into the fields of Cyrene, where they were defeated by Amasis, and almost all perished, and the king saved himself by flight; upon which the Egyptians mutinied and rebelled against him, and Amasis became their king:
and all the fish of thy rivers shall stick unto thy scales; the common people of Egypt; for the above numerous army consisted only of Egyptians, whom he gathered from all parts, drained his rivers of them, and almost exhausted his country hereby; he had indeed in an army, after this battle with Amasis, thirty thousand auxiliaries, Carians and Ionians; but these were not the fish of his rivers. The Targum is,
"I will make thy kingdom to cease from thee, and all the princes of thy strength with thy mighty ones shall be killed;''
with which the history agrees. The allusion to the crocodile is here very just and pertinent, which is a fish full of scales. Monsieur Thevenot a, who saw many of them, says, that
"the body of this fish is large, and all of a size; the back is covered with high scales, like the heads of nails in a court gate, of a greenish colour, and so hard that they are proof against a halberd; and it has a long tail covered with scales like the body;''
and another traveller says b they have scales on their back musket proof, and therefore must be wounded in the belly; but another traveller c says, this is a vulgar report that a musket shot will not pierce the skins of the crocodiles, for upon trial it is found false; yet all writers, ancient and modern, allow it to have very firm scales on its back, which render it capable of bearing the heaviest strokes, and to be in a measure impenetrable and invincible; so Herodotus d says, it has a skin full of scales, on the back infrangible; or, as Pliny e expresses it, invincible against all blows and strokes it may be stricken with; and so says Aristotle f, with which Aelian g agrees, who says that the crocodile has by nature a back and tail impenetrable; for it is covered with scales, as if it was armed as one might say, not unlike to hard shells.
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Gill: Eze 29:5 - -- And I will leave thee thrown into the wilderness, thee, and all the fish of thy rivers,.... Where fish in common cannot live, but die as soon almost a...
And I will leave thee thrown into the wilderness, thee, and all the fish of thy rivers,.... Where fish in common cannot live, but die as soon almost as out of the water, and on dry land, excepting those that are of the amphibious kind. This wilderness designs the deserts of Lybia and Cyrene, where the battle was fought between Hophra and Amasis; and where the Egyptian army perished, only their king, before compared to a crocodile, which lives on land, as well as in water, escaped. The Targum is,
"I will cast thee into a wilderness, and all the princes of thy strength:''
thou shalt fall upon the open fields thou shalt not be brought together, nor gathered, this is to he understood of his army; for what is proper to an army is sometimes ascribed to the head or general of it; which fell by the sword in the fields of Lybia and Cyrene and was so discomfited, that the remains of it could not be brought and gathered together again: or the sense is, that those that were slain were left in the open fields, and had no burial; they were not gathered to the grave, as Kimchi interprets it; and so the Targum,
"upon the face of the field thy carcass shall be cast; it shall not be gathered, nor shall it be buried:''
this was only true of the carcasses of the soldiers slain in battle, not of the king, who fled, and afterwards in another battle was taken by Amasis, and strangled in the city of Sais, where he was buried among his ancestors, as Herodotus h relates:
I have given thee for meat to the beasts of the field and to the fowls of the heaven; that is, his army; as the armies of the kings, beast, and false prophet, will be at the battle of Armageddon, when the two latter will be taken and cast alive into the burning lake, of which this monarch was an emblem, Rev 19:17.
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Gill: Eze 29:6 - -- And all the inhabitants of Egypt shall know that I am the Lord,.... Who could eject their king from his kingdom, and deliver him into the hands of his...
And all the inhabitants of Egypt shall know that I am the Lord,.... Who could eject their king from his kingdom, and deliver him into the hands of his enemy; though he thought no God could, as he boastingly said, before observed:
because they have been a staff of reed to the house of Israel; alluding to the country of Egypt, which abounded with reeds that grew upon the banks of the river Nile, and other rivers. This signifies that either the Egyptians were weak, and could not help the people of Israel when they applied to them; or rather that they were treacherous and deceitful, and would not assist them, according to agreement; and were even pernicious and hurtful to them, as a broken reed; see Isa 36:6. The Targum renders it,
"the staff of a reed broken.''
