
Text -- Hosea 14:9 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Which the prophet has delivered.

Wesley: Hos 14:9 - -- The ways which he would have us walk in towards him, his law, his ordinances, his whole doctrine are all righteous and equal. And the ways wherein God...
The ways which he would have us walk in towards him, his law, his ordinances, his whole doctrine are all righteous and equal. And the ways wherein God walks towards us, in afflicting or comforting are all righteous and equal.

Wesley: Hos 14:9 - -- Will approve them all, justifying the righteousness of God's displeasure, and confessing he remembereth mercy in the midst of judgment. And justifying...
Will approve them all, justifying the righteousness of God's displeasure, and confessing he remembereth mercy in the midst of judgment. And justifying the righteousness of his precepts by endeavouring to observe them.

Wesley: Hos 14:9 - -- Wilful, obstinate sinners, stumble and are offended at his commands, but more at his judgments; they cast off the one, and vainly hope to shift off th...
Wilful, obstinate sinners, stumble and are offended at his commands, but more at his judgments; they cast off the one, and vainly hope to shift off the other, 'till at last they fall under the weight of their own sins and God's wrath.
JFB: Hos 14:9 - -- EPILOGUE, summing up the whole previous teaching. Here alone Hosea uses the term "righteous," so rare were such characters in his day. There is enough...
EPILOGUE, summing up the whole previous teaching. Here alone Hosea uses the term "righteous," so rare were such characters in his day. There is enough of saving truth clear in God's Word to guide those humbly seeking salvation, and enough of difficulties to confound those who curiously seek them out, rather than practically seek salvation.

JFB: Hos 14:9 - -- Stumble and are offended at difficulties opposed to their prejudices and lusts, or above their self-wise understanding (compare Pro 10:29; Mic 2:7; Ma...
Stumble and are offended at difficulties opposed to their prejudices and lusts, or above their self-wise understanding (compare Pro 10:29; Mic 2:7; Mat 11:19; Luk 2:34; Joh 7:17; 1Pe 2:7-8). To him who sincerely seeks the agenda, God will make plain the credenda. Christ is the foundation-stone to some: a stone of stumbling and rock of offense to others. The same sun softens wax and hardens clay. But their fall is the most fatal who fall in the ways of God, split on the Rock of ages, and suck poison out of the Balm of Gilead.
Clarke: Hos 14:9 - -- Who is wise, and he shall understand these things? - What things? Those which relate to the backslidings, iniquity, and punishment of Israel; and to...
Who is wise, and he shall understand these things? - What things? Those which relate to the backslidings, iniquity, and punishment of Israel; and to the mercy and kindness of God in their promised restoration. The things which belong to the work of sin in the heart; the things which belong to the work of grace in the soul; and particularly the things mentioned in this wonderful chapter

Clarke: Hos 14:9 - -- Prudent, and he shall know them? - He who endeavors to understand them, who lays his heart to them, such a person shall understand them
Prudent, and he shall know them? - He who endeavors to understand them, who lays his heart to them, such a person shall understand them

Clarke: Hos 14:9 - -- For the ways of the Lord are right - This is the conclusion which the prophet makes from the whole. All God’ s conduct, both in the dispensatio...
For the ways of the Lord are right - This is the conclusion which the prophet makes from the whole. All God’ s conduct, both in the dispensation of justice and mercy, is right: all as it should be, all as it must be; because he is too wise to err, too good to be unkind

Clarke: Hos 14:9 - -- The just shall walk, in them - This is a truth which he will always acknowledge; and illustrate it by a righteous and godly life
The just shall walk, in them - This is a truth which he will always acknowledge; and illustrate it by a righteous and godly life

Clarke: Hos 14:9 - -- But the transgressors shall fall therein - Howsoever good they might have been before, if they do not consider the necessity of depending upon God; ...
