
Text -- Habakkuk 2:12 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Hab 2:12
Clarke -> Hab 2:12
Clarke: Hab 2:12 - -- Wo to him that buildeth a town with blood - At the expense of much slaughter. This is the answer of the beam to the stone. And these things will ref...
Wo to him that buildeth a town with blood - At the expense of much slaughter. This is the answer of the beam to the stone. And these things will refer to the vast fortunes gained, and the buildings erected, by means of the slave-trade; where, to a considerate and humane mind, the walls appear as if composed of the bones of negroes, and cemented by their blood! But the towns or houses established by this iniquity soon come to ruin; and the fortunes made have, in most cases, become as chaff and dust before the whirlwind of God’ s indignation. But where are the dealers in the souls and bodies of men? Ask him who has them in his keeping. He can tell.
Calvin -> Hab 2:12
Calvin: Hab 2:12 - -- The stone, then, from the wall shall cry, and the wood shall answer —what will it answer?— Woe to him who builds a city by blood, and who adorns...
The stone, then, from the wall shall cry, and the wood shall answer —what will it answer?— Woe to him who builds a city by blood, and who adorns his city by iniquity. By blood and by iniquity he understands the same thing; for though the avaricious do not kill innocent men, they yet suck their blood, and what else is this but to kill them by degrees, by a slow tormenting process? For it is easier at once to undergo death than to pine away in want, as it happens to helpless men when spoiled and deprived of all their property. Wherever there is wanton plundering, there is murder committed in the sight of God; for as it has been said, he who spares not the helpless, but drinks up their blood, doubtless sins no less than if he were to kill them.
But if this personification seems to any one strange, he must consider how incredible seemed to be what the Prophet here teaches, and how difficult it was to produce a conviction on the subject. We indeed confess that God is the judge of the world; nay, there is no one who does not anticipate his judgement by condemning avarice and cruelty; the very name of avarice is infamous and hated by all: the same may be said of cruelty. But yet when we see the avaricious in splendor and in esteem, we are astounded, and no one is able to foresee by faith what the Prophet here declares. Since, then our dullness is so great, or rather our sottishness, it is no wonder that the Prophet should here set before us the stones and the wood, as though he said, “When all prophecies and all warnings become frigid, and God himself obtains no credit, while openly declaring what he will do, and when his servants consume their labor in vain by warning and crying, let now the stones come forth, and be teachers to you who will not give ear to the voice of God himself, and let the wood also cry out in its turn.” This, then, is the reason why the Prophet introduces here mute things as the speakers, even to awaken our insensibility.
TSK -> Hab 2:12
TSK: Hab 2:12 - -- him : Gen 4:11-17; Jos 6:26; 1Ki 16:34; Jer 22:13-17; Eze 24:9; Dan 4:27-31; Mic 3:10; Nah 3:1; Joh 11:47-50; Rev 17:6
blood : Heb. bloods, Hab 2:8
him : Gen 4:11-17; Jos 6:26; 1Ki 16:34; Jer 22:13-17; Eze 24:9; Dan 4:27-31; Mic 3:10; Nah 3:1; Joh 11:47-50; Rev 17:6
blood : Heb. bloods, Hab 2:8

