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Text -- Habakkuk 2:19 (NET)

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Context
2:19 The one who says to wood, ‘Wake up!’ is as good as dead– he who says to speechless stone, ‘Awake!’ Can it give reliable guidance? It is overlaid with gold and silver; it has no life’s breath inside it.
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: STONE, STONES | JEHOIACHIN | Idolatry | HABAKKUK | DUMB | Carving | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
JFB , Clarke , Calvin , Defender , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable , Guzik

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

JFB: Hab 2:19 - -- Arise to my help.

Arise to my help.

JFB: Hab 2:19 - -- Rather, An exclamation of the prophet, implying an ironical question to which a negative answer must be given. What! "It teach?" Certainly not [MAURER...

Rather, An exclamation of the prophet, implying an ironical question to which a negative answer must be given. What! "It teach?" Certainly not [MAURER]. Or, "It (the idol itself) shall (that is, ought to) teach you that it is deaf, and therefore no God" [CALVIN]. Compare "they are their own witnesses" (Isa 44:9).

JFB: Hab 2:19 - -- The Hebrew is nominative, "There it is" [HENDERSON].

The Hebrew is nominative, "There it is" [HENDERSON].

JFB: Hab 2:19 - -- Outside it has some splendor, within none.

Outside it has some splendor, within none.

Clarke: Hab 2:19 - -- Wo unto him - How foolish and contemptible to worship a thing formed by the hand of man out of wood, stone, gold, or silver! The meanest brute is su...

Wo unto him - How foolish and contemptible to worship a thing formed by the hand of man out of wood, stone, gold, or silver! The meanest brute is superior to them all; it breathes and lives, but they have no breath in them. However, they are said above to be teachers of lies; that is, they appeared to give out oracles: but these were lies; and were not given by the statue, but by the priest.

Calvin: Hab 2:19 - -- He pursues, as I have said, the same subject, and sharply inveighs against the sottishness of men, that they call on wood and stone, as though there ...

He pursues, as I have said, the same subject, and sharply inveighs against the sottishness of men, that they call on wood and stone, as though there were some hidden power in them. They say to the wood, Awake; for they implored help from their idols. Shall it teach? Some render it thus as a question; but I take it in a simpler form, “It will teach;” that is, “It is a wonder that ye are so wilfully foolish; for were God to send to you no Prophet, were there no one to instruct you, yet the wood and the stone would be sufficient teachers to you: ask your idols, that is, ascertain rightly what is in them. Doubtless, the god that is made of wood or of stone, sufficiently declares by his silence that he is no god. For there is no motion in wood and stone. Where there is no vigor and no life, is it not right to feel assured, that there is no deity? There are, indeed, many creatures endued with feeling and motion; but the God who gives power, and motion, and feeling to the whole world, and to all its parts, does he not surpass in these respects all his creatures? Since, then, wood and stone are silent, they are teachers sufficient for you, provided ye be apt scholars.”

We hence see how the Prophet in this way amplifies the insensibility of men; for they did not perceive what was quite manifest. The design of what follows is the same. Behold, it is covered over with gold and silver; that is, it is made splendid: for idolaters think that their gods are better when adorned with gold and silver; but yet there is no breath in the midst of them. “Look,” he says, “within; look within, and ye shall see that they are dead.” 47 The rest we shall dilate on to-morrow.

Defender: Hab 2:19 - -- A woe is pronounced against those who induce others to sin (Hab 2:15), and another here against those who seek knowledge and life from wood and stone....

A woe is pronounced against those who induce others to sin (Hab 2:15), and another here against those who seek knowledge and life from wood and stone. These are merely created materials, embellished by men, but possess neither life nor knowledge, and so cannot impart such information to others. Man's heart is corrupt and so he seeks to escape his Creator; nevertheless, he must somehow seek knowledge and life beyond himself, and so "worshipped and served the creature more than the Creator" (Rom 1:25). This sinful ignorance is no less characteristic of modern humanistic evolutionists than it was of the ancient pantheistic evolutionists, and God has pronounced woe on all who turn to such lies."

TSK: Hab 2:19 - -- that : 1Ki 18:26-29; Psa 97:7; Isa 44:17; Jer 51:47; Dan 3:7, Dan 3:18, Dan 3:29, Dan 5:23; Jon 1:5 it is : Isa 40:19, Isa 46:6; Jer 10:4, Jer 10:9; D...

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Hab 2:19 - -- But then the greater is the "Woe"to him who deceiveth by them. The prophet passes away from the idols as "nothings"and pronounces "woe"on those who ...

