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Text -- Haggai 1:2-6 (NET)

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Context
The Indifference of the People
1:2 The Lord who rules over all says this: “These people have said, ‘The time for rebuilding the Lord’s temple has not yet come.’” 1:3 So the Lord spoke through the prophet Haggai as follows: 1:4 “Is it right for you to live in richly paneled houses while my temple is in ruins? 1:5 Here then is what the Lord who rules over all says: ‘Think carefully about what you are doing. 1:6 You have planted much, but have harvested little. You eat, but are never filled. You drink, but are still thirsty. You put on clothes, but are not warm. Those who earn wages end up with holes in their money bags.’”
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Haggai a prophet during the time of Zerubbabel


Dictionary Themes and Topics: Worldliness | Wages | Temple | TRADE | Stingy | Selfishness | Repentance | Lukewarmness | JOSHUA (3) | House | HAGGAI | Greed | Fear of God | Church | CEILING | CEILED; CEILING | BAG | more
Table of Contents

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

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

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

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: Hag 1:4 - -- Arched and richly adorned.

Arched and richly adorned.

Wesley: Hag 1:6 - -- But what you eat doth not nourish or satisfy you.

But what you eat doth not nourish or satisfy you.

Wesley: Hag 1:6 - -- Your water quenches not your thirst, your wine does not revive your spirit.

Your water quenches not your thirst, your wine does not revive your spirit.

Wesley: Hag 1:6 - -- You have no comfort therein.

You have no comfort therein.

Wesley: Hag 1:6 - -- Loses all his labour.

Loses all his labour.

JFB: Hag 1:2 - -- Jehovah, Lord of the powers of heaven and earth, and therefore requiring implicit obedience.

Jehovah, Lord of the powers of heaven and earth, and therefore requiring implicit obedience.

JFB: Hag 1:2 - -- "This" sluggish and selfish "people." He does not say, My people, since they had neglected the service of God.

"This" sluggish and selfish "people." He does not say, My people, since they had neglected the service of God.

JFB: Hag 1:2 - -- The proper time for building the temple. Two out of the seventy predicted years of captivity (dating from the destruction of the temple, 558 B.C., 2Ki...

The proper time for building the temple. Two out of the seventy predicted years of captivity (dating from the destruction of the temple, 558 B.C., 2Ki 25:9) were yet unexpired; this they make their plea for delay [HENDERSON]. The seventy years of captivity were completed long ago in the first year of Cyrus, 536 B.C. (Jer 29:10); dating from 606 B.C., Jehoiakim's captivity (2Ch 36:6). The seventy years to the completion of the temple (Jer 25:12) were completed this very year, the second of Darius [VATABLUS]. Ingenious in excuses, they pretended that the interruption in the work caused by their enemies proved it was not yet the proper time; whereas their real motive was selfish dislike of the trouble, expense, and danger from enemies. "God," say they, "hath interposed many difficulties to punish our rash haste" [CALVIN]. Smerdis' interdict was no longer in force, now that Darius the rightful king was on the throne; therefore they had no real excuse for not beginning at once to build. AUBERLEN denies that by "Artaxerxes" in Ezra 4:7-22 is meant Smerdis. Whether Smerdis or Artaxerxes Longimanus be meant, the interdict referred only to the rebuilding of the city, which the Persian kings feared might, if rebuilt, cause them trouble to subdue; not to the rebuilding of the temple. But the Jews were easily turned aside from the work. Spiritually, like the Jews, men do not say they will never be religious, but, It is not time yet. So the great work of life is left undone.

JFB: Hag 1:4 - -- It is not time (Hag 1:2), ye say, to build Jehovah's house; yet how is it that ye make it a fit time not only to build, but to "dwell" at ease in your...

It is not time (Hag 1:2), ye say, to build Jehovah's house; yet how is it that ye make it a fit time not only to build, but to "dwell" at ease in your own houses?

JFB: Hag 1:4 - -- Rather, for "you, you"; the repetition marking the shameful contrast between their concern for themselves, and their unconcern for God [MAURER]. Compa...

Rather, for "you, you"; the repetition marking the shameful contrast between their concern for themselves, and their unconcern for God [MAURER]. Compare a similar repetition in 1Sa 25:24; Zec 7:5.

JFB: Hag 1:4 - -- Rather, "wainscoted," or "paneled," referring to the walls as well as the ceilings; furnished not only with comfort but luxury, in sad contrast to God...

Rather, "wainscoted," or "paneled," referring to the walls as well as the ceilings; furnished not only with comfort but luxury, in sad contrast to God's house not merely unadorned, but the very walls not raised above the foundations. How different David's feelings (2Sa 7:2)!

JFB: Hag 1:5 - -- Literally, "Set your heart" on your ways. The plural implies, Consider both what ye have done (actively, Lam 3:40) and what ye have suffered (passivel...

Literally, "Set your heart" on your ways. The plural implies, Consider both what ye have done (actively, Lam 3:40) and what ye have suffered (passively) [JEROME]. Ponder earnestly whether ye have gained by seeking self at the sacrifice of God.

JFB: Hag 1:6 - -- Nothing has prospered with you while you neglected your duty to God. The punishment corresponds to the sin. They thought to escape poverty by not buil...

Nothing has prospered with you while you neglected your duty to God. The punishment corresponds to the sin. They thought to escape poverty by not building, but keeping their money to themselves; God brought it on them for not building (Pro 13:7; Pro 11:24; Mat 6:33). Instead of cheating God, they had been only cheating themselves.

JFB: Hag 1:6 - -- Through insufficiency of clothing; as ye are unable through poverty from failure of your crops to purchase sufficient clothing. The verbs are infiniti...

Through insufficiency of clothing; as ye are unable through poverty from failure of your crops to purchase sufficient clothing. The verbs are infinitive, implying a continued state: "Ye have sown, and been bringing in but little; ye have been eating, but not to being satisfied; ye have been drinking, but not to being filled; ye have been putting on clothes, but not to being warmed" [MOORE]. Careful consideration of God's dealings with us will indicate God's will regarding us. The events of life are the hieroglyphics in which God records His feelings towards us, the key to which is found in the Bible [MOORE].

