![](images/minus.gif)
Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
![](images/arrow_open.gif)
![](images/information.gif)
![](images/cmt_minus_head.gif)
collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
By Moses.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Wesley: Hos 12:13 - -- In the wilderness. The aim of the prophet seems to be this, to prevent their vain pride, and boasting of their ancestors.
In the wilderness. The aim of the prophet seems to be this, to prevent their vain pride, and boasting of their ancestors.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Wesley: Hos 12:14 - -- He shall bear the punishment of all his blood; his murders of the innocent, and his own guilt too.
He shall bear the punishment of all his blood; his murders of the innocent, and his own guilt too.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Wesley: Hos 12:14 - -- Which Ephraim hath cast upon the prophets, the worshippers of God, and on God; preferring idols before him.
Which Ephraim hath cast upon the prophets, the worshippers of God, and on God; preferring idols before him.
Moses (Num 12:6-8; Deu 18:15, Deu 18:18).
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
JFB: Hos 12:13 - -- Translate, "kept"; there is an allusion to the same Hebrew word in Hos 12:12, "kept sheep"; Israel was kept by God as His flock, even as Jacob kept sh...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
JFB: Hos 12:14 - -- Not take away the guilt and penalty of the innocent blood shed by Ephraim in general, and to Moloch in particular.
Not take away the guilt and penalty of the innocent blood shed by Ephraim in general, and to Moloch in particular.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
JFB: Hos 12:14 - -- Ephraim's dishonor to God in worshipping idols, God will repay to him. That God is "his Lord" by right redemption and special revelation to Ephraim on...
Ephraim's dishonor to God in worshipping idols, God will repay to him. That God is "his Lord" by right redemption and special revelation to Ephraim only aggravates his guilt, instead of giving him hope of escape. God does not give up His claim to them as His, however they set aside His dominion.
Clarke: Hos 12:13 - -- By a prophet (Moses) the Lord brought Israel out of Egypt, and by a prophet (Joshua) was he preserved - Joshua succeeded Moses, and brought the Isra...
By a prophet (Moses) the Lord brought Israel out of Egypt, and by a prophet (Joshua) was he preserved - Joshua succeeded Moses, and brought the Israelites into the promised land; and when they passed the Jordan at Gilgal, he received the covenant of circumcision; and yet this same place was now made by them the seat of idolatry! How blind and how ungrateful!
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Hos 12:14 - -- Therefore shall he leave his blood upon him - He will not remove his guilt. These are similar to our Lord’ s words, Joh 3:36; Joh 9:41 : "He th...
Therefore shall he leave his blood upon him - He will not remove his guilt. These are similar to our Lord’ s words, Joh 3:36; Joh 9:41 : "He that believeth not on the Son of God, shall not see life, for the wrath of God Abideth On Him"- shall not be removed by any remission, as he rejects the only way in which he can be saved. Because ye say, We see; therefore, Your Sin Remaineth, i.e., it still stands charged against you. Your miseries and destruction are of your own procuring; your perdition is of yourselves. God is as merciful as he is just.
Calvin: Hos 12:13 - -- And God, he says, brought you up by a Prophet from Egypt, and by a Prophet you have been preserved This was, as it were, their second nativity. Some...
And God, he says, brought you up by a Prophet from Egypt, and by a Prophet you have been preserved This was, as it were, their second nativity. Some think that the comparison is between their first origin and their deliverance; as though Hosea had said, “Though you were born of a very poor and ignoble man, yet God has favoured you with singular privilege; for he gave Moses to be the minister of your liberation.” But in my judgement the Prophet speaks in a more simple way; for, first, he shows what was the first origin of the people, that they were from Jacob; and then he shows what was their second origin; for God had again begotten them when he brought them out of Egypt. And they were there, as it is well known, very miserable, and they did not come out by their own valour, they did not attain for themselves their liberty; but Moses alone extended his hand to them, having been sent for this end by God. Since the case was so, it was strange that they now provoked God, as he says in the last verse, by their altars.
