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Text -- Haggai 1:9 (NET)

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Context
1:9 ‘You expected a large harvest, but instead there was little, and when you brought it home it disappeared right away. Why?’ asks the Lord who rules over all. ‘Because my temple remains in ruins, thanks to each of you favoring his own house!
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Temple | Stingy | Selfishness | Repentance | Lukewarmness | JOSHUA (3) | Greed | BLOW | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Calvin , 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)

Wesley: Hag 1:9 - -- But it answered not the expectation.

But it answered not the expectation.

Wesley: Hag 1:9 - -- I blasted it.

I blasted it.

Wesley: Hag 1:9 - -- You with eagerness carry on your own particular buildings.

You with eagerness carry on your own particular buildings.

JFB: Hag 1:9 - -- Literally "looked" so as to turn your eyes "to much." The Hebrew infinitive here expresses continued looking. Ye hoped to have your store made "much" ...

Literally "looked" so as to turn your eyes "to much." The Hebrew infinitive here expresses continued looking. Ye hoped to have your store made "much" by neglecting the temple. The greater was your greediness, the more bitter your disappointment in being poorer than ever.

JFB: Hag 1:9 - -- Even the little crop brought into your barns I dissipated. "I did blow upon," that is, I scattered and caused to perish with My mere breath, as scatte...

Even the little crop brought into your barns I dissipated. "I did blow upon," that is, I scattered and caused to perish with My mere breath, as scattered and blighted corn.

JFB: Hag 1:9 - -- In emphatic antithesis.

In emphatic antithesis.

JFB: Hag 1:9 - -- Expressing the keenness of everyone of them in pursuing their own selfish interests. Compare "run," Psa 119:32; Pro 1:16, contrasted with their apathy...

Expressing the keenness of everyone of them in pursuing their own selfish interests. Compare "run," Psa 119:32; Pro 1:16, contrasted with their apathy about God's house.

Clarke: Hag 1:9 - -- Ye looked for much - Ye made great pretensions at first; but they are come to nothing. Ye did a little in the beginning; but so scantily and unwilli...

Ye looked for much - Ye made great pretensions at first; but they are come to nothing. Ye did a little in the beginning; but so scantily and unwillingly that I could not but reject it

Clarke: Hag 1:9 - -- Ye run every man unto his own house - To rebuild and adorn it; and God’ s house is neglected!

Ye run every man unto his own house - To rebuild and adorn it; and God’ s house is neglected!

Calvin: Hag 1:9 - -- Here the Prophet relates again, that the Jews were deprived of support, and that they in a manner pined away in their distress, because they robbed G...

Here the Prophet relates again, that the Jews were deprived of support, and that they in a manner pined away in their distress, because they robbed God of the worship due to him. He first repeats the fact, Ye have looked for much, but behold little 138 It may happen that one is contented with a very slender portion, because much is not expected. They who are satisfied with their own penury are not anxious though their portion of food is but scanty, though they are constrained to feed on acorns. Those who are become hardened in enduring evils, do not seek much; but they who desire much, are more touched and vexed by their penury. This is the reason why the Prophet says, Ye have looked for much, and, behold, there was but little; that is, “Ye are not like the peasants, who satisfy themselves with any sort of food, and are not troubled on account of their straitened circumstances; but your desire has led you to seek abundance. Hence ye seek and greedily lay hold on things on every side; but, behold, it comes to little.”

In the second place he adds, Ye have brought it home. He farther mentions another kind of evil—that when they gathered wine, and corn, and money, all these things immediately vanished. Ye have brought it home, and I have blown upon it. By saying that they brought it home, he intimates that what they had acquired was laid up, that it might be preserved safely; for they who had filled their storehouses, and wine-cellars, and bags, thought that they had no more to do with God. Hence it was that profane men securely indulged themselves; they thought that they were beyond the reach of danger, when their houses were well filled. God, on the contrary, shows that their houses became empty, when filled with treasures and provisions. But he speaks still more distinctly—that he had blown upon them, that is, that he had dissipated them by his breath: for the Prophet did not deem it enough historically to narrate what the Jews had experienced; but his purpose also was to point out the cause, as it were, by the finger. He therefore teaches us, that what they laid in store in their houses did not without a cause vanish away; but that this happened through the blowing of God, even because he cursed their blessing, according to what we shall hereafter see in the Prophet Malachi.

He then adds, Why is this? saith Jehovah of hosts. God here asks, not because he had any doubts on the subject, but that he might by this sort of goading rouse the Jews from their lethargy,—“Think of the cause, and know that my hand is not guided by a blind impulse when it strikes you. You ought, then, to consider the reason why all things thus decay and perish.” Here again is sharply reproved the stupidity of the people, because they attended not to the cause of their evils; for they ought to have known this of themselves.