JFB: Hag 1:6 - -- Proverbial for labor and money spent profitlessly (Zec 8:10; compare Isa 55:2; Jer 2:13). Contrast, spiritually, the "bags that wax not old, the treas...

Proverbial for labor and money spent profitlessly (Zec 8:10; compare Isa 55:2; Jer 2:13). Contrast, spiritually, the "bags that wax not old, the treasure in heaven that faileth not" (Luk 12:33). Through the high cost of necessaries, those who wrought for a day's wages parted with them at once, as if they had put them into a bag with holes.

Clarke: Hag 1:2 - -- The time is not come - They thought that the seventy years spoken of by Jeremiah were not yet completed, and it would be useless to attempt to rebui...

The time is not come - They thought that the seventy years spoken of by Jeremiah were not yet completed, and it would be useless to attempt to rebuild until that period had arrived. But Abp. Usher has shown that from the commencement of the last siege of Jerusalem unto this time, precisely sixty-nine years had been completed.

Clarke: Hag 1:4 - -- Is it time for you - If the time be not come to rebuild the temple, it cannot be come for you to build yourselves comfortable houses: but ye are reb...

Is it time for you - If the time be not come to rebuild the temple, it cannot be come for you to build yourselves comfortable houses: but ye are rebuilding your houses; why then do ye not rebuild the house of the Lord? The foundation of the temple had been laid fourteen years before, and some considerable progress made in the building; and it had been lying waste in that unfinished state to the present time.

Clarke: Hag 1:5 - -- Consider your ways - Is it fit that you should be building yourselves elegant houses, and neglect a place for the worship of that God who has restor...

Consider your ways - Is it fit that you should be building yourselves elegant houses, and neglect a place for the worship of that God who has restored you from captivity?

Clarke: Hag 1:6 - -- Ye have sown much - God will not bless you in any labor of your hands, unless you rebuild his temple and restore his worship. This verse contains a ...

Ye have sown much - God will not bless you in any labor of your hands, unless you rebuild his temple and restore his worship. This verse contains a series of proverbs, no less than five in the compass of a few lines.

Calvin: Hag 1:2 - -- They who think that seventy years had not passed until the reign of Darius, may from this passage be easily disproved: for if the seventy years were ...

They who think that seventy years had not passed until the reign of Darius, may from this passage be easily disproved: for if the seventy years were not accomplished, an excuse would have been ready at hand,—that they had deferred the work of building the Temple; but it was certain, that the time had then elapsed, and that it was owing to their indifference that the Temple was not erected, for all the materials were appropriated to private uses. While then they were thus taking care of themselves and consulting their own interest, the building of the Temple was neglected. That the Temple was not built till the reign of Darius, this happened, as we have said, from another cause, because the prefects of king Cyrus gave much annoyance to the Jews, and Cambyses was most hostile to them. But when liberty was restored to them, and Darius had so kindly permitted them to build the Temple, they had no excuse for delay.

It is however probable that they had then many disputes as to the time; for it may have been, that they seizing on any pretext to cover their sloth, made this objection,—that many difficulties had occurred, because they had been too precipitate, and that they had thus been punished for their haste, because they had rashly undertaken the building of the Temple: and we may also suppose that they took another view of the time as having not yet come, for easily might this objection occur to them,—“It is indeed true that the worship of God is deservedly to be preferred to all other things; but the Lord grants us this indulgence, so that we are allowed to build our own houses; and in the meantime we attend to the sacrifices. Have not our fathers lived many ages without a Temple? God was then satisfied with a sanctuary: there is now an altar erected, and there sacrifices are offered. The Lord then will forgive us if we defer the building of the Temple to a suitable time. But in the meantime every one may build his own house, so that afterwards the Temple may at leisure be built more sumptuously.” However this may have been, we find that true which I have often stated,—that the Jews were so taken up with their own domestic concerns, with their own ease, and with their own pleasures, that they made very little account of God’s worship. This is the reason why the Prophet was so greatly displeased with them.

He declares what they said, This people say, The time is not yet come to build the house of Jehovah 132 He repeats here what the Jews were wont to allege in order to disguise their sloth, after having delayed a long time, and when they could not, except through consummate effrontery, adduce anything in their own defense. We however see, that they hesitated not to promise pardon to themselves. Thus also do men indulge themselves in their sins, as though they could make an agreement with God and pacify him with some frivolous things. We see that this was the case then. But we may also see here, as in a mirror, how great is the ingratitude of men. The kindness of God had been especially worthy of being remembered, the glory of which ought to have been borne in mind to the end of time: they had been restored from exile in a manner beyond what they had ever expected. What ought they to have done, but to have devoted themselves entirely to the service of their deliverer? But they built, no, not even a tent for God, and sacrificed in the open air; and thus they wilfully trifled with God. But at the same time they dwelt at ease in houses elegantly fitted up.

And how is the case at this day? We see that through a remarkable miracle of God the gospel has shone forth in our time, and we have emerged, as it were, from the abodes below. Who does now rear up, of his own free-will, an altar to God? On the contrary, all regard what is advantageous only to themselves; and while they are occupied with their own concerns, the worship of God is cast aside; there is no care, no zeal, no concern for it; nay, what is worse, many make gain of the gospel, as though it were a lucrative business. No wonder then, if the people have so basely disregarded their deliverance, and have almost obliterated the memory of it. No less shameful is the example witnessed at this day among us.

But we may hence also see how kindly God has provided for his Church; for his purpose was that this reproof should continue extant, that he might at this day stimulate us, and excite our fear as well as our shame. For we also thus grow frigid in promoting the worship of God, whenever we are led to seek only our own advantages. We may also add, that as God’s temple is spiritual, our fault is the more atrocious when we become thus slothful; since God does not bid us to collect either wood, or stones, or cement, but to build a celestial temple, in which he may be truly worshipped. When therefore we become thus indifferent, as that people were thus severely reproved, doubtless our sloth is much more detestable. We now see that the Prophet not only spoke to men of his age, but was also destined, through God’s wonderful purpose, to be a preacher to us, so that his doctrine sounds at this day in our ears, and reproves our torpor and ungrateful indifference: for the building of the spiritual temple is deferred, whenever we become devoted to ourselves, and regard only what is advantageous to us individually. We shall go on with what follows tomorrow.