But the transgressors shall fall therein - Howsoever good they might have been before, if they do not consider the necessity of depending upon God; of receiving all their light, life, power, and love from him; ever evidencing that faith which worketh by love; maintaining an obedient conduct, and having respect to all God’ s precepts; they shall fall, even in the "way of righteousness."When still using the Divine ordinances, and associating with God’ s people, they shall perish from the way; and be like Ephraim, who once "spoke trembling,"and "was exalted in Israel,"who was "God’ s beloved son,"and "called out of Egypt;"yet, by "offending in Baal,"giving way to "the idols of his heart,"fell from God, fell into the hands of his enemies, and became a wretched thrall in a heathen land
"Whoso is wise, let him understand these things
Whoso is prudent, let him know them!"-
He who is well instructed will make a proper application of what he has here read; will tremble at the threatenings, and embrace the promises, of his God
The Targum is worthy the most serious attention
"The ways of the Lord are right, and the just who walk in them shall live for ever; but the ungodly, because they have not walked in them, shall be delivered into hell.
How instructive, how convincing, how awakening, and yet how consolatory, are the words of this prophecy! Reader, lay them to heart. A godly mind cannot consider them in vain; such shall know them, and know that the ways of the Lord are right
Calvin -> Hos 14:9
Calvin: Hos 14:9 - -- The Prophet, I have no doubt, very often inculcated what he here says, and frequently recalled it to mind, for we know that he had a constant struggl...
The Prophet, I have no doubt, very often inculcated what he here says, and frequently recalled it to mind, for we know that he had a constant struggle with extreme obstinacy. It was not only for one day that he found the people hard and perverse, but through the whole course of his preaching. Since then the Israelites continued, either openly to despise the Prophet’s teaching, or at least to regard as fables what they heard from his mouth, or to chide him in words, and even to threaten him, when he treated them with severity and when the Prophet saw that the wickedness of the people was irreclaimable, he, being armed with confidence, no doubt went forth very often among them, and said “Ye think that you shall be unpunished, while ye make a mock of what I teach; ye shall surely find at last that the ways of the Lord are right.” And I have already reminded you, that the Prophets, after having harangued the people at large and in many words, reduced at last into brief heads what they had taught; for it is not probable, that since Hosea had so long discharged the office of a teacher, he had spoken only these few things, which might have been gone through in three hours. This is absurd. But when he had diligently attended to the office deputed to him, he afterwards, as I have said, collected together these few chapters, that the remembrance of his teaching might be perpetuated. What he was constrained then often to repeat, he now lays down at the end of his book, that it might be as it were a complete sealing up of his teaching.
Who is wise, he says, and he will understand these things? who is intelligent, and he will know them? This interrogatory mode is expressive; for Hosea was amazed at the fewness of those who yielded themselves to be taught by God. The Israelites no doubt, arrogated to themselves great wisdom, as ungodly men are wont to do. For they seem to themselves to be then especially acute, when they laugh at every thing like piety, when they treat God’s name with scorn, and indulge themselves, as we see at this day, in their own impiety. And this diabolical rage lays hold on many, because they think that they would be very simple and stupid, were they to embrace any thing the Scripture contains. “O! what is faith but foolish credulity?” This is the thought that comes to their minds. There are also filthy dogs, who hesitate not to vomit forth such a reproach as this, “Only believe! But what is this thy believing, but wilfully to give up all judgement and all choice, and to allow thyself to be like mute cattle driven here and there? If then thou art wise, believe nothing.” Thus godless men speak; and hence, as I have said, they pride themselves on their own acuteness, when they can shake off every fear of God and all regard for divine truth. There were many such, we may easily believe, in the time of the Prophet. Since then the whole land was filled with dreadful contempt of God, and yet men commonly thought themselves wise, nay, imagined in their deep thoughts, as Isaiah says, 101 that they could deceive God, he now asks, Who is wise, and he will understand? As though he said, “I indeed see, that if I believe you, ye are all wise; for, imitating the giants, ye dare to rise up against God, and ye think yourselves ingenious when ye elude every truth, when ye proudly tread religion under foot; in this way ye are all wise. But at the same time, if there be any grain of wisdom in you, you must surely acknowledge me to be sent by God, and that what I declare is not the invention of men, but the word of the living God.” We now then see what force there is in this question, when the Prophet says, Who is wise, and he will understand these things? Who is intelligent, and he will know them?