And it very frequently occurs in the Prophets, that God reminds the Israelites whence or from what source they had arisen, “Look to your origin, to the stone from which ye were cut off; for Abraham was alone and childless, and his wife also was barren;” and yet God multiplied their race, (Isa 51:2.) This was said, because the Israelites did not look to God, but in their adversity despaired, when no way appeared by which they could be restored; but in their prosperity they became proud, and regarded as nothing the favour of God. We then see what the Prophet had in view. The Lord says, “Acknowledge what you owe to me; for I have chosen Jacob your father, and have not chosen him because he was eminent for his great dignity in the world; for he was a fugitive and a keeper of sheep, and served for his wife. I afterwards redeemed you from the land of Egypt; and in that coming forth there was nothing that you did; there is no reason why you should boast that liberation was obtained by your velour; for Moses alone was my servant in that deliverance. I did then beget you the second time, when I redeemed you. How great is your ingratitude, when you do not own and worship me as your Redeemer?” We now then see that the Prophet thus treated the people of Israel, that it might in every way appear that they were unworthy of so many and so great benefits bestowed on them by God; for they had perverted all the works of God, and so perverted them, that they did not think that any thing, belonged to him, and they returned no thanks to God; nay, they extolled themselves, as if God had never conferred on them any kindness.
But I will not dwell on the history of Jacob, for it is not necessary for elucidating the meaning of the Prophet, and it is well known: it is enough to refer only to what is suitable to this place. Jacob then fled into the country of Syria; and then he says, Israel served for a wife He mentions the name, Israel, after Jacob. The name, Israel, was noble and memorable; yea, it was given by God to the holy patriarch: but at the same time Jacob did not in himself or in his own person excel; he nevertheless served, and was in a most humble condition, and he served for a wife; that is, that he might have a wife; for we know how he made an agreement with his uncle Laban.
Further, By a Prophet he brought them out of Egypt This was their second nativity: and by a Prophet Israel was preserved There is an allusion here to the word
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Calvin: Hos 12:14 - -- The Prophet says first, that Ephraim had provoked God by his high places Some, however, take the word תמרורים , tamerurim, for bitterness...
The Prophet says first, that Ephraim had provoked God by his high places Some, however, take the word
Then his blood shall remain on him. As the word
And his reproach shall his Lord return unto him Here he calls God himself the Lord of Israel, though Israel had shaken off the yoke, and alienated themselves from the service of God. They cannot, he says, escape the authority of God, though they have spurned his law; though they have become wanton in their superstitions, they shall yet know that they remain under the hand and power of God, they shall know that they effect nothing by this their petulance; though they thus wander after their abominations, yet the Lord will not lose his right, which he had obtained for himself by redeeming Israel. Their Lord then shall render to them their own reproach, of which they are worthy.
TSK: Hos 12:13 - -- Hos 13:4, Hos 13:5; Exo 12:50,Exo 12:51, Exo 13:3; 1Sa 12:8; Psa 77:20; Isa 63:11, Isa 63:12; Amo 2:11, Amo 2:12; Mic 6:4; Act 3:22, Act 3:23, Act 7:3...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
TSK: Hos 12:14 - -- provoked : 2Ki 17:7-18; Eze 23:2-10
most bitterly : Heb. with bitternesses
therefore : 2Sa 1:16; 1Ki 2:33, 1Ki 2:34; Eze 18:13, Eze 24:7, Eze 24:8, Ez...
![](images/cmt_minus_head.gif)
collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Hos 12:13 - -- By a prophet was he preserved - Or "kept."Jacob "kept sheep"out of love of God, sooner than unite himself with one, alien from God; his posteri...
By a prophet was he preserved - Or "kept."Jacob "kept sheep"out of love of God, sooner than unite himself with one, alien from God; his posterity "was kept"like a sheep by God, as the Psalmist said, "He led His people like sheep by the hand of Moses and Aaron"Psa 77:20. They were "kept"from all evil and want and danger, by the direct power of God; "kept"from all the might of Pharaoh in Egypt and the Red Sea , "not through any power of their own, but by the ministry of a single prophet; "kept, in that great and terrible wilderness"Deu 8:15, wherein were "fiery serpents and scorpions and drought, where"was "no water,"but what God brought out of the rock of flint; no bread, but what he sent them from heaven."All this, God did for them "by "a single "prophet; they"had many prophets, early and late, calling upon them in the name of God, but they would not hearken unto them."