Calvin: Hag 1:5 - -- Here the Prophet deals with the refractory people according to what their character required; for as to those who are teachable and obedient, a word ...

Here the Prophet deals with the refractory people according to what their character required; for as to those who are teachable and obedient, a word is enough for them; but they who are perversely addicted to their sins must be more sharply urged, as the Prophet does here; for he brings before the Jews the punishments by which they had been already visited. It is commonly said, that experience is the teacher of fools; and the Prophet has this in view in these words, apply your hearts to your ways; 135 that is, “If the authority of God or a regard for him is of no importance among you, at least consider how God deals with you. How comes it that ye are famished, that both heaven and earth deny food to you? Besides, though ye consume much food, it yet does not satisfy you. In a word, how is it that all things fade away and vanish in your hands? How is this? Ye cannot otherwise account for it, but that God is displeased with you. If then ye will not of your own accord obey God’s word, let these judgements at least induce you to repent.” It was to apply the heart to their ways, when they acknowledged that they were thus famished, not by chance, but that the curse of God urged them, or was suspended over their heads. He therefore bids them to receive instruction from the events themselves, or from what they were experiencing; and by these words the Prophet more sharply teaches them; as though he had said, that they profited nothing by instruction and warning, and that it remained as the last thing, that they were to be drawn by force while the Lord was chastising them.

Calvin: Hag 1:6 - -- He says that they had sown much, and that small was the produce. They who render the clause in the future tense, wrest the meaning of the Prophet: ...

He says that they had sown much, and that small was the produce. They who render the clause in the future tense, wrest the meaning of the Prophet: for why did he say, apply your heart to your ways, if he only denounced a future punishment? But, as I have already stated, he intimates, that they very thoughtlessly champed the bridle, for they perceived not that all their evils were inflicted by God’s hand, nor did they regard his judgement as righteous. Hence he says, that they had sowed much, and that the harvest had been small; and then, that they ate and were not satisfied; that they drank and had not their thirst quenched; that they clothed themselves and were not warmed. How much soever they applied those things which seemed necessary for the support of life, they yet availed them nothing. And God, we know, does punish men in these two ways either by withdrawing his blessings, by rendering the earth and and the heavens dry; or by making the abundant produce unsatisfying and even useless. It often happens that men gather what is sufficient for support, and yet they are always hungry. It is a kind of curse, which appears very evident when God takes away their nourishing power from bread and wine, so that they supply no support to man. When therefore fruit, and whatever the earth produces for the necessities of man, give no support, God proves, as it were by an outstretched arm, that he is an avenger. But the other curse is more frequent; that is, when God smites the earth with drought, so that it produces nothing. But our Prophet refers to both these kinds of evils. Behold, he says, Ye have sown much and ye gather little; and then he says, Though ye are supplied with the produce of wine and corn, yet with eating and drinking ye cannot satisfy yourselves; nay, your very clothes do not make you warm. They might have had a sure hope of the greatest abundance, had they not broken off the stream of God’s favor by their sins. Were they not then extremely blind this experience must have awakened them, according to what is said in the Joe 1:0.

He says at the end of the verse, He who gains wages, gains then for a perforated bag. By these words he reminds them, that the vengeance of God could not only be seen in the sterility of the earth, and in the very hunger of men, who by eating were not satisfied; but also in their work, for they wearied themselves much without any profit, as even the money cast into the bag disappeared. Hence he says, even your work is in vain. It was indeed a most manifest proof of God’s wrath, when their money, though laid up, yet vanished away. 136

We now see what the Prophet means: As his doctrine appeared frigid to the Jews and his warnings were despised, he treats them according to the perverseness of their disposition. Hence he shows, that though they disregarded God and his Prophets, they were yet sufficiently taught by his judgements, and that still they remained indifferent. He therefore goads them, as though they were asses, that they might at length acknowledge that God was justly displeased with them, and that his wrath was conspicuous in the sterility of the land, as well as in everything connected with their life; for whether they did eat or abstained from food, they were hungry; and when they diligently labored and gathered wages, their wages vanished, as though they had cast them into a perforated bag. It follows—

Defender: Hag 1:2 - -- The temple had been started soon after the edict of Cyrus in 536 b.c., but opposition in the land and other problems had discouraged them and they soo...

The temple had been started soon after the edict of Cyrus in 536 b.c., but opposition in the land and other problems had discouraged them and they soon quit building, with the temple still very incomplete (Ezr 4:24). This was the occasion for Haggai's prophecy. Darius also renewed Cyrus' authorization to continue the work, and the temple project was soon resumed and finally finished (Ezr 6:1-14)."

Defender: Hag 1:4 - -- The "cieled houses" were paneled with fine woods normally found only in palaces."

The "cieled houses" were paneled with fine woods normally found only in palaces."

Defender: Hag 1:5 - -- This is the first of five admonitions in Haggai's brief prophecy to "consider" what they were doing (Hag 1:5, Hag 1:7; Hag 2:15, Hag 2:18)."

This is the first of five admonitions in Haggai's brief prophecy to "consider" what they were doing (Hag 1:5, Hag 1:7; Hag 2:15, Hag 2:18)."

Defender: Hag 1:6 - -- The good citizens of Jerusalem had been called by God to rebuild His temple, but they had quickly turned aside to build comfortable homes for themselv...

The good citizens of Jerusalem had been called by God to rebuild His temple, but they had quickly turned aside to build comfortable homes for themselves, unwilling to combat the opposition of the Lord's enemies God therefore had withdrawn His blessing. A severe drought came (Hag 1:11), along with other problems, and their apparent prosperity soon turned to dust. All of God's people need to learn and obey the admonition of the Lord to "seek ye first the kingdom of God" (Mat 6:33) trusting Him to take care of their material needs."

