
Text -- Hosea 14:5 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Hos 14:5 - -- I will refresh and comfort, and make fruitful in good works, such as return to me.
I will refresh and comfort, and make fruitful in good works, such as return to me.

Wesley: Hos 14:5 - -- As the cedars in Lebanon, so shall the true Israel, converted backsliders, be blessed of God: so flourishing and happy shall the church be under Chris...
As the cedars in Lebanon, so shall the true Israel, converted backsliders, be blessed of God: so flourishing and happy shall the church be under Christ.
JFB: Hos 14:5 - -- Which falls copiously in the East, taking the place of the more frequent rains in other regions. God will not be "as the early dew that goeth away," b...

JFB: Hos 14:5 - -- No plant is more productive than the lily, one root often producing fifty bulbs [PLINY, Natural History, 21.5]. The common lily is white, consisting o...
No plant is more productive than the lily, one root often producing fifty bulbs [PLINY, Natural History, 21.5]. The common lily is white, consisting of six leaves opening like bells. The royal lily grows to the height of three or four feet; Mat 6:29 alludes to the beauty of its flowers.

JFB: Hos 14:5 - -- That is, as the trees of Lebanon (especially the cedars), which cast down their roots as deeply as is their height upwards; so that they are immovable...
That is, as the trees of Lebanon (especially the cedars), which cast down their roots as deeply as is their height upwards; so that they are immovable [JEROME], (Isa 10:34). Spiritual growth consists most in the growth of the root which is out of sight.
Clarke -> Hos 14:5
Clarke: Hos 14:5 - -- I will be as the dew unto Israel - On these metaphors I gladly avail myself of the elegant and just observations of Bp. Lowth. "These verses (Hos 14...
I will be as the dew unto Israel - On these metaphors I gladly avail myself of the elegant and just observations of Bp. Lowth. "These verses (Hos 14:5-7) contain gracious promises of God’ s favor and blessings upon Israel’ s conversion. In the fifth verse, it is described by that refreshment which copious dews give to the grass in summer. If we consider the nature of the climate, and the necessity of dews in so hot a country, not only to refresh, but likewise to preserve life; if we consider also the beauty of the oriental lilies, the fragrance of the cedars which grow upon Lebanon, the beauteous appearance which the spreading olive trees afforded, the exhilarating coolness caused by the shade of such trees, and the aromatic smell exhaled by the cedars; we shall then partly understand the force of the metaphors here employed by the prophet; but their full energy no one can conceive, till he feels both the want, and enjoys the advantage, of the particulars referred to in that climate where the prophet wrote."- Lowth’ s twelfth and nineteenth prelection; and Dodd on the place
What a glorious prophecy! What a wonderful prophet! How sublime, how energetic, how just! The great master prophet, Isaiah, alone could have done this better. And these promises are not for Israel merely after the flesh; they are for all the people of God. We have a lot and portion in the matter; God also places his love upon us. Here the reader must feel some such sentiment as the shepherd in Virgil, when enraptured with the elegy which his associate had composed on their departed friend. The phraseology and metaphors are strikingly similar; and therefore I shall produce it
Tale tuum carmen nobis, divine poeta
Quale sopor fesses in gramine, quale per aestu
Dulcis aquae saliente sitim restinguere rivo
Nec calamis solum aequiparas, sed voce magistrum
Fortunate puer! tu nunc eris alter ab illo
Nos tamen haec quocunque modo tibi nostra vicissi
Dicemus, Daphninque tuum tollemus ad astra
Daphnin ad astra feremus: amavit nos quoque Daphnis
Virgil. Ecl. v., ver. 45
"O heavenly poet, such thy verse appears
So sweet, so charming to my ravish’ d ears
As to the weary swain with cares oppress’ d
Beneath the sylvan shade, refreshing rest
As to the feverish traveler, when firs
He finds a crystal stream to quench his thirst
In singing, as in piping, you excel
And scarce your master could perform so well
O fortunate young man! at least your lay
Are next to his, and claim the second praise
Such as they are, my rural songs I joi
To raise your Daphnis to the powers divine
For Daphnis was my friend, as well as thine."
Calvin -> Hos 14:5
Calvin: Hos 14:5 - -- The Prophet now again repeats what he had said, that God, after restoring the people to favour, would be so beneficent, as to render apparent the fru...