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Gill: Eze 29:7 - -- When they took hold of thee by thy hand,.... When the Israelites entered into an alliance and confederacy with the Egyptians, called for their assista...
When they took hold of thee by thy hand,.... When the Israelites entered into an alliance and confederacy with the Egyptians, called for their assistance according to treaty, and put their confidence in them:
thou didst break and rend all their shoulder; as a reed which a man puts under his armhole, and leans upon, and it breaks under him, the splinters run into the flesh up to the very shoulder, and tear the flesh to pieces; so, through Zedekiah's trusting to the king of Egypt, he rebelled against the king of Babylon, which brought on his ruin, and the destruction of his kingdom:
and when they leaned upon thee thou brakest, and madest all their loins to be at a stand; when they put their confidence in the king of Egypt, and sent to him for help when besieged by the king of Babylon, and he failed them, they were obliged to raise up themselves, as a man is forced to do when his staff breaks under him, whose loins before were bowed, but now erects himself, and stands and walks as well as he can without it; so the Jews were forced to stand upon their own legs, and exert all the force they had, and make all the efforts they could against the king of Babylon, being left in the lurch by the king of Egypt; in which, though they were rightly served for their vain confidence and not trusting in the Lord, yet the treachery of the Egyptians was resented by him, as follows:
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
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NET Notes: Eze 29:3 In Egyptian theology Pharaoh owned and controlled the Nile. See J. D. Currid, Ancient Egypt and the Old Testament, 240-44.
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NET Notes: Eze 29:7 Heb “you caused to stand for them all their hips.” An emendation which switches two letters but is supported by the LXX yields the reading...
Geneva Bible: Eze 29:1 In the ( a ) tenth year, in the tenth [month], in the twelfth [day] of the month, the word of the LORD came to me, saying,
( a ) That is, of the capt...
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Geneva Bible: Eze 29:3 Speak, and say, Thus saith the Lord GOD; Behold, I [am] against thee, Pharaoh king of Egypt, the great ( b ) dragon that lieth in the midst of his riv...
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Geneva Bible: Eze 29:4 But I will put ( c ) hooks in thy jaws, and I will cause the fish of thy rivers to stick to thy scales, and I will bring thee out of the midst of thy ...
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Geneva Bible: Eze 29:6 And all the inhabitants of Egypt shall know that I [am] the LORD, because they have been a staff of ( d ) reed to the house of Israel.
( d ) Read (2K...
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Geneva Bible: Eze 29:7 When they took hold of thee by thy hand, thou didst break, and tear all their shoulder: and when they leaned upon thee, thou didst break, and make all...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Eze 29:1-21
TSK Synopsis: Eze 29:1-21 - --1 The judgment of Pharoh for his treachery to Israel.8 The desolation of Egypt.13 The restoration thereof after17 Egypt the reward of Nebuchadnezzar.2...
MHCC -> Eze 29:1-16
MHCC: Eze 29:1-16 - --Worldly, carnal minds pride themselves in their property, forgetting that whatever we have, we received it from God, and should use it for God. Why, t...
Matthew Henry -> Eze 29:1-7
Matthew Henry: Eze 29:1-7 - -- Here is, I. The date of this prophecy against Egypt. It was in the tenth year of the captivity, and yet it is placed after the prophecy against Ty...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Eze 29:1-16
Keil-Delitzsch: Eze 29:1-16 - --
The Judgment upon Pharaoh and His People and Land
Because Pharaoh looks upon himself as the creator of his kingdom and of his might, he is to be de...
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 29:1--32:32 - --E. Judgment on Egypt chs. 29-32
Ezekiel concluded his oracles against foreign nations with seven message...
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