TSK: Hag 1:2 - -- This : Num 13:31; Ezr 4:23, Ezr 4:24, Ezr 5:1, Ezr 5:2; Neh 4:10; Pro 22:13, Pro 26:13-16, Pro 29:25; Ecc 9:10, Ecc 11:4; Son 5:2, Son 5:3

TSK: Hag 1:3 - -- by Haggai : Ezr 5:1; Zec 1:1

by Haggai : Ezr 5:1; Zec 1:1

TSK: Hag 1:4 - -- to : 2Sa 7:2; Psa 132:3-5; Mat 6:33; Phi 2:21 and : Psa 74:7, Psa 102:14; Jer 26:6, Jer 26:18, Jer 52:13; Lam 2:7, Lam 4:1; Eze 24:21; Dan 9:17, Dan 9...

TSK: Hag 1:5 - -- thus : Hag 1:7, Hag 2:15-18; Lam 3:40; Eze 18:28; Luk 15:17; 2Co 13:5; Gal 6:4 Consider your ways : Heb. Set your heart on your ways, Exo 7:23, Exo 9:...

thus : Hag 1:7, Hag 2:15-18; Lam 3:40; Eze 18:28; Luk 15:17; 2Co 13:5; Gal 6:4

Consider your ways : Heb. Set your heart on your ways, Exo 7:23, Exo 9:21 *marg. Psa 48:13 *marg. Eze 40:4; Dan 6:14, Dan 10:12

TSK: Hag 1:6 - -- have : Hag 1:9, Hag 2:16; Lev 26:20; Deu 28:38-40; 2Sa 21:1; Psa 107:34; Isa 5:10; Jer 14:4; Hos 4:10, Hos 8:7; Joe 1:10-13; Amo 4:6-9; Mic 6:14, Mic ...

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Hag 1:2 - -- Thus speaketh the Lord of hosts, saying, This people say - Not Zerubbabel or Joshua, but "this people."He says not, "My people,"but reproachful...

Thus speaketh the Lord of hosts, saying, This people say - Not Zerubbabel or Joshua, but "this people."He says not, "My people,"but reproachfully "this people,"as, in acts, disowning Him, and so deserving to be disowned by Him. "The time is not come,"literally "It is not time to come, time for the house of the Lord to be built". They might yet sit still; the time for them "to come"was not yet, for not yet was the "time for the house of the Lord to be built."Why it was not time, they did not say. The government did not help them; the original grant by Cyrus Ezr 3:7 was exhausted; the Samaritans hindered them, because they would not own them, (amid their mishmash of worship, "worshiping,"our Lord tells them Joh 4:22, "they know not what"), as worshipers of the same God. It was a bold excuse, if they said, that the 70 years during which the temple was to lie waste, were not yet ended.

The time had long since come, when, 16 years before, Cyrus had given command that the house of God should be built. The prohibition to build, under Artaxerxes or Pseudo-Smerdis, applied directly to the city and its walls, not to the temple, except so far as the temple itself, from its position, might be capable of being used as a fort, as it was in the last siege of, Jerusalem. Yet in itself a building of the size of the temple, apart from outer buildings, could scarcely so be used. The prohibition did not hinder the building of stately private houses, as appears from Haggai’ s rebuke. The hindrances also, whatever they were, had not begun with that decree. The death of Pseudo-Smerdis had now, for a year, set them free, if had they had any zeal for the glory and service of God. Otherwise, Haggai would not blamed them. God, knowing that He would bend the heart of Darius, as He had that of Cyrus, requires the house to be built without the king’ s decree. It was built in faith, that God would bring through what He had enjoined, although outward things were as adverse now as before. And what He commanded He prospered Ezra 5\endash 6.

There was indeed a second fulfillment of 70 years, from the destruction of the temple by Nebuchadnezzar 586 b.c., to its consecration in the 6th year of Darius 516 b.c. But this was through the willfulness of man, prolonging the desolation decreed by God, and Jeremiah’ s prophecy relates to the people not to the temple.

"The prophet addresses his discourse to the chiefs (in Church and state) and yet accuses directly, not their listlessness but that of the people, in order both to honor them before the people and to teach that their sins are to be blamed privately not publicly, lest their authority should be injured, and the people incited to rebel against them; and also to shew that this fault was directly that of the people, whom he reproves before their princes, that, being openly convicted before them, it might be ashamed, repent, and obey God; but that indirectly this fault touched the chiefs themselves, whose office it was to urge the people to this work of God". "For seldom is the prince free from the guilt of his subjects, as either assenting to, or winking at them, or not coercing them, though able."

Since also Christians are the temple of God, all this prophecy of Haggai is applicable to them . "When thou seest one who has lapsed thinking and preparing to build through chastity the temple which he had before destroyed through passion, and yet delaying day by day, say to him, ‘ Truly thou also art of the people of the captivity, and sayest, The time is not yet come for building the house of the Lord.’ Whoso has once settled to restore the temple of God, to him every time is suited for building, and the prince, Satan, cannot hinder, nor, the enemies around. As soon as being thyself converted, thou callest upon the name of the Lord, He will say, "Behold Me". "To him who willeth to do right, the time is always present; the good and right-minded have power to fulfill what is to the glory of God, in every time and place."

Barnes: Hag 1:3 - -- And the word of the Lord came - o "Before, he prophesied nothing, but only recited the saying of the people; now he refutes it in his prophecy...

And the word of the Lord came - o "Before, he prophesied nothing, but only recited the saying of the people; now he refutes it in his prophecy, and repeats, again and again, that he says this not of himself, but from the mind and mouth of God."It is characteristic of Haggai to inculcate thus frequently, that his words are not his own, but the words of God. Yet "the prophets, both in their threats and prophecies, repeat again and again, "Thus saith the Lord,"teaching us, how we should prize the word of God, hang upon it, have it ever in our mouth, reverence, ruminate on, utter, praise it, make it our continual delight."

Barnes: Hag 1:4 - -- Is it time for you - You, being what you are, the creatures of God, "to dwell in your ceiled houses,"more emphatically, in your houses, and th...

Is it time for you - You, being what you are, the creatures of God, "to dwell in your ceiled houses,"more emphatically, in your houses, and those "ceiled,"probably with costly woods, such as cedar . But where then was the excuse of want of means? They imitated, in their alleged poverty, what is spoken of as magnificent in their old kings, Solomon and Shallum, but not having, as Solomon first did (1Ki 6:9, ויספן ), "covered the house of God with beams and rows of cedar". "Will ye dwell in houses artificially adorned, not so much for use as for delight, and shall My dwelling-place, wherein was the Holy of holies, and the cherubim, and the table of showbread, be bestreamed with rains, desolated in solitude, scorched by the sun?"