But then the greater is the "Woe"to him who deceiveth by them. The prophet passes away from the idols as "nothings"and pronounces "woe"on those who deceive by them. He . first expostulates with them on their folly, and would awaken them. "What hath it profited?"(As in Psa 115:5; 1Co 12:2) Then on the obstinate he denounces "woe.""Woe unto him that saith to the wood, Awake; to the dumb stone, Arise."Self-made blindness alone could, in the light of truth, so speak; but yet more lies in the emphatic word, "It."The personal pronoun stands emphatically in Hebrew; He shall teach, lo, He (this same of whom he speaks) this is It which shall teach: It, and not the living God. And yet this same It (the word is again emphatic) he points, as with the finger, to it, "behold, It is laid over with, held fast by , gold and silver,"so that no voice could escape, if it had any. "And there is no breath at all in the midst of it"(Compare Jer 10:14 repeated Jer 51:17), literally "All breath, all which is breath, there is none within it;"he first suggests the thought, breath of every sort, and then energetically denies it all ; no life of any sort, of man, or bird, or beast, or creeping thing Isa 41:23; Jer 10:5; none, good or bad; from God or from Satan; none whereby it can do good or do evil; for which it should be loved or feared. Evil spirits may have made use of idols: they could not give them life, nor dwell in them.

The words addressed to it are the language of the soul in the seeming absence or silence of God (Psa 7:7; Psa 35:23; Psa 44:24; Psa 59:6; Isa 51:9; Delitszch), but mockery as spoken to the senseless stone, as Ehijah had mocked the Baal-priests, "peradventure he sleepeth and must be awaked"1Ki 18:26-27.

Poole: Hab 2:19 - -- In the former verse the prophet declared the uselessness and unprofitableness of the idols of Babylon, now he threatens the idolaters. They sinned g...

In the former verse the prophet declared the uselessness and unprofitableness of the idols of Babylon, now he threatens the idolaters. They sinned greatly by placing their confidence in them, and they should suffer the more for it.

The wood whatever shape art may give it, or whatever veneration blind idolaters may bear to it, it is still wood, no better; a log, a worthless block.

Awake: this expresseth the idolater’ s prayer to his idol. Awake; what! is he a sleepy god? No, not so much, it is a lifeless log, and its eyes never did see.

The dumb stone another sort of their useless idols, senseless as the stones, and still as unable to rise or help as before they were graven and carved; it is a stone, no god.

Arise another form of praying to this idol; and when the idol can rise Babylon shall be helped, till then it must abide its sorrows.

It shalt teach: sottish men! in misery to hope that lifeless idols shall counsel and direct. What! dumb, and without sense, and yet teach!

Behold look, ye selfdeceiving idolaters, consult your own senses, see what matter they are made of.

It is laid over with gold and silver see the facings or plates are different from that which is under, and can that be a god that is made up of such different materials? it were more like men to pull off the gold and silver, and with these to purchase your safety.

There is no breath at all not so much as the soul of a brute in them.

Gill: Hab 2:19 - -- Woe to him that saith to the wood, Awake,.... That saith to a wooden image, let him go by what name he will; saint such an one, or such an one; awake,...

Woe to him that saith to the wood, Awake,.... That saith to a wooden image, let him go by what name he will; saint such an one, or such an one; awake, arise, exert thyself on our behalf; deliver us from present danger; save us from our enemies; or pray and intercede for us, that we may be delivered and saved, as the Papists do; addressing a block of wood as they would God himself, or as his people do, Psa 44:23. This must be very displeasing and detestable to God, and therefore a woe is threatened to such idol worshippers: who also say

to the dumb stone, Arise; to the idol of stone, as the Targum; the stone statue, an image made of stone, such as the Papists have even of wood, and of stone, as well as of gold, and silver, and brass, Rev 9:20 and so stupid as to say to such stocks and stones, arise, stand up, and help us:

it shall teach; the stone itself would teach them better, would they but consider what it is, look upon it, and handle it, when they would find it to be a mere stone, and no deity: or, "shall it teach?" so Jarchi, Kimchi, and Ben Melech; no, it cannot teach any true doctrine, or direct to right worship; it cannot teach men their duty, or where they may have help; it is a dumb idol; it cannot teach men the nature of God, and the knowledge of him; or instruct in his mind and will; or inform of things secret or future:

it is laid over with gold and silver; it is made of stone, and covered with gold and silver; how should it teach?

and there is no breath at all in the midst of it; or, "no spirit" o; so far from having the spirit of divinity in it, or the Spirit of God, that it has not the spirit of a man in it, nor even the spirit of a brute creature; it has not so much as animal breath, and so no life, motion, or activity in it; and therefore must be quite unprofitable to the worshipper of it; incapable of teaching those who apply to it; and they must be stupid that do it, and most righteously bring themselves under the displeasure and wrath of God, and expose themselves to the woe here denounced against such persons.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Hab 2:19 Though the Hebrew text has no formal interrogative marker here, the context indicates that the statement should be taken as a rhetorical question anti...