We at the same time see that the Prophet here condemns all the wisdom of men, and as it were thunders from heaven against the pride of those who thus presumptuously mock God; for how much soever they imagined themselves to be pre-eminent, he intimates that they were both blind and stupid and mad. Who then is wise? he says. But at the same time, he shows that the true wisdom of men is to obey God and to embrace his word; as it is said in another place, that wisdom and the beginning of wisdom is the fear of God, (Pro 1:7.) Whosoever then wishes to be truly wise, he must begin with the fear of God and with reverence to his word; for where there is no religion, men cannot certainly understand any thing aright. Let us suppose men endued, not only with great clearness of mind, but also with the knowledge of all the sciences; let them be philosophers, let them be physicians, let them be lawyers, let nothing be wanting to them, except that they have no true knowledge of eternal life, would it not be better for them to be mere cattle than to be thus wise, to exercise their minds for a short time on fading things, and to know that all their highly valued treasure shall perish with their life? Surely to be thus wise is far more wretched than if men were wholly void of understanding. Justly then does the Prophet intimate here that those were not only foolish, but also mad, and wholly destitute of all understanding, who regarded not celestial truth, and were deaf to the Prophets, and discerned not when God spake, nor understood the power of his word. All then who are not thus wise, the Prophet justly says, are utterly void of all prudence and judgement: he therefore repeats the same thing, Who is wise, and he will understand these things? Who is intelligent, and he will know them? that is, “If any excels others, he ought surely to show in this particular his wisdom, and if any one is endued with common understanding, he ought to know what this doctrine means, in which the image and glory of God shine forth brightly. All then who know and understand nothing in this respect are no doubt altogether foolish.”
He afterwards adds, For right are the ways of Jehovah He alleges this truth in opposition to the profane rashness of men, who haughtily reject God, and dare to despise his word. Right, he says, are the ways of the Lord: and by saying that they are right, he no doubt glances at the abominable blasphemies which the ungodly have recourse to, when they wish to render the word of God not only odious and contemptible, but also absurd, so as not to deserve any respect. Thus we see at this day, that godless men not only in words reject both the Law and the Prophets, but also search out pretences, that they may appear to be doing right in destroying all faith in the oracles of God. For instance, they seek out every sort of contradiction in Scripture, every thing not well received, every thing different from the common opinion, — all these absurdities, as they call them, they collect together, and then they draw this conclusion, that all those are fools, who submit to any religion, since the word of God, as they say, contains so many absurd things. This raving madness prevailed then no doubt in the world: and the Prophet, by saying that right are the ways of Jehovah, means, that how much soever the ungodly may clamour, or murmur, or taunt, nothing is yet done by the Lord but what is right, and free from every blame and defect. However much then the ungodly may vomit forth slanders against the word of God, it is the same as if they threw dust into the air to darken the light of the sun; just so much they effect, he seems to say, by their audacity: for perfect rectitude will ever be found in the ways of the Lord; his word will ever be found free from every stain or defect.