"With these words carnal Christians are reproved, who have no glow of zeal for God, but are full of self-love, and so make no effort to repair, build, or strengthen the material temples of Christ, and houses assigned to His worship, when aged, ruinous, decaying or destroyed, but build for themselves curious, voluptuous, superfluous dwellings. In these the love of Christ gloweth not; these Isaiah threateneth, Isa 5:8, Isa 5:12. "Woe to you who join house to house and field to field, and regard not the work of the Lord!"

To David and Solomon the building of God’ s temple was their heart’ s desire; to early Christian Emperors, to the ages of faith, the building of Churches; now mostly, owners of lands build houses for this world’ s profit, and leave it to the few to build in view of eternity, and for the glory of God.

Barnes: Hag 1:5 - -- And now, thus saith the Lord of hosts; "Consider,"(literally "set your heart upon) your ways,"what they had been doing, what they were doing, and wh...

And now, thus saith the Lord of hosts; "Consider,"(literally "set your heart upon) your ways,"what they had been doing, what they were doing, and what those doings had led to, and would lead to. This is ever present to the mind of the prophets, as speaking God’ s words, that our acts are not only "ways"in which we go, each day of life being a continuance of the day before; but that they are ways which lead, somewhere in God’ s Providence and His justice; to some end of the "way,"good or bad. So God says by Jeremiah Jer 21:8. "I set before you the way of life and the way of death;"and David Psa 16:11, "Thou wilt show me the path of life,"where it follows, "In Thy presence is the fullness of joy and at Thy Right Hand there are pleasures forevermore;"and Solomon Pro 6:23, "Reproofs of instruction are the way of life;"and, he is in Pro 10:17, "the way of life who keepeth instruction; and he who forsaketh rebuke, erreth;"and Pro 15:24, "The way of life is above to the wise, that he may depart from hell beneath;"and of the adulterous woman, Pro 7:27. "Her house are the ways of hell, going down to the chambers of death"and Pro 5:5-6, "her feet go down unto death; her steps take hold on hell; lest thou shouldest ponder the path of life."Again, Pro 14:12; Pro 16:25. "There is a way that seemeth right unto a man, and the end thereof are the ways of death;"and contrariwise Pro 4:18, "The path of the righteous is a shining light, shining more and more until the mid-day"Pro 2:13. "The ways of darkness"are the ways which end in darkness; and when Isaiah says Isa 59:8, "The way of peace hast thou not known,"he adds, "whosoever goeth therein shall not know peace."They who choose not peace for their way, shall not find peace in and for their end.

On these your ways, Haggai says, "set your hearts,"not thinking of them lightly, nor giving a passing thought to them, but fixing your minds upon them; as God says to Satan Job 1:8, "Hast thou set thy heart on My servant Job?"and God is said to set His eye or His face upon man for good Jer 24:6; or for evil Jer 21:10, He speaks also, not of setting the mind, applying the understanding, giving the thoughts, but of "setting the heart,"as the seat of the affections. It is not a dry weighing of the temporal results of their ways, but a loving dwelling upon them, for repentance without love is but the gnawing of remorse.

Set your heart on your ways; - i. e., your affections, thoughts, works, so as to be circumspect in all things; as the apostle Paul says 1Ti 5:21, "Do nothing without forethought,"i. e., without previous judgment of reason; and Solomon Pro 4:25, "Let thine eyes look right on, and let thine eyelids look straight before thee;"and the son of Sirach, "Son, do nothing without counsel and when thou hast done it thou wilt not repent."For since, according to a probable proposition, nothing in human acts is indifferent, i. e., involving neither good nor ill deserts, they who do not thus set their hearts upon their ways, do they not daily incur almost countless sins, in thought, word, desire, deed, yea and by omission of duties? Such are all fearless persons who heed not to fulfill what is written Pro 4:23, ‘ Keep your heart with all watchfulness. ‘ "

"He "sows much"to his own heart, but "brings in little,"who by reading and hearing knows much of the heavenly commands, but by negligence in deeds bears little fruit. "He eats and is not satisfied,"who, hearing the words of God, coveteth the gains or glory of the world. Well is he said not to be "satisfied,"who eateth one thing, hungereth after another. He drinks and is not inebriated, who inclineth his ear to the voice of preaching, but changeth not his mind. For through inebriation the mind of those who drink is changed. He then who is devoted to the knowledge of God’ s word, yet still desireth to gain the things of the world, drinks and is not inebriated. For were he inebriated, no doubt he would have changed his mind and no longer seek earthly things, or love the vain and passing things which he had loved. For the Psalmist says of the elect Psa 36:8, "they shall be inebriated with the richness of Thy house,"because they shall be filled with such love of Almighty God, that, their mind being changed, they seem to be strangers to themselves, fulfilling what is written Mat 16:24, ‘ If any will come after Me, let him deny himself. ‘ "

Barnes: Hag 1:6 - -- Ye have sown much - The prophet expresses the habitualness of these visitations by a vivid present. He marks no time and so expresses the more ...

Ye have sown much - The prophet expresses the habitualness of these visitations by a vivid present. He marks no time and so expresses the more vividly that it was at all times. It is one continually present evil. "Ye have sown much and there is a bringing in little; there is eating and not to satisfy; there is drinking and not to exhilarate; there is clothing and not to be warm It is not for the one or the other years, as, since the first year of Darius Hystaspis; it is one continued visitation, coordinate with one continued negligence. As long as the sin lasted, so long the punishment. The visitation itself was twofold; impoverished harvests, so as to supply less sustenance; and various indisposition of the frame, so that what would, by God’ s appointment in nature, satisfy, gladden, warm, failed of its effect. "And he that laboreth for hire, gaineth himself hire into a bag full of holes"(literally "perforated.") The labor pictured is not only fruitless, but wearisome and vexing. There is a seeming result of all the labor, something to allure hopes; but immediately it is gone. The pagan assigned a like baffling of hope as one of the punishments of hell , "Better and wiser to seek to be blessed by God, Who bestoweth on us all things. And this will readily come to those who choose to be of the same mind with Him and prefer what is for His glory to their own. For so saith the Saviour Himself to us Mat 6:33, Seek ye first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things shall be added unto you."