But God gives the answer, because he saw that they remained stupefied— On account of my house, he says, because it is waste 139 God here assigns the cause; he shows that though no one of them considered why they were so famished, the judgement of his curse was yet sufficiently manifest, on account of the Temple remaining a waste. And you, he says, run, every one to his own house. Some read, You take delight, every one in his own house; for it is the verb רצה , retse, which we have lately noticed; and it means either to take pleasure in a thing, or to run. Every one, then, runs to his house, or, Every one delights in his house. But it is more suitable to the context to give this rendering, Every one runs to his house. For the Prophet here reminds the Jews that they were slow and slothful in the work of building the Temple, because they hastened to their private houses. He then reproves here their ardor in being intent on building their own houses, so that they had no leisure to build the Temple. This is the hastening which the Prophet blames and condemns in the Jews.

We may hence learn again, that they had long delayed to build the sanctuary after the time had arrived: for, as we have mentioned yesterday, they who think the Jews returned in the fifty-eighth year, and that they had not then undergone the punishment denounced by Jeremiah, are very deluded; for they thus obscure the favor of God; nay, they wholly subvert the truth of the promises, as though they had returned contrary to God’s will, through the permission of Cyrus, when yet Isaiah says, that Cyrus would be the instrument of their promised redemption. (Isa 45:1.) Surely, then, Cyrus must have been dead before the time was fulfilled! and in that case God could not have been the redeemer of his people. Therefore Eusebius, and those who agree with him, did thus most absurdly confound the order of time. It now follows—

TSK: Hag 1:9 - -- Ye looked : They had used all proper means in the cultivation of their lands, and had ""sown much;""but when they rationally entertained the most sang...

Ye looked : They had used all proper means in the cultivation of their lands, and had ""sown much;""but when they rationally entertained the most sanguine expectations of a large increase, they were strangely disappointed; and even what they had brought home was unaccountably wasted, as if the Lord had ""blown upon it,""and driven it away! And the reason was, because they neglected the temple, and left it in ruins, whilst they eagerly employed themselves in building and decorating their own houses; therefore they were visited by drought and famine, and by various diseases on man and beast. Hag 1:6, Hag 2:16, Hag 2:17; Isa 17:10,Isa 17:11; Mal 3:8-11

blow upon it : or, blow it away, 2Sa 22:16; 2Ki 19:7; Isa 40:7; Mal 2:2

Why : Job 10:2; Psa 77:5-10

Because : Hag 1:4; Jos 7:10-15; 2Sa 21:1; Mat 10:37, Mat 10:38; 1Co 11:30-32; Rev 2:4, Rev 3:19

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Hag 1:9 - -- Ye looked - , literally "a looking;"as though he said, it has all been one looking, "for much,"for increase, the result of all sowing, in the w...

Ye looked - , literally "a looking;"as though he said, it has all been one looking, "for much,"for increase, the result of all sowing, in the way of nature: "and behold it came to little,"i. e., less than was sown; as Isaiah denounced to them of old by God’ s word, Isa 5:10. "the seed of a homer shall yield an ephah,"i. e., one tenth of what was sown. "And ye brought it home, and I blew upon it,"so as to disperse it, as, not the wheat, but the chaff is blown before the wind. This, in whatever way it came to pass, was a further chastisement of God. The little seed which they brought in lessened through decay or waste. Why? saith the Lord of hosts. God asks by his prophet, what He asks in the awakened conscience Psa 39:11. "God with rebukes chastens man for sin."Conscience, when alive, confesses for "what"sin; or it asks itself, if memory does not supply the special sin. Unawakened, it complains about the excess of rain, the drought, the blight, the mildew, and asks, not itself, why, in God’ s Providence, these inflictions came in these years? They felt doubtless the sterility in contrast with the exceeding prolificalness of Babylonia, as they contrasted the "light bread,"Num 21:5. the manna, with Num 11:5. the plenteousness of Egypt. They ascribed probably their meagre crops (as we mostly do) to mere natural causes, perhaps to the long neglect of the land during the captivity. God forces the question upon their consciences, in that Haggai asks it in His Name, in whose hands all powers stand, "saith the Lord of host."They have not to talk it over among themselves, but to answer Almighty God, "why?"That "why?"strikes into the inmost depths of conscience!