He then adds, And the just shall walk in them, but in them shall the ungodly stumble By saying that the just shall walk in them, he confirms the last sentence by experience, for the just really find the ways of the Lord to be right We ought also to be furnished with this assurance, if we would boldly repel all the impious calumnies, which are usually heaped together by profane men against the word of God: for if we know not what it is to walk in the ways of the Lord, we shall surely, as soon as any thing is alleged against them, be suspended in doubt, or be wholly upset; for we see that many, not deeply rooted in the word of God, instantly quail, as soon as any thing is said against it, because they know not what it is to walk in the ways of the Lord; but they who walk in the Lord’s ways courageously fight against all the temptations of the world; they carry on the context that they may attain celestial life; they feel assured that though now miserable for a time, they shall yet be blessed, for they have embraced the grace of God in Christ; they are sustained too by their own conscience, so that they can look down on all the reproaches and slanders of the world, and proceed onward in their course. They then who thus walk in the ways of the Lord are unconquerable; yea, were the whole world to oppose them, and were the ungodly with their profane words to infect the whole atmosphere, the godly would still pursue their course until they reached the end. All the ways of Jehovah are therefore right, the just shall walk in them; but in them shall the ungodly stumble, or fall; for
End of the Prophecies of Hosea
Defender: Hos 14:9 - -- True wisdom exists only in those whose minds have been redeemed and are focused on God (2Ti 1:7; Rom 11:33-36; 1Co 2:6-8; Col 2:3).
True wisdom exists only in those whose minds have been redeemed and are focused on God (2Ti 1:7; Rom 11:33-36; 1Co 2:6-8; Col 2:3).

Defender: Hos 14:9 - -- "There is a way that seemeth right unto a man, but the end thereof are the ways of death" (Pro 16:25). In contrast, "the ways of the Lord are right!""
"There is a way that seemeth right unto a man, but the end thereof are the ways of death" (Pro 16:25). In contrast, "the ways of the Lord are right!""
TSK -> Hos 14:9
TSK: Hos 14:9 - -- wise : Psa 107:43; Pro 1:5, Pro 1:6, Pro 4:18; Jer 9:12; Dan 12:10; Mat 13:11, Mat 13:12; Joh 8:47; Joh 18:37
for : Gen 18:25; Deu 32:4; Job 34:10-12,...
wise : Psa 107:43; Pro 1:5, Pro 1:6, Pro 4:18; Jer 9:12; Dan 12:10; Mat 13:11, Mat 13:12; Joh 8:47; Joh 18:37
for : Gen 18:25; Deu 32:4; Job 34:10-12, Job 34:18, Job 34:19; Psa 19:7, Psa 19:8, Psa 119:75, Psa 119:128; Eze 18:25, Eze 33:17-20; Zep 3:5; Rom 7:12
and the : Job 17:9; Psa 84:5, Psa 84:7; Pro 10:29; Isa 8:13-15; Mat 11:19
but : Luk 2:34, Luk 4:28, Luk 4:29, Luk 7:23; Joh 3:19, Joh 3:20, Joh 9:39, Joh 15:24; Rom 9:32, Rom 9:33; 2Co 2:15, 2Co 2:16; 2Th 2:9-12; 1Pe 2:7, 1Pe 2:8

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Hos 14:9
Barnes: Hos 14:9 - -- Who is wise and he shall understand these things? - The prophet says this, not of the words in which he had spoken, but of the substance. He do...
Who is wise and he shall understand these things? - The prophet says this, not of the words in which he had spoken, but of the substance. He does not mean that his style was obscure, or that he had delivered the message of God in a way difficult to be understood. This would have been to fail of his object. Nor does he mean that human acuteness is the key to the things of God. He means that those only of a certain character, those "wise,"through God, unto God, will understand the things of God. So the Psalmist, having related some of God’ s varied chastenings, mercies and judgments, sums up, "Whoso is wise and will observe these things, even they shall understand the loving kindness of the Lord"Psa 107:43. So Asaph says that God’ s dealings with the good and bad in this life were "too hard"for him to "understand, until"he "went into the sanctuary of God;"then "understood"he "their end"Psa 73:16-17.