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Barnes: Hos 12:14 - -- Ephraim provoked - the Lord most bitterly Literally, "with bitternesses,"i. e., with most heinous sins, such as are most grievously displeasing...
Ephraim provoked - the Lord most bitterly Literally, "with bitternesses,"i. e., with most heinous sins, such as are most grievously displeasing to God, and were a most bitter requital of all His goodness. "Wherefore He shall leave"(or, "cast") "his blood"(literally, "bloods") "upon him."The plural "bloods"expresses the manifoldness of the bloodshed . It is not used in Holy Scripture of mere guilt. Ephraim had shed blood profusely, so that it ran like water in the land (see the notes above at Hos 4:2; Hos 5:2). He had sinned with a high hand against God, in destroying man made in the image of God. Amid that bloodshed, had been the blood not of the innocent only, but of those whom God sent to rebuke them for their idolatry, their rapine, their bloodshed. "Jezebel cut off the prophets of the Lord"1Ki 18:4, as far as in her lay, with a complete excision. Ephraim thought his sins past; they were out of his sight; he thought that they were out of God’ s also; but they were laid up with God; and God, the prophet says, would cast them down upon him, so that they would crush him.
And his reproach shall his Lord return unto him - For the blood which he had shed, should his own blood be shed, for the reproaches which he had in divers ways cast against God or brought upon Him, he should inherit reproach. Those who rebel against God, bring reproach on Him by their sins, reproach Him by their excuses for their sins reproach Him in those whom He sends to recall them from their sins, reproach Him for chastening them for their sins. All who sin against the knowledge of God, bring reproach upon Him by acting sinfully against that knowledge. So Nathan says to David, "Thou hast given much occasion to the enemies of God to blaspheme"2Sa 12:14. The reproachful words of the enemies of God are but the echo of the opprobrious deeds of His unfaithful servants. The reproach is therefore, in an special manner, "their reproach"who caused it. All Israel’ s idolatries had this aggravation.
Their worship of the calves or of Baal or of any other gods of the nations, was a triumph of the false gods over God. Then, all sin must find some plea for itself, by impugning the wisdom or goodness of God who forbad it. Jeroboam, and Ephraim by adhering to Jeroboam’ s sin reproached God, as though the going up to Jerusalem was a hard service. "It is too much for you to go up to Jerusalem; Behold thy gods, O Israel, which brought thee up out of the land of Egypt.": "It was an open injury and reproach to God, to attribute to dead lifeless things those great and wonderful things done by Him for them."All the reproach, which they, in these ways, brought, or cast upon God, he says, "his Lord shall return"or "restore"to them. Their’ s it was; He would give it back to them, as He says, "Them that honor Me, I will honor; and they that despise Me, shall be lightly esteemed"1Sa 2:30.
Truly shame and reproach have been for centuries the portion of God’ s unfaithful people. To those who are lost, He gives back their reproach, in that they "rise to reproaches Dan 12:2 and everlasting abhorrence . It is an aggravation of this misery, that He who shall "give back to him"his reproach, had been "his God."Since "his God"was against him, who could be for him? "For whither should we go for refuge, save to Him? If we find wrath with Him, with whom should we find ruth?"Ephraim did not, the sinner will not, allow God to be "his God"in worship and service and love: but whether he willed or no, God would remain his Lord. He was, and might still have been their Lord for good; they would not have Him so, and so they should find Him still their Lord, as an Avenger, returning their own evil to them.
Poole: Hos 12:13 - -- By a prophet by Moses,
the Lord brought Israel your forefathers, out of Egypt; where they had been bondmen two hundred and fifteen years, or near u...
By a prophet by Moses,
the Lord brought Israel your forefathers, out of Egypt; where they had been bondmen two hundred and fifteen years, or near upon it, old slaves, or vassals for some descents.
