
Text -- Habakkuk 2:7 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
The answer to the question, "How long?" (Hab 2:6).

JFB: Hab 2:7 - -- Often used of usury; so favoring LEE'S rendering (Hab 2:6). As the Chaldean, like a usurer, oppressed others, so other nations shall, like usurers, ta...
Often used of usury; so favoring LEE'S rendering (Hab 2:6). As the Chaldean, like a usurer, oppressed others, so other nations shall, like usurers, take pledges of, that is, spoil, him.
Clarke -> Hab 2:7
Clarke: Hab 2:7 - -- Shall they not rise up suddenly - Does not this refer to the sudden and unexpected taking of Babylon by Cyrus, whose troops entered into the city th...
Shall they not rise up suddenly - Does not this refer to the sudden and unexpected taking of Babylon by Cyrus, whose troops entered into the city through the bed of the Euphrates, whose waters they had diverted by another channel; so that the Babylonians knew nothing of the matter till they saw the Persian soldiers rise up as in a moment, in the very heart of their city?
Calvin -> Hab 2:7
Calvin: Hab 2:7 - -- The Prophet proceeds with the subject which we have already begun to explain; for he introduces here the common taunts against the king of Babylon an...
The Prophet proceeds with the subject which we have already begun to explain; for he introduces here the common taunts against the king of Babylon and the whole tyrannical empire, by which many nations had been cruelly oppressed. He therefore says that enemies, who should bite him, 34 would suddenly and unexpectedly rise up. Some expound this of worms, but not rightly: for God not only inflicted punishment on the king when dead, but he intended also that there should be on earth an evident and a memorable proof of his vengeance on the Babylonians, by which it might be made known to all that their cruelty could not be suffered to go unpunished.
The words, Shall not they rise suddenly, are emphatical, both as to the question and as to the word,
TSK -> Hab 2:7
TSK: Hab 2:7 - -- they : Pro 29:1; Isa 13:1-5, Isa 13:16-18, Isa 21:2-9, Isa 41:25, Isa 45:1-3, Isa 46:11, Isa 47:11; Isa 48:14, Isa 48:15; Jer 50:21-32, Jer 51:11, Jer...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Hab 2:7
Barnes: Hab 2:7 - -- Shall not they rise up suddenly that shall bite thee, and awake that shall vex thee? - The destruction of the wicked is ever sudden at last. Su...
Shall not they rise up suddenly that shall bite thee, and awake that shall vex thee? - The destruction of the wicked is ever sudden at last. Such was the flood Luk 17:26-27, the destruction of Sodom, of Pharaoh, of the enemies of God’ s people through the Judges, of Sennacherib, Nineveh, Babylon by the Medes and Persians. Such shall the end be Mat 24:43-44; Mat 25:13; Luk 17:26-30; Luk 21:34-35; 1Th 5:3; 2Pe 3:10; Rev 16:15. As he by his oppressions had pierced others (it is the word used of the oppression of usury), so should it be done to him. "The Medes and Persians who were before subject to the Babylonian empire, and whose kings were subject to Nebuchudnezzar and his successors, rose up and awaked, i. e., stirred themselves up in the days of Belshazzar to rebel against the successors of Nebuchadnezzar which sat on his throne, like a man who awaketh from sleep."The words "awake,""arise,"are used also of the resurrection, when the worm of the wicked gnaweth and dieth not (See Isa 14:11; Isa 66:24).
And thou shall be for booties unto them? - The common phrase is modified to explain the manifoldness of the plunder which he should yield. So Jeremiah Jer 50:10, "Chaldaea shall be a spoil; all that spoil her shall be satisfied, saith the Lord."See Cyr: "We may hear Him who saith Mat 12:29, ‘ How can one enter into a strong man’ s house, and spoil his goods, except he first bind the strong man? and then he will spoil his house.’ For, as soon as He was born of the holy Virgin, He began to ‘ spoil his goods.’ For the Magi came from the East - and worshiped Him and honored Him with gifts and became a first-fruits of the Church of the Gentiles. And being vessels of Satan, and the most honored of all his members, they hastened to Christ."
Poole -> Hab 2:7
Poole: Hab 2:7 - -- Shall they not? this question doth more fully ascertain the thing. Rise up; either grow up, or else, as men who resolve to do a thing thoroughly, get...
Shall they not? this question doth more fully ascertain the thing. Rise up; either grow up, or else, as men who resolve to do a thing thoroughly, get upon their feet and stand to it. The Medes and Persians were growing to power, and would ere long rise up to ruin Babylon.
Suddenly and surprise it in security, so they were down ere they did perceive themselves falling; and such sudden ruin is most dreadful.
Bite thee devour and eat thee up.
And awake thou, O Belshazzar, (and Babylon with thee,) wilt in drunken slumbers (unable to resist) fall into the hands of the awakened Medes and Persians.
Vex thee as thou hast been, O Babylon, vexation to others by thy proud and insolent behaviour, by scoffs and cruelties, so others shall now be a vexation unto thee.
Thou shalt be for booties not only your lands, houses, and goods, but your persons, and those of your relations, shall be booties, taken and sold for slaves, to the profit of them, Medes and Persians.
Haydock -> Hab 2:7
Haydock: Hab 2:7 - -- Bile, like worms in the grave. Cyrus will overturn the kingdom. The Rabbins pretend that Evilmerodac caused his father's body to be cut in pieces f...
Bile, like worms in the grave. Cyrus will overturn the kingdom. The Rabbins pretend that Evilmerodac caused his father's body to be cut in pieces for the crows, lest he should return again. (Calmet)
Gill -> Hab 2:7
Gill: Hab 2:7 - -- Shall not they rise up suddenly that shall bite thee,.... Or, "thy usurers", or "creditors" d, as some render it; the Christians, whose money, goods, ...
Shall not they rise up suddenly that shall bite thee,.... Or, "thy usurers", or "creditors" d, as some render it; the Christians, whose money, goods, and substance, they had spoiled them of, but now should be repaid with great usury and gain; these, that is, their princes and emperors, as Constantine and Theodosius, rose up suddenly, and conquered the heathen emperors, and took away their power and authority from them, and their wealth and riches, and gave them to the Christians, what they and those under them had plundered them of:
and awake that shall vex thee, or "move thee" e; the emperor, from the throne of the empire; and other subordinate magistrates from their places of dignity, trust, and profit; the priests out of their temples; and change the face of things everywhere; and which is expressed in language agreeable to this, in Rev 6:14, and has respect to the same times and things, "and the heaven departed as a scroll when it is rolled together, and every mountain and island were moved out of their place"; which is to be understood of the fall of the Pagan Roman empire:
and thou shalt be for booties unto them? the wealth and riches found in the Roman empire, as it fell into the hands of Constantine, were converted to the use of the Christians for the building of their temples, and the maintenance of their ministers, the relief of their poor, and for the reparation of losses others had sustained under the persecutions: thus the Christian emperors rose up at once, and exerted themselves; and who before seemed to be asleep awoke, and seized upon the empire, and the riches of it, and divided the spoil among themselves and their people.

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
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...
Constable -> Hab 2:6-20; Hab 2:6-8
Constable: Hab 2:6-20 - --3. The Lord's sentence on Babylon 2:6-20
The Lord pronounced taunts or mocking statements on the...