In like way Daniel, at the close of his prophecy, sums up the account of a sifting-time, "Many shall be purified and made white and tried, and the wicked shall do wickedly; and none of the wicked shall understand, but the wise shall understand"Dan 12:10. As these say that the wise alone understand the actual dealings of God with man, so Hosea says, that the wise alone would understand what he had set forth of the mercy and severity of God, of His love for man, His desire to pardon, His unwillingness that any should perish, His longing for our repentance, His store of mercies in Christ, His gifts of grace and His free eternal love, and yet His rejection of all half-service and His final rejection of the impenitent. "Who is wise?""The word "who"is always taken, not for what is impossible, but for what is difficult."So Isaiah saith, "Who hath believed our report, and to whom is the Arm of the Lord revealed?"Isa 53:1.
Few are wise with "the wisdom which is from above;"few understand, because few wish to understand, or seek wisdom from Him who "giveth to all men liberally, and upbraideth not"Jam 1:5. The question implies also, that God longs that people should understand to their salvation. He inquires for them, calls to them that they would meditate on His mercies and judgments. As Paul says, "Behold the goodness and severity of God; on them which fell, severity; but toward thee, goodness, if thou continue in His goodness. O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! how unsearchable are His judgments, and His ways past finding out"Rom 11:22, Rom 11:33. Unsearchable to intellect and theory; intelligible to faith and for acting on.
And he shall understand these things - (that is, that he may understand). The worldly-wise of that generation, too, doubtless, thought themselves too wise to need to understand them; as the wise after this world counted the Cross of Christ foolishness.
Prudent - Properly "gifted with understanding,"the form of the word expressing, that he was "endowed with"this "understanding,"as a gift from God. And He shall know them. While the wise of this world disbelieve, jeer, scoff at them, in the name of human reason, he who has not the natural quickness of man only, but who is endued with the true wisdom, shall "know"them. So our Lord says, "If any man will do His will, he shall know of the doctrine whether it is of God"Joh 7:17. The word, "wise,"may especially mean him who contemplates these truths and understands them in themselves, yet plainly so as to act upon them; and the word "endued with prudence,"may especially describe such as are gifted with readiness to apply that knowledge to practice, in judgment, discrimination, act . By uniting both, the prophet joins contemplative and practical wisdom, and intensifies the expression of God’ s desire that we should be endowed with them.
For the ways of the Lord are right - If in the word, "ways,"the figure is still preserved, the prophet speaks of the "ways,"as "direct and straight;"without a figure, as "just and upright."
The ways of the Lord - Are, what we, by a like figure, call "the ‘ course’ of His providence;"of which Scripture says, "His ways are judgment"Deu 32:4; Dan 4:37; "God, His ways are perfect"Psa 18:30; "the Lord is righteous in all His ways, and holy in all His works"Psa 145:17; "Thy way is in the sea, and Thy paths in the great waters, and Thy footsteps are not known"Psa 77:19; "lo, these are parts of His ways, but how little a portion is heard of Him, and the thunder of His power who can understand?"Job 26:14; "who hath enjoined Him His way, and who can say, Thou hast wrought iniquity?"Job 36:23. These "ways of God"include His ordering for us, in His eternal wisdom, that course of life, which leads most directly to Himself. They include, then, all God’ s commandments, precepts, counsels, His whole moral law, as well as His separate purpose for each of us. In the one way, they are God’ s ways toward us; in the other they are God’ s ways for us.
The just shall walk in them - God reveals His ways to us, not that we may know them only, but that we may do them. "The end of moral science is not knowledge, but practice,"said the Pagan philosopher . But the life of grace is a life of progress. The word, "way,"implies not continuance only, but advance. He does not say,"they shall "stand"in God’ s ways,"but "they shall walk in them."They shall go on in them "upright, safe, and secure, in "great peace"and with "nothing whereat to stumble". In God’ s ways there is no stumbling block, and they who walk in them, are free from those of which other ways are full. Whereas, out of God’ s ways, all paths are tangled, uneven, slippery, devious, full of snares and pitfalls, God maketh His "way straight,"a royal highway, smooth, even, direct unto Himself.