"He loses good deeds by evil acts, who takes account of his good works, which he hits before his eyes, and forgets the faults which creep in between; or who, after what is good, returns to what is vain and evil". "Money is seen in the pierced bag, when it is cast in, but when it is lost, it is not seen. They then who look how much they give, but do not weigh how much they gain wrongly, cast their rewards into a pierced bag. Looking to the Hope of their confidence they bring them together; not looking, they lose them."

"They lose the fruit of their labor, by not persevering to the end, or by seeking human praise, or by vain glory within, not keeping spiritual riches under the guardianship of humility. Such are vain and unprofitable men, of whom the Saviour saith, Mat 6:2. ‘ Verily I say unto you, they have their reward. ‘ "

Poole: Hag 1:2 - -- Thus speaketh by way of reproof, and to awaken the drowsy Jews; he who knew their heart tells them what they both thought and spoke. This people wh...

Thus speaketh by way of reproof, and to awaken the drowsy Jews; he who knew their heart tells them what they both thought and spoke.

This people whom mercy preserved in, redeemed out of Babylon, and brought into their land on purpose to build the temple. This people, whom Cyrus by proclamation sent to do this, who seemed to long for a temple when they were in Babylon.

Say discourse thus among themselves, and discourage all that were forward. The time is not come; the proper season of rebuilding the house of God seems to be not come, for since the prohibition by Cambyses in the days of Cyrus, and through all the time of Cambyses, and in the first year and part of the second of Darius, we have no commission to do it, but are required not to do any thing in this affair without further order, Ezr 4:21 .

Poole: Hag 1:3 - -- Then when the people were thus sluggish, made excuses, and delayed doing their duty, then at that time came the word of the Lord by Haggai the prophe...

Then when the people were thus sluggish, made excuses, and delayed doing their duty, then at that time came the word of the Lord by Haggai the prophet: see Hag 1:1 .

Poole: Hag 1:4 - -- Is it time? you think it full time to build your own houses, you judge it seasonable enough to lay out much cost on adorning them, what pretence can ...

Is it time? you think it full time to build your own houses, you judge it seasonable enough to lay out much cost on adorning them, what pretence can you make that it is not seasonable to build my house?

For you Jews, who were by a king (that knew not your God) sent to build my house, you unthankful and forgetful ones.

To dwell to settle yourselves securely, and for continuance with stateliness.

Ceiled searched and with cedar wainscot, curiously carved and covered, and as richly adorned as if you were full of treasures.

Houses: it seems to intimate some of them had more than one house, a city and a country house, and whilst God’ s house lay waste; they thus lavish out their wealth on private worldly conveniences, but grudge the charge on God’ s house. Can you thus live without a temple, an altar, a sacrifice, and yet cannot live without stately houses? Do you owe so much to yourselves, and so little to your God? so much to your bodies, so little to your souls?

Lie waste in its rubbish, or in bare, naked foundations without any superstructure.

Poole: Hag 1:5 - -- Now therefore or, And now or, But now , Heb.; it is time for you to consider, to set your heart to that I propose. Thus saith the Lord of hosts ...

Now therefore or,

And now or, But now , Heb.; it is time for you to consider, to set your heart to that I propose.

Thus saith the Lord of hosts the great God speaks, hearken therefore.

Consider your ways ponder well the course you have taken and the success of it, what you have designed, how you have succeeded, what care, and what disappointment, what labour, and how fruitless your labour hath been; consider how you have carried it toward God, and how God hath carried it toward you.

Poole: Hag 1:6 - -- The prophet doth help them, or directs them what in particular they ought to consider, and so debateth it with them: Your labour, care, and charge h...

The prophet doth help them, or directs them what in particular they ought to consider, and so debateth it with them: Your labour, care, and charge hath been great in ploughing and sowing, that you are sensible of; but what harvest have you had? O, your barns have been far from full, you have reaped and brought in little; this is evident to all.

Ye eat you feed on the fruit of your labour and product of the earth,

but ye have not enough but what you eat doth not nourish you, it doth not suffice; you are hungry and meagre still.

Ye drink, but ye are not filled with drink the like emptiness and unprofitableness in your drink; your water quencheth not your thirst, your wine does not refresh your heart or revive your spirit; or you dare not eat or drink sufficiently for fear you should not have enough, lest your store should fail you.

Ye clothe you, but there is none warm your wool and flax is not what it used to be, sufficient to defend you from the cold, it will not warm you.

He that earneth wages earneth wages to put it into a bag with holes who labours or trades to gain and lay up loseth all his labour, it runs from him as money put into a purse or pocket that hath no bottom, that cannot hold it. This fruitless labour you will soon discern, if you consider your ways: and what think you may be the cause of this?

Haydock: Hag 1:2 - -- Yet come. God's service must be restored without delay, and manners reformed; as otherwise many will be lost eternally. (Worthington) --- The Jews...

Yet come. God's service must be restored without delay, and manners reformed; as otherwise many will be lost eternally. (Worthington) ---

The Jews refrained from commencing the temple till the time marked out by Jeremias xxv. 11., and Zacharias i. 7. (Calmet) ---

From the beginning of the last siege sixty-nine years had elapsed. (Usher, the year of the world 3485.) ---

Others, reflecting on the obstacles placed by Cyrus and Cambyses, thought it was not yet time to work at the temple: but these were only pretexts. The kingdom was now held by another family, and the former decrees abolished. Fear of labour, therefore, was the only impediment.

Haydock: Hag 1:4 - -- Ceiled: superbly adorned. Hebrew, "covered." You are not content with what is merely necessary, while the temple lies in ruins. (Calmet)

Ceiled: superbly adorned. Hebrew, "covered." You are not content with what is merely necessary, while the temple lies in ruins. (Calmet)

Haydock: Hag 1:5 - -- Ways. Sound the real motives of your neglect. (Haydock) --- See if your misfortunes do not originate in this cause, and if God does not require yo...

