
Text -- Hosea 11:3 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
As a mother or nurse helps the child.

They would not see nor acknowledge me in it.
JFB: Hos 11:3 - -- Literally "to use his feet." Compare a similar image, Deu 1:31; Deu 8:2, Deu 8:5, Deu 8:15; Deu 32:10-11; Neh 9:21; Isa 63:9; Amo 2:10. God bore them ...
Literally "to use his feet." Compare a similar image, Deu 1:31; Deu 8:2, Deu 8:5, Deu 8:15; Deu 32:10-11; Neh 9:21; Isa 63:9; Amo 2:10. God bore them as a parent does an infant, unable to supply itself, so that it has no anxiety about food, raiment, and its going forth. Act 13:18, which probably refers to this passage of Hosea; He took them by the arms, to guide them that they might not stray, and to hold them up that they might not stumble.
Clarke -> Hos 11:3
Clarke: Hos 11:3 - -- I taught Ephraim also to go - An allusion to a mother or nurse teaching a child to walk, directing it how to lift and lay its feet, and supporting i...
I taught Ephraim also to go - An allusion to a mother or nurse teaching a child to walk, directing it how to lift and lay its feet, and supporting it in the meantime by the arms, that it may use its feet with the greater ease. This is a passage truly pathetic.
Calvin -> Hos 11:3
Calvin: Hos 11:3 - -- Here again God amplifies the sin of the people, by saying, that by no kindness, even for a long time, could they be allured, or turned, or reformed, ...
Here again God amplifies the sin of the people, by saying, that by no kindness, even for a long time, could they be allured, or turned, or reformed, or reduced to a sound mind. It was surely enough that the people of Israeli who had been brought by the hand of God from the grave to the light of life, should have repudiated every instruction; it was a great and an atrocious sin; but now God goes on farther, and says, that he had not ceased to show his love to them, and yet had attained nothing by his perseverance; for the wickedness and depravity of the people were incurable. Hence he says, I have led Ephraim on foot 76 Some are of opinion that it is a noun, from
He afterwards adds, To carry on his arms Some render the expression,
TSK -> Hos 11:3
TSK: Hos 11:3 - -- taught : Exo 19:4; Num 11:11, Num 11:12; Deu 1:31, Deu 8:2, Deu 32:10-12; Isa 46:3, Isa 63:9; Act 13:18
I healed : Hos 2:8, Hos 7:1, Hos 14:4; Exo 15:...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Hos 11:3
Barnes: Hos 11:3 - -- I taught Ephraim also to go - Literally, "and I set Ephraim on his feet;"i. e., while they were rebelling, I was helping and supporting them, a...
I taught Ephraim also to go - Literally, "and I set Ephraim on his feet;"i. e., while they were rebelling, I was helping and supporting them, as a nurse doth her child, teaching it to go with little steps, step by step, "accustoming it to go by little and little without weariness;"and not only so, but "taking them by their arms;"or it may be equally translated, "He took them in His arms,"i. e., God not only gently "taught"them "to walk,"but when they were wearied, "He took them up in His arms,"as a nurse doth a child when tired with its little attempts to walk. Such was the love and tender care of God, guiding and upholding Israel in His ways which He taught him, guarding him from weariness, or, if wearied, taking him in the arms of His mercy and refreshing him. So Moses says, "In the wilderness thou hast seen, how that the Lord thy God bare thee, as a man doth bear his son, in all the way that ye went, until ye came unto this place"Deu 1:31; and he expostulates with God, "Have I conceived all this people? have I begotten them, that Thou shouldest say unto me, Carry them in thy bosom, as a nursing father beareth his sucking child, unto the land which Thou swarest unto their father’ s?"Num 11:12. : "Briefly yet magnificently doth this place hint at the wondrous patience of God, whereof Paul too speaks, "for forty years suffered He their manner’ s in the wilderness"Act 13:18.
For as a nursing father beareth patiently with a child, who hath not yet come to years of discretion, and, although at times he be moved to strike it in return, yet mostly he sootheth its childish follies with blandishments, and, ungrateful though it be, carries it in his arms, so the Lord God, whose are these words, patiently bore with the unformed people, ignorant of the spiritual mysteries of the kingdom of heaven, and although He killed the bodies of many of them in the wilderness yet the rest He soothed with many and great miracles, "leading them about, and instructing them, (as Moses says) keeping them as the apple of His eye"Deu 32:10.
But they knew not that I healed them - They laid it not to heart, and therefore what they knew with their understanding was worse than ignorance. : "I who was a Father, became a nurse, and Myself carried My little one in My arms, that he should not be hurt in the wilderness, or scared by heat or darkness. By day I was a cloud; by night, a column of fire, that I might by My light illumine, and heal those whom I had protected. And when they had sinned and had made the calf, I gave them place for repentance, and they knew not that I healed them, so as, for forty years, to close the wound of idolatry, restore them to their former health."
: "The Son of God carried us in His arms to the Father, when He went forth carrying His Cross, and on the wood of the Cross stretched out His arms for our redemption. Those too doth Christ carry daily in His arms, whom He continually entreateth, comforteth, preserveth, so gently, that with much alacrity and without any grievous hindrance they perform every work of God, and with heart enlarged run, rather than walk, the way of God’ s commandments. Yet do these need great caution, that they be clothed with great circumspection and humility, and despise not others. Else Christ would say of them, "They knew not that I healed them."
Poole -> Hos 11:3