But - (and) the transgressors shall fall therein - Literally, "shall stumble thereon"Psa 119:165. Transgressors, i. e., those who rebel against the law of God, "stumble"in divers manners, not "in,"but "at"the ways of God. They stumble at God Himself, at His All-Holy Being, Three and One; they stumble at His attributes; they stumble at His providence, they stumble at His acts; they stumble at His interference with them; they stumble at His requirements. They rebel against His commandments, as requiring what they like not; at His prohibitions, as refusing what they like. They stumble at His Wisdom, in ordering His own creation; at His Holiness, in punishing sin; but most of all, they stumble at His Goodness and condescension. They have a greater quarrel with His condescension than with all His other attributes. They have stumbled, and still stumble at God the Son, becoming Man, and taking our flesh in the Virgin’ s womb; they stumble at the humility of the Crucifixion; they stumble at His placing His Manhood at the Right Hand of God; they stumble at the simplicity, power and condescension, which He uses in the sacraments; they stumble at His giving us His Flesh to eat; they stumble at His forgiving sins freely, and again and again; they stumble at His making us members of Himself, without waiting for our own wills; they stumble at His condescension in using our own acts, to the attainment of our degree of everlasting glory.
Every attribute, or gift, or revelation of God, which is full of comfort to the believer, becomes in turn an occasion of stumbling to the rebellious. "The things which should have been for his wealth, become to him an occasion of falling. "They cannot attemper their own wishes and ways to the divine law, because, obeying what they themselves affect, "the law of their members,"they stumble at that other law, which leadeth unto life"Psa 69:22. : With this the prophet sums up all the teaching of the seventy years of his ministry. This is the end of all which he had said of the severity and mercy of God, of the Coming of Christ, and of our resurrection in Him. This is to us the end of all; this is thy choice, Christian soul, to walk in God’ s ways, or to stumble at them. As in the days when Christ came in the Flesh, so it is now; so it will be to the end. So holy Simeon prophesied, "‘ This Child is set for the fall and rising again of many in Israel’ Luk 2:34; and our Lord said of Himself, ‘ For judgment I am come into this world, that they which see not might see, and that they which see might be made blind’ Joh 9:39. And Peter; ‘ Unto you which believe He is precious; but unto them which be disobedient, the stone which the builders disallowed, the same is made the head of the corner, and a stone of stumbling and rock of offence, to them which stumble at the word, being disobedient’ 1Pe 2:7-8. ‘ Christ crucified was unto the Jews a stumbling block, and unto the Greeks foolishness, but unto them which are called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ the Power of God, and the Wisdom of God’ 1Co 1:23-24. The commandment, which’ was ordained ‘ to life,’ Paul, when yet unregenerate, ‘ found’ to be ‘ unto death’ Rom 7:10. : "Pray we then the Eternal Wisdom, that we may be truly wise and understanding, and receive not in vain those many good things which Christ has brought to the race of man. Let us cleave to Him by that ‘ faith, which worketh by love;’ let us seek the Good, seek the Just, ‘ seek the Lord while He may be found, and call upon Him while He is near.’ Whatever God doeth toward ourselves or others, let us account right; ‘ for the ways of the Lord are right,’ and ‘ that’ cannot be unjust, which pleaseth the Just. Whatever He teacheth, whatever He commandeth, let us believe without discussion, and embrace most firmly for "that"cannot be false, which the Truth hath taught. Let us walk in His ways;"for Christ Himself is "the Way"unto Himself, "the Life.": "Look up to heaven; look down to Hell; live for Eternity.""Weigh a thousand, yea thousands of years against eternity what dost thou, weighing a finite, how vast soever, against Infinity."
rdrb \brdrs \brdrw30 \brsp20
Poole -> Hos 14:9
Poole: Hos 14:9 - -- Who is wise, and he shall understand these things? though not many wise, yet some methinks; now of those few, who is there that will consider what si...