Ways. Sound the real motives of your neglect. (Haydock) ---

See if your misfortunes do not originate in this cause, and if God does not require you to build the temple, ver. 9. (Calmet)

Haydock: Hag 1:6 - -- Filled. Literally, "inebriated," (Haydock) so as to become cheerful. (St. Jerome)

Filled. Literally, "inebriated," (Haydock) so as to become cheerful. (St. Jerome)

Gill: Hag 1:2 - -- Thus speaketh the Lord of hosts,.... Of armies above and below; whom all ought to reverence, honour, and obey; who was able to support his people in b...

Thus speaketh the Lord of hosts,.... Of armies above and below; whom all ought to reverence, honour, and obey; who was able to support his people in building his house, and protect them from their enemies, which should have been an encouragement to them; and to punish them for their neglect of it, which might have deterred them from it. This preface is made, to show that what follow were not the words of the prophet, but of the Lord; and therefore to be the more regarded, and the truth of them not to be doubted of:

saying, This people say; repeating the words of the people of the Jews to Zerubbabel and Joshua, that they might observe them, and the wickedness and ingratitude in them. "This people", lately brought out of the captivity of Babylon, and loaded with various blessings and benefits; and not a few of them, but the generality of them, the body of them, expressed themselves after this manner, when pressed to build the temple:

The time is not come, the time that the Lord's house should be built; suggesting that the seventy years of Jerusalem and the temple lying in ruins, reckoning from the destruction of them in the nineteenth year of Nebuchadnezzar, were not yet fulfilled; or rather intimating that it was not the time in Providence, since they had been forbid and hindered in former reigns from going on with the work; or, since it had been a time of famine and distress with them, it was not a time fit and convenient to carry on such a service; and though they did not lay aside all thoughts of it, yet they judged it right and proper to defer it to a more convenient time, when they were better settled, and in a better capacity to engage in it.

Gill: Hag 1:3 - -- Then came the word of the Lord by Haggai the prophet,.... This is a second prophecy, distinct from the former; that was delivered to the two governors...

Then came the word of the Lord by Haggai the prophet,.... This is a second prophecy, distinct from the former; that was delivered to the two governors, setting forth the sentiments and language of the people concerning the building of the temple, which was left with them to consider how just it was; but this is sent to the people themselves, expostulating with them about the folly and ingratitude of it:

saying; as follows:

Gill: Hag 1:4 - -- Is it time for you, O ye, to dwell in your panelled houses,.... They could not only find time, leisure, and convenience to build houses to dwell in; ...

Is it time for you, O ye, to dwell in your panelled houses,.... They could not only find time, leisure, and convenience to build houses to dwell in; but to wainscot them, and line them with boards of cedar, as the Targum; as bad as the times were complained of; and could sit in them, indulging themselves in luxury, ease, and sloth; and why then was it not a fit and convenient time as well to build the house of the Lord in?

and this house lie waste? or, "and shall this house lie waste?" or, "when this house lies waste?" o not indeed in its rubbish and ruins, as it was demolished by the Chaldeans, and left; but with a bare foundation, laid some years ago; and ever since neglected; the superstructure not carried on, and much less built up to be fit for service; and therefore might be said with propriety to lie waste and desolate, being unfinished, unfit for use, and no regard had unto it. David was of another mind, 2Sa 7:2 and truly religious persons will be more concerned for the house of God than for their own houses.

Gill: Hag 1:5 - -- Now therefore thus saith the Lord of hosts,.... The Lord God omniscient and omnipotent, that saw all their actions, and could punish for them; since t...

Now therefore thus saith the Lord of hosts,.... The Lord God omniscient and omnipotent, that saw all their actions, and could punish for them; since they were so careful of their own houses, and adorning them, and so careless of his house; he would have them now sit down, and seriously think of these things, and of what he should further observe unto them:

Consider your ways; their sinful ways, and repent of them, and forsake them, particularly their ingratitude before observed; and their civil ways, their common ways of life; their labour, work, and business, they were continually employed in; and observe the event of them; what success they had, what these issued in; whether there were not some visible tokens of the divine displeasure on them, which rendered all their attempts to support and enrich themselves and families vain, and of no effect: and they would do well to consider to what all this was to be imputed; whether it was not chiefly owing to this, their neglect of the house of God; and this he would have considered, not in a slight cursory way; but with great earnestness, diligence, and application of mind: "put", or "set your hearts upon your ways" p; so it may be literally rendered.

Gill: Hag 1:6 - -- Ye have sown much, and bring in little,.... Contrary to what is usually done; the seed that is sown is but little, in, comparison of what springs up, ...

Ye have sown much, and bring in little,.... Contrary to what is usually done; the seed that is sown is but little, in, comparison of what springs up, is reaped, and gathered into the barn; which commonly affords seed again to the sower, and bread to the eater; but here much land was tilled, and a great deal of seed was sown in it; but a thin crop was produced, little was gathered into the barn; a blessing being withheld from the earth, and from their labours, because of their sins, which they would do well to think of, and the cause of it:

ye eat, but ye have not enough; what the earth did yield, and which they gathered in, they made food of, and ate of it; yet it was not sufficient to satisfy their hunger; or it was not blessed for their nourishment; or they had a canine appetite in judgment given them, so that they were never satisfied: or, it was "not for fulness" q; they were not filled with it to satisfaction, but still craved more; and yet, it may be, durst not eat more, if they had it, lest they should want the next day:

ye drink, but ye are not filled with drink; or, "not to inebriation" r; it was not sufficient to quench their thirst, much less to make them merry and; cheerful: the vines produced such a small quantity of grapes, and those so little wine, that they had not enough to drink, at least could not drink freely, but sparingly, lest it should be all spent before another vintage came:

ye clothe you, but there is none warm; or, "but" it is "not for heat to him" s; to anyone; so rigorous the season, so extreme the cold, that his clothes will not keep him warm, even though the climate was, naturally and usually hot:

and he that earneth wages earneth wages to put it into a bag with holes; or, "pierced through" t; if a man is hired as a labourer, and gets much wages, and brings it home, and lays it up; or if he trades and merchandises, and has great gains by it, and thinks to amass great riches; yet, what through losses, and the dreariness of provisions, and the many ways he has for the spending of his money, it is as if he put it into a bag full of holes, and it ran through as fast as put into it; signifying hereby that all his pains and labour were in vain.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Hag 1:2 Heb “the time has not come, the time for the house of the Lord to be built” (similar KJV). A number of English versions refer to “re...