The Prophet now again repeats what he had said, that God, after restoring the people to favour, would be so beneficent, as to render apparent the fruit of reconciliation. Seeing that the Israelites had been afflicted, they ought to have imputed this to their own sins, they ought to have perceived by such proofs, the wrath of God. They had been so stupid as to have on the contrary imagined, that their adversities happened to them by chance. The Prophet had been much engaged in teaching this truth, that the Israelites would be ever miserable until they turned to God, and also, that all their affairs would be unhappy until they obtained pardon. He now speaks of a change, that God would not only by words show himself propitious to them, but would also give a proof by which the Israelites might know that they were now blessed, because they had been reconciled to God; for his blessing would be the fruit of his gratuitous love. Thus then ought this sentence, I will be to Israel as the dew, to be connected: He intimates that they were before dry, because they had been deprived of God’s favour. He compares them to a rose or lily: for when the fields or meadows are burnt up by the heat of the sun, and there is no dew distilling from heaven, all things wither. How then can lilies and roses flourish, except they derive moisture from heaven, and the dew refreshes the grounds that they may put forth their strength? The reason then for the similitude is this, because men become dry and destitute of all vigour, when God withdraws his favour. Why? Because God must, as it were, distil dew, otherwise, as it has been said, we become wholly barren and dry. I will be then as dew to Israel
And further, He shall Flourish as the lily, and his roots he shall send forth Some render
We now then perceive the meaning of the Prophet. He mentions here the twofold effect of God’s blessing as to the Israelites, — that their restoration would be sudden, as soon as God would distil like the dew his favour upon them, and also that this happiness would not be fading, but enduring and permanent. And the words may be rendered, as Libanus, or as those of Libanus: as Libanus he shall cast forth his roots, as the trees which grow there; or, he shall cast forth his roots as the trees which are in Libanus. But as to the sense there is no difference. It follows —
TSK -> Hos 14:5
TSK: Hos 14:5 - -- as the dew : Deu 32:2; 2Sa 23:4; Job 29:19; Psa 72:6; Pro 19:12; Isa 18:4, Isa 26:19; Isa 44:3; Mic 5:7
he shall : Son 2:1, Son 2:2, Son 2:16, Son 4:5...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Hos 14:5
Barnes: Hos 14:5 - -- I will be as the dew unto Israel - Before, He had said, "his spring shall become dry and his fountain shall be dried up"Hos 13:15. Now again He...
I will be as the dew unto Israel - Before, He had said, "his spring shall become dry and his fountain shall be dried up"Hos 13:15. Now again He enlarges the blessing; their supply shall be unfailing, for it shall be from God; yea, God Himself shall be that blessing; "I will be the dew; descending on the mown grass"Psa 72:6, to quicken and refresh it; descending, Himself, into the dried and parched and sere hearts of men, as He saith, "We will come unto him and make Our abode in him"Joh 14:23. The grace of God, like the dew, is not given once for all, but is, day by day, waited for, and, day by day, renewed. Yet doth it not pass away, like the fitful goodness Joh 6:4 of God’ s former people, but turns into the growth and spiritual substance of those on whom it descends.
He shall grow as the lily - No one image can exhibit the manifold grace of God in those who are His own, or the fruits of that grace. So the prophet adds one image to another, each supplying a distinct likeness of a distinct grace or excellence. The "lily"is the emblem of the beauty and purity of the soul in grace; the "cedar"of Lebanon, of its strength and deep-rootedness, its immovableness and uprightness; the evergreen "olive tree"which "remaineth in its beauty both winter and summer,"of the unvarying presence of Divine Grace, continually, supplying an eversustained freshness, and issuing in fruit; and the fragrance of the aromatic plants with which the lower parts of Mount Lebanon are decked, of its loveliness and sweetness; as a native explains this , "he takes a second comparison from Mount Lebanon for the abundance of aromatic things and odoriferous flowers."
Such are the myrtles and lavender and the odoriferous reed; from which "as you enter the valley"(between Lebanon and Anti-lebanon) "straightway the scent meets you."All these natural things are established and well-known symbols of things spiritual. The lily, so called in Hebrew from its dazzling whiteness, is, in the Canticles Son 2:1-2, the emblem of souls in which Christ takes delight. The lily multiplies exceedingly : yet hath it a weak root and soon fadeth. The prophet, then, uniteth with these, plants of unfading green, and deep root. The seed which "had no root,"our Lord says, "withered away"Mat 13:6, as contrariwise, Paul speaks of these, who are "rooted and grounded in love"Eph 3:17, and of being "rooted and built up in Christ"Col 2:7. The widespreading branches are an emblem of the gradual growth and enlargement of the Church, as our Lord says, "It becometh a tree, so that the birds of the air come and lodge in the branches thereof"Mat 13:32.