Because of My house which is waste, and ye run - literally, "are running,"all the while, "each to his own house"They were absorbed in their material interests, and had no time for those of God. When the question was of God’ s house, they stir not from the spot; when it is of their own concerns, they run. Our Lord says, Mat 6:33. "Seek ye first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things shall be added unto you."Man reverses this, seeks his own things first, and God withholds His blessing.

"This comes true of those who prefer their own conveniences to God’ s honor, who do not thoroughly uproot self-love, whose penitence and devotion are shewn to be unstable, for on a slight temptation they are overcome. Such are they who are bold, self-pleasing, wise and great in their own eyes, who do not ground their conversation on true and solid humility."

(Cyr.) "To those who are slow to fulfill what is for the glory of God, and the things whereby His house, the Church, is firmly stayed, neither the heavenly dew cometh, which enricheth hearts and minds, nor the fruitfulness of the earth; i. e., right action; not food nor wine nor use of oil. But they will be ever strengthless and joyless, unenriched by spiritual oil, and remain without taste or participation of the blessing through Christ."

Poole: Hag 1:9 - -- Ye, O Jews, you toiled, and were at great cost, as Hag 1:6 . Looked for much expected, hoped, promised yourselves a great increase, a plentiful ha...

Ye, O Jews, you toiled, and were at great cost, as Hag 1:6 .

Looked for much expected, hoped, promised yourselves a great increase, a plentiful harvest.

And, lo, it came to little but you saw, discerned, and were sensible that it answered not expectation; all dwindled into a very little, you were losers by all, went backward still.

I did blow upon it: had your little been as the righteous man’ s little, you might have lived on it, and rejoiced in it; but it had not such a blessing upon it; it was blasted, and so was weak, and empty, and heartless, it profited little.

Because of mine house that is waste all this curse on your estate and labour was for your ungodly neglect of my house, leaving it waste.

Ye run did with eagerness carry on your own particular buildings, spared not care or cost for them; you stir not a foot about my house, you run with greatest earnestness about your own.

Every man to his own house domestic affairs and concerns, in which not one or two, or some few, but every one is culpable, scarce any free from this fault.

Gill: Hag 1:9 - -- Ye looked for much, and, lo, it came to little,.... They looked for a large harvest, and very promising it was for a while; but in the end it came to...

Ye looked for much, and, lo, it came to little,.... They looked for a large harvest, and very promising it was for a while; but in the end it came to little; it was a very small crop, very little was reaped and gathered in: or, "in looking", ye looked "to increase" x; your substance; had raised expectations of making themselves and families by their agriculture, and by their plantations of vines and olives, and by their trade and merchandise; and it dwindled away, and came to little or nothing; their riches, instead of being increased, were diminished:

and when ye brought it home, I did blow upon it; when they brought into their barns or houses the produce of their land, labour, and merchandise, which was but little, the Lord blew a blast upon that little, and brought rottenness and worms into it, as Jarchi; so that it was not a blessing to them, but a curse. So the Targum interprets it,

"behold, I sent a curse upon it:''

or, "I blew it away" y; as any light thing, straw or stubble, or thistle down, are blown away with a wind; so easily can the Lord, and sometimes he does, strip men of that little substance they have; riches by his orders make themselves wings, and flee away; or he, by one providence or another, blows them away like chaff before the wind:

Why? saith the Lord of hosts; what was the cause and reason of this? which question is put, not on his own account, who full well knew it; but for their sakes, to whom he speaks, that they might be made sensible of it; and in order to that to introduce what follows, which is an answer to the question:

because of mine house that is waste; which they suffered to lie waste, and did not concern themselves about the rebuilding of it: this the Lord resented, and for this reason blasted all their labours:

and ye run every man unto his own house; were very eager, earnest, and diligent, in building, beautifying, and adorning their own houses; taking care of their own domestic affairs; sparing no cost nor pains to promote their own secular interest; running in all haste to do any thing and everything to increase their worldly substance; but sat still, were idle and slothful, careless and negligent, about the house of God and the affairs of it.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Hag 1:9 Heb “and each of you runs to his own house”; NIV “is busy with”; TEV “is busy working on”; NCV “work hard fo...

Geneva Bible: Hag 1:9 Ye looked for much, and, lo, [it came] to little; and when ye brought [it] home, I did blow ( i ) upon it. Why? saith the LORD of hosts. Because of mi...

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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...

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 1:9-11 - -- "Ye looked out for much, and behold (it came) to little; and ye brought it home, and I blew into it. Why? is the saying of Jehovah of hosts. Becaus...

Constable: Hag 1:7-11 - --B. Haggai's second challenge 1:7-11 1:7-8 Again the Lord called the people to reflect thoughtfully on what they were doing (cf. v. 5). He urged them t...

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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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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