Who is wise, and he shall understand these things? though not many wise, yet some methinks; now of those few, who is there that will consider what sins God complains of and threatens to punish in his people, what sins God forbade them so much as once to commit, and peremptorily commanded them to turn from when once committed; what duties he required, what promises he proposed, what patience he used toward them while any hope of their amendment, what severity upon their incorrigible sins? Whoso with any tolerable degree of wisdom will view these things, and seriously consider of them, they will understand, and know that the prophet hath given best advice, and that it is the safest course to follow it.
Prudent, and he shall know them? the same thing doubled with elegancy, and to confirm the word, as is usual in Scripture.
For the ways of the Lord are right the ways which he would have us walk in towards him, his law, his ordinances of worship, his whole doctrine which directeth our walk, are all righteous and equal. And the ways wherein God walketh toward us, in corrections for sins committed, in suspending his. promises of grace, on conditions of duty, in afflicting or comforting, are all righteous and very equal.
The just shall walk in them will approve them, all justifying the righteousness of God’ s displeasure, and confessing he remembereth mercy in the midst of judgment; and justifying the righteousness of his precepts by endeavouring to observe them.
But the transgressors wilful, obstinate, and inconsiderate sinners,
shall fall therein eventually it proves so, they stumble and are offended somewhat at his precepts and commands, but more at his severe judgments; they cast off the one, and vainly hope to shift off the other, till at last they fall under the weight of their own sins and God’ s wrath.
Haydock -> Hos 14:9
Haydock: Hos 14:9 - -- Idol? or God will no more reproach them, as their conversion is sincere. ---
Make. Hebrew, "be to him like," &c. (Calmet)
Idol? or God will no more reproach them, as their conversion is sincere. ---
Make. Hebrew, "be to him like," &c. (Calmet)
Gill -> Hos 14:9
Gill: Hos 14:9 - -- Who is wise, and he shall understand these things? prudent,
and he shall know them?.... Contained in this book, and particularly in this chapter;...
Who is wise, and he shall understand these things? prudent,
and he shall know them?.... Contained in this book, and particularly in this chapter; which expresses so much of the goodness of God and grace of Christ to Israel; though it may be applied to the whole Scripture, and to all the mysteries and doctrines of the Gospel, respecting Christ and his grace; and be a recommendation of these to the consideration of every wise and prudent man; where he will find enough to exercise his wisdom and understanding; though he need not be discouraged in his search and inquiry into them. It suggests as if there were but few such wise persons, and that they are the only wise men that do know and understand these things; and all others are but fools, let them be thought as wise as they will:
for the ways of the Lord are right; straight, plain, even, according to the rules of, justice and equity; there is no unrighteousness in them; none in the ways in which he himself walks; either in his ways and methods of grace, his decrees and purposes, his counsels and covenant; or in his providential dispensations; nor in those he directs others to walk in, the paths of faith and doctrine; or the ways of his commandments:
and the just shall walk in them; such as are, justified by the righteousness of Christ, and have ills grace wrought in them, and live righteously; these walk, and continue to walk, in the ways of God; which shows that the doctrine of justification by Christ's implored righteousness is no licentious doctrine:
but the transgressors shall fall therein; the transgressors of the law of God, not being used to his ways, as Kimchi's father observes, stumble in them and fall; or rather, as Jarchi and the Targum, they fall into hell, into ruin and destruction, because they walk not in them; though the sense seems to be, that as Christ himself, so his ways and his word, his doctrines and his ordinances, are stumbling blocks to wicked men, at which they stumble, and fall, and perish; see Luk 2:34 Rom 9:33.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Hos 14:9
NET Notes: Hos 14:9 The shortened form of the prefix-conjugation verb וְיָבֵן (vÿyaven) indicates that it is a jussive rath...
Geneva Bible -> Hos 14:9
Geneva Bible: Hos 14:9 Who [is] ( h ) wise, and he shall understand these [things]? prudent, and he shall know them? for the ways of the LORD [are] right, and the just shall...