By a prophet was he preserved in the wilderness: see Ex 2 Ex 3 , &c. Now the drift of the prophet herein to me appears to be this, to prevent their vain pride and boasting of their ancestors, their raiser sheltering themselves under ancestors’ merits against God’ s just displeasure on them for their sins, and the sottish plea of what their fathers did at Beth-el and Gilgal. There are many things which arise on consideration of what their fathers were, suffered, enjoyed, and did, to aggravate their sins and insure them of punishment; but nothing to secure them against judgment to come, or to lessen judgments when they come.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Poole: Hos 12:14 - -- Ephraim provoked him to anger most bitterly: after all the means used from time to time to reclaim idolatrous sinning Israel, yet still they provoked...
Ephraim provoked him to anger most bitterly: after all the means used from time to time to reclaim idolatrous sinning Israel, yet still they provoked God to indignation by their idolatries, perjuries, oppressions, murders, and all manner of sins which use to be rife among idolaters; these things were bitterness unto God.
Therefore seeing he will incorrigibly persist as he hath begun, and end in sin and misery,
shall he leave his blood upon him he shall bear the guilt and punishment of all his blood, his murders of the innocent, of those that testified against him, and, as one who hath murdered himself, shall bear his own guilt too.
His reproach which Ephraim hath east upon the prophets and pious worshippers of God, all the reproach Ephraim hath cast on God, preferring idols before him,
shall his Lord return unto him either God, who is Lord of all, or the Assyrian king and his princes, lording it over captive Ephraim; God shall by these return the shame on Ephraim which he cast on God, his worship, temple, and prophets.
Haydock: Hos 12:13 - -- Prophet. Josue put the people in possession of the country, and offered sacrifice at Galgal, where the rite of circumcision was performed. This pla...
Prophet. Josue put the people in possession of the country, and offered sacrifice at Galgal, where the rite of circumcision was performed. This place is now defiled. What perfidy (Haydock) and ingratitude. (Calmet)
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Haydock: Hos 12:14 - -- Him. He shall suffer for his crimes. (Menochius) ---
He can blame only himself. (Calmet)
Him. He shall suffer for his crimes. (Menochius) ---
He can blame only himself. (Calmet)
Gill: Hos 12:13 - -- And by a prophet the Lord brought Israel out of Egypt,.... Or, "by the prophet"; the famous and most excellent prophet Moses, who, by way of eminency,...
And by a prophet the Lord brought Israel out of Egypt,.... Or, "by the prophet"; the famous and most excellent prophet Moses, who, by way of eminency, is so called; him the Lord sent, and employed, and made use of him as an instrument to bring his people out of their bondage in Egypt; in which he was a type of Christ the great Prophet of the church, raised up like unto him, and the Redeemer of his people from sin, Satan, and the world, law, hell, and death, and all enemies:
and by a prophet he was preserved; by the same prophet Moses was Israel preserved at the Red sea, and in the wilderness; where they were kept as a flock of sheep from their powerful enemies, and brought to the borders of Canaan's land. Some understand this last clause of Joshua, by whom the Israelites were safely conducted through Jordan into the land of Canaan, and settled there; and particularly were brought by him to Gilgal, where the covenant of circumcision was renewed, and the first passover in the land kept, but now a place of idolatry, as before mentioned; and which sin was aggravated by this circumstance: but the design of this observation seems to be to put the Israelites in remembrance of their low estate in Egypt, and of the goodness of God to them in delivering them from thence, which they had sadly requited by their degeneracy and apostasy from him; and to him unto them how much they ought to have valued the prophets of the Lord, though they had despised them, since they had received such benefits and blessings by the means of a prophet.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Hos 12:14 - -- Ephraim provoked him to anger most bitterly,.... The Vulgate Latin version supplies it, me; that is, God, as Kimchi; or his Lord, as it may be suppli...