The symmetry of the tree and its outstretched arms express, at once, grace and protection. Of the "olive"the Psalmist says, "I am like a green olive tree in the house Of God"Psa 52:8; and Jeremiah says, "The Lord called thy name a green olive tree, fair and of goodly fruit"Jer 11:16; and of "fragrance"the spouse says in the Canticles, "because of the savor of Thy good ointments, Thy name is as ointment poured forth"Son 1:3; and the Apostle says, "thanks be to God, which maketh manifest the savor of His knowledge by us in every place"2Co 2:14. Deeds of charity also are "an odor of good smell"Phi 4:18; the prayers of the saints also are "sweet odors"Rev 5:8. All these are the fruits of the Spirit of God who says, "I will be as the dew unto Israel."Such reunion of qualities, being beyond nature, suggests the more, that, that, wherein they are all combined, the future Israel, the Church, shall flourish with graces beyond nature, in their manifoldness, completeness, unfadingness.
Poole -> Hos 14:5
Poole: Hos 14:5 - -- I the Lord, who have pardoned, and am appeased,
will be as the dew refresh and water, that they may grow, and that they may be fruitful and flouris...
I the Lord, who have pardoned, and am appeased,
will be as the dew refresh and water, that they may grow, and that they may be fruitful and flourish, as the dew in those countries, where it was more abundant than with us, and for some months together supplied the want of rain; God will refresh and comfort, and make fruitful in good works, through his grace, such as return to him.
Israel those that do unfeignedly, not hypocritically, confess, pray, and repent.
As the lily which grows apace, is fragrant, beautiful, and delights in valleys, often grows among thorns; so the Israel of God among troubles in low state, yet comely, and fragrant to the Lord, and grows up in him speedily.
Lebanon put for the trees of Lebanon; as those trees spread forth their roots, grow up to strength, are most beautiful, odoriferous, and durable, cedars in Lebanon are these trees; so shall the true Israel, converted backsliders, be blessed of God. So flourishing and happy shall the church be under Christ.
Haydock -> Hos 14:5
Haydock: Hos 14:5 - -- Breaches, when Israel shall be converted, as some were to Christ, and many will be at the end of the world. (Worthington) ---
Hebrew, "their return...
Breaches, when Israel shall be converted, as some were to Christ, and many will be at the end of the world. (Worthington) ---
Hebrew, "their return." Septuagint, "dwellings." They shall be purified. ---
Freely. I have been forced to chastise, My heart dilates. (Calmet) ---
Septuagint, "I will love them manifestly." Syriac, "accept their free offerings." (Haydock)
Gill -> Hos 14:5
Gill: Hos 14:5 - -- I will be as the dew unto Israel,.... To spiritual Israel, to those that return to the Lord, take with them words, and pray unto him, whose backslidin...