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Hab 2:12
Barnes: Hab 2:12 - -- Woe to him that buildeth a town with blood, and establisheth a city by iniquity! - Nebuchadnezzar "encircled the inner city with three walls a...
Woe to him that buildeth a town with blood, and establisheth a city by iniquity! - Nebuchadnezzar "encircled the inner city with three walls and the outer city also with three, all of burnt brick. And having fortified the city with wondrous works, and adorned the gates like temples, he built another palace near the palace of his fathers, surpassing it in height and its great magnificence."He seemed to strengthen the city, and to establish it by outward defenses. But it was built through cruelty to conquered nations, and especially God’ s people, and by oppression, against His holy Will. So there was an inward rottenness and decay in what seemed strong and majestic, and which imposed on the outward eye; it would not stand, but fell. Babylon, which had stood since the flood, being enlarged contrary to the eternal laws of God, fell in the reign of his son. Such is all empire and greatness, raised on the neglect of God’ s laws, by unlawful conquests, and by the toil and sweat and hard service of the poor. Its aggrandizement and seeming strength is its fall. Daniel’ s exhortation to Nebuchadnezzar Dan 4:27, "Redeem thy sins by righteousness, and thine iniquities by showing mercy on the poor,"implies that oppressiveness had been one of his chief sins.
Poole -> Hab 2:12
Poole: Hab 2:12 - -- Whosoever he be that lays foundations in blood, is here threatened, and none so great as to keep Off the woe, deserved and menaced.
A town Heb. c...
Whosoever he be that lays foundations in blood, is here threatened, and none so great as to keep Off the woe, deserved and menaced.
A town Heb. city .
With blood in the guilt and with the cruelty of murdering the innocents it is the worst cement which is tempered with blood of murdered men, women, and children.
And stablisheth goeth about or thinketh to establish the foundations of a city.
A city Babylon in particular.
By iniquity by force and fraud, by riches extorted from the just possessor.
Whosoever he be that lays foundations in blood, is here threatened, and none so great as to keep Off the woe, deserved and menaced.
A town Heb. city .
With blood in the guilt and with the cruelty of murdering the innocents it is the worst cement which is tempered with blood of murdered men, women, and children.
And stablisheth goeth about or thinketh to establish the foundations of a city.
A city Babylon in particular.
By iniquity by force and fraud, by riches extorted from the just possessor.
Haydock -> Hab 2:12
Haydock: Hab 2:12 - -- Wo. This might be explained of Nabuchodonosor; but we rather understand the king of Tyre, whose pride was intolerable, Ezechiel xxviii. It seems us...
Wo. This might be explained of Nabuchodonosor; but we rather understand the king of Tyre, whose pride was intolerable, Ezechiel xxviii. It seems useless to repeat so often the same threats against one king. (Calmet)
Gill -> Hab 2:12
Gill: Hab 2:12 - -- Woe to him that buildeth a town with blood, and establisheth a city by iniquity! This is what the stone and beam should say, if others were silent. Th...
Woe to him that buildeth a town with blood, and establisheth a city by iniquity! This is what the stone and beam should say, if others were silent. The town and city are the church of Rome, mystical Babylon, the great city, called spiritually Egypt and Sodom; the builder of this is the pope of Rome, the bishops of it in succession, who built it with blood: the pope of Rome received his title as head of the church from Phocas, that murdered the emperor Mauritius; the foundation of the church of Rome is the blood of the saints, shed in persecutions and wars; hence she is said to be drunk with the blood of them, and to have the blood of prophets and saints found in her, Rev 17:5 and it is established by unjust exactions of tribute from all countries subject to it, and by indulgences, processions, and various methods taken to extort money from the people, to support its pageantry, pomp, and grandeur; but there is a "woe" denounced against such that are concerned herein, and which will take place in due time, nor can it be awarded, as follows:

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Hab 2:1-20
TSK Synopsis: Hab 2:1-20 - --1 Unto Habakkuk, waiting for an answer, is shewn that he must wait by faith.5 The judgment upon the Chaldean for unsatiableness,9 for covetousness,12 ...
MHCC -> Hab 2:5-14
MHCC: Hab 2:5-14 - --The prophet reads the doom of all proud and oppressive powers that bear hard upon God's people. The lusts of the flesh, the lust of the eye, and the p...
Matthew Henry -> Hab 2:5-14
Matthew Henry: Hab 2:5-14 - -- The prophet having had orders to write the vision, and the people to wait for the accomplishment of it, the vision itself follows; and it is, as d...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Hab 2:6-20; Hab 2:12-14
Keil-Delitzsch: Hab 2:6-20 - --
In Hab 2:6-20 the destruction of the Chaldaean, which has been already intimated in Hab 2:4, Hab 2:5, is announced in the form of a song composed of...

Keil-Delitzsch: Hab 2:12-14 - --
The third woe refers to the building of cities with the blood and property of strangers. Hab 2:12. "Woe to him who buildeth cities with blood, and ...
Constable -> Hab 2:6-20; Hab 2:12-14
Constable: Hab 2:6-20 - --3. The Lord's sentence on Babylon 2:6-20
The Lord pronounced taunts or mocking statements on the...