NET Notes: Hag 1:3 Heb “and the word of the Lord came by the hand of Haggai the prophet, saying.” Cf. the similar expression in v. 1 and the note there.

NET Notes: Hag 1:4 Heb “Is it time for you, [yes] you, to live in paneled houses, while this house is in ruins”; NASB “lies desolate”; NIV “...

NET Notes: Hag 1:5 Heb “Set your heart upon your ways” (see 2:15, 18); traditionally “Consider your ways” (so KJV, ASV, NAB, NASB).

NET Notes: Hag 1:6 Some translate “pockets” (so NLT) but the Hebrew word צְרוֹר (tsÿror) refers to a bag, pouch, or ...

Geneva Bible: Hag 1:2 Thus speaketh the LORD of hosts, saying, This people say, The time is not come, the time ( c ) that the LORD'S house should be built. ( c ) Not that ...

Geneva Bible: Hag 1:4 [Is it] time for you, O ye, to dwell in your ( d ) cieled houses, and this house [lie] waste? ( d ) Showing that they sought not only their necessiti...

Geneva Bible: Hag 1:6 ( e ) Ye have sown much, and bring in little; ye eat, but ye have not enough; ye drink, but ye are not filled with drink; ye clothe you, but there is ...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Hag 1:1-15 - --1 The time when Haggai prophesied.2 He reproves the people for neglecting the building of the house.7 He incites them to the building.12 He promises t...

Maclaren: Hag 1:6 - --Vain Toil Ye have sown much, and bring in little; ye eat, but ye have not enough; ye drink, but ye are not filled with drink; ye clothe you, but ther...

MHCC: Hag 1:1-11 - --Observe the sin of the Jews, after their return from captivity in Babylon. Those employed for God may be driven from their work by a storm, yet they m...

Matthew Henry: Hag 1:1-11 - -- It was the complaint of the Jews in Babylon that they saw not their signs, and there was no more prophet (Psa 74:9), which was a just judgment u...

Keil-Delitzsch: Hag 1:2 - -- The prophet begins by charging the people with their unconcern about building the house of God. Hag 1:2. "Thus saith Jehovah of hosts: This people ...

Keil-Delitzsch: Hag 1:3-4 - -- The word of Jehovah is opposed in Hag 1:4 to this speech of the people; and in order to give greater prominence to the antithesis, the introductory ...

Keil-Delitzsch: Hag 1:5-6 - -- After rebutting the untenable grounds of excuse, Haggai calls attention in vv. 5, 6 to the curse with which God has punished, and is still punishing...

Constable: Hag 1:1-6 - --A. Haggai's First challenge 1:1-6 1:1 Yahweh sent a message to Zerubbabel and Joshua through the prophet Haggai, though it went to all the Israelites ...

Guzik: Hag 1:1-15 - --Haggai 1 - Getting Priorities Straight A. God rebukes the returning remnant for their misplaced priorities. 1. (1) Introduction. In the second yea...

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Commentary -- Other

Critics Ask: Hag 1:2 EZRA 4:23 —How could foreign influence have caused the work to cease when Haggai 1:2 blames it on the indifference of the leaders? PROBLEM: Ezr...

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Introduction / Outline

JFB: Haggai (Book Introduction) THE name Haggai means "my feast"; given, according to COCCEIUS, in anticipation of the joyous return from exile. He probably was one of the Jewish exi...

JFB: Haggai (Outline) HAGGAI CALLS THE PEOPLE TO CONSIDER THEIR WAYS IN NEGLECTING TO BUILD GOD'S HOUSE: THE EVIL OF THIS NEGLECT TO THEMSELVES: THE HONOR TO GOD OF ATTEND...

TSK: Haggai 1 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Hag 1:1, The time when Haggai prophesied; Hag 1:2, He reproves the people for neglecting the building of the house; Hag 1:7, He incites t...

Poole: Haggai (Book Introduction) THE ARGUMENT Haggai is the first prophet that appears in the name of the Lord of hosts, to awaken, reprove, direct, exhort, and encourage both the ...

Poole: Haggai 1 (Chapter Introduction) HAGGAI CHAPTER 1 The time when Haggai prophesied, Hag 1:1 . Haggai reproveth the people’ s delay in building the temple, Hag 1:2-6 . He incite...

MHCC: Haggai (Book Introduction) After the return from captivity, Haggai was sent to encourage the people to rebuild the temple, and to reprove their neglect. To encourage their under...

MHCC: Haggai 1 (Chapter Introduction) (Hag 1:1-11) Haggai reproves the Jews for neglecting the temple. (Hag 1:12-15) He promises God's assistance to them.

Matthew Henry: Haggai (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Prophecy of Haggai The captivity in Babylon gave a very remarkable turn to the affairs of the Jewis...

Matthew Henry: Haggai 1 (Chapter Introduction) In this chapter, after the preamble of the prophecy, we have, I. A reproof of the people of the Jews for their dilatoriness and slothfulness in bu...

Constable: Haggai (Book Introduction) Introduction Title and Writer The title of this prophetic book is also the name of its...

Constable: Haggai (Outline) Outline I. A call to build the temple ch. 1 A. Haggai's first challenge 1:1-6 ...

Constable: Haggai Haggai Bibliography Alden, Robert L. "Haggai." In Daniel-Minor Prophets. Vol. 7 of The Expositor's Bible Commen...

Haydock: Haggai (Book Introduction) THE PROPHECY OF AGGEUS. INTRODUCTION. Aggeus was one of those that returned from the captivity of Babylon, in the first year of the reign of k...

Gill: Haggai (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO HAGGAI This part of sacred Scripture is in some Hebrew copies called "Sepher Haggai", the Book, of Haggai; in the Vulgate Latin ver...

Gill: Haggai 1 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO HAGGAI 1 This chapter contains the first sermon of the Prophet Haggai to the people of the Jews, directed to Zerubbabel the governo...

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