I will be as the dew unto Israel,.... To spiritual Israel, to those that return to the Lord, take with them words, and pray unto him, whose backslidings are healed, and they are freely loved; otherwise it is said of apostate Israel or Ephraim, that they were "smitten, and their root dried up, and bore no fruit", Hos 9:16. These words, and the whole, context, respect future times, as Kimchi observes; even the conversion of Israel in the latter day, when they shall partake of all the blessings of grace, signified by the metaphors used in this and the following verses. These words are a continuation of the answer to the petitions put into the mouths of converted ones, promising them many favours, expressed in figurative terms; and first by "the dew", which comes from heaven, is a great blessing of God, and is quickening, very refreshing and fruitful to the earth: and the Lord is that unto his people as the dew is to herbs, plants, and trees of the earth; he is like unto it in his free love and layout, and the discoveries of it to them; which, like the dew, is of and from himself alone; is an invaluable blessing; better than life itself; and is not only the cause of quickening dead sinners, but of reviving, cheering, and refreshing the drooping spirits of his people; and is abundance, never fails, but always continues, Pro 19:12; and so he is in the blessings of his grace, and the application of them; which are in heavenly places, in Christ, and come down from thence, and in great abundance, like the drops of dew; and fall silently, insensibly, and unawares, particularly regenerating grace; and are very cheering and exhilarating, as forgiveness of sin, a justifying righteousness, adoption, &c. Deu 33:13; and also in the Gospel, and the doctrines of it, which distil as dew; these are of God, and come down from heaven; seem little in themselves, but of great importance to the conversion of sinners, and comfort of saints; bring many blessings in them, and cause great joy and fruitfulness wherever they come with power, Deu 32:2. The Targum is,
"my Word shall be as dew to Israel;''
the essential Word of God, the Messiah; of whose incarnation of a virgin some interpret this; having, like the dew, no father but God, either in his divine or human nature; but rather it is to be understood of the blessings of grace he is to his people as Mediator; being to them wisdom, righteousness, sanctification, and redemption, and every other, even their all it, all:
he shall grow as the lily; to which the church and people of God are sometimes compared, especially for their beauty and comeliness in Christ, Solomon in all his glory not being arrayed like one of these; particularly for their unspotted purity, being clothed with fine linen, clean and white, the white raiment of Christ's righteousness, and having their garments washed and made white in his blood; see Son 2:1; and here for its growth. The root of the lily lies buried in the earth a long time, when it seems as if it was dead; but on a sudden it springs out of the earth, and runs up to a great height, and becomes very flourishing; which is not owing to itself, it "toils not"; but to the dew of heaven: so God's elect in a state of nature are dead, but, being quickened by the grace of God, spring up on a sudden, and grow very fast; which is not owing to themselves, but to the dews of divine grace, the bright shining of the sun of righteousness upon them, and to the influences of the blessed Spirit; and so they grow up on high, into their Head Christ Jesus, and rise up in their affections, desires, faith and hope to heavenly things, to the high calling of God in Christ, and become fruitful in grace, and in good works. The Targum is,
"they shall shine as the lily;''
see Mat 6:29;
and cast forth his roots as Lebanon; as the tree, or trees, of Lebanon, as the Targum; and so Kimchi, who adds, which are large, and their roots many; or as the roots of the trees of Lebanon, so Jarchi; like the cedars there, which, as the word here used signifies, "struck" c their roots firm in that mountain, and stood strong and stable, let what winds and tempests soever blow: thus, as in the following, what one metaphor is deficient in, another makes up. The lily has but a weak root, and is easily up; but the cedars in Lebanon had roots firm and strong, to which the saints are sometimes compared, as here; see Psa 92:12; and this denotes their permanency and final perseverance; who are rooted in the love of God, which is like a root underground from all eternity, and sprouts forth in regeneration, and is the source of all grace; is itself immovable, and in it the people of God are secured, and can never be rooted out; and they may be said to "strike" their roots in it, as the phrase here, when they exercise: a strong faith in it, and are firmly persuaded of their interest in it; see Eph 3:17; they are also rooted in Christ, who is the root of Jesse, of David, and of all the saints; from whom they have their life, their nourishment and fruitfulness, and where they remain unmoved, and strike their roots in him, by renewed acts of faith on him, claiming their interest in him; and are herein so strongly rooted and grounded, that all the winds and storms of sin, Satan, and the world, cannot eradicate them; nay, as trees are more firmly rooted by being shaken, so are they; see Col 2:7. The Targum is,
"they shall dwell in the strength of their land, as a tree of Lebanon, which sends forth its branch.''

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Hos 14:1-9
Maclaren -> Hos 14:4-5
Maclaren: Hos 14:4-5 - --The Dew And The Plants
I will be as the dew unto Israel: he shall grow as the lily, and cast forth his roots as Lebanon. 6. His branches shall spread...
MHCC -> Hos 14:4-8
MHCC: Hos 14:4-8 - --Israel seeks God's face, and they shall not seek it in vain. His anger is turned from them. Whom God loves, he loves freely; not because they deserve ...
Matthew Henry -> Hos 14:4-7
Matthew Henry: Hos 14:4-7 - -- We have here an answer of peace to the prayers of returning Israel. They seek God's face, and they shall not seek in vain. God will be sure to mee...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Hos 14:4-8
Keil-Delitzsch: Hos 14:4-8 - --
"I will heal their apostasy, will love them freely: for my wrath has turned away from it. Hos 14:5. I will be like dew for Israel: it shall bloss...
Constable -> Hos 11:12--Joe 1:1; Hos 14:3-7
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...