Ephraim provoked him to anger most bitterly,.... The Vulgate Latin version supplies it, me; that is, God, as Kimchi; or his Lord, as it may be supplied from the last clause of the verse; the sense is the same either way: it was God that Ephraim or the ten tribes provoked to stir up his wrath and vengeance against them; notwithstanding all the favours that they and their ancestors had received from him, they provoked him in a most bitter manner, to bitter anger, vehement wrath and fury: or, "with bitternesses" n; with their sins, which are in their own nature bitter, displeasing to God; and in their effects bring bitterness and death on those that commit them; meaning particularly their idolatry, and all belonging to it; their idols, high places, altars, &c. The word here used is rendered "high heaps" o, Jer 31:21; and is here by Kimchi interpreted of altars, with which, and their sacrifices on them, they provoked the Lord to anger:
therefore shall he leave his blood upon him; the blood of innocent persons, prophets, and other good men shed by him; the sin of it shall be charged upon him, and he shall bear the punishment of it. So the Targum,
"the fault of innocent blood which he shed shall return upon him:''
or "his own blood shall be poured out upon him" p; in just retaliation for the blood of others shed by him, and for all the blood sired by him in idolatrous sacrifices, and other bloody sins; or his own blood being shed by the enemy shall remain upon him unrevenged; God will not punish those that shed it:
and his reproach shall his Lord return unto him: that is, as he has reproached the prophets of the Lord for reproving him for his idolatry, and reproached fire Lord himself, by revolting from him, and neglecting his worship, and preferring the worship of idols to him; so, as a just recompence, he shall be delivered up into the hands of the enemy, and become a reproach, a taunt, and a proverb, in all places into which he shall be brought. God is called "his Lord", though he had rebelled against him, and shook off his yoke, and would not obey him; yet, whether he will or not, he is his Lord, and will show himself to be so by his sovereignty and authority over him, and by the judgments exercised on him. Some understand this of the Assyrian king, become his lord, by taking and carrying him captive, the instrument in God's hand of bringing him to reproach; but the former sense seems best.
![](images/cmt_minus_head.gif)
expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Hos 12:13 Heb “was protected”; NASB “was kept.” The verb שָׁמַר (shamar, “to watch, guard, kee...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
NET Notes: Hos 12:14 Heb “for his contempt” (so NIV); NRSV “for his insults”; NAB “for his outrage.”
Geneva Bible -> Hos 12:13
Geneva Bible: Hos 12:13 And by a ( m ) prophet the LORD brought Israel out of Egypt, and by a prophet was he preserved.
( m ) Meaning Moses, by which appears that whatever t...
![](images/cmt_minus_head.gif)
expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Hos 12:1-14
TSK Synopsis: Hos 12:1-14 - --1 A reproof of Ephraim, Judah, and Jacob.3 By former favours he exhorts to repentance.7 Ephraim's sins provoke God.
MHCC -> Hos 12:7-14
MHCC: Hos 12:7-14 - --Ephraim became a merchant: the word also signifies a Canaanite. They carried on trade upon Canaanitish principles, covetously and with fraud and decei...
Matthew Henry -> Hos 12:7-14
Matthew Henry: Hos 12:7-14 - -- Here are intermixed, in these verses, I. Reproofs for sin. When God is coming forth to contend with a people, that he may demonstrate his own righte...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Hos 12:12-14
Keil-Delitzsch: Hos 12:12-14 - --
This punishment Israel well deserved. Hos 12:12. "And Jacob fled to the fields of Aram; and Israel served for a wife, and for a wife did he keep gu...
Constable: Hos 11:12--Joe 1:1 - --VI. The fifth series of messages on judgment and restoration: historical unfaithfulness 11:12--14:9
A tone of ex...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Constable: Hos 11:12--14:1 - --A. Judgment for unfaithfulness 11:12-13:16
Hosea again established Israel's guilt and predicted her puni...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Constable: Hos 11:12--13:1 - --1. The deceitfulness of Israel 11:12-12:14
Several comparisons of Israel and the patriarch Jacob...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Constable: Hos 12:6-13 - --The pride of Israel that needed humbling 12:7-14
12:7-8 A merchant who used dishonest scales loved to oppress his customers. Similarly Israel's oppres...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)