Poole: Hos 11:3 - -- I taught Ephraim also to go ; as a mother or nurse doth help the child, and with tenderest care doth guide and form its steps, and by long-continued p...
I taught Ephraim also to go ; as a mother or nurse doth help the child, and with tenderest care doth guide and form its steps, and by long-continued patience waits on it; such like was the tenderness of God toward Israel in his childhood.
Taking them by their arms supporting and bearing them up, as nurses bear up the child in their hands, taking them up by the arms, giving strength for motion, till the child should grow to strength.
But they knew not that I healed them ; unthankful, sottish, and heedless ones, neither would see nor acknowledge me in it, but within few months’ time ascribe their deliverance to a golden calf, Exo 32:4 ; thus foolishly they requite the love of their God.
Haydock -> Hos 11:3
Haydock: Hos 11:3 - -- Healed them. My laws were designed to counteract idolatry. (Haydock) ---
I treated them with the utmost tenderness, Deuteronomy i. 31., and xxxii....
Healed them. My laws were designed to counteract idolatry. (Haydock) ---
I treated them with the utmost tenderness, Deuteronomy i. 31., and xxxii. 11.
Gill -> Hos 11:3
Gill: Hos 11:3 - -- I taught Ephraim also to go,.... All the tribes of Israel and Ephraim, or the ten tribes with the rest; these the Lord instructed in the way of his co...
I taught Ephraim also to go,.... All the tribes of Israel and Ephraim, or the ten tribes with the rest; these the Lord instructed in the way of his commandments, and taught them to walk therein; he his angel before them, to conduct them through the wilderness; yea, he himself went before them in the pillar of cloud by day, and in the pillar of fire by night, to which history this seems to refer. So the Targum,
"I, by an angel sent by me, led Israel in the right way.''
The allusion seems to be to a mother or nurse accommodating herself to her child, beginning to go; she stoops down, sets it on its feet, and one foot before another, forms its steps, teaches it how to go, and walks its pace with it. And in like manner the Lord deals with his spiritual Israel, his regenerated ones, who become like little children, and are used as such; as in regeneration they are quickened, and have some degree of spiritual strength given them, they are taught to go; they are taught what a Saviour Christ is, and their need of him; they are instructed to go to him by faith for everything they want, and to walk by faith on him, as they have received him; and having heard and learned of the Father, they go to Christ, Joh 6:45; and are taught also to go to the throne of grace for all supplies of grace; and to the house of God, to attend the word and ordinances, for the benefit of their souls; and to walk in the ways of the Lord, for his glory, and their good;
taking them by their arms; or "on his own arms" x; bearing and carrying them in his arms, as a father his son; see Deu 1:31 Num 11:12; so the Lord deals with his spiritual Israel, either holding them by their arms while walking, as nurses their children, to help and ease them in walking, and that they may not stumble and fall; so the Lord holds up the goings of his people in his ways, that their footsteps slip not, and upholds them with the right hand of his righteousness: or taking them up in his own arms when weary, he carries them in his bosom; or, when they are failing or fallen, lays hold on them, and takes them up again; and so they are not utterly cast down, whether the fall is into sin, or into some calamity and affliction; when he puts underneath his everlasting arms, and bears them and keeps them from sinking, as well as from a final and total falling away. Abarbinel, and others after him, interpret this of Ephraim taking up and carrying in his arms Baalim, the graven images and golden calves; which is mentioned as an instance of ingratitude; but very wrongly;
but they knew not that I healed them; of the diseases of Egypt, or preserved them from them: this includes the whole of their salvation and deliverance from Egypt, and all the benefits and favours accompanying it, which they imputed to their idols, and not to the Lord; see Exo 15:26. "Healing", in a spiritual sense, generally signifies the forgiveness of sin, which the Lord's people may have, and not know it; and, through want of better light and knowledge, may also ascribe it to their repentance, humiliation, and tears, when it is alone owing to the grace of God, and blood of Christ.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Hos 11:1-12
TSK Synopsis: Hos 11:1-12 - --1 The ingratitude of Israel unto God for his benefits.5 His judgment.8 God's mercy toward them.12 Israel's falsehood and Judah's fidelity.
MHCC -> Hos 11:1-7
MHCC: Hos 11:1-7 - --When Israel were weak and helpless as children, foolish and froward as children, then God loved them; he bore them as the nurse does the sucking child...
Matthew Henry -> Hos 11:1-7
Matthew Henry: Hos 11:1-7 - -- Here we find, I. God very gracious to Israel. They were a people for whom he had done more than for any people under heaven, and to whom he had give...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Hos 11:3-4
Keil-Delitzsch: Hos 11:3-4 - --
Nevertheless the Lord continued to show love to them. Hos 11:3, Hos 11:4. "And I, I have taught Ephraim to walk: He took them in His arms, and they...
Constable: Hos 6:4--11:12 - --V. The fourth series of messages on judgment and restoration: Israel's ingratitude 6:4--11:11
This section of th...

Constable: Hos 6:4--11:8 - --A. More messages on coming judgment 6:4-11:7
The subject of Israel's ingratitude is particularly promine...

Constable: Hos 9:1--11:8 - --2. Israel's inevitable judgment 9:1-11:7
This section of prophecies continues to record accusati...

Constable: Hos 11:1-7 - --Israel's rebelliousness 11:1-7
Again this section, which is all divine speech, begins wi...