Geneva Bible: Hab 2:19 Woe to him that saith to the wood, Awake; to the dumb stone, Arise, it shall teach! ( q ) Behold, it [is] laid over with gold and silver, and [there i...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

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 2:15-20 - --A severe woe is pronounced against drunkenness; it is very fearful against all who are guilty of drunkenness at any time, and in any place, from the s...

Matthew Henry: Hab 2:15-20 - -- The three foregoing articles, upon which the woes here are grounded, are very near akin to each other. The criminals charged by them are oppressors ...

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 2:18-20 - -- Fifth and last strophe. - Hab 2:18. "What profiteth the graven image, that the maker thereof hath carved it; the molten image and the teacher of li...

Constable: Hab 2:6-20 - --3. The Lord's sentence on Babylon 2:6-20 The Lord pronounced taunts or mocking statements on the...

Constable: Hab 2:18-20 - --Judgment for idolatry 2:18-20 2:18 Habakkuk, like other prophets, saw through the folly of idolatry and exposed it (cf. Isa. 41:7; 44:9-20; 45:16, 20;...

Guzik: Hab 2:1-20 - --Habakkuk 2 - God Justifies His Judgment A. The proud rebuked. 1. (2-3) Preparation for the answer: how to publish the vision. Then the LORD answer...

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Introduction / Outline

JFB: Habakkuk (Book Introduction) HABAKKUK, from a Hebrew root meaning to "embrace," denoting a "favorite" (namely, of God) and a "struggler" (for his country's good). Some ancient aut...

JFB: Habakkuk (Outline) HABAKKUK'S EXPOSTULATION WITH JEHOVAH ON ACCOUNT OF THE PREVALENCE OF INJUSTICE: JEHOVAH SUMMONS ATTENTION TO HIS PURPOSE OF SENDING THE CHALDEANS AS...

TSK: Habakkuk 2 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Hab 2:1, Unto Habakkuk, waiting for an answer, is shewn that he must wait by faith; Hab 2:5, The judgment upon the Chaldean for unsatiabl...

Poole: Habakkuk (Book Introduction) THE ARGUMENT The prophecy of Habakkuk seems to be an exact stating of that perplexed case, touching the seeming unequalness of the proceedings of G...

Poole: Habakkuk 2 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 2 Unto Habakkuk, waiting for an answer, Hab 2:1 , is showed that he must wait in faith, Hab 2:2-4 . The judgment of the Chaldeans for insat...

MHCC: Habakkuk (Book Introduction) The subject of this prophecy is the destruction of Judea and Jerusalem for the sins of the people, and the consolation of the faithful under national ...

MHCC: Habakkuk 2 (Chapter Introduction) (Hab 2:1-4) Habakkuk must wait in faith. (Hab 2:5-14) Judgments upon the Chaldeans. (Hab 2:15-20) Also upon drunkenness and idolatry.

Matthew Henry: Habakkuk (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Prophecy of Habakkuk It is a very foolish fancy of some of the Jewish rabbin that this prophet was ...

Matthew Henry: Habakkuk 2 (Chapter Introduction) In this chapter we have an answer expected by the prophet (Hab 2:1), and returned by the Spirit of God, to the complaints which the prophet made of...

Constable: Habakkuk (Book Introduction) Introduction Title and Writer The title of the book is the name of its writer. ...

Constable: Habakkuk (Outline) Outline I. Heading 1:1 II. Habakkuk's questions and Yahweh's answers 1:2-2:20 ...

Constable: Habakkuk Habakkuk Bibliography Armerding, Carl E. "Habakkuk." In Daniel-Minor Prophets. Vol. 7 of The Expositor's Bible ...

Haydock: Habakkuk (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION. THE PROPHECY OF HABACUC. Habacuc was a native of Bezocher, and prophesied in Juda some time before the invasion of the Chaldeans, ...

Gill: Habakkuk (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO HABAKKUK This book is called, in the Vulgate Latin and Syriac versions, "the Prophecy of Habakkuk". Of this prophet, Aben Ezra and ...

Gill: Habakkuk 2 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO HABAKKUK 2 This chapter contains an answer from the Lord to the expostulations, pleadings, and reasonings of the prophet, in the